Dissenting Report by Mr Petro Georgiou MP
1.1
The Joint Standing Committee on Migration’s third report of the inquiry
into immigration detention, Immigration Detention in Australia: Facilities,
Services and Transparency, reports on the following terms of reference:
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.
1.2
This dissent records a number of concerns regarding this report. The
first is in relation to the detention of children at immigration detention
facilities both on and offshore, and the Committee’s repeated failure to
adequately address this issue in its reports. The second is the third report’s
lack of recommendation regarding the establishment of an Immigration Detention
Health Review Commission. The third is that the Committee’s recommendations on
improving transparency in this and its other reports are inadequate in that the
only reliable mechanism for ensuring independent oversight of detention
decisions is through independent, judicial review.
Children in Detention
1.3
The issue of children being detained in immigration detention facilities
has not been effectively addressed in any of the Committee’s reports despite
its being of direct relevance to the inquiry.
1.4
In my dissenting comments on the Committee’s second report, Immigration
Detention in Australia: Community-Based Alternatives to Detention, I said
that the report had paid insufficient regard to evidence relating to the detention
of children in immigration residential housing and immigration transit
accommodation.
1.5
The issue of children in detention is also inadequately addressed in the
Committee’s third report.
1.6
According to the latest publicly available DIAC figures, as at 3 July
2009, there were 101 children in immigration detention, only 25 of whom were in
community detention. Seven were in immigration residential housing and 69 were
held in what is described as “Alternative Temporary Detention in the Community
(Christmas Island)” (this term in not defined).[1]
1.7
In discussing the infrastructure at the various detention facilities,
the report makes note of a number of concerns about immigration residential
housing raised by the Australian Human Rights Commission, namely the lack of
interpreters and the lack of onsite access to health or mental health services.[2]
1.8
However, in raising these concerns, the report fails to mention the
Commission’s “significant concern” about the detention of children in these
facilities.[3] In its submission to the
inquiry the Australian Human Rights Commission stated that:
It is important to recognise that IRH [immigration
residential housing] facilities are still closed facilities, and a mix of
detainees with different needs, and detention experiences, may all be contained
in the same facility. HREOC has been aware of several cases where children and
families have been detained in IRH facilities for a significant period of time.
While the IRH facilities are significantly better than IDCs [Immigration Detention
Centres], they are still a closed detention facility and, for children and
their families, are inappropriate for anything but the briefest of periods.
1.9
In its submission, as well as in its 2008 Immigration Detention
Report, the Australian Human Rights Commission cited examples of families
with children being detained in these facilities for two and three month
periods. Its submission records that:
During 2007 inspections of immigration detention facilities,
HREOC spoke to a family with a small child who was detained in IRH for two
months before they were given a Residence Determination. The father told us
that he had been concerned about the effect of the detention on his daughter,
who was distressed at being surrounded by strangers. His wife was also pregnant.[4]
The 2008 Immigration Detention Report
cites further incidence of this:
During the Commission’s 2008 visits to the immigration
residential housing facilities, there was a family of five at the Sydney IRH
with a baby and a five-year-old child. The family had been detained for three
months. The parents spoke of the five-year-old child’s confusion and distress
about being detained.[5]
1.10
The Australian Human Rights Commission has also expressed its
“significant concerns” about the accommodation of several children in immigration
transit accommodation.[6]
1.11
While the Committee’s third report mentions some of the Australian Human
Rights Commission’s concerns regarding these facilities (for example, lack of
access to cooking facilities and lack of written induction materials and
complaint forms for detainees at Brisbane ITA)[7] it does not mention the
Commission’s concern regarding the detention of children in immigration transit
accommodation.[8]
1.12
In 2005, the Howard government implemented significant reforms to immigration
detention which allowed the release, in July 2005, of all children and their
families from immigration detention and their placement in “residence
determinations”.
1.13
A principle was introduced into the Migration Act 1958 that, in
accordance with international law, “a minor shall only be detained as a measure
of last resort” (s. 4AA). Instead of being detained in immigration detention,
children and their families were to be released to live freely in the community
under a mechanism known as a “residence determination”.
1.14
In my last dissent, I expressed my concern about a new tolerance of the
detention of children in facilities euphemistically described as “alternative”
and “family-style” facilities. A tolerance apparent in the government, the
Department of Immigration, and reflected in this Committee’s reports is
blurring the distinction that had formerly divided incarceration from being
able to live freely in the community for children in immigration detention.
1.15
It must be made very clear that both immigration residential housing and
transit accommodation are closed, secure environments where detainees are
closely monitored by guards and are not allowed to freely come and go.
1.16
There are no detailed descriptions of the security arrangements in
operation at immigration residential housing and immigration transit
accommodation in this report. Indeed, a fundamental flaw of the report is its
failure to provide detailed, factual descriptions of the security
infrastructure in operation at any immigration detention facility,
despite the dedication of Chapter Two to the provision of lengthy descriptions
of the infrastructure of the immigration detention facilities currently
operating in Australia.
1.17
When additional information from DIAC regarding security infrastructure
was requested by the Committee, insufficient time was allowed for its
provision. In the end, the Committee sacrificed the inclusion of substantive
and highly relevant material in order to meet the requirements of arbitrarily
imposed reporting timeframes.
1.18
The evidence received by the Committee that children are being detained
in residential housing and transit accommodation for extended periods is
disturbing.
1.19
The third report also makes mention of the detention of children on
Christmas Island. The report records that, as at 29 May 2009, what the
Committee designates as the “Construction Camp Immigration Detention Centre”,
held 18 female children and 43 male children.[9]
1.20
While the Committee Observations state that “The Committee understands
that this immigration detention centre is primarily used to house family or
socially connected groups of arrivals”,[10] there is no comment
about the detention of children at the centre.
1.21
It is unclear from the report what security is used at the Construction
Camp or whether detainees are able to come and go freely unescorted.
1.22
Regarding what the Committee designates as the “Phosphate Hill
Immigration Detention Centre”, the report describes it as being set up for the
purpose of detaining children and families (see paragraphs 2.112 and 2.116),
albeit as at 29 May 2009 there were no children being held there.
1.23
The Committee Observations regarding the Phosphate Hill Immigration
Detention Centre describe the facilities as run down, cramped, lacking privacy,
hot and noisy. The kitchen and food preparation areas are characterised as
“derelict and substandard”. The facilities, they conclude, “do not comply with
DIAC’s own Standards for Design and Fitout of Immigration Detention Facilities
are in no way commensurate with Australian community standards or
expectations.”[11]
1.24
Regarding Phosphate Hill, the Committee does make an observation
regarding its lack of suitability for children. In the Committee Observations
at paragraph 2.118 the report says that:
A children’s playground is located on the grounds of
Phosphate Hill however no other part of the immigration detention centre would
be considered suitable for children.
This observation is welcome, but
it would have been far stronger had it been a recommendation.
1.25
With regard to both the Construction Camp and Phosphate Hill, the report
is, once again, inadequate regarding the citation of the concerns of the
Australian Human Rights Commission. Regarding the Construction Camp, the
following concerns of the Australian Human Rights Commission are cited: the
area has no grass and very few trees, the bedrooms are very small and
claustrophobic and there is no access to public phones or the internet.[12]
With regard to Phosphate Hill, the concerns cited are: that it provides a low
standard of accommodation, no access to the internet and has very few
recreational facilities.[13]
1.26
Not included in the report is the Australian Human Rights Commission’s
opinion in its 2008 Immigration Detention Report that:
DIAC classifies the Construction Camp as ‘alternative
temporary detention in the community’. The Commission is of the view that this
is not accurate. The Construction Camp is not community based accommodation;
it is a facility being specifically used as a place of immigration detention
(my emphasis).[14]
Also not cited is the Commission’s
recommendation that:
Children should not be held in immigration detention on
Christmas Island. However, if DIAC intends to continue this practice, children
should be accommodated with their family members in DIAC’s community based
accommodation. They should not be detained at the construction camp
facility, the Phosphate Hill IDC or the new Christmas Island IDC (my
emphasis).[15]
1.27
On 29 July 2008, the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Senator
the Honourable Chris Evans announced the endorsement by Cabinet of a set of new
immigration detention values that would “guide and drive new detention policy
and practice into the future”. These included that “children … will not be detained
in an immigration detention centre.”[16]
1.28
It is deeply troubling that so many children are being held at the
Construction Camp Immigration Detention Centre on Christmas Island.
1.29
I recommend the following:
Recommendation 1
Children and their families should not be held in any
immigration detention facility either onshore or offshore.
Recommendation 2
The Australian Government upgrade the facilities at
Phosphate Hill Immigration Detention Centre as a matter of priority to ensure
that they are commensurate with Australian community standards. Until the
facilities are upgraded, people should no longer be detained there. Children
and families are not to be detained at the Phosphate Hill Immigration Detention
Centre.
Immigration Detention Health Review Commission
1.30
The third term of reference for this report instructs the Committee to
consider options for the provision of detention services and detention health
services across the range of current detention facilities.
1.31
At paragraphs 3.112-123, the report cites a large volume of evidence
presented to the Committee expressing concern about the adequacy of both
physical and mental health services being provided to detainees. This evidence
was provided to the Committee by the Commonwealth Ombudsman, the Refugee Council
of Australia, the NSW Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture
and Trauma Survivors and the Australian Psychological Society.
1.32
The Palmer Inquiry, commissioned in the wake of public outcry over the
unlawful detention of Cornelia Rau and tendered to the former Government in
2005 by Mr Mick Palmer, identified serious deficiencies in a range of areas
including the provision of appropriate health services. The Inquiry found that:
Given the importance and prominence of health care services,
the Inquiry considers that the lack of any focussed mechanism for external
accountability and professional review of service delivery standards and
arrangements in a major omission. It acknowledges the efforts made in this
regard by the Immigration Detention Advisory Group and the Commonwealth
Ombudsman, both of which have a much wider scope of responsibility. An expert
body specifically dealing with health matters is required to complement and
strengthen these efforts …. The Inquiry concluded that the delivery of adequate
and appropriate health care for immigration detainees, and their welfare in
general, need to be safeguarded by continuous oversight by an independent,
external review body.[17]
1.33
To effect this, the Palmer Inquiry recommended that:
The Minister for Immigration establish an Immigration
Detention Health Review Commission as an independent body under the
Commonwealth Ombudsman’s legislation to carry out external reviews of health
and medical services provided to immigration detainees and of their welfare.[18]
The Immigration Detention Health
Review Commission would be empowered to “initiate reviews and audits of health
care standards and the welfare of detainees”.[19] It needed to be
“appropriately staffed and resourced, with a core of experienced people with
relevant skills”.[20]
1.34
The health, in particular the mental health, of immigration detainees
has been identified, and is now widely recognised, as a critical area of
concern. The provision of health services is an area in which the Department of
Immigration has repeatedly been shown to have failed in its duty of care.
1.35
Yet this hugely significant recommendation providing a mechanism of
focussed external accountability and professional review of health services was
never implemented.
1.36
It was revealed to the Inquiry that the Commonwealth Ombudsman had, at
the time, expressed concerns about the capacity of his office to undertake this
role.[21] However, Professor
McMillan told the Committee that:
if this Committee or the government proposes that a function
of that kind should be located in the Ombudsman’s office then I will take a
very open minded view of the need for the function and how it can be sensibly
located within the office.[22]
1.37
DIAC has confirmed that the Palmer recommendation was not implemented
and that a decision had instead been made to establish the Detention Health
Advisory Group (DeHAG).[23]
1.38
However, when asked at the inquiry hearings whether DeHAG was capable of
discharging the responsibilities of an Immigration Detention Health Review
Commission as envisaged by Mr Palmer, Professor Harry Minas, DeHAG Chair, told
the Committee that DeHAG “is not set up in a way to discharge those
responsibilities”.[24]
1.39
Professor Minas stressed to the Committee that DeHAG is only an advisory
body. It has no role in monitoring the welfare of detainees, and no statutory
right of entry to detention facilities.[25] Professor Minas said
that the Palmer recommendation “has not been implemented and it is our view
that such a body remains essential.”[26]
1.40
It is unfortunate that despite having considered this evidence, the
Committee chose to make no recommendation on this matter.
Recommendation 3
I recommend as a matter of urgency that the Australian
Government implement the Palmer Report’s recommendation 6.11 and establishes an
Immigration Detention Health Review Commission.
Transparency – Independent, Judicial Review
1.41
Finally, regarding transparency, I reiterate the view articulated in the
dissenting report to the Committee’s first report by myself and Senators Dr
Alan Eggleston and Sarah Hanson-Young that judicial review of detention
decisions is the only reliable mechanism for ensuring independent oversight of
detention decisions.
1.42
I reiterate my recommendations from that dissent, namely that:
Recommendation 4
A person who is detained should be entitled to appeal
immediately to a court for an order that he or she be released because there
are no reasonable grounds to consider that their detention is justified on the
criteria specified for detention;
Recommendation 5
A person may not be detained for a period exceeding 30 days
unless on an application by the Department of Immigration and Citizenship a
court makes an order that it is necessary to detain the person on a specified
ground and there are no effective alternatives to detention. This is consistent
with the Minister’s commitment that under the new system “the department will
have to justify a decision to detain – not presume detention.”[27]
Mr Petro
Georgiou MP