CHAPTER 4
Committee view and recommendations
4.1
In the committee's view, the terms of the Malaysian Arrangement and the
associated Operational Guidelines, along with their practical implementation,
are fundamentally and irreversibly flawed. In particular, the committee
strongly believes that the Malaysian Arrangement is lacking in significant
detail and, most importantly, fails to address serious human rights issues.
Non-legally binding nature of the Malaysian Arrangement
4.2
At its most basic level, the arrangement is inadequate and unacceptable
because it is extraordinarily imprecise in nature, and includes the use of
vague language and terms which are not defined and which appear only to reflect
the 'political commitments' of the parties. Since the Malaysian Arrangement is
non-legally binding, there is absolutely no means to enforce the obligations of
the parties under the arrangement.
4.3
Malaysia has apparently undertaken major obligations in relation to the principle
of non-refoulement of asylum seekers; to treat asylum seekers with dignity and
respect and in accordance with human rights standards; and to deal with the
special needs of vulnerable cases, including unaccompanied minors.[1]
However, the Australian Government is powerless in the event that Malaysia does
not comply with the arrangement. As the Ombudsman highlighted to the committee,
there are no steps which can be taken by the Joint Committee or the
Advisory Committee – the only bodies likely to be providing any form of
oversight or monitoring of the arrangement – in the event that there is any breach
of the arrangement.
4.4
The committee is not satisfied with assertions made by the Department that
'a number of the arrangements and understandings that Australia has entered
into are not in fact legally binding',[2]
and that '[i]t is not in the interest of either government that the arrangement
not be successfully implemented' because both governments entered into the
arrangement in good faith with the intention of meeting their respective
commitments.[3]
The arrangement itself needs to include sufficient, binding and enforceable
safeguards. A clause providing for the resolution of differences ('to be
resolved as soon as reasonably practicable by consultation between the
parties') – which is apparently how the Australian Government envisages
breaches by Malaysia will be addressed – is simply not adequate.
Malaysia is not a party to the Refugee Convention
4.5
In terms of selecting Malaysia as the location to process the protection
claims of the 800 Transferees, the Australian Government has completely ignored
that Malaysia is not a party to the Refugee Convention.
4.6
The committee accepts the advice of the Department that it is a 'long
understood position' that the Refugee Convention does not confer upon asylum
seekers a right to 'demand' that the particular contracting state in which they
arrive must process their claim and, if upheld, grant them a right to re-settle.[4]
However, at a minimum, the Australian Government should meet the Prime Minister's
previous commitment to 'rule out' sending asylum seekers who travel to
Australia by boat to countries which are not a signatory to the Refugee
Convention.[5].
Pre-transfer arrangements
4.7
The Department placed significant emphasis on the pre-removal assessment
in terms of ensuring:
-
the non-refoulement of a potential Transferee where that person
fears persecution in Malaysia;
-
the identification of vulnerabilities and heightened risks,
particularly focusing on unaccompanied children; and
-
confirming fitness to travel.[6]
4.8
The Department noted in its supplementary submission that 'pre-removal/transfer
guidelines' (Pre-removal Guidelines) have been developed.[7]
However, for reasons which are not apparent to the committee, the Pre-removal
Guidelines were not been included in the arrangement. Further, the Department
did not see fit to provide a copy of the Pre-removal Guidelines to the
committee as part of its submission, nor was the Department able to provide a
copy at the hearing to enable the committee to consider the document during the
course of the hearing.[8]
In the committee's view, given the importance of the procedures set out in the Pre-removal
Guidelines, this document should have been provided to the committee as soon as
possible after the hearing. Instead, the document was not provided to the
committee until a week after the hearing, as part of the Department's responses
to questions taken on notice.[9]
4.9
The committee also notes that the Commonwealth and Immigration Ombudsman
has requested a copy of the Pre-removal Guidelines and has not been provided
with a copy, even though the Ombudsman's request was made more than a month ago.[10]
The Department's reluctance to provide the Pre-removal Guidelines to the
Ombudsman comes in spite of the fact that the Ombudsman's office has a
statutory responsibility for work in this area.[11]
4.10
In the absence of the Pre-removal Guidelines being available to the
committee at the hearing, members of the committee were forced to spend
considerable time questioning officers of the Department to determine the
processes provided for in the document, and how pre-removal assessments would
apply in specific scenarios.[12]
Conditions in Malaysia
4.11
According to the Malaysian Arrangement, Malaysia is obligated to treat
the Transferees with 'dignity and respect and in accordance with human rights
standards'.[13]
Further, pursuant to the Operational Guidelines, 'Transferees will enjoy an
adequate standard of treatment, including having access to the same support as
other asylum seekers and refugees in the community'.[14]
4.12
Aside from the obvious issue that, due to the non-binding nature of the arrangement,
the Australian Government has no way of ensuring that these standards of
treatment are upheld in Malaysia, the committee has a number of other concerns
regarding the treatment of the asylum seekers transferred to Malaysia.
4.13
Conditions for refugees and asylum seekers in Malaysia are nothing short
of appalling with harassment and violence part of the refugee community's daily
experience, and the threat of arrest a constant.[15]
In particular, the committee is gravely concerned at the past involvement of
RELA, the volunteer citizens' police force, in immigration matters, particularly
in light of RELA's well-documented history of extortion, intimidation, harassment
and abuse of asylum seekers and refugees.
4.14
The committee is somewhat encouraged by evidence from the UNHCR that
'the activities of RELA have been scaled back and that the Malaysian Government
is involved in a significant initiative (6P Programme) to regularise the legal
status of all illegal migrants'. Further:
Many persons of concern to UNHCR stand to benefit from this
Programme by having their status regularised. It would mean all refugees in
Malaysia would, in addition to their registration and ID documents for UNHCR,
be registered within the Government's immigration data base and thus protected
from arbitrary arrest and detention. It would also mean that all refugees in
Malaysia would have the right to work on a par with legal migrants in the
country. This would also entitle them to the same insurance and health schemes
as documented, legal migrant workers...
For present purposes, the Arrangements would have involved a
legal status (and documentation proof) for transferees and this, subject to
adequate monitoring and other safeguards, would have served as a significant
safeguard against any exposure to RELA or arbitrary arrest.[16]
4.15
The committee also notes the Department's advice that 'RELA are not
responsible for in any way imprisoning or incarcerating these people in
Malaysia'; and that the Undersecretary International Division, Malaysian
Ministry of Home Affairs indicated during the course of negotiations on the
Malaysian Arrangement that 'RELA are no longer involved in immigration
matters', instead 'now focussing on a new direction for the agency'.[17]
4.16
However, it is unclear what this 'new direction' is and the committee is
of the view that RELA's continuing involvement in the enforcement of
immigration matters is possible, particularly given that it is unknown how many
RELA there actually are in Malaysia. In May 2007, Human Rights Watch reported
that the Malaysian Government had authorised 'almost half a million RELA
volunteers to help maintain public order'.[18]
In August 2010, Amnesty International noted that RELA aimed to expand its
membership from 1.6 million to 2.6 million by the end of 2010.[19]
Such figures are extraordinary and the committee considers that it would be
extremely difficult, if not impossible, to regulate or control all aspects of
RELA's activities.
4.17
The risk to refugees and asylum seekers of being caned in Malaysia is
also a serious concern for the committee. The committee appreciates the advice
of the Department that the exemption granted under Malaysian immigration laws
to the 800 Transferees means that they will not have committed an offence,
and therefore will not be subject to caning, in relation to entering Malaysia
without appropriate documentation.[20]
4.18
However, as Amnesty has pointed out, caning is not only used for
immigration offences, it is a supplementary punishment for approximately 40
other crimes.[21]
On the risks to Transferees of being punished by caning for non-immigration
related offences, a departmental representative told the committee:
As per normal for anyone who goes to a country like Malaysia,
or to the US or wherever, if you commit an offence you will be subject to their
criminal laws.[22]
4.19
In response to concerns raised during the inquiry about the treatment of
asylum seekers in Malaysia, another representative from the Department told the
committee:
Australia does not accept that it has a legal obligation that
persons outside our territory have to be accorded with the same standards of
treatment in all respects as they would have received had they remained in
Australia. In the case of transfers to countries for processing outside
Australia, we have, however, accepted a moral obligation to ensure that such
people are accorded reasonable standards of treatment.[23]
4.20
In the committee's view, if the transfer of asylum seekers to Malaysia
proceeds then the Australian Government will have failed dismally in fulfilling
any so-called 'moral obligation'. Further, it is astonishing that the
Department 'is satisfied with assurances provided by the Malaysian
[G]overnment' that caning will not occur, at least partly on the basis that the
arrangement was 'negotiated in good faith and freely entered into by Malaysia'.[24]
Identification of the 800 Transferees
4.21
In relation to the ability of the 800 Transferees to be identified in
Malaysia as subject to the Malaysian Arrangement, the Department detailed the operation
of the Nexcode (Foreign Identification) label which will be affixed to the identification
cards of individuals.[25]
However, the Department made several significant concessions in relation to the
operation of the card. First, the Department was unable to give the committee
any assurances in relation to the safeguards built into the card to ensure the
security of the document system. Instead the Department referred to measures
such as 'special printing, design and laminar surfaces that are put over the
top of the card that reflect in certain kinds of light' and concluded, on the
basis of these measures, that it was 'satisfied that there are reasonable
safeguards in place to protect the use of the card'.[26]
4.22
Second, the Department indicated that, despite the emphasis placed on
the presence of the Nexcode sticker on the card for identification purposes,
only 'normal Malaysian law enforcement and immigration authorities' will have
access to the card readers necessary to read the Nexcode sticker. The
Department then went on to advise that 'this has been structured such that you
do not actually need a card reader to identify the person as being subject to
the Arrangement'.[27]
It is therefore not clear to the committee why the Department has placed such
an emphasis on the Nexcode sticker as a means of identifying the 800
individuals who are subject to the arrangement, if the card reader for the
sticker is not readily available, nor in fact necessary.
4.23
In the committee's view, the identification card and Nexcode sticker
measures are manifestly inadequate to ensure the identification of the 800
individuals that are being transferred to Malaysia and to guarantee the
standard of treatment which they are to be accorded under the arrangement. This
is particularly the case given the evidence that the committee received as to
the disregard which is shown for refugees in Malaysia who have managed to be
granted a UN registration card.
Unaccompanied minors
4.24
In the committee's view, the provisions made under the Malaysian Arrangement
with respect to unaccompanied children are completely unacceptable.
4.25
Specific provision needs to be made for unaccompanied minors to have representation
with respect to their legal rights during any pre-removal interview. The
committee does not take any comfort in the fact that unaccompanied children
will be accompanied at interview by an 'independent observer'.[28]
Nowhere in the list of roles fulfilled by the independent observer will that
person be required to advocate for the legal rights of the child. That is the
role of the child's legal guardian and, in the committee's view, it is necessary
that a person representing the child's legal interests be present at the
interview.
4.26
Further, explicit provision needs to be made for the transfer of
guardianship of children in Malaysia. The Australian Government simply cannot
rely on an expectation that an official of the Malaysian Government will become
the guardian to unaccompanied children. To send unaccompanied minors to
Malaysia without making detailed provision for their guardianship on arrival is
a dereliction in the Minister's duty as legal guardian of these children.
Recommendation 1
4.27
The committee recommends that the Australian Government not proceed with
the implementation of the Arrangement between the Government of Australia
and the Government of Malaysia on transfer and resettlement, due to the
obvious flaws and defects in that arrangement.
Senator Gary
Humphries
Chair
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page