Chapter 2
Attorney-General's portfolio
2.1
This chapter summarises some of the matters raised during the
committee's consideration of the budget estimates for the Attorney-General's
portfolio for the 2017–18 financial year.
2.2
The Attorney-General's portfolio appeared over two days, with the
Attorney-General's Department (AGD, the department) attending on Wednesday, 24
May 2017 and other agencies of the portfolio attending on Thursday, 25 May
2017.
Statement by the Attorney-General on events in Manchester
2.3
At commencement of the day's hearing, Senator the Hon George Brandis QC,
Attorney-General, made a brief opening statement about a bombing that had
occurred in Manchester, United Kingdom, on the previous day. He stated that he
and the Prime Minister, the Hon Malcolm Turnbull MP, had already spoken with
their UK counterparts to offer the Australian people's condolences, as well as
to express the determination that the two countries should continue to work
together to keep our respective countries safe.[1]
2.4
The Attorney-General noted that there had been a number of recent
attacks in Australia, and that there had also been a number of terrorist
attacks that had been thwarted by Australian authorities:
Since September 2014, when the national threat level was
raised to its current level, there have been four acts of terrorist violence
committed in Australia: at Endeavour Hills, in Melbourne; at Martin Place; in
Parramatta; and in Minto. Those acts of terrorist violence have caused the deaths
of three innocent Australians. They have also led to the deaths of three
terrorism perpetrators. In each case, the person who perpetrated the acts of
terrorist violence was either a lone actor or a person acting with the
encouragement of a small number of people around them; and, in each case, they
were acting on the inspiration of Islamist terrorist messaging.
But, more importantly, since September 2014, our authorities
have thwarted 12 imminent terrorist attacks on Australian soil, the most recent
being just before Christmas, in Melbourne. Each of those thwarted terrorist
attacks was potentially more lethal than the four incidents in which a
perpetrator did succeed in committing a violent crime. In particular, the event
that was thwarted in Melbourne in the days before Christmas had the hallmarks
of a very significant mass-casualty terrorist attack and had been prepared with
a high level of sophistication. In every one of those 12 cases, our agencies
and our police were able to act and to protect the lives of Australians and,
potentially, to save the lives of many Australians because they relied on
security intelligence, both domestic and, in some cases, shared with us by our
Five Eyes partners. Without that intelligence, those terrorist crimes would not
have been stopped—nor, of course, would they have been stopped without the
skill and bravery of the Australian Federal Police and the state police who
interdicted and prevented them.[2]
2.5
The Attorney-General assured the committee that the government was focussed
on maintaining the integrity of national security legislation and agencies,
while respecting the essential principles of our political system and way of
life:
We have debates in this committee, as we should in a
parliamentary democracy, about the way our laws ought to be written. But may I
reassure members of this committee—and, through the committee, the Australian
public—that we spare no effort to ensure that our laws are kept constantly
under review, that we give the agencies and law enforcement the powers that
they need to be in the best possible position to protect our people, whilst
always respecting the rule of law and the liberal values, rights and freedoms
which are integral to our political system and indeed to our way of life.[3]
2.6
Finally, the Attorney-General commented that the threat of terrorism
would be an ongoing issue faced by Australia:
I want to thank the committee and I want to thank the Senate
for agreeing to pass the eight tranches of national security law, which have
been developed and introduced into the parliament since the middle of 2014. We
will keep those laws constantly under review. The agencies and law enforcement
will keep their techniques and operations constantly under review to ensure, at
all times consistent with the rule of law, we do what we can and what we must
to prevent an event like that which we saw in Manchester, an the event of
unspeakable evil, occurring in Australia. But this is not something that is the
work of a day or a week or a month or a year; this is a problem that will be
with us for the foreseeable future and governments of all political persuasions
must, and I am sure do, regard that task as pre-eminent.[4]
Statement by the Attorney-General on the coronial inquest into the Lindt
café siege
2.7
On the afternoon of 24 May 2017, the Attorney-General made a statement
on the findings of the report of the New South Wales coronial inquest into the
Lindt café siege of September 2014, which was handed down that morning.[5]
2.8
The Attorney-General noted that Australia's counter-terrorism
environment has changed significantly since the siege at the Lindt café, noting
the significant number of planned attacks that had been averted by intelligence
and policing agencies:
The national terrorism threat level remains at 'Probable',
reflecting credible intelligence that individuals or groups have developed both
an intent and capability to conduct a terrorist attack in Australia. The Lindt
Cafe siege is one of four terror-related attacks Australia has experienced
since September 2014. But it is important to emphasise that in that time,
there have been 12 major counter-terrorism disruptions of attack planning in
Australia. Due to the skill and expertise of our intelligence and policing
agencies, 12 terrorist attacks on Australian soil have been averted since
September 2014 and we should be profoundly grateful for the skill and expertise
and courage of the men and women of ASIO, the Australian Federal Police, the
state and territory police and others who were able to save an unknown number
of Australian lives.[6]
2.9
The Attorney-General stated that the Commonwealth would carefully study
the coroner's report and respond to its 45 recommendations appropriately. The
Attorney noted that his statement should not be regarded as a Commonwealth
response, which would be delivered after due consideration, but as an
indication of what steps the Commonwealth had already taken.[7]
2.10
Senator Brandis did note that the Commonwealth had already taken steps
to address a number of recommendations made by the NSW coroner's report for consideration
by the Attorney-General and other Commonwealth agencies. In particular, he
noted the following measures:
-
as part of its responsibility for overseeing operational
counter-terrorism arrangements between Australian law enforcement and
intelligence agencies, the Australia-New Zealand Counter Terrorism Committee (ANZCTC)
continually considers and facilitates the effectiveness of information sharing
between those agencies. In particular, the ANZCTC has already facilitated the
implementation of a classified national computer network to communicate
sensitive counter-terrorism information securely and effectively
(recommendation 39 of the coroner's report);[8]
-
AGD reviewed its correspondence handling procedures in cases
where correspondence might raise national security concerns, and implemented
those changes in 2015. The consequence of those changes is that such
correspondence is now routinely referred to the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) (recommendation 40 of the coroner's report);[9]
and that
-
the Commonwealth Counter-Terrorism Coordinator with relevant
agencies, including ASIO, has already engaged with the Australian Psychological
Society and other stakeholders in the mental health sector on this issue. An outcome
of that engagement has been an agreement that further work be done to improve
information sharing to identify at-risk or radicalised individuals.[10]
2.11
The Attorney-General stated that he would ask the committee whether any
further improvements may be required on any of these matters, in light of the
coroner's recommendations.[11]
2.12
Moreover, the Attorney-General noted a number of other ways that the
department had recently made improvements to its capabilities and relevant
legislation, including:
-
implementing 11 of the recommendations of the Joint Review into
the Lindt café siege undertaken collaboratively by the Commonwealth
and the NSW governments;[12]
-
actively reviewing Commonwealth counter-terrorism arrangements,
including through the Review of Australia's Counter-Terrorism Machinery in
2015, the current L'Estrange inquiry reviewing our national intelligence
community, and an ongoing review of Defence support for national counter-terrorism
arrangements;[13]
-
a program of eight tranches of national security legislation
reform to ensure Commonwealth agencies have the necessary powers to respond to
the threat of terrorism;[14]
-
commitment to a national strategy for crowded places led by ANZCTC,
involving all jurisdictions, local governments, owners and operators of open
spaces;[15]
-
working on measures to ensure harmonisation across jurisdictions,
including operational doctrine, training courses, and equipment;[16]
and
-
ensuring relevant agencies are appropriately funded for the
challenges they face in responding to and combatting terrorism.[17]
2.13
The Attorney-General noted that:
Australia faces national security challenges that continue to
evolve. Even as ISIL suffers territorial losses in Syria and Iraq, we do not expect
the threat to diminish in the foreseeable future. Our response to this has
included our work to encourage increased cooperation on counter-terrorism
throughout the South-East Asian region, in particular, through fora of the kind
that I described this morning. We continue, of course, to engage closely,
crucially, with our Five Eyes[18]
partners and with other nations as well.[19]
2.14
In closing, Senator Brandis reaffirmed the Commonwealth's commitment to
consider the coroner's report closely, to learn lessons from its findings, and
to act upon those recommendations in collaboration with the states and
territories.[20]
2.15
In response to questions from the committee, the Attorney-General gave
further information on this matter regarding:
-
improvements to how letters are handled by the AGD and other
Commonwealth agencies, in light of Mr Man Haron Monis' letter of
October 2014;[21]
and
-
how the AGD has engaged with other Commonwealth agencies
regarding recommendations made by the committee's report into Mr Monis' letter.[22]
Attorney-General's Department
Corporate matters
2.16
The committee asked questions about a number of corporate and staffing
issues. The secretary of AGD, Mr Chris Moraitis PSM, outlined the recent changes
to the staffing profile of the AGD to the committee:
The department is about 1,050 to 1,100 core staff in the
traditional department of the Attorney-General's. In the last year or so there
has been the addition of the Australian Government Solicitor, which is about
560 to 600 staff, including staff all around the country in Australian
Government Solicitor offices. We also have staff that we technically engage for
the purpose of royal commissions. We have two royal commissions happening at
the moment: the Northern Territory royal commission and the sexual abuse of
children royal commission, which is coming to an end later this year...
It can get up to 2,000 if you add in what I call the
traditional enterprise AGD, the Australian Government Solicitor, added on since
July 2015, and the various staff who are brought on for the purpose of
supporting royal commissions, which have a finite period...[23]
2.17
This level of staffing, Mr Moraitis suggested, indicated a reduction in
staffing levels over the last two years, coming from both
machinery-of-government changes and efficiency dividends:
The answer is that the department has not expanded. It has
actually contracted. Just as I alluded to the fact that there was an arts
ministry, after a MOG in 2015 those numbers declined quite significantly, by a
couple of hundred. There have been ups and downs but, at the moment,
historically over a 10-year period we are at staffing levels that are probably
2007 levels. We have been declining, historically. The numbers go up and down
in small ways. For example, as I said we get staff for these various royal
commissions, but for core staff—for example, we are doing some recruitment in
the cyberspace, following the cybersecurity review. So we are ramping up
numbers—not in significant ways. There is an on and an off ramp, as you can
imagine, but the overall trend has been not to increase. On the contrary it has
actually stabilised and somewhat decreased. That is reflecting efficiency
dividends and other matters that have been part of our budget reality for
several years now.[24]
2.18
The committee also sought information on a range of other corporate
matters, including:
-
the use of labour hire companies by the department for temporary
staffing, including the provision of training and security clearances for these
staff;[25]
-
the rollout of the Australian Government Guidelines on the
Recognition of Sex and Gender regarding Commonwealth departments;[26]
-
the Australian Government Solicitor's merging into the AGD, and
its representation of the Attorney-General and his chief of staff in Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (AAT) and Federal Court proceedings;[27]
-
the costs of the royal commissions into the Northern Territory
and child sexual abuse;[28]
and
-
ongoing Freedom of Information (FOI) matters, including the
Australian Government Solicitor's involvement in Federal Court case concerning
the FOI application for the Attorney-General's diary.[29]
Funding for legal services and the
Family Court in the 2017–18 Budget
2.19
The committee was interested in the additional funding of $55.7 million
for legal services in the 2017–18 Budget. The Attorney-General stated that this
consisted of $39 million additional funding for community legal centres
(CLCs) and a $16.7 million boost for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
legal services.[30]
He commented that:
...in relation to the community legal centres—or CLCs, to use
the acronym that people use—the $39 million was directed explicitly to family
law and family violence services...
[Additionally] the $16.7 million part of the parcel was
additional funding for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander legal services. If
I may say so, this is a small part of the Commonwealth's expenditure, because
the Commonwealth's contribution to community legal services, legal aid
commissions and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander legal services over the
five-year period expiring in the middle of 2020 will be $1.7 billion.[31]
2.20
On the funding model for this increase, the department commented that:
... as a starting point, we allocated to ensure that no state
or territory would have a reduction in their funding, as against this financial
year, and the remainder of the funding was allocated in accordance with the
funding allocation model that is used for allocating funding under the national
partnership agreement generally.[32]
2.21
A number of other issues around legal services were also raised by the
committee:
-
the pilot program of specialist domestic violence units, which
will be evaluated next year to inform the government of future policy options;[33]
-
funding in the 2017–18 Budget for additional family consultants
in the Family Court system;[34]
and
-
the intention of the government to undertake a review of the Family
Law Act 1975 and the family law system more generally, conducted by the Australian
Law Reform Commission.[35]
National security
2.22
The Attorney-General informed the committee of the engagement he had
undertaken with national security officials during his recent visit to the
United States.[36]
Senator Brandis also noted that he would travel to Ottawa in June for the
annual meeting of the Five Eyes community.[37]
2.23
The Attorney-General also outlined a number of other ways he has
actively engaged regional partners on security issues, including achieving an
in-principle agreement with Indonesia to lead a regional multilateral counter-terrorism
framework operating at ministerial level. The first meeting of this forum will
be in August this year, with the focus being on returning foreign fighters.[38]
2.24
The committee were interested in number of other matters relevant to
national security, including:
-
the independent review of the Australian intelligence community
being undertaken by Mr Michael L'Estrange, including the ways in which the
AGD has informed and assisted in the review;[39]
-
information and intelligence-sharing between Australian security
agencies;[40]
and
-
funding for countering violent extremism, including work with
state and territory governments, and international partners.[41]
Other matters
2.25
The committee had questions relating to several other aspects of the AGD,
including:
-
the timeframes for the royal commissions into the Northern
Territory and sexual abuse of children, as well as the ways in which records
would be transferred to the relevant Commonwealth departments and ultimately to
the National Archives;[42]
-
the intervention of the Attorney-General in previous or ongoing native
title cases;[43]
-
aspects of international extradition treaties that Australia is
party to;[44]
-
the department's oversight of policy addressing slavery or
slavery-like conditions in Australia, including human trafficking;[45]
-
the alignment of Australian law with international criminal law;[46]
-
the new national firearms agreement agreed in February 2017 and
the progress of jurisdictions in developing legislation; [47]
and
-
progress of the $40 million Safer Communities Fund program
announced in the 2016-17 Budget.[48]
Australian Federal Police
2.26
The committee sought information from the Australian Federal Police
(AFP) on a number of issues, including:
-
changes to the AFP's funding made in the Budget, including some
reductions for overseas activities in Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands,
and changes to capital works funding;[49]
-
staffing levels, including attrition rates;[50]
-
prosecution of cases of multiple voting in the 2016 Federal
Election;[51]
-
funding for programs that are to be evaluated and then considered
for extension by the government, including the anti-gangs task force, the
keeping illegal guns off our streets program and Registered Organisations
Commission;[52]
-
referrals to and convictions arising from the trade union
corruption taskforce;[53]
-
accessing a journalist's call records by an AFP officer, and
steps taken by the AFP to identify breaches and audit investigations with due
diligence;[54]
-
international travel undertaken by sex offenders to South-East
Asia and cybersex human trafficking;[55]
-
remuneration of AFP staff, including SES officers, and the status
of enterprise agreement bargaining;[56]
-
law enforcement liaison officers in the Minister's office;[57]
-
AFP programs looking at organised crime, and potential
connections between organised crime gangs and terrorist recruitment;[58]
-
mental illness and bullying in the AFP, including what support
services are available for officers;[59]
and
-
AFP investigation of Pauline Hanson's One Nation party.[60]
Australian Human Rights Commission
2.27
The committee asked the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) about
a number of matters, including:
-
the 2017-18
Budget measures regarding the drug testing of Newstart recipients, particularly
whether drug addiction could be regarded as a disability and, if so, whether
there was potential for the new legislation to breach the Disability
Discrimination Act 1992.[61]
- the
Queensland University of Technology case regarding section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975;
- changes to procedure of the
AHRC resulting from legislative amendments;[62]
-
changes to
the AHRC's budget and resourcing;[63]
-
the
disclosure of travel undertaken by AHRC officials, including for particular
events;[64]
and
-
potential candidates
for the replacement of the President upon her retirement.[65]
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
2.28
Ms Sian Leathem, Registrar, AAT, made a statement to the committee about
recent media coverage concerning the AAT:
In an article dated 9 May 2017, the Herald Sun
reported that the tribunal overturned the minister's visa decisions 4,389
times. I wish to make it clear that these matters relate to general migration
visa decisions. They represent approximately 39 per cent of all general
migration applications finalised in the period from 1 July 2016 to 30 April
2017. The partner, student, visitor and work visa categories make up the
highest number of set-aside decisions. Importantly, those figures do not relate
to protection matters.
The subject of recent media interest is two types of
decisions—firstly, those relating to the cancellation of protection visas and,
secondly, those made on character grounds. The cases referred to in the article
in the Herald Sun dated 16 May 2017 appear to relate to decisions made
by a delegate of the minister to cancel protection visas on the basis of
incorrect information said to have been provided to the department. Visas may
be cancelled under section 109 of the Migration Act where incorrect information
is provided at the time of application. Cancellation is not automatic, and the
decision-maker, including the tribunal, must consider whether there was
noncompliance by the visa holder and, if so, whether the visa should be
cancelled, having regard to the factors set out in the migration regulations
and departmental policy.[66]
2.29
Ms Leathem stated that AAT decisions relating to applicants from Iran
have not been published since 2011, following a request made by the Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade, but observed this relates to less than 1 per cent
of AAT decisions.
2.30
She also stated that another article in the Herald Sun of 22 May 2017
concerned character-related decisions, and outlined the nature of these
decisions, as well as the number of such decisions made by the AAT:
Between 1 July 2014 and 30 April 2017, the AAT finalised
156 applications for review of these types of decisions. The tribunal set
aside the decision in 35 of those cases.[67]
2.31
Ms Leathem drew the committee's attention to the availability of
judicial review for AAT findings, both for applicants and decision-makers:
The only part of the statement [provided to the committee but
not read out in full] that I would like to draw the attention of the committee
to is that, of course, an applicant or a decision-maker who believes a decision
made by the tribunal is wrong in law can appeal that decision to either the
Federal Court or the Federal Circuit Court, depending on what type of decision
it is. In addition to the availability of judicial review, for decisions
relating to visas, the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection has the
power to personally substitute a more favourable decision or to set aside
certain decisions of the tribunal.[68]
2.32
On questioning by the committee, the AAT provided information on a
number of issues, including:
-
the procedure for publication of AAT findings, including where
decisions are not published or only published following the de-identification
of information;[69]
-
the amalgamation of several former independent tribunals into the
AAT, including migration and refugee review tribunals, as well as the Social
Security Appeals Tribunal;[70]
-
the AAT's processes and protocols for the publication of findings,
including claims made by media articles about the AAT and comments made by the
Minister for Immigration and Border Protection, the Hon Peter Dutton MP;[71]
-
the structure of the AAT, including how caseloads are administered,
new appointments are managed, and the competency framework for members making
decisions;[72]
and
-
updated statistics on findings relating to appeals of Disability
Support Pension decisions.[73]
Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation
2.33
The Director-General of ASIO, Mr Duncan Lewis AO DCS CSC, gave an
opening statement, advising the committee on:
-
assistance offered to the UK intelligence community following the
terrorist bombing in Manchester;
-
the national terrorism threat advisory level in Australia, which
has remained at 'probable' since September 2014 and would not change in
response to the events in the UK;
-
the role of ASIO in the NSW coronial inquest into the Lindt café
siege and organisational improvements in counter-terrorism following the siege;
and
-
ASIO's core focus areas: countering terrorism and the promotion
of communal violence; countering espionage, foreign interference and malicious
insiders; countering serious threats to Australia's border integrity; providing
protective security advice; and collecting foreign intelligence in Australia on
the request of the Ministers for Defence and for Foreign Affairs.[74]
2.34
Mr Lewis also provided a specific update on the counter-terrorism
activities of ASIO, giving information on:
-
four terror attacks and 12 disrupted terror operations since
2014, including one disruption related to a right-wing extremist;
-
Australians fighting in, or seeking to fight in, Syria and Iraq;
-
the threat of Islamist extremist ideology; and
-
the ongoing task for the Australian intelligence community in
countering violent extremism and terrorism.[75]
2.35
The committee asked ASIO about a number of topics, including:
-
the role of ASIO in security assessments in immigration matters;[76]
-
the legal consequences for Australian citizen foreign fighters,
and their families, who wish to return to Australia;[77]
-
journalist information warrants and the obligations of ASIO under
the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979;[78]
-
connections between Islamist extremist ideology and refugees, for
which Mr Lewis suggested there was no evidence;[79]
and
-
the relationship between US and Australian intelligence services
following the election of President Trump.[80]
Questions on Notice
2.36
During the week of budget estimates 2017–18, a number of responses to
questions on notice were received from the Attorney-General's portfolio,
including:
-
85 responses for additional estimates 2016–17;
-
eight responses for supplementary budget estimates 2016–17; and
-
nine responses for additional estimates 2015–16.
2.37
During the hearing of 24 May 2017, committee members voiced concern that
late receipt of responses meant senators did not have sufficient time to
scrutinise answers before the portfolio appeared for questioning and that
matters may be concluded before senators had time to read related responses.[81]
The Chair clarified that he would 'allow some leniency in going back where
those answers do relate to matters that we have already passed on from this
committee' and would not prevent a senator from asking such a question.[82]
2.38
It is the view of the committee that, where possible, answers to
questions on notice should be tabled in advance of estimates hearings to
provide sufficient time for scrutiny.
2.39
A full index of questions taken on notice during the hearings will be
made available on the committee's website and responses will be published as
they are received.
Senator the Hon Ian
Macdonald
Chair
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