Chapter 1 Introduction
Background to this report
1.1
On 14 May 2008 the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Senator the
Hon Chris Evans, requested the Joint Standing Committee on Migration to
inquire into and report on immigration detention in Australia.
1.2
The Committee undertook to examine:
n the criteria that
should be applied in determining how long a person should be held in
immigration detention
n the criteria that
should be applied in determining when a person should be released from
immigration detention following health and security checks
n options to expand the
transparency and visibility of immigration detention centres (IDCs)
n the preferred
infrastructure options for contemporary immigration detention
n options for the
provision of detention services and detention health services across the range
of current detention facilities, including immigration detention centres,
Immigration Residential Housing (IRH), Immigration Transit Accommodation (ITA) and
community detention, and
n options for
additional community-based alternatives to immigration detention by
§
inquiring into international experience
§
considering the manner in which such alternatives may be utilised
in Australia to broaden the options available within the current immigration
detention framework, and
§
comparing the cost effectiveness of these alternatives with
current options.
1.3
These wide ranging and challenging terms of reference require the
Committee to examine current detention policy and values and how they are
articulated in administrative practice, infrastructure, facilities and service
delivery.
1.4
More broadly, they set the task of developing a blueprint for Australia’s future immigration detention policy. They require the Committee to critically
assess the role that detention plays in maintaining the integrity of
Australia’s immigration system, and the shape of a future immigration detention
system that meets the needs of people with an unresolved immigration status and
the Australian community. The terms of reference require an assessment of how
to most appropriately weigh the balance between a person’s right to liberty and
dignity, risk concerns and cost effectiveness for the Australian taxpayer.
1.5
With the launch of the inquiry in May 2008, the Committee sought
submissions from government agencies and advisory groups, non‑government
organisations, such as refugee and migrant support and advocacy groups and
charitable organisations. A total of 143 submissions have been received. The
list of submissions is at Appendix A.
1.6
The Committee has conducted public hearings and roundtables in Canberra,
Sydney, Perth, Melbourne and Brisbane, and inspected all detention centres,
residential housing facilities and immigration transit facilities in Australia.[1]
A list of public hearings and visits is at Appendix B.
1.7
During the course of the inquiry the Committee has spoken to a number of
former detainees and individuals currently in detention centres, as well as
individuals and families in immigration residential housing, in community
detention and living in the community on bridging visas. Invitations to the
community detention client roundtable in Sydney were facilitated by the Department
of Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC), and the bridging visa client roundtable
in Melbourne was facilitated by the Australian Red Cross, Hotham Mission and
the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, for which the Committee is appreciative.
1.8
The Committee would also like to acknowledge the assistance of DIAC in
providing information on immigration detention facilities and the detainee population,
a substantial amount of which has been used in Chapter 2.
The development of Australia’s system of mandatory detention
1.9
Introduced in 1992, the policy of mandatory detention was envisaged as a
temporary and exceptional measure for a particular group of unauthorised
arrivals or ‘designated’ persons who arrived by boat between 19 November 1989
and 1 September 1994. The period of detention was limited to 273 days. In 1994
this time limit was removed and mandatory detention was extended to all
unlawful non-citizens.
1.10
Since that time, the Australian Government has invested in the
construction and expansion of a network of secure detention facilities. This
has included the now defunct facilities at Port Hedland in Western Australia, Baxter and Woomera in South Australia, Cocos Island, Nauru and Manus Island in Papua New Guinea. Currently in use are facilities on Christmas Island, in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane and Darwin.[2]
1.11
The number of people held in immigration detention was at its highest
between 2000 and 2002. Between 1999 and 2001 Australia was faced with an
unprecedented number of asylum seekers; around 9500 arrived unlawfully by boat
from the Middle East via Indonesia.[3] There has been a steady
reduction in the detention population since then, although the numbers continue
to fluctuate in response to external factors such as natural disaster and
conflict, the activities of people smugglers, trends in non-compliance and
administrative compliance action.[4]
1.12
Australia’s secure detention facilities, both onshore and offshore,
currently have an operational capacity of over 1800 and can accommodate an
additional 1600 detainees if required. At 29 May 2009 the detainee population
was 798, including 62 in community detention and 127 in alternative temporary
detention in the community.[5]
1.13
Australia’s experience with mandatory immigration detention has been
controversial. In this decade, government policy has progressively recognised
the need to develop a range of alternatives to secure and institutional
detention. In part, this has been a way of reconciling a limited and
geographically dispersed detention infrastructure with the necessity of
detaining people elsewhere, in transit, for medical attention, or for other
reasons.
1.14
Pressure for development of alternatives also came from public concern
about families and children in detention, in some cases for multiple years, and
more diffusely from reports of the prevalence of depression, anxiety,
self-harm, suicidal ideation and psychiatric disorders amongst immigration
detainees.[6]
1.15
In some instances Australia may have been in breach of international
human rights and the United Nations Human Rights Committee has found Australia’s immigration detention regime to be in violation of its obligations under
international law on seven separate occasions.[7] Under United Nations
guidelines, the detention of asylum seekers or other immigration clients should
be a measure of last resort where no other alternatives are available.[8]
In the context of a mandatory detention system it has been difficult, until
recently, to demonstrate that alternatives to secure immigration detention had
been considered and found inappropriate.
1.16
Over recent years, the range of types of detention accommodation in Australia has expanded substantially. Currently the following types of immigration
detention are available for DIAC to place unlawful non‑citizens:
n immigration detention
centres (secure, institutional detention)
n alternative temporary
detention in the community, which may include foster care for minors or stays
in hotels, hospitals, other medical facilities or state correctional facilities
(introduced in 2002)[9]
n community detention,
which is supported community living arrangements for those assessed as a low
flight risk and for families with children (introduced in 2005)[10]
n immigration
residential housing, a detention facility[11], that provides family-style detention accommodation for lower risk
detainees (introduced in 2006), [12] or
n immigration transit accommodation,
which is hostel-type accommodation for people anticipated to be removed or
processed quickly (introduced in 2007).[13]
1.17
In addition, bridging visas can also be used as an alternative to
immigration detention. A bridging visa makes a non-citizen temporarily lawful
until a specified event occurs or until their immigration status is resolved. While
the Migration Act 1958 requires the detainment of an unlawful
non-citizen, the current immigration policy is that, where it is appropriate
and safe to do so, the granting of a bridging visa should be considered prior
to detaining a person.[14]
1.18
Inquiry participants acknowledged that
the introduction of case management and more expedient processing of cases as
being positive and significant.
Ministerial announcements
1.19
The Committee’s inquiry has taken place during a time of significant
immigration policy shifts in Australia.
1.20
On 29 July 2008, the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Senator
the Hon Chris Evans, announced a series of values that would underpin
Australia’s immigration detention policy.[15] Those seven values are:
1. Mandatory
detention is an essential component of strong border control.
2. To
support the integrity of Australia’s immigration program three groups will be
subject to mandatory detention:
n all
unauthorised arrivals, for management of health, identity and security risks to
the community
n unlawful
non-citizens who present unacceptable risks to the community, and
n unlawful
non-citizens who have repeatedly refused to comply with their visa conditions.
3. Children,
including juvenile foreign fishers and, where possible, their families, will
not be detained in an immigration detention centre.
4. Detention
that is indefinite or otherwise arbitrary is not acceptable and the length and
conditions of detention, including the appropriateness of both the
accommodation and the services provided, would be subject to regular review.
5. Detention
in immigration detention centres is only to be used as a last resort and for
the shortest practicable time.
6. People
in detention will be treated fairly and reasonably within the law.
7. Conditions
of detention will ensure the inherent dignity of the human person.
1.21
The values build on reforms implemented by the previous Government.
These include the commitment not to place children in immigration detention
centres, the introduction of community detention for families and other
vulnerable detainees, and the increasing use of bridging visas in preference to
detention.
1.22
In August 2008, the Government abolished temporary protection visas (TPVs).
TPVs were introduced by the previous government to discourage people smuggling
activities resulting in unauthorised boat arrivals and to discourage refugees
leaving their country of first asylum. Now, all applicants for a protection
visa who are found to engage Australia’s protection obligations receive a
permanent protection visa.[16] While the TPV regime is
not considered as part of this inquiry, the experience of TPV holders living in
the community whilst awaiting resolution of immigration status has informed the
Committee’s reflections, in the second report, on how community-based
arrangements might best function in the interests of the person, the community
and the Australian migration system.
1.23
In February 2009 the Government announced that the ‘Refugee Review
Tribunal (RRT) will publish its country of origin research to provide greater
transparency in its decision making’.[17] The Government also
announced that in responding to community requests the ‘Migration Review
Tribunal (MRT) will also double the number of decisions published online so
that 40 per cent of all decisions made by the tribunals will be publicly
available.’[18]
1.24
On 18 March 2009 the Migration Amendment (Abolishing Detention Debt)
Bill 2009 was introduced into the Senate. The Bill seeks to amend the Migration
Act to remove the liability for detention and related costs for certain persons
and liable third parties and extinguishes all outstanding immigration detention
debt. As the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship noted, the bill is in
line with the recommendation of this Committee from its first report that the
practice of charging a person for their immigration detention be abolished.
People convicted of people smuggling or illegal foreign fishing will still be
liable for their costs of detention and removal.[19]
1.25
As part of the 2009–10 Budget the Government announced that it ‘will
provide $186.7 million over five years (including $175.0 million in capital
funding) to redevelop the Villawood Immigration Detention Centre.’[20]
1.26
In May 2009 the Government announced that it has ‘committed $ 77.4
million over four years to implement key immigration compliance and detention
policy improvements in community care, status resolution and assisted voluntary
returns.’ The new funding is focussed on addressing prompt resolution of an individual’s
immigration status.[21]
1.27
On 25 June 2009 the Migration Amendment (Immigration Detention Reform)
Bill 2009 was introduced into the Senate.[22] The Bill seeks to amend
the Migration Act to support the implementation of the Government’s ‘New
Directions in Detention policy’, announced by the Government on 29 July 2008.[23]
First report: Criteria for release from detention
1.28
To facilitate the contribution of this inquiry to the implementation of
the reforms announced by the Minister, the Committee decided to report in three
parts.
1.29
The first report, Immigration detention in Australia: A new beginning
– Criteria for release from detention, was tabled on 1 December 2008.[24]
This report focussed on the first two of the six terms of reference, that is:
n the criteria that
should be applied in determining how long a person should be held in
immigration detention, and
n the criteria that
should be applied in determining when a person should be released from immigration
detention following health, identity and security checks.[25]
1.30
The report addressed these terms of reference in the context of the
Minister’s announcements and endorsed the application of a risk-based model to
assess whether immigration detention was a proportionate and necessary response
in each individual case.
1.31
The Committee’s objective was to set transparent and open guidelines
that would enable the implementation of the seven principles outlined by the
Australian Government. The first report outlined guidelines for the assessment
of public health, compliance, criminal and national security risks. It also
considered the future shape of our immigration detention system in terms of
fairness, accountability, and review mechanisms for ongoing detention. Finally,
it considered removal practices and the policy of charging people for the time
they spend in detention.
1.32
A recurring concern about the current immigration detention system has
been the indefinite nature of detention, with little scope or information about
the reasons or rationale for detention. The report tackled those uncertainties
through the following recommendations:
n five day time frames
for health checks
n up to 90 days for the
completion of security and identity checks, after which consideration must be
given to release onto a bridging visa
n a maximum time limit
of 12 months’ detention for all except those who are demonstrated to be a
significant and ongoing risk to the community, and
n the publication of
clear guidelines regarding how the criteria of unacceptable risk and visa
non-compliance are to be applied.
1.33
The report also recommended additional measures to increase oversight
and transparency, such as:
n greater detail and
scope for the three month review conducted by DIAC[26]
n ensuring detainees
and their legal representatives receive a copy of the review[27]
n ensuring the six
month Ombudsman’s review is tabled in parliament and that the ministerial
response to recommendations is comprehensive[28]
n providing increased
oversight of national security assessments that may affect individuals[29]
n enshrining the new
values in legislation,[30] and
n providing for merits
and judicial review of the grounds for detention after that person has been
detained for more than 12 months. This would apply to those who remain in
detention after 12 months on the basis of a ‘significant and ongoing
unacceptable risk’ assessment.[31]
1.34
Additionally, the Committee considered that the practice of charging a
person for their own detention was considered harsh and contrary to the stated
value that immigration detention was not punitive. The Committee recommended
that this practice should cease and that all such debts should be waived
immediately.
1.35
A full list of the Committee’s recommendations from this report is
provided at Appendix C.
Second report: Community-based alternatives to detention
1.36
Given that the Committee’s first report focussed on the criteria for release
from detention, the Committee chose to next report on the conditions and
material support for that release, including appropriate options for
community-based alternatives to secure detention.
1.37
The second report, Immigration detention in Australia: A new
beginning – Community-based alternatives to detention was tabled on 25 May
2009.[32] This report considered
Australia’s current use of alternatives to detention centres, and assessed
options in international use which may have application in the Australian
context.
1.38
Under the inquiry’s terms of reference the Committee canvassed options
for additional community-based alternatives to immigration detention by:
n inquiring into
international experience
n considering the
manner in which such alternatives may be utilised in Australia to broaden the
options available within the current immigration detention framework, and
n comparing the cost
effectiveness of these alternatives with current options.
1.39
In considering community-based alternatives to detention, the Committee
also commented on the infrastructure required to meet the needs of those not in
detention centres and awaiting the resolution of their immigration status. This
provided a partial response to a further term of reference, namely:
n the preferred
infrastructure options for contemporary immigration detention.
1.40
The second report of the Committee examined the practicality of
releasing people from immigration detention and recommended that the Australian
Government reform the bridging visa framework to comprehensively support those
released into the community, with appropriate reporting or surety requirements.[33]
1.41
In addition, the Committee recommended that the Government utilise the
reformed bridging visa framework in lieu of community detention until a
person’s immigration status is resolved, and review the cases of those
currently on residence determinations.[34]
1.42
The Committee also recommended that there should be improved
transparency in immigration decision-making, improved access to legal advice,
and improved access to voluntary return counselling in order to support the
provision of information to the client and to help them decide what is going to
be the best and most realistic outcome for themselves and their families.[35]
1.43
A full list of the Committee’s recommendations from this report is
provided at Appendix D.
Structure of this report
1.44
This last report addresses the remaining terms of reference, namely:
n options to expand the
transparency and visibility of immigration detention centres
n the preferred
infrastructure options for contemporary immigration detention, and
n options for the
provision of detention services and detention health services across the range
of current detention facilities, including immigration detention centres,
immigration residential housing, immigration transit accommodation and
community detention.
1.45
Chapter 2 of this report provides a factual description of the current immigration
detention facilities including information on the location, size and capacity
of immigration detention centres, immigration residential housing, immigration transit
accommodation and community detention. This chapter also encapsulates how the
community perceives immigration detention facilities and the Committee’s
observations of each facility.
1.46
Chapter 3 examines the provision of services in detention facilities
historically, the current arrangements, and the status of the current tender
process. Also examined is the training of personnel at immigration detention facilities.
1.47
The final chapter outlines the many varied national and international oversight
mechanisms to ensure that people in immigration detention are treated humanely.
Also discussed is the community concern about the transparency of immigration
detention facilities.