Chapter 3
The legal and policy implications of paying
people-smugglers
3.1
Of the 12 submissions received to this inquiry, nine focused largely or
wholly on the legal ramifications of the incident reported to have occurred in
May 2015, should those events have transpired in the manner reported by the
media and claimed by the Indonesian authorities. The submissions were
consistent in their analysis of the laws and legal issues raised, and the legal
experts who appeared as witnesses at the committee's public hearing elaborated
on these matters.
3.2
Several submissions also raised concerns about the policy implications
of paying people-smugglers to turn back boats, particularly for Australia's
relationship with Indonesia, and for the objective of combating people smuggling.
Australian law
3.3
Submitters raised issues relating to various Commonwealth laws that may
be of relevance in relation to the alleged incident, including people smuggling
provisions in the Criminal Code Act 1995 (Criminal Code) and the Migration
Act 1958 (Migration Act), and immunity provisions in the Intelligence
Services Act 2001 (ISA).
The Migration Act
3.4
Submissions noted that while the Migration Act contained certain
offences relating to people smuggling, these would not be relevant in this
instance, as the Migration Act offences (only) related to the smuggling of
persons into Australia.[1]
The Criminal Code
3.5
On the other hand, many submissions assessed that the actions allegedly
taken by Australian officials may constitute the commission of people smuggling
offences as set out in the Criminal Code.
3.6
Division 73 of the Criminal Code establishes people smuggling and
related offences. Under section 73.1, an offence of people smuggling is
committed if a person organises or facilitates the entry of another person into
a foreign country (whether or not via Australia) in a way that does not comply with
the requirements under that country's law for entry into the country, and the
person smuggled is not a citizen or permanent resident of the foreign country.
This offence attracts a penalty of up to ten years' imprisonment.
3.7
Section 73.2 provides for an aggravated offence of people smuggling if
the perpetrator recklessly places the victim in danger of death or serious
harm, or subjects the victim to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. A
further aggravated offence is contained in section 73.3, for smuggling five or
more persons. The aggravated offences attract penalties of up to 20 years'
imprisonment.
3.8
An offence of 'supporting the offence of people smuggling' is established
by section 73.3A. This offence is committed if a person 'provides material
support or resources' which aids another person or organisation to engage in
people smuggling conduct, and carries a penalty of up to ten years'
imprisonment.
3.9
Section 73.5 specifies that proceedings against an individual for any of
the people smuggling offences must not be commenced without the written consent
of the Attorney-General.
Commission of offences
3.10
Civil Liberties Australia (CLA) pointed out that, if the reporting of
the incident was accurate, it was clear that the asylum seekers' entry into
Indonesian territory did not comply with Indonesia's requirements for entry,
and that the passengers were not citizens or permanent residents of Indonesia,
satisfying two out of the three limbs of the core people smuggling offence in
section 73.1 of the Criminal Code.[2]
3.11
Most submitters concurred that whether the primary offence of people
smuggling was committed would essentially depend on whether the actions satisfied
the third limb of the offence, in that the officials 'organised or facilitated'
the illegal (re-)entry of the asylum seekers into Indonesia.
3.12
CLA argued that this had indeed occurred:
By supplying two boats, paying money to the Indonesian crew,
loading the passengers onto those boats, providing them with fuel and other
supplies and directing them towards Rote Island, Australians have organised and
facilitated the entry of other persons into Indonesia.[3]
3.13
The Law Council of Australia (LCA) noted that the meaning of the terms
'organises' and 'facilitates' are not defined in the Criminal Code, and as such
'should be given their ordinary meaning'. It assessed that, accordingly, 'it is
arguable that 'facilitates' may include the financing of people smugglers'.[4]
3.14
Professor Ben Saul of the University of Sydney referred to relevant case
law which has considered the meaning of these terms, stating:
[I]n this context, 'organise' means to 'arrange personally;
take responsibility for providing (something)'...To 'facilitate' means 'make easy
or easier; promote; help forward (an action result etc)'...Moreover, 'organise'
and 'facilitate' describe conduct directed at producing a result or outcome,
namely bringing about entry into another country. A person will possess the
intention to organise or facilitate entry if he or she means to engage in that
conduct (Criminal Code, s.5.2(1)) and is aware of the purpose and destination
of the voyage...There is no requirement that the offence be committed to obtain
profit or other benefit.[5]
3.15
Professor Saul concluded as follows in relation to whether the offence
of people smuggling had been made out:
In this case, Australian officials allegedly paid crew
members to take migrants back into Indonesian waters...In these circumstances, it
is arguable that such payments amount to 'organising' the illegal entry of
migrants into Indonesia, since their original destination was Australia and but
for the payments, they would not have been taken to Indonesia. Australian
personnel thus arranged or took responsibility for the illegal entry to
Indonesia...In the alternative, if 'organising' people smuggling is considered to
demand a higher level of involvement or control over illegal entry, then the
Australian conduct would still likely amount to 'facilitating' illegal entry to
Indonesia—that is, enabling or promoting it by paying the crew to carry it out;
again, but for the payments, the crew would not have taken the migrants
illegally to Indonesia.[6]
3.16
Should the primary offence be established, several submitters argued
that the 'aggravated' offences may also be relevant.
3.17
In relation to the aggravated offence of people smuggling involving
conduct which gives rise to a danger of death or serious harm to the victim,
Dr Anthony Cassimatis and Ms Catherine Drummond of the
University of Queensland submitted that:
Media reports state that one of the wooden boats which
Australian officials allegedly gave people smugglers to return their passengers
to Indonesia ran out of fuel, forcing the second vessel to take its passengers
on board. That second vessel then crashed on a reef near an Indonesian island.
This suggests that insufficient fuel was provided for the journey which is
inherently dangerous and was likely to endanger the lives and safety of the
migrants concerned, which included at least one pregnant woman and three
children.[7]
3.18
The Refugee & Immigration Legal Centre (RILC) agreed:
In these circumstances, we consider that if Australian
officials are found to have committed the offence of people smuggling, the
alleged conduct in question also gave rise to a danger of death or serious harm
to the asylum seekers on the boat.
The Criminal Code provides that a person is reckless with
respect to a result (such as death or serious injury being caused to someone)
if: he or she is aware of a substantial risk that the result will occur; and
having regard to the circumstances known to him or her, it is unjustifiable to
take the risk. In the circumstances it would be likely that the Australian
officials responsible would be conscious of such a risk to the safety of
passengers on board, and that a reasonable person in those circumstances would
consider exposing those passengers at that serious risk unjustifiable. As a
result, the Australian officials responsible for providing the relevant cash
payments, inducements, and replacement sea vessels, may have committed an
aggravated offence of people smuggling under section 73.2 of the Criminal Code.[8]
3.19
CLA and other submitters noted that the reports of the incident
indicated that 65 asylum seekers were involved, and argued that it was
therefore likely that the aggravated offence of smuggling at least five people
had also been committed.[9]
3.20
Professor Saul expressed the view that officers involved in the
incident, including those who did not make the actual alleged payment, may have
committed the offence of supporting people smuggling under section 73.3A:
[This offence] potentially captures those who stood behind
the ASIS officer(s) who made the payments; for instance, a senior officer who
ordered or approved the operation, or a finance officer who approved the
payments may have aided the officer who organised or facilitated entry by
actually making the payments.[10]
3.21
RILC advised that while the meaning of providing 'material support or
resources' in section 73.3A was not defined in the Criminal Code, the
explanatory memorandum to the bill that introduced this offence had
envisaged a broad interpretation including, but not limited to the provision of:
property, tangible or intangible, or service, finances including currency or
monetary instruments or financial securities, financial services, false
documentation or identification, communications equipment, facilities and
transportation.[11]
Complicity and common purpose
3.22
Several submitters argued that officials may be criminally responsible
by being 'complicit' in the offence of people smuggling committed by the boat
crew members.[12]
Complicity and common purpose ('aiding and abetting') the offence of people
smuggling would be an offence under section 11.2 of the Criminal Code.[13]
3.23
LCA argued that if a court were to determine that paying the people
smugglers as alleged did not constitute facilitating people smuggling, it could
still amount to aiding and abetting in the relevant offence of people smuggling.[14]
3.24
CLA expressed the view that officials not directly involved in the cash
payment may also be criminally liable under this offence:
[A]nyone who has been involved in the decision making that
led to the incident in question is potentially guilty of [aiding] and abetting
the underlying offences of people smuggling and aggravated people smuggling. It
is possible that other offences have been committed by Australians who, though
not directly involved in the incident in question, may have assisted them before
and/or after the fact.[15]
Caveats and immunities
3.25
Submissions noted that section 73.5 of the Criminal Code, providing that
proceedings against a person for people smuggling offences could only be
commenced with the written consent of the Attorney-General, were likely to
prevent prosecution if the alleged perpetrators were agents of the government.
3.26
Many submitters regarded this as an inherent conflict of interest within
the law, and a matter of concern. RILC stated that:
There may well be...serious violations of not only
international law but domestic law in Australia, and yet the gatekeeper for
whether there is a proper investigation under the ordinary protections of
Australian law is the Attorney-General, and that is potentially a serious problem
here for obvious reasons, given the potential conflict of interest that arises...
...
The end point of all this—and it is a dramatic consequence—is
that Commonwealth officials can be directed to commit serious criminal offences
which put people's lives in danger, as we have potentially seen here, and
prosecution can be immunised by politicians, by the executive. What this points
to is the real potential for an exercise of largely arbitrary power outside of
the ordinary legal constraints and ordinary legal scrutiny under the rule of
law in our country.[16]
3.27
RILC argued that 'urgent amendment' to the Criminal Code and other
provisions needed to be considered, 'so that classes of offence of a serious
nature cannot be immunised by the executive so easily or at all'.[17]
3.28
Further, submitters noted that Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS)
officers may be protected by subsection 14(1) of the Intelligence Services
Act 2001 (ISA), which provides that a staff member or agent of a designated
agency (which includes ASIS) 'is not subject to any civil or criminal liability
for any act done outside Australia if the act is done in the proper performance
of a function of the agency'.[18]
Under subsection 14(2), any officers in Australia connected to such acts would
enjoy the same immunity.
3.29
Professor Saul advised in his submission that:
The legal effect of s. 14(1) is to create an exemption from
or exception to liability, since a person 'is not subject to any civil or
criminal liability' that would ordinarily apply. It is therefore more than a
mere procedural immunity which bars prosecution for an offence; rather, it
eliminates altogether any underlying criminal liability.[19]
3.30
Submitters discussed whether the alleged activity (making a payment to
the crew of a people smuggling boat) would constitute an act done 'in the
proper performance of a function' of ASIS. The Andrew & Renata Kaldor
Centre for International Refugee Law (Kaldor Centre) contended that :
This is questionable, since most ASIS functions relate to
intelligence-gathering, not operational activities. However, if the...Minister
responsible for ASIS...directed an official to make the alleged payment, then the
official would be immune from prosecution, since section 6(1)(3) of the Act
includes as an ASIS 'function' 'such other activities as the responsible
Minister directs relating to the capabilities, intentions or activities of
people or organisations outside Australia'.[20]
3.31
Dr Cassimatis and Ms Drummond argued, on the other hand, that:
Despite this broad function, it still seems unlikely that
conduct which Australia has criminalised and assumed international obligations
to prevent and suppress could be regarded as being done in the proper
performance of the functions of ASIS. If the alleged incident were part of some
covert operation to gain the trust of people smugglers for the purpose of
gathering intelligence to prevent and disrupt people smuggling, then the case
may be stronger for it falling within the proper performance of ASIS functions.
On the available facts, this is not the case.[21]
3.32
LCA noted that the responsible minister may only direct ASIS to
undertake activities if he or she has consulted other ministers who have
related responsibilities, and is satisfied that there are acceptable
arrangements in place to ensure that:
-
in carrying out the direction, nothing will be done beyond what
is necessary having regard to the purposes for which the direction is given;
and
-
the nature and consequences of acts done in carrying out the
direction will be reasonable having regard to the purposes for which the
direction is given.[22]
3.33
Professor Saul added that, given the immunity provisions in the ISA, the
defence of 'lawful authority' under section 10.5 of the Criminal Code would
also potentially be available to an ASIS officer in proceedings brought against
them.[23]
RILC noted on the other hand that there may be classes of officials, including
those indirectly involved, who were not covered by the relevant immunities.[24]
3.34
At the committee's public hearing, Professor Cassimatis queried whether
the actions as reported could be lawfully authorised at all:
As to the scope of the immunities, plainly we are a society
under law, and so statements cannot just be taken at face value if there is
fundamental undermining of the standards through conduct that could not
possibly be authorised. It may be possible that the immunities could be
outmanoeuvred. Plainly [the government] cannot just authorise any conduct at
all, and this does appear to be on the unreasonable side of conduct...an open,
publicly marked vessel involved in payment of funds to people smugglers...seems
to push the boundaries quite severely.[25]
Civil liability
3.35
One submission also raised the issue of potential civil liability for
the alleged conduct of Australian officials, through the tort of misfeasance of
public office. Dr Cassimatis and Ms Drummond proposed that:
Paying people smugglers and releasing asylum seekers into the
hands of people smugglers also potentially raises the tort of misfeasance of
public office...[This] tort can apply in cases where a government official acts
'with reckless indifference to the harm that is likely to ensue' and with
knowledge that the act in question is beyond power. Recalling that the asylum
seekers included three children and a pregnant woman and that one of the
vessels supplied by Australia appears to have had insufficient fuel,
misfeasance of public office cannot be excluded. The conduct of Australian
officials in paying people smugglers (a patently unlawful act) and then
releasing asylum seekers back into their control raise an arguable case of
reckless indifference.[26]
International law
3.36
Submitters to the inquiry commented in detail on the conformity of the
alleged conduct of Australian officials with Australia's international treaty
obligations, including obligations under: the Protocol Against the Smuggling
of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air, supplementing the United Nations Convention Against
Transnational Organised Crime (Migrant Smuggling Protocol);[27]
and the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (Refugee
Convention).[28]
The Migrant Smuggling Protocol
3.37
The purpose of the Migrant Smuggling Protocol is 'to prevent and combat
the smuggling of migrants, as well as to promote cooperation among States
Parties to that end, while protecting the rights of smuggled migrants'.[29]
It defines smuggling of migrants as 'the procurement, in order to obtain,
directly or indirectly, a financial or other material benefit, of the illegal
entry of a person into a State Party of which the person is not a national or a
permanent resident'.[30]
3.38
Some submitters argued that Australia may have breached its obligations
under the Migrant Smuggling Protocol by acting contrary to its purpose.
The Kaldor Centre stated that:
[P]aying people smugglers to transport asylum seekers to any
country they cannot lawfully enter is contrary to the stated purpose of the
Protocol...The practical effect of the alleged payment—and any other payments
that may have been made in the past under both the current Coalition and the
previous Labor government—is the creation of incentives for people smugglers to
continue their activities, in the hope that they may also be paid to return
their passengers. This clearly undermines the purpose of the Migrant Smuggling
Protocol.
...[T]he additional requirement in the Protocol's purpose –
that the rights of smuggled migrants be protected – suggests that any action
that could result in refoulement or otherwise put asylum seekers' lives or
safety at risk would be contrary to the treaty.[31]
3.39
Dr Cassimatis and Ms Drummond argued further that, if the alleged
conduct of Australian officials met the definition of migrant smuggling under
the Protocol, Australia 'would undeniably have acted contrary to the purpose of
the Protocol to prevent and combat migrant smuggling'.[32]
3.40
More specifically, it was also submitted that the alleged conduct of
Australian officials could constitute specific offences under the Protocol. Professor
Saul submitted that the alleged conduct of Australian officials could fall within
the scope of one or more of the following offences:
- The offence of people smuggling under article 6(1)(a)
of the Protocol. Paying the crew to turn back the boat procured the illegal
entry of the asylum seekers into Indonesia, in order to obtain the 'material
benefit' of directly preventing imminent irregular entry to Australia. A
'material' benefit is not exhaustively defined, is to be interpreted
'understood broadly' to capture motives other than obtaining a financial
benefit.
- The offence of participating as an accomplice in
people smuggling, under article 6(2)(b)) of the Protocol. Complicity
encompasses conduct that aids, abets or facilitates people smuggling. This
could include paying the crew to procure the migrants' illegal entry, where the
crew do so for financial benefit. The financial benefit obtained by the crew
need not be their exclusive motivation to do so; for instance, threat of
prosecution by Australia may also have motivated them.
- The offence of organizing or directing other[s] to
commit people smuggling, under article 6(2)(c) of the Protocol. The
payments, coupled with the Australian naval interdiction of the vessel, a
policy of forcible turn backs of boats, and the threat of prosecution unless
the crew agreed to Australia's request, could cumulatively amount to organizing
or directing the crew to commit people smuggling.[33]
3.41
Several other submitters also noted Australia's potential contravention
of these provisions.[34]
3.42
Submitters noted that the commission of such offences under the terms of
the Protocol would depend in part on whether the Australian government had
obtained a 'material benefit' from its activities. On this point the Human
Rights Law Centre (HRLC) agreed with Professor Saul that:
Assuming the allegations are true, the benefit gained by the
Commonwealth includes preventing the entry of the vessel and its crew to
Australia and the associated perceived political gain of "stopping the
boats". There are reasonably strong arguments that these constitute
"material benefits" and accordingly that paying people smugglers to
smuggle people back to Indonesia in these circumstances would be a breach of
the Protocol.[35]
3.43
Some argued further that Australia had not complied with Article 7
of the Migrant Smuggling Protocol, which requires State Parties to engage in
cooperative activities and 'cooperate to the fullest extent possible to prevent
and suppress the smuggling of migrants by sea'. UnitingJustice Australia
referred to 'Australia acting unilaterally and without proper consultation with
neighbours' in this regard.[36]
3.44
The Kaldor Centre submitted that:
The alleged payment of people smugglers to return to
Indonesia, without the knowledge or consent of the Indonesian government,
undermines the principle of international cooperation. It seems clear that the
Australian government neither consulted nor cooperated with the Indonesian
government in facilitating the return of the asylum seekers to Indonesia, since
Indonesia's Foreign Ministry made repeated requests for information from
Australia about the incident, all of which were refused.[37]
3.45
RILC argued that Australia had failed to meet its obligations under
Article 16 of the People Smuggling Protocol to take all appropriate measures to
preserve and protect the rights of persons who have been the object of
smuggling under applicable international law.[38]
3.46
It was noted by submitters that the offences set out in the Migrant
Smuggling Protocol are not judiciable at the international level. Rather,
States Parties are relied on to incorporate them into domestic legislation,
which Australia has done through the inclusion of people smuggling offences in
the Commonwealth Criminal Code, as discussed above.[39]
Professor Cassimatis advised the committee that although there was a clause in
the Protocol providing for ultimate referral of disputes between parties to the
International Court of Justice, that was unlikely to be applicable in this
case.[40]
The Refugee Convention and
non-refoulement
3.47
Several submitters noted Australia's obligations as a signatory to
the Refugee Convention, primarily the obligation of non-refoulement;
namely, that Australia is prohibited under article 33 of the Convention from
refouling (returning) asylum seekers to any country where their life or freedom
would be threatened on account of their race, religion, nationality, membership
of a particular social group or political opinion; or where they are at risk of
being returned to another country where they have a well-founded fear of
persecution.[41]
It was also noted that the principle of non-refoulement is contained in other
international treaties to which Australia is party, including the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT),
and is further considered a principle of customary international law, meaning
that it is binding on all nation states regardless of treaty obligations.[42]
3.48
Submitters argued that the return of the asylum seekers to Indonesia
(which is not a party to the Refugee Convention), absent an individual
determination of the protection needs of each asylum seeker, created at minimum
a risk that the principle of non-refoulement would be violated. The Kaldor
Centre contended:
Indonesia is not a party to the Refugee Convention, and does
not have national refugee status determination procedures in place to identify
protection needs, nor legislative or practical frameworks to adequately
safeguard the rights of asylum seekers in their territory. While there is insufficient
information to ascertain whether the 65 asylum seekers in the present case were
in danger, the important point to note is that a policy of turning back boats
creates an inherent risk that the principle of non‑refoulement will be
violated, because an individual determination of the protection needs of each
asylum seeker is not undertaken.[43]
3.49
Professor Hilary Charlesworth, Dr Emma Larking and Ms Jacinta Mulders
argued that diverting the asylum seekers to Indonesia was contrary to the
object and purpose of the Refugee Convention, as well as its specific provisions:
The actions of the Australian authorities in diverting the
asylum-seekers to Indonesia are contrary to the object and purpose of the
[Refugee Convention], including to assure to refugees the widest possible
exercise of their fundamental rights and freedoms, and to deal with the problem
of refugees through international cooperation (preamble). Australia has been a
party to the Refugees Convention since 1954.
The Convention implicitly requires States Parties to consider
the refugee status claims of asylum-seekers who are subject to their control.
This involves assessing claims of refugee status in good faith and through a
robust determination process. The circumstances of the transaction between Australian
authorities and the Indonesian boat crew suggests that no substantive or
comprehensive assessment of the asylum-seekers' protection claims were carried
out.[44]
3.50
RILC also regarded Australia's failure to undertake refugee status
determinations of the asylum seekers as a major concern:
...payments that result in inducements to turn back asylum
seekers at sea not only potentially endanger those people's lives, but also
eviscerate the possibility of meeting our obligations, because at the heart of
the obligations under the refugee convention is ensuring that someone who is
fleeing from harm is not exposed to further harm in the future. If we do not
inquire and examine the predicament of that person on that boat who is en route
to Australia or possibly to New Zealand, we create a situation where it is
literally impossible to meet the absolutely fundamental obligation and the
starting point, and that is to work out whether or not that person may well be
at risk.[45]
Other international laws
3.51
The relevance of other international laws was also raised in some
submissions, including other human rights treaties and the international law of
the sea.
3.52
LCA listed various Australian obligations under international law it
regarded as relevant to the committee's inquiry:
-
respecting the internationally recognised right to seek asylum,
and the system of refugee protection envisaged by the Refugee Convention;
-
recognising, protecting and promoting the individual rights of
those seeking asylum as protected under the human rights Conventions to which
Australia is a party;
-
recognising, protecting and promoting the rights of all children
seeking protection in Australia, including those set out in the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (CRC), which requires that in all actions
concerning children, the best interests of the child must be a primary
consideration;
-
ensuring the safety of life at sea;
-
treating humanely all people in its custody or control;
-
respecting freedom of navigation on the high seas;
-
respecting the sovereign maritime boundaries and areas of other
countries; and
-
providing accessible, timely and effective remedies for alleged
violations of Australia's international human rights law obligations.[46]
3.53
Legal expert Dr Emma Larking believed that '[i]f there was detention or
a failure to provide humane treatment, there are a range of protections under...human
rights treaties that could well have been breached here', citing ICCPR and the
CRC.[47]
3.54
Amnesty International agreed, asserting in its report that the conduct
of the government as described in its research was in breach of various
principles and instruments of (domestic and) international law. In addition to
the matters already raised in this chapter, Amnesty drew attention to its
allegations of unlawful detention, ill-treatment and excessive use of force as
abuses of various human rights provisions in international law.[48]
3.55
Amnesty further argued that the caveats and immunities within Australian
law (discussed above) which may prevent prosecution of persons guilty of people
smuggling offences, were in breach of the UN Convention on Transnational
Organised Crime, the "parent Convention" to the Migrant Smuggling
Protocol.[49]
3.56
With regard to international laws for the protection of safety of life
at sea (SOLAS), RILC observed that if media reports of the incident were
accurate, including allegations that officials put the asylum seekers on boats
with insufficient fuel to reach their destination, Australia may have breached
its SOLAS obligations: 'even in as much of a controlled process as Operation
Sovereign Borders would purport to say that operation might have been, it is
putting people's lives at risk'.[50]
3.57
The government did not agree with this, telling the committee that it
had met its SOLAS obligations by providing the asylum seekers 'with the
means—with safe means—to be able to return to their country of departure'.[51]
Commander of the Operation Sovereign Borders Joint Agency Task Force (OSB
JATF), Major-General Andrew Bottrell, added that:
I refute quite strongly any suggestion that the men and women
of the Australian Border Force or the Australian Defence Force that were
involved in any of these activities would take any action that would knowingly
put any of the lives of any of these people in harm's way...I acknowledge that
they are operating within the confines of what is seen, in many areas, as a
tough policy, but they work extremely carefully and they have learnt quite a
lot over the last number of years to make sure that any and all of their
activities are undertaken as safely as possible.[52]
3.58
Professor Cassimatis advised the committee that, if the government's
account of the incident were truthful—that is, if Australian officials had
responded to a distress call from the boat in question—that fact would be
relevant to the safety of life at sea obligations incurred, but 'would not
affect the people-smuggling concerns, because they are totally discrete'.[53]
3.59
RILC assessed that Australia's actions may also place it in breach of
international maritime laws, including the United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea.[54]
3.60
Dr Cassimatis and Ms Drummond argued that Australia may also have
violated aspects of the Lombok Treaty, a bilateral defence and security
cooperation agreement between Australia and Indonesia, by using its
intelligence services or other resources, including the payment of money, in
ways that would harm the interests of Indonesia.[55]
3.61
The government rejected suggestions that laws may have been breached
during the May 2015 incident, emphasising to the committee that all actions
undertaken by Operation Sovereign Borders complied with domestic and
international law. Major-General Bottrell told the committee that:
I take regular, detailed and clear advice from a range of
legal minds within the bureaucracy, and I am very confident, under all of this
activity, that our actions are consistent with domestic law and our obligations
under international law.[56]
Indonesian law
3.62
Submitters noted that Indonesia has implemented the offences in the
Migrant Smuggling Protocol into its domestic legislation, through offences of
people smuggling and assisting smuggling in articles 120 and 124 of its Law
6/2011 on Immigration.[57]
Professor Saul observed that '[j]ust as Australia has successfully sought the
extradition of suspected people smugglers from some other countries, it may be
possible for Indonesia to request the extradition of suspected Australian
smugglers'.[58]
3.63
Professor Saul noted that exemptions and defences available to ASIS
officers under Australian law would not be applicable in any proceedings
brought before Indonesian courts. He also discussed the potential impact of the
doctrine of foreign state immunity on Indonesia's ability to prosecute
Australian officials:
Under public international law, there is a separate question
whether Australian officials would enjoy state immunity from the enforcement
jurisdiction of foreign criminal courts. Current senior government officials
enjoy personal immunity while in office, but this does not extend to lower
officials such public servants, including ASIS officers.
State officials also enjoy functional immunity for official
acts, but there is uncertainty whether serious violations of international law
are exempted, whether because they may not be characterised as 'official acts'
or because ratification of specific treaties amounts to a waiver of immunity in
respect of a particular crime. On the present facts, it is certainly arguable
that Australia's adherence to the Migrant Smuggling Protocol constitutes a
waiver of any immunity for Australian officials engaging in smuggling.[59]
3.64
Professor Cassimatis also discussed the issue of foreign state immunity at
the committee's public hearing, arguing that Australia's position of 'neither
confirming nor denying' the payment could expose its officials to prosecution
in Indonesia:
...if the Indonesian government...did actually commence criminal
proceedings, the Australian government would be compelled, in a sense, to
protect its officials by publicly acknowledging the conduct in order to ensure
the [foreign state] immunity under international law...
...
...for the international immunity, the case law is clear: in
order for an official acting on behalf of the state to gain immunity from
prosecution in a foreign state, the government concerned would need to adopt
that conduct.[60]
3.65
The government declined to 'speculate' on this issue, reiterating that
all Operation Sovereign Borders activities were undertaken in compliance with
Australian and international law, and that 'there is no suggestion of any
criminal action by Indonesian authorities or any international bodies against
Commonwealth officials with respect to the May 2015 venture'.[61]
3.66
The Kaldor Centre assessed that in any case, it was unlikely that
Indonesia would attempt to extradite and prosecute Australians for this
incident:
Rather than pursuing legal action against Australia,
Indonesia is much more likely to continue to put diplomatic pressure on the
Australian government to reveal further information about the alleged payment,
and may seek an undertaking from the Australian government that it will not
make such a payment again.[62]
The policy implications of payments for turn backs
3.67
Beyond possible breaches of law involved in the alleged conduct of the
May 2015 incident, several submitters raised concerns about the policy implications
of any Australian government practice of making payments to people-smugglers.
The impact on bilateral relations
between Australia and Indonesia
3.68
Several submitters claimed that the alleged incident would have a
negative effect on the bilateral relationship between Australia and Indonesia.
For example, the HRLC stated:
Australia's relationship with Indonesia has already been
strained by its policy of boat turnbacks. When Australia breached Indonesian
territorial waters six times in the space of two months last year, the
Indonesian Government made its displeasure clear, saying in a statement that it
"deplores and rejects the violation of its sovereignty and territorial
integrity" and that "any such violation of whatever basis constitutes
a serious matter in bilateral relations of the two countries".
Australia has kept turning back boats regardless. Indonesia
demanded answers in response to the reports that Australia paid people
smugglers to smuggle people into Indonesia, but Australia refused to provide
any. This latest incident, and the Government's continued secrecy, undoubtedly
further damages our relationship with our close neighbour.[63]
3.69
UnitingJustice Australia was equally concerned that a finding that
Australian officials paid Indonesian people smugglers to turn back a boat would
'further undermine the Australian Government's bilateral relationship with
Indonesia'.[64]
CLA raised the potential for Indonesia 'to respond to a perceived major slight
in terms of trade, military, police or personal relationships...without direct
reference' to this incident. CLA believed that 'only a full and open accounting
by Australia for what occurred will address Indonesian concerns'.[65]
3.70
RILC submitted that the incident had not only had a 'serious adverse
impact' on Australia's relations with Indonesia, but had also damaged
Australia's international reputation and credibility more broadly, in relation
to refugee and humanitarian issues.[66]
Possible negative consequences of
providing payments to boat crews
3.71
Submitters also claimed that the alleged conduct of providing people
smuggling boat crews with financial incentives and/or resources could have a number
of negative consequences for Australia's efforts to combat people smuggling.
3.72
One of the key criticisms raised in this regard was that such conduct
served to provide substantial incentives to people smugglers.[67]
Professor Saul described this effect as 'putting the sugar back on the table',
encouraging other smugglers to make the trip in the hope of similar payments,[68]
and RILC characterised it as 'poor, unethical government policy'.[69]
CLA and RILC observed that such payments would increase the profitability of
the people smugglers' 'business model' by offering the potential for financial
compensation even if the venture did not succeed.[70]
3.73
RILC added its concerns that payments would provide 'vulnerable
unskilled and often desperate' persons recruited by people smugglers to pilot
asylum seeker vessels with significant incentives to make further voyages, and
could also result in asylum seekers making a higher number of attempted
journeys.[71]
UnitingJustice Australia believed that '[i]t is just as likely that lives will
be lost at sea on the return journey as on the journey over'.[72]
3.74
Other criticisms were that paying people smugglers to return asylum
seekers to Indonesia shifted the burden of managing persons in need of
protection to Indonesia, and further endangered or victimised those people who
were already victims of people smuggling operations.[73]
Committee view
3.75
In the previous chapter, the committee acknowledged that it was unable
to reach a conclusion as to the definitive facts of the May 2015 incident.
3.76
The evidence summarised in this chapter makes clear that, if the
incident occurred as reported, it potentially involved serious breaches of both
Australian and international law. The committee observes that the government's
assurances that no laws were broken are difficult to accept at face value in
the absence of transparency about what occurred.
3.77
The evidence received by the committee would nevertheless suggest that,
whatever the facts of the May 2015 incident (and any others like it), these are
unlikely to be dealt with through court action in either Australia or
Indonesia.
3.78
Within Australia, the legal obstacles presented by the
Attorney-General's effective veto on prosecutions for people smuggling under
the Criminal Code, and the other immunities potentially available to officials
breaking the law during Operation Sovereign Borders, underline further the
lacuna in accountability in this area of government activity which is of
concern to many submitters, and to the committee.
3.79
The committee is also cognisant of the analysis offered by many
submitters that payments to people smugglers would have disturbing
ramifications for Australia's very important relationship with Indonesia, and
also for the objective that Operation Sovereign Borders is supposed to serve:
disrupting the business model of people smuggling operations, in order to
"stop the boats" and prevent deaths at sea. Such payments are indeed
likely to provide an incentive to people smugglers, and the committee finds it
difficult to imagine how they could possibly constitute good policy in that
regard.
3.80
Bearing in mind these considerations, the following chapter sets out the
evidence received by the committee to date in relation to issues of
transparency and accountability for Operation Sovereign Borders, and the
committee's consideration of the need for further pursuit of these issues.
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