Introductory Info
Date introduced: 4 July 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Home Affairs
Commencement: Royal Assent.
The Bills Digest at a glance
The Counter-Terrorism (Temporary
Exclusion Orders) Bill 2019 (the TEO Bill) will introduce two new orders, each
of which could be made by the Minister for Home Affairs:
- a temporary exclusion order (TEO), which may prevent an
Australian citizen aged 14 years or older who is overseas from returning
to Australia for up to two years at a time and
- a return permit, under which the Minister may impose conditions
on the person’s entry into Australia, including conditions with which the
person must comply for up to 12 months after re-entering the country.
The orders are intended to enable authorities to plan for
and manage the return of Australians of counter-terrorism interest (such as
individuals who have fought with or otherwise supported a terrorist
organisation overseas) and mitigate risks to the community posed by such
individuals. Similar orders exist under United Kingdom law and have been made
at least nine times since they were introduced in 2015.
An earlier version of the TEO Bill (the
February Bill) was introduced into the 45th Parliament on
21 February 2019, but lapsed on prorogation of Parliament before
being debated. The TEO Bill has been revised to implement most of the
recommendations made by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and
Security (PJCIS) in its report on the February Bill either in full or in
part. The most significant change is that the Minister will be required to
refer TEOs immediately to a reviewing authority, who must review the decision
to issue a TEO as soon as reasonably practicable and determine if its issue
involved one or more specified errors of law. If the reviewing authority
determines that the issue of the TEO involved such an error, the TEO is taken
never to have been made. Other changes include requiring the Minister to take certain
matters into account before imposing conditions under a return permit, requiring
the Minister to issue a return permit within a reasonable period, annual
reporting, and enabling review of the new legislation by the Independent
National Security Legislation Monitor (INSLM) and the PJCIS.
Stakeholders have objected to the Bill on the grounds that
the Government has not demonstrated the need for the new powers, that the Bill
may not be constitutionally sound, and that it may be inconsistent with
international human rights law and international obligations to exercise
criminal jurisdiction over people suspected of engaging in terrorism.
Some stakeholders also outlined changes that they
recommended to the February Bill if it was to proceed. Key changes proposed that
have not been addressed in the TEO Bill include:
- an additional threshold that must be met before a TEO may be
issued, namely that the person has engaged in certain conduct while overseas
(this was also recommended by the PJCIS)
- a requirement to afford a person full procedural fairness in
relation to decisions made under the proposed law
- providing for merits review of decisions made under the proposed
law
- only allowing TEOs to be made in relation to persons aged
18 years or older and
-
if TEOs are permitted in relation to persons aged 14–17 years,
requiring the best interests of the child to be given as much weight as
protecting the community.
Other changes recommended by the PJCIS but not implemented
include removing the ability to issue a TEO on the basis of an assessment from
the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and including in a TEO
a summary of the grounds on which it was made.
History of
the Bills
An earlier version of the TEO Bill (the February Bill)
was introduced into the 45th Parliament on 21 February 2019. The February
Bill lapsed on prorogation of Parliament before being debated in either House
of Parliament.
The TEO Bill has been revised to implement most of the
recommendations made by the PJCIS in its report on the February Bill
either in full or in part. The most significant change is that the Minister
will be required to refer TEOs immediately to a reviewing authority, who must
review the decision to issue a TEO as soon as reasonably practicable and
determine if its issue involved one or more specified errors of law. If the
reviewing authority determines that the issue of the TEO involved such an error,
the TEO is taken never to have been made.
The Consequential Amendments Bill has not been introduced
previously, and would implement recommendations made by the PJCIS in its report
on the February Bill.
Purpose of
the Bills
The purpose of the TEO Bill is to introduce two new
orders, each of which could be made by the Minister for Home Affairs:
- a temporary exclusion order, which may prevent an Australian
citizen aged 14 years or older who is overseas from returning to Australia
for up to two years at a time and
- a return permit, under which the Minister may impose conditions
on the person’s entry into Australia, including conditions with which the
person must comply for up to 12 months after re-entering the country.
The orders are intended to enable authorities to plan for
and manage the return of ‘Australians of counterterrorism interest’ and mitigate
risks to the community posed by such individuals.[1]
The purpose of the Consequential Amendments Bill is to:
- enable
the INSLM to review and report on the operation, effectiveness and implications
of the Counter-Terrorism (Temporary Exclusion Orders) Act 2019 (the Act)
and
- amend
the functions of the PJCIS to include monitoring and reviewing the exercise of
powers under the Act, and conducting a review of the operation, effectiveness
and implications of the Act within three years of its commencement.
Background
In November 2018, the Prime Minister announced that the
Government would introduce a scheme for TEOs based on that which exists in the
United Kingdom (UK):[2]
... Exclusion Orders would enable the Minister to impose a
condition on the control, return and re-entry into our community of Australians
who have been in conflict zones like Syria. It will enable the Minister for
Home Affairs to impose an Order for up to two years on Australian citizens of
counterterrorism interests who are located offshore. It would be a criminal
offence for them to return to Australia, unless a permit of this nature is
provided - that is the Temporary Exclusion Order. Once the person is back in
Australia it would impose controls on them to mitigate the risk to the
community, such as reporting to police, curfews, restrictions on technology
used and the like. Failure to comply with the terms of that Temporary Exclusion
Order, would be also an offence and subject to penalties for that citizens.[3]
The Minister for Home Affairs provided the latest figures
on Australians involved in overseas conflicts in his second reading speech for
the TEO Bill:
Since 2012, around 230 Australians have travelled to Syria or
Iraq to fight with or support extremist groups involved in conflict. Around 80
are still active in conflict zones.[4]
The number of Australians estimated to still be active in
conflict zones is down from an estimated 100 in February 2019.[5]
He went on to outline the Government’s rationale for
introducing TEOs and related return permits:
The advice of Australia's national security agencies is that
many Australians of counterterrorism concern, who have travelled to Iraq and
Syria to engage in that conflict, are likely to seek to return to Australia in
the very near future. This bill will ensure that law enforcement agencies can
effectively manage these returns in a way which will reduce the threat to the
Australian community.
...
It is essential that Australian authorities have the capacity
to manage the risk of persons returning to Australia from foreign conflict
zones.
...
The government has been clear that our policy is to deal with
foreign terrorist fighters as far from our shores as possible.
The bill will ensure that if an Australian of
counterterrorism concern does return to Australia, it is with adequate
forewarning and into the waiting hands of authorities.[6]
The foreign fighter phenomenon is not a new issue.[7]
However, a range of factors, including the large number of foreign fighters who
joined the conflicts in Iraq and Syria (many of them with the Islamic State
group), and the relatively high proportion from Western nations, has concerned
authorities.[8]
A key concern is the potential threat these individuals may pose to domestic
security upon return.[9]
Since 2014, the Australian Parliament has passed several pieces of legislation
aimed at preventing Australians from joining overseas conflicts and better
equipping authorities to deal with those who were nonetheless able to do so.
This has included:
- the Counter-Terrorism
Legislation Amendment (Foreign Fighters) Act 2014, which introduced
broad-ranging amendments primarily aimed at addressing the increased threat of
terrorism posed by Australians engaging in, and returning from, conflicts in
foreign countries. Amendments included updating existing foreign incursions
offences and enacting a new offence of entering a declared area, removing the requirement
for ‘terrorism-related proceedings’ to comply with the usual rules of evidence,
allowing the Minister for Foreign Affairs to suspend a person’s passport
pending a decision about cancellation, and expanding the control order regime.
- the Counter-Terrorism
Legislation Amendment Act (No. 1) 2014, which included amendments to
further expand the control order regime and to amend the functions of the
Australian Secret Intelligence Service to explicitly include providing
assistance to the Australian Defence Force in support of military operations
and cooperation with the Defence Force on intelligence matters and
- the Australian
Citizenship Amendment (Allegiance to Australia) Act 2015, which
expanded the national security-related grounds on which dual citizens may lose
their Australian citizenship, including by enabling citizenship loss on the
basis of acting inconsistently with allegiance to Australia by engaging in
specified conduct, and of having fought for or been in the service of a
terrorist organisation.[10]
The UK scheme
The Counter-Terrorism
and Security Act 2015 (UK) introduced TEOs, permits to return and
notices specifying obligations with which an individual subject to a TEO must
comply after return to the UK.[11]
TEOs
The Home Secretary may impose a TEO if:
- the
Home Secretary reasonably suspects an individual is, or has been, involved in
terrorism-related activity outside the UK
- the
Home Secretary reasonably considers that it is necessary, for purposes
connected with protecting members of the public in the UK from a risk of
terrorism, for a TEO to be imposed on the individual
- the
Home Secretary reasonably considers that the individual is outside the UK
- the
individual has the right of abode in the UK and
- the
court has given its permission for a TEO to be imposed on the individual, or
the Home Secretary reasonably considers that the urgency of the case requires a
TEO to be imposed without obtaining such permission (in which case, the Home
Secretary must refer the imposition of the TEO to the court immediately after
giving notice of the order).[12]
TEOs remain in force for two years unless revoked or
brought to an end earlier, though another TEO may be imposed on the same
individual.[13]
Permits to return
The Home Secretary may issue a permit to an individual
subject to a TEO that gives the individual permission to return to the UK (a
‘permit to return’). Such a permit may only be issued on application of the
individual, or if the Home Secretary considers that the individual is to be
deported to the UK or because of the urgency of the situation it is expedient
to issue a permit in the absence of an application from the individual.[14]
A permit may be subject to the individual complying with
conditions specified therein; and must stipulate the time at which or period
during which the individual is permitted to return to the UK, the manner in
which the individual is permitted to return and the place where the individual
is permitted to return.[15]
Obligations after return
The Home Secretary may issue a notice imposing certain
obligations on a person subject to a TEO who has returned to the UK (under a
permit). The obligations able to be imposed are:
- reporting
to a police station, and complying with directions given by a constable about
such reporting
- notifying
the police of the individual’s place or places of residence and any changes to
the same and
- attending
appointments with specified persons or persons of specified descriptions, and
complying with reasonable directions given by the Home Secretary relating to
matters about which the individual is required to attend an appointment.[16]
Such a notice remains in force until the TEO ends, unless
it is revoked or brought to an end earlier.[17]
Offences
Offences apply if an individual subject to a TEO returns
to the UK other than under a permit to return, contravenes a requirement in a
permit to return, or fails to comply with an obligation included in a notice.[18]
Use of TEOs
There is little publicly available information on the use
of TEOs in the UK. Nine TEOs were imposed in 2017, with none imposed before
2017, and no publicly available information about whether any have been imposed
in 2018 or 2019.[19]
Information on the circumstances in which the TEOs that have been issued were
made does not appear to be publicly available.
Committee
consideration
At the time of publication of this Bills Digest, the current
Bills had not been considered by any parliamentary committees. Information on
consideration of the February Bill and the Government’s response is set out
below.
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security
The PJCIS inquired into the February Bill and tabled its
report on 3 April 2019.[20]
The report included 19 recommendations, 17 of which were for amendments to
the Bill, another that the Government obtain legal advice from the
Solicitor-General or equivalent on the constitutional validity of the revised
Bill, and the last that, following implementation of all other recommendations,
the Bill be passed by the Parliament.[21]
The TEO Bill includes amendments to:
- implement
in full recommendations 3, 4, 6, 8, 9 and 14 (about matters to be considered
when imposing or varying conditions in a return permit; special requirements in
relation to children; the period for which a person’s return to Australia may
be delayed under a return permit; including in the Bill all the circumstances
in which a return permit must be issued and how applications may be made;
removing the proposed rule-making power; and reporting annually on use of the
new powers)
- implement
in part recommendations 2, 5 and 7 (about giving a return permit ‘as soon as
practicable’, matters to be set out in TEOs, and having an issuing authority
issue TEOs and approve conditions in return permits) and
- respond
to recommendations 1 and 10 (about factors to be considered before making
a TEO and clarifying that a person may seek judicial review of a decision to
grant or refuse a return permit).
The Consequential Amendments Bill will implement
recommendations 15 and 17 (relating to review of the legislation by
the PJCIS) in full and recommendation 16 (relating to review of the
legislation by the INSLM) in part.
The Government has not implemented:
- recommendation
11, which was for certain offences to be amended so that the prosecution would
need to prove that a person knew that a TEO was in force, or that a condition
had been imposed under a return permit (instead of that the person was reckless
as to the relevant circumstance) or
- recommendation 12,
which was for changes to the thresholds for making a TEO, specifically,
including an additional matter of which the Minister must be satisfied before
making a TEO and not allowing TEOs to be made on the basis of an assessment
from ASIO.
No amendments are required to implement recommendations 13,
18 and 19.[22]
Further information on the extent to which different
elements of the Bill implement recommendations of the PJCIS is noted in the
‘Key issues and provisions’ section of this Digest.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills (Scrutiny
of Bills Committee) raised several concerns about the February Bill, none of
which have been addressed through amendments in the TEO Bill.
The Committee had ‘significant scrutiny concerns’ about
the decision to exclude an Australian citizen from the country resting with the
Minister, and with the threshold test being set at reasonable suspicion instead
of reasonable belief that an order will prevent certain conduct.[23]
It was also concerned that TEOs may be made in relation to individuals aged
14–17 years, and that in such cases, the interests of the child are to be given
lesser consideration than community protection.[24]
The Committee was also concerned at the exclusion of
procedural fairness, lack of access to merits review of Ministerial decisions
to issue a TEO or impose conditions under a return permit, and the limited
scope for judicial review. It considered that it may be appropriate for the
Bill to be amended to require the Minister to observe the usual requirements of
procedural fairness and to allow for merits review of Ministerial decisions ‘by
a tribunal with appropriate national security expertise’.[25]
Finally, the Committee noted the inclusion of
offence-specific defences in the Bill for several offences. The Committee
recognised that the defendant will bear only an evidential rather than a legal
burden in relation to those defences, but nonetheless stated that it expected
any reversal of the burden of proof to be justified (which had not been done in
this instance).[26]
The Committee did not seek a response from the Minister on
the matters outlined above.
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (PJCHR)
reported on the February Bill in April 2019.[27]
The PJCHR considered that the framework for imposing conditions
under a return permit may be incompatible with the rights to privacy, freedom
of expression and freedom of association, due to both the scope of
the conditions able to be imposed and the lack of judicial involvement in their
imposition. It sought the Minister’s advice on the compatibility of the measure
with those rights.[28]
The PJCHR also considered that the exclusion of procedural
fairness and lack of merits review for decisions made in relation to TEOs and
return permits may make those measures incompatible with the right to a fair
hearing. It noted that the Statement of Compatibility did not discuss the
absence of merits review or the narrow scope for judicial review, and stated
that it would require further information to fully assess whether TEOs and
return permits are compatible with the right to a fair hearing. The PJCHR
sought the Minister’s advice accordingly.[29]
It considered that TEOs and return permits may not be
compatible with the rights of children, in particular the obligation to
consider the best interests of the child and the right of children not to be
separated from their parents against their will. The PJCHR sought the
Minister’s advice on the compatibility of the measures with the rights of
children and on whether the measures are framed so as to give sufficient weight
to evaluating the impacts on affected children.[30]
The PJCHR also sought the Minister’s advice on the
compatibility of TEOs and return permits with the rights to freedom of
movement and protection of the family. It had questions about
whether it could be shown that the measures were needed to address a
‘substantial and pressing concern’ and whether they are rationally connected to
a legitimate objective; and raised several concerns relating to
proportionality, including the broad discretion given to the Minister, exclusion
of procedural fairness, limited rights of review and the length of time for
which a person may be prevented from returning to Australia.[31]
Amendments included in the TEO Bill to respond to the
PJCIS’s recommendations may go some way to addressing the PJCHR’s concerns, but
some of the factors highlighted by the PJCHR as contributing to its concerns,
such as the exclusion of procedural fairness and limited rights of review,
remain in the TEO Bill.
The Minister’s response to the PJCHR had not been published
at the time of publication of this Digest.[32]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
In additional comments to the majority PJCIS report, Labor
members of the PJCIS stated that while they had ‘ultimately decided to
recommend’ that the February Bill be passed with amendments, they were
‘concerned that a number of issues have not been adequately scrutinised by this
Committee in the limited time available’.[33]
Their key outstanding concern was that the Bill might infringe the
constitutional right of abode.[34]
At the time of publication of this Digest, there was no
public indication of the policy position of any other non-government parties or
independents on the Bills.
Position of
major interest groups
Non-government stakeholders that made submissions to the
PJCIS’s inquiry into the February Bill recommended that the Bill not be
passed at all, or that it not be passed in that form.[35]
The reasons stakeholders opposed the Bill included that:
- the
Government had not demonstrated the need for the new orders/the gap in existing
counter-terrorism laws that the orders would fill[36]
- the
Bill may not be constitutionally sound, in particular it may:
- deprive
Australian citizens of their constitutional right of abode and
- breach
the separation of powers and[37]
- the
Bill may be inconsistent with international human rights and other laws,
including the right to enter one’s country, right to privacy, right to freedom
of movement, right to a fair trial, right to family life, the rights of
children, and international obligations to exercise criminal jurisdiction over
people suspected of engaging in terrorism.[38]
Some stakeholders, including the Law Council of Australia
(LCA), the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) and legal academics, also
outlined changes they would recommend to the February Bill if it was to
proceed. Key changes that were suggested included:
- TEOs
being issued or approved by a court,[39]
or by a retired judicial officer,[40]
instead of the Minister
- an
additional threshold that must be met before a TEO may be issued, namely that
the person has engaged in certain conduct while overseas[41]
- a
requirement to afford a person the full requirements of procedural fairness in
relation to decisions made under the proposed law[42]
- providing
for merits review of decisions made under the proposed law[43]
- only
allowing TEOs to be made in relation to individuals aged 18 years or older[44]
- if
TEOs are permitted in relation to individuals aged 14–17 years, requiring the
best interests of the child to be given as much weight as protecting the
community and[45]
- other
safeguards and accountability mechanisms, including:
- requiring the Minister to periodically review TEOs and conditions
imposed under return permits to ensure that they remain appropriate and
- enabling review of the new law by the INSLM.[46]
The Consequential Amendments Bill will enable review of
the new law by the INSLM, and the TEO Bill will require TEOs to be considered
by a reviewing authority. The other changes outlined above have not been
addressed in the TEO Bill. Further detail is included in the ‘Key issues and
provisions’ section of this Digest.
The Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security (IGIS)
considered that some aspects of the February Bill ‘would benefit from greater
clarity’.[47]
In particular, the IGIS suggested it be made clear whether or not the advice
provided by ASIO to the Minister for the purposes of the possible imposition of
a TEO is to be in the form of a security assessment in accordance with the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation Act 1979 (ASIO Act). The IGIS noted
that the form of advice provided will have implications for an individual’s
rights of review.[48]
The TEO Bill clarifies this point by providing that such advice does not
constitute a security assessment.[49]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum for the TEO Bill states that
the financial impact of the Bill will be low, with any costs to be met from
within existing resources.[50]
The Explanatory Memorandum for the Consequential
Amendments Bill states that the Bill will have no financial impact.[51]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bills’ compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bills are compatible.[52]
However, the PJCHR and several stakeholders questioned the compatibility of the
February Bill with some of those rights, including the right to enter one’s
country, right to privacy, right to freedom of movement, right to a fair trial,
right to family life, and the rights of children.[53]
Key issues
and provisions
Overview
The Bill will allow the Minister for Home Affairs to make
two types of order:
- a temporary exclusion order (TEO), which may prevent an
Australian citizen aged 14 years or older who is overseas from returning
to Australia for up to two years at a time and
- a return permit, under which the Minister may impose conditions
on the person’s entry into Australia, including conditions with which the
person must comply for up to 12 months after re-entering the country.[54]
TEOs will be reviewed by a reviewing authority
(a former Justice of the High Court, a former justice or judge of a court
created by the Parliament, a former judge of a state or territory Supreme Court,
or certain members of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal). If the reviewing
authority determines that the issue of the TEO involved one or more specified
errors of law, the TEO is taken never to have been made.[55]
A TEO will be taken to be revoked if a return permit is issued
to the person.[56]
The Minister will be required to issue a return permit to a person subject to a
TEO if that person (or a representative) applies for one, and to do so within a
reasonable period of receiving the application.[57]
However, a return permit may delay a person’s return to Australia by up to 12
months.[58]
The Minister will not be required to observe any
requirements of procedural fairness in exercising a power or performing a
function under the TEO Act.[59]
The reviewing authority will not have the power to review
the conditions imposed under a TEO or a return permit, only the decision to
issue the TEO. While the Explanatory Memorandum for the TEO Bill states that a
person subject to a TEO or a return permit will have access to judicial review,[60]
aspects of the Bill, such as the exclusion of procedural fairness and of the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977, will limit the extent to which
such review will be practically available. The Scrutiny of Bills Committee and
some stakeholders also considered that affected individuals should have access
to full independent merits review (not just judicial review) of decisions
relating to TEOs and return permits.[61]
Temporary exclusion orders
Conditions for issue
The Minister will be able to make a TEO in relation to a
person if:
- the person is:
- located
outside Australia
- an
Australian citizen and
- at
least 14 years of age
- one
of the thresholds outlined below is met
- a
return permit is not in force in relation to the person and
- where
the person is 14 to 17 years of age, the Minister has, before making the TEO,
had regard to the protection of the community as the paramount consideration
and the best interests of the person as a primary consideration.[62]
Thresholds for issue
There will be two possible grounds on which the Minister
may make a TEO, namely if:
- the Minister suspects on reasonable grounds that making the order
would substantially assist in preventing:
- a
terrorist act
- training
from being provided to, received from or participated in with a listed
terrorist organisation
- the
provision of support for, or the facilitation of, a terrorist act and/or
- the
provision of support or resources to an organisation that would help the
organisation to engage in an activity described in paragraph (a) of the
definition of terrorist organisation in subsection 102.1(1) of the Criminal Code Act
1995 (Criminal Code) (directly or indirectly engaging in, preparing,
planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act) or
-
the person has been assessed by ASIO to be directly or indirectly
a risk to security for reasons related to politically motivated violence (where
both security and politically motivated violence
take the meanings of the ASIO Act).[63]
The first of the two thresholds outlined above is similar
to that which applies in order for a senior AFP member to seek the Minister’s
consent to request an interim control order, but is more focused on the
prevention of certain activities.[64]
Of relevance to the second
threshold, the definition of security in the ASIO Act
includes the protection of Australia and its people from politically
motivated violence, which is defined to mean:
- acts
or threats of violence or unlawful harm that are intended or likely to achieve
a political objective, whether in Australia or elsewhere, including acts or
threats carried on for the purpose of influencing the policy or acts of a
government, whether in Australia or elsewhere; or
- acts that:
- involve
violence or are intended or are likely to involve or lead to violence (whether
by the persons who carry on those acts or by other persons); and
- are directed to overthrowing or destroying, or assisting in the overthrow or
destruction of, the government or the constitutional system of government of
the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory; or
ba. acts that are terrorism
offences; or
- acts
that are offences punishable under Division 119 of the Criminal Code,
the Crimes (Hostages) Act 1989 or Division 1 of
Part 2, or Part 3, of the Crimes (Ships and Fixed Platforms)
Act 1992 or under Division 1 or 4 of Part 2 of the Crimes
(Aviation) Act 1991; or
- acts that:
- are
offences punishable under the Crimes (Internationally Protected
Persons) Act 1976; or
- threaten or endanger any person or class of persons specified by the Minister
for the purposes of this subparagraph by notice in writing given to the
Director‑General.[65]
Issue: appropriateness of proposed
thresholds and rejection of PJCIS recommendations
Each of the thresholds in subclause 10(2) under
which a TEO may be made relate only to an assessment of the risk posed by an
individual. In contrast, the UK scheme also requires a reasonable suspicion that
an individual is, or has been, involved in terrorism-related activity outside
the UK before a TEO can be made (that is, an assessment about the past conduct
of an individual).[66]
The PJCIS recommended that that an additional threshold along the lines of the
UK model be included in the Bill so that TEOs may only be made where there is a
suspicion of wrongdoing on the part of an individual.[67]
The Government has not implemented that recommendation. Its response to the
PJCIS report stated:
Implementing the recommendation to require the Minister to
suspect the person is or has been involved in terrorism-related activities
outside Australia would restrict the operation of the scheme to high risk
individuals only. Proposed section 10(2) would set out a two-part test which
will be significantly harder to make out, thus reducing the number of
individuals eligible for a TEO and undermining the utility of the scheme.[68]
The PJCIS also recommended that the second ground on which
a TEO may be issued (the person has been assessed by ASIO to be directly or
indirectly a risk to security for reasons related to politically motivated
violence) be removed from the Bill.[69]
Ananian-Welsh, Blackbourn and McGarrity noted that this threshold is similar to
one of the character tests in the Migration Act 1958,
under which a person may be denied a visa or have their visa cancelled if ASIO
assesses they are directly or indirectly a risk to security. They argued that
the threshold raises procedural issues and that applying such a test to
citizens ‘ignores the particular legal position of citizens, in terms of their
rights and the reciprocal responsibilities of the State’.[70]
The Government’s response to the PJCIS report did not state its rationale for
not implementing this recommendation, simply stating: ‘The intent of paragraph
10(2)(b) is to provide for the making of a TEO based on a consistent form of
assessment of terrorism threat by ASIO’.[71]
Issue: TEOs
in relation to individuals 14–17 years of age
Allowing orders to be made in relation to children at
least 14 years of age is consistent with the control order regime in
Division 104 of the Criminal Code as amended in 2016, and
citizenship cessation laws enacted in 2015.[72]
Nonetheless, the LCA and the AHRC objected to TEOs being able to be made in
relation to anyone under 18 years of age, and the Scrutiny of Bills Committee
was concerned about this aspect of the February Bill.[73] The AHRC considered that
allowing TEOs to be made in relation to children would impinge on a range of
rights protected in the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (CRC), and that depriving a child of the
right to re-enter Australia ‘is likely to have even more serious consequences
than it would an adult, and is more likely to be arbitrary’.[74]
The requirement in subclause 10(3) to have regard
to the protection of the community as the paramount consideration and the best
interests of the child as a primary consideration also mirrors requirements
relating to the imposition of obligations, prohibitions and restrictions under
control orders made in relation to young people.[75] This approach was endorsed
by the PJCIS.[76]
However, several stakeholders considered that requiring greater weight to be
given to community protection than to the best interests of the child is
inconsistent with Australia’s obligations under the CRC.[77] They pointed to comments of
the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child and a 1995 High Court
judgment to argue that the interests of the child must be given either the
greatest weight, or equal greatest weight with other considerations.[78] The AHRC and
Ananian-Welsh, Blackbourn and McGarrity recommended that community protection
and the best interests of the child both be made primary considerations to be
given equal weight.[79]
The PJCIS recommended that in determining the best
interests of a person aged 14–17 years, the Minister should be required to take
into account the same matters that a court is required to consider when determining
the bests interests of the child in relation to a control order (such as the
child’s age, maturity, and physical and mental health, and the benefit of the
child having meaningful relationships with family and friends).[80]
This recommendation will be implemented by subclauses 10(4) (for
TEOs) and 16(6) (for return permits) of the TEO Bill.
Review of
TEO by reviewing authority
Unlike the UK scheme, the Minister will not be required to
seek the prior permission of a court before issuing a TEO.[81] However, the
Minister will be required to immediately refer TEOs to a reviewing authority.
Several stakeholders argued for the involvement of the
courts or retired judges in the issuing of TEOs in submissions to the PJCIS’s
inquiry into the February Bill. The AHRC and the LCA considered that the
power to make TEOs should sit with the courts instead of the Minister, with the
AHRC suggesting that orders only be made:
... where a court is satisfied on the balance of probabilities
that the making of the order is necessary and proportionate to achieve the
objects of the Bill, in all the circumstances of the particular case.[82]
Drs Rebecca Ananian-Welsh, Jessie Blackbourn and Nicola
McGarrity stated that their preferred model would be to require the Minister to
apply to a retired judge for a TEO (and for issue of a return permit), pointing
to the procedures in place for the issue of continuing preventative detention
orders and ASIO questioning and questioning and detention warrants, and
arguing:
Such an approach is consistent with the severity of the
consequences which flow from a TEO, including exclusion from their country of
citizenship for up to two years (or one year where a Return Permit has been
issued). Whilst forced to remain overseas, there is a real risk of the person
being imprisoned in another country that may have less concern for human rights
than Australia. Furthermore, even after a Return Permit is issued, intrusive
pre- and post-entry conditions may be imposed. The experience of the judiciary
in making independent and impartial decisions in the sensitive national
security space would assist in ensuring the necessity and proportionality of
TEOs and Return Permits, as well as the legitimacy of the TEOs scheme in the
eyes of the public.[83]
In the alternative, they suggested independent judicial
oversight of the Minister’s decision to issue a TEO, following the UK model.[84] As noted above,
except in urgent cases, one of the pre-conditions for the issue of a TEO by the
UK’s Home Secretary is that the court has given the Home Secretary permission.[85] The Home
Secretary applies to the court for permission to issue a TEO, and the court
determines whether the Home Secretary’s decisions on the other thresholds for
issue are ‘obviously flawed’, applying ‘the principles applicable on an
application for a judicial review’.[86]
If the court determines that any of the Home Secretary’s decisions were
obviously flawed, it may not give its permission; in any other case, it must
give its permission.[87]
The PJCIS recommended that the Bill be amended so that:
- subject to the third dot point below, consistent with the
preventative detention order regime, a temporary exclusion order may only be
issued by an ‘issuing authority’ (being a judge, a retired judge or a senior
member of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal) on application by the Minister
- the issuing authority must approve any conditions set out in a
return permit, and
- in respect of urgent situations, the Minister may issue a
temporary exclusion order, or impose a condition in a return permit, without
the approval of an issuing authority, provided that:
- the Minister obtain the approval of an issuing authority for the
temporary exclusion order as soon as reasonably practicable, and
- if the issuing authority does not approve of the temporary
exclusion order, the Minister must immediately revoke the order.[88]
The TEO Bill would partially implement this
recommendation. The Minister will be required to refer the decision to make a
TEO to a reviewing authority immediately after making it (a reviewing
authority will be a former Justice of the High Court, a former justice
or judge of a court created by the Parliament or a former judge of a state or
territory Supreme Court, or a senior member of the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal, appointed by the Attorney-General[89]).[90]
The reviewing authority must review the decision as soon as is reasonably
practicable and determine whether:
- the
making of the decision was an improper exercise of power
- the
decision was induced or affected by fraud, or
- if
the TEO was made on the basis of the Minister’s suspicion of relevant matters
(as opposed to an ASIO assessment), there was no material before the Minister
from which he or she could form the relevant state of mind.[91]
If the reviewing authority is of the opinion that one or
more of the above applies, the TEO is taken never to have been made (and if the
person has been notified of the TEO, the Minister must cause steps to be taken
to notify the person of the review decision).[92]
The review must be conducted in the absence of the person
to whom the order relates, and without that person being notified of the review
or given an opportunity to make representations.[93]
The reviewing authority will not have the power to review
the conditions imposed under a TEO or a return permit, only the decision to
issue the TEO.[94]
Severability
clause
Clause 30 provides that if section 14 (which
will be about review of TEO by reviewing authority) is not a valid law of the
Commonwealth, that:
- it
is Parliament’s intention that the proposed legislation operate as if that
section had never been enacted and
- the
proposed legislation applies as if subsections 13(1) and (2) (which will set
out when a TEO comes into force) were omitted and replaced with the following:
“(1) A temporary exclusion order in relation to a person
comes into force immediately after the Minister makes the temporary exclusion
order in relation to the person.”
Issue: form of advice from
ASIO and implications for rights of review
One of the grounds on which a TEO may be issued is that
the person has been assessed by ASIO to be directly or indirectly a risk to
security for reasons related to politically motivated violence.[95] As noted above, the PJCIS
recommended that TEOs not be able to be made on this ground, but the Government
has not implemented that recommendation.
As the IGIS noted, the February Bill did not appear
to require ASIO’s advice to be provided in the form of a security assessment
made under Part IV of the ASIO Act, meaning it would not be subject
to review by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT).[96] The Government has since
confirmed that the advice will not be given in the form of a security
assessment, and this is now reflected in the TEO Bill.[97]
The IGIS noted that this approach would be inconsistent
with the way ASIO advice is provided on Australian citizens in other contexts:
Although neither the Bill nor the Explanatory Memorandum
directly addresses this, we understand that it is the policy intention that any
advice provided by ASIO for these purposes would not be required to be in the
form of a security assessment, in accordance with Part IV of the Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979 (the ASIO Act). We further
understand the policy underpinning the Bill to be that the imposition of a TEO
would not be a ‘prescribed administrative action’ as defined in section 35 of
the ASIO Act. For the avoidance of ambiguity, the Committee may wish to
consider whether the Bill should be amended to make this policy intention
clear.
If this is the case, it would mean that the advice provided
by ASIO to the Minister would not be subject to review by the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (as it would be if it were provided in the form of a security
assessment). We note that this could create a disparity in the way that advice
by ASIO is provided in relation to Australian citizens in other contexts, such
as that under the Australian Passports Act 2005. The Committee may wish
to examine this aspect further.[98]
If ASIO furnishes an adverse or qualified security
assessment to an agency in relation to an individual under Part IV of the ASIO
Act, the individual must generally be notified in writing within 14 days of
that assessment and informed of his or her right to apply to the AAT for
review.[99]
To the extent that the findings of the AAT on such a review do not confirm
ASIO’s assessment, those findings are to be taken as superseding that
assessment for the purposes of any prescribed administrative action to which
the assessment is relevant.[100]
A reviewing authority who considers a TEO made on the
grounds of an ASIO assessment will have no power to consider ASIO’s assessment
that a person is directly or indirectly a risk to security, and accordingly, no
power to confirm or overturn that assessment.
Duration of TEOs and ability to issue successive TEOs
A TEO will be required to specify the period during which
it is in force, which must not end more than two years after the day the TEO is
made.[101]
This limit will not prevent the making of another TEO in relation to the same
person.[102]
The two year maximum duration for each TEO is the same as
that which applies under the UK scheme.[103]
The LCA suggested that a second TEO should only be able to
be made in relation to the same person where ‘the court determines there are
“exceptional circumstances” that would warrant’ such action.[104]
Other requirements for TEOs
A TEO must: be in writing; specify the name of the person
to which it relates; state that the criteria for making an order have been met;
set out the effect of clauses 8 (offence of entering Australia while a
TEO if in force), 11 (revocation of a TEO), 12 (application to
revoke a TEO); 15 (issue of return permit) and 18 (applications
relating to return permits); specify whether the person to whom it relates is
permitted to apply for or obtain an Australian travel document; and state that
the person may have review rights in relation to the decision to issue the TEO.
If the person has an Australian travel document, the TEO must specify whether
the person must surrender that document to a specified person or body.[105]
If the TEO specifies that the person is not permitted to
apply for, or to obtain, an Australian travel document, or that the person must
surrender an Australian travel document, the person will be taken, for the
purposes of section 12 of the Australian
Passports Act 2005, to be prevented from travelling internationally.[106] Ananian-Welsh,
Blackbourn and McGarrity considered that the Minister should be required to
‘take into account the fundamental human rights of the subject of the TEO and
any dependents before cancelling their Australian travel document or
restricting their ability to obtain another’.[107]
By requiring that a TEO states that the criteria for issue
have been met and that the person may have review rights, the Government has
partially implemented a recommendation of the PJCIS on the February Bill.
However, the PJCIS also recommended that a TEO be required to include a summary
of the grounds on which it was made (with information that is likely to
prejudice national security excluded). That part of the recommendation has not
been implemented.[108]
As soon as practicable after making a TEO, the Minister
‘must cause such steps to be taken as are, in the opinion of the Minister,
reasonable and practicable’ to bring to the attention of the person in relation
to whom it is made the content of the order.[109]
The Explanatory Memorandum states that this could include electronic means of
communication, and that the provision:
... is intended to allow the Minister flexibility to choose the
most reasonable and practical means of service in the circumstances of the
person being overseas, including potentially in a conflict zone.[110]
If the person to whom the TEO relates is 14 to 17 years of
age, steps must also be taken to bring the TEO to the attention of a parent or
guardian, implementing part of a recommendation of the PJCIS on the
February Bill.[111]
Issue: when a TEO comes into force and notification
requirements
As the AHRC pointed out, the proposed notification requirements
(in subclause 10(8) of the TEO Bill) may fall short of those under
the UK scheme.[112]
The UK scheme provides that a TEO comes into force when
notice of its imposition is given.[113]
The TEO Bill provides that a TEO comes into force:
- immediately
after being made if the Minister is satisfied that urgent circumstances make
that necessary or
- otherwise,
when the reviewing authority has reviewed the TEO and decided that its issue
did not involve any of the errors of law specified in subclause 14(4)(b).[114]
If the reviewing authority determines that the issue of
the order did involve one of those errors of law, the TEO is taken never to
have been made, so does not come into force.[115]
UK regulations list the means by which notice may be
given, including by hand, fax, postal service in which delivery or receipt is
recorded, electronically, by document exchange, courier or collection by the
person or a representative. They also provide that notice shall be deemed to
have been given in certain circumstances.[116]
The Bill requires only that ‘reasonable and practicable steps’ be taken to
bring a TEO to the attention of the person on whom it is imposed. The LCA was
concerned about the lack of a requirement of effective notification, and the
AHRC suggested that all reasonably practicable steps be required to be taken to
give notice of a TEO as soon as reasonably practicable.[117]
Revoking a TEO
The Minister may revoke a TEO on his or her own initiative
or on application by the person to whom the TEO relates or a representative.[118] Clause 12
sets out how an application to revoke a TEO may be made and the information it
must contain, as recommended by the PJCIS in its report on the
February Bill.[119]
A TEO is also taken to be revoked if a return permit is issued
to the person to whom the TEO relates.[120]
Issue: no requirement for the Minister to keep the need for
a TEO under review
While the Minister may revoke a TEO on his or her own
initiative, there is no explicit obligation on the Minister to keep under
review whether the TEO remains necessary and appropriate. The UK scheme
requires the Home Secretary to keep under review whether the TEO remains
necessary for purposes connected with protecting the UK public from a risk of
terrorism.[121]
The AHRC and Ananian-Welsh, Blackbourn and McGarrity suggested the inclusion of
an equivalent requirement.[122]
Offences related to TEOs
A person will commit an offence if the person:
- is reckless as to whether a TEO is in force in relation to the
person and
- intentionally enters Australia.[123]
The maximum penalty for this offence will be imprisonment
for two years and/or a fine of 120 penalty units (currently $25,200).[124]
The PJCIS recommended that the offence should be amended
to require the prosecution to prove that the person knew of the
existence of the TEO.[125]
The Government has not implemented that recommendation, stating that requiring
proof of knowledge rather than recklessness may reduce deterrence.[126]
To prove that a person was reckless as to whether a TEO was in force, the
prosecution will need to prove that the person was ‘aware of a substantial
risk’ that a TEO was in force and that having regard to the circumstances known
to him or her, is was ‘unjustifiable to take the risk’.[127]
It will also be an offence for the owner, charterer,
lessee, operator, agent or master of a vessel or the owner, charterer, lessee,
operator or pilot in charge of an aircraft to intentionally permit the vessel
or aircraft to be used to convey a person subject to a TEO to Australia.[128] The
offence will only apply if the person knew that a TEO was in force in relation
to the other person.[129]
There will be an exception to this offence if the person conveyed was being
deported or extradited to Australia.[130]
A defendant will bear an evidential burden in relation to the exception,
meaning he or she would need to adduce or point to evidence that suggests a
reasonable possibility that the exception applies.[131] The maximum penalty will
be imprisonment for two years and/or a fine of 120 penalty units for an
individual, or a fine of 600 penalty units for a body corporate (currently
$126,000).[132]
Offence
related to protection of information
A person will commit an offence if the person:
- is
reckless as to whether he or she is, or has been, a reviewing authority
- intentionally
obtains information under subsection 14(2) of the proposed legislation and
- intentionally
discloses that information.[133]
It will be a defence to the offence if the information was
disclosed for the purposes of giving effect to the proposed legislation.[134]
The defendant will bear an evidential burden in relation to the defence, meaning
he or she would need to adduce or point to evidence that suggests a reasonable
possibility that it applies.[135]
The maximum penalty for this offence will be imprisonment
for two years and/or a fine of 120 penalty units (currently $25,200).[136]
Return permits
The Minister will be required to issue a return
permit to a person subject to a TEO if that person applies for one (or someone
else applies on his or her behalf), or if the person is to be or is being
deported or extradited to Australia.[137]
In addition, the Minister may issue a return permit to a person subject
to a TEO if the Minister considers it appropriate to do so.[138]
In either case, the Minister may impose conditions on the permit.[139]
Timeframe for issue of permit
The Minister will be required to issue a return permit
‘within a reasonable period’ of: receiving an application, after the Minister
becomes aware of the person’s deportation or extradition, or otherwise makes a
decision to issue a permit (whichever applies).[140]
This requirement has been included in response to the PJCIS’s recommendation
that the Minister be required to issue a return permit ‘as soon as practicable’
after receiving an application or when the person is being deported.[141]
It is consistent with the UK scheme, which requires the Home Secretary to issue
a permit for return to an individual who has applied for one ‘within a
reasonable period’ of the application being made.[142]
Duration
A return permit must specify a period during which it is
in force. That period must not end more than 12 months after the person
enters Australia.[143]
Threshold for imposing conditions
The Minister will only be permitted to impose one or more
conditions on a return permit if the Minister is satisfied that each condition
is, and the conditions taken together are, reasonably necessary and reasonably
appropriate and adapted for the purpose of preventing:
- a terrorist act
- training
from being provided to, received from or participated in with a listed
terrorist organisation
- the
provision of support for, or the facilitation of, a terrorist act
and/or
- the
provision of support or resources to an organisation that would help the
organisation to engage in an activity described in paragraph (a) of the
definition of terrorist organisation in subsection 102.1(1) of the Criminal
Code (directly or indirectly engaging in, preparing, planning, assisting in
or fostering the doing of a terrorist act).[144]
The February Bill had required only that the Minister
be satisfied that the conditions, taken together, met the threshold set out
above. The Government has amended this provision to implement a PJCIS
recommendation that the Minister also be required to be satisfied that each
individual condition is reasonably necessary and reasonably appropriate and
adapted.[145]
Factors to
be considered before imposing conditions
Before imposing a pre-entry condition that would prevent a
person from entering Australia for a period of time, the Minister will be
required to consider, to the extent known to the Minister:
- whether
the person has a lawful right to remain, or to enter and remain, in a country
other than Australia during that period;
- if the
person has no lawful right to remain, or to enter and remain, in a country
other than Australia during that period—the likelihood of the person being
detained, mistreated or harmed if the person cannot enter Australia until the
end of that period.[146]
This provision has been included in response to the
PJCIS’s recommendation that such factors be considered before the making of a
TEO that requires a person to surrender their Australian travel documents or
prevents them from applying for or obtaining Australian travel documents.[147]
The PJCIS also recommended that when imposing conditions
under a return permit, the Minister should have regard to ‘the impact of the
conditions on the person’s individual circumstances, including in relation to
their dependents (if any)’.[148]
This will be implemented by subclause 16(4).
If the person is 14 to 17 years of age, the Minister will
be also be required, before imposing a condition, to have regard to the protection
of the community as the paramount consideration and the best interests of the
person as a primary consideration.[149]
The concerns raised by stakeholders about this issue (set out above under
‘Issue: TEOs in relation to persons 14–17 years of age’) also apply to the
imposition of conditions under return permits.
The PJCIS recommended that in determining the best
interests of a person aged 14–17 years, the Minister should be required to take
into account the same matters that a court is required to consider when
determining the bests interests of the child in relation to a control order
(such as the child’s age, maturity, and physical and mental health, and the
benefit of the child having meaningful relationships with family and friends).[150] This
recommendation will be implemented by subclauses 10(4) (for TEOs)
and 16(6) (for return permits) of the TEO Bill.
Pre-entry conditions
Delayed entry
The Minister may require that the person issued a return
permit must not enter Australia during a specified period. The maximum delay
permitted is the period that is ‘reasonably necessary to assess the risk posed by
the entry of the person to Australia and to make appropriate arrangements for
that entry’ or 12 months from the issue of the permit, whichever is
shorter.[151]
The February Bill had simply included a maximum delay
of 12 months. The inclusion of the alternative ‘reasonably necessary’
timeframe implements a recommendation of the PJCIS and is consistent with the
UK scheme.[152]
Entry to Australia
The Minister may require that the person issued a return
permit:
- must
enter Australia:
- within
a specified period of no more than three months after the permit is issued to
the person or
- on
a specified date no more than three months after the permit is issued to the
person and/or
- in
a specified manner.[153]
The Minister could require, for example, that the person
enter Australia on a specific date and flight.[154]
Post-entry conditions
The Minister may impose one or more of the conditions
listed in subclause 16(10) with which the person returning under
the permit must comply once he or she re-enters Australia. The return permit
must specify the period during which each condition applies, which may not
extend beyond the end date for the permit.[155]
This will mean that a person may be subject to post-entry conditions for up to
12 months.[156]
Imposition of post-entry conditions under a return permit
differs from the UK scheme, under which conditions are imposed under a separate
notice following the individual’s return.[157]
The proposed model will mean that an individual knows in advance the conditions
to which they will be subject.
Most of the conditions that may be imposed are
notification requirements, and some of them relate to the ability to hold,
apply for and obtain Australian travel documents.
The notification-related conditions are summarised in the
table below.[158]
The permit may specify the manner in which the person must provide the required
notification, and/or any documents or information that must be provided to substantiate
the matter.[159]
In addition, the Minister may provide that:
- if
the person has an Australian travel document, that he or she must surrender it
to a specified person or body
- the
person is not permitted to apply for an Australian travel document and/or
- the
person is not permitted to obtain an Australian travel document.[160]
If one of the travel document conditions is imposed, the
person will be taken, for the purposes of section 12 of the Australian
Passports Act, to be prevented from travelling internationally.[161]
Table: Permitted post-entry notification conditions
Matter/circumstance
|
Action required
|
Time within which notification must be provided
|
principal place of residence
|
notify specified person or body
|
n/a
|
place of employment
|
notify specified person or body
|
n/a
|
place of education
|
notify specified person or body
|
n/a
|
change to principal place of residence, place of
employment and/or place of education
|
notify specified person or body
|
24 hours
|
any contact with specified individuals (within or outside
Australia)
|
notify specified person or body
|
24 hours
|
if the person intends to enter, or enters, a state or
territory other than the one in which his or her principal place of residence
is located
|
notify specified person or body
|
period specified in permit
|
if the person intends to leave, or leaves, Australia
|
notify specified person or body
|
period specified in permit
|
if the person accesses or uses, or intends to access or
use specified forms of telecommunication or other technology
|
notify specified person or body and/or provide a specified
person or body with sufficient information to enable the specific service,
account or device to be identified
|
period specified in permit
|
if the person intends to apply for an Australian travel
document
|
notify specified person or body
|
period specified in permit
|
Whereas under a control order, a
person may be prohibited or restricted from communicating with certain
individuals or using specified forms of technology, a return permit may not
place such restrictions on the person’s actions.[162]
Instead, these permits may require the person to notify authorities of certain
actions.
Other matters
A return permit must: be in writing; specify the name of
the person to whom it relates; specify the period during which it and any
conditions are to be in force; specify any conditions imposed; set out the
effect of clauses 17 (varying and revoking a permit), 18
(applications relating to return permits), 20 (offence for failing to
comply with conditions) and 22 (offence for providing false information
and documents); and state that the person may have review rights in relation to
the decision to issue the permit.[163]
The requirement to state that a person may have review rights has been included
in response to a recommendation of the PJCIS.[164]
The Minister must cause a copy of the permit to be served
personally on the person to whom it relates.[165]
If the person to whom the order relates is 14 to 17 years of age, the permit
must also be served on a parent or guardian (if reasonably practicable to do
so), implementing part of a recommendation of the PJCIS on the
February Bill.[166]
The Minister may vary or revoke a permit on his or her own
initiative or on application by the person to whom the permit relates (or
another person on his or her behalf).[167]
Issue: notification requirements for revocations
A revocation under clause 17 will take effect
immediately, yet as with a TEO, the Minister will only be required to ‘cause
such steps to be taken as are, in the opinion of the Minister, reasonable and practicable’
to bring the revocation to the individual’s attention.[168]
It is possible that a permit could be revoked after an individual has booked
and paid for his or her return to Australia, and even while the individual is
in transit.
It is also not entirely clear in what circumstances the
Minister would revoke (as opposed to vary) a return permit on his or her own
initiative, and the practical implications of such an action. If the Minister
revokes a permit because he or she considers that the individual should not yet
be permitted to return, the Minister would presumably impose another TEO on the
individual, but would then be required to issue another return permit if the
individual made a fresh application for one.
Issue: interaction with the control order regime
The Minister stated in his second reading speech for the
February Bill that after a period of further assessment following an
individual’s return, police may apply for a control order in relation to the
person.[169]
While this may be a reasonable course of action in relation to some
individuals, the Bill does not contain any provisions to prevent a person from
being subject to both conditions under a return permit and obligations,
prohibitions and restrictions under a control order at the same time.
Consideration could be given to inclusion of a provision stating that if a
control order is imposed on an individual, a return permit in force in relation
to that individual is taken to be revoked, or a provision requiring the
Minister to revoke a return permit if a control order is issued.
Offences
There will be three offences in relation to return
permits.
The first two offences will mirror those described above
for TEOs (and carry the same penalties), but apply in relation to conditions
imposed under return orders.[170]
The PJCIS recommended that the offence for failing to
comply with a condition of a return permit should be amended to require the
prosecution to prove that the person knew of the existence of the return
permit.[171]
The Government has not implemented that recommendation, stating that requiring
proof of knowledge rather than recklessness may reduce deterrence.[172] To
prove that a person was reckless as to whether a condition was in force under a
return permit, the prosecution will need to prove that the person was ‘aware of
a substantial risk’ that the condition was in force and that having regard to
the circumstances known to him or her, is was ‘unjustifiable to take the risk’.[173]
The third offence will apply where a person knowingly
provides false or misleading information or documents in response to a
condition imposed on a permit given to the person.[174]
An exception will apply (with the defendant bearing an evidential burden) if
the information or document is not false or misleading in a material
particular. This offence will carry the same maximum penalty as the others (imprisonment
for two years and/or a fine of 120 penalty units).[175]
Issues common to TEOs and return permits
Necessity of the proposed orders
The Australian Government already has a significant suite
of powers available to it to deal with the threats posed by foreign fighters,
including passport suspension and cancellation; citizenship cessation powers;
the control order regime; ASIO powers to investigate individuals of security concern
and law enforcement powers to investigate suspected criminal conduct.[176]
In that context, some stakeholders have questioned the necessity of the
measures proposed in the Bills and argued that the Government has not provided
sufficient justification for them.[177]
The LCA stated:
... the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill and Second Reading
Speech do not adequately justify why a TEO scheme is a necessary, proportionate
and legitimate response to the threat of terrorism in Australia. They do not
address why the wide array of counter-terrorism powers already available are
not able to meet the current national security needs of Australia.[178]
Similar sentiments were expressed by the AHRC, IARC and Professor
Helen Irving in submissions to the PJCIS’s inquiry into the February Bill, and
by others elsewhere.[179]
Ananian-Welsh, Blackbourn and McGarrity stated:
We submit that no evidence has been presented to demonstrate
that the anti-terrorism legislation which Australia has enacted to date is
inadequate and, furthermore, that the proposed TEOs scheme fills an identified
gap. We are concerned that the TEOs scheme would be relied upon to circumvent
the safeguards of the criminal justice system, which should be given primacy,
and even the limited safeguards of the control orders regime.[180]
They also questioned
whether TEOs could even prove to be counter-productive:
Refusal of entry into Australia on relatively flimsy grounds
could further a person’s sense of injustice and heighten the risk of them, or
those close to them, committing terrorist acts overseas or upon their return to
Australia at some point in the future.[181]
The Department of Home Affairs was asked at a PJCIS
hearing about what gap the Bill sought to fill. The Department responded that
there is not currently a mechanism for the managed return of individuals of
counter-terrorism interest in the absence of evidence to enable a prosecution.[182]
While there is not currently a specific mechanism of that kind, passport
cancellation and control orders used in combination would go some way towards
managing the return of such individuals. If a person’s passport has been
cancelled, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade can issue a short-term
travel document to facilitate an individual’s return to Australia.[183]
Constitutional issues
Some organisations and legal academics have suggested that
TEOs and return permits may not be constitutionally sound.
Professor Irving argued that Australian citizens have a constitutional
right of abode, and that the Bill would breach that right.[184]
She noted that in a 1988 case, the High Court stated:
The right of the Australian citizen to enter the country is
not qualified by any law imposing a need to obtain a licence or
"clearance" from the Executive.[185]
Irving considered:
Notwithstanding that the Bill gives a citizen who is subject
to a TEO the right to apply for and be granted a return permit, the Bill will
make the citizen’s return to Australia dependent upon a ‘clearance’ from the
Minister: the return permit may contain conditions, including on the date on
which the person may return, and the person to whom it applies may be prevented
from returning for up to twelve months from the issue of the permit.
The fact that the exclusion is temporary does not qualify the
character of the Bill as a law that would prevent a citizen from exercising his
or her right of abode.[186]
Irving and the LCA also contended that the February Bill may
breach the separation of powers. The LCA made this argument on the basis that a
TEO may represent punishment imposed by the Executive for criminal conduct.[187]
Irving submitted:
Nothing in the Bill suggests that the making of a TEO
requires a prior judicial determination of guilt or even an application before
a court or judicial officer. In making it an offence to enter Australia, the
Bill will punish a person for what is, effectively, a pre-determination of
guilt by the Executive, signified by a penalty (the imposition of the TEO), the
breach of which is the only relevant demonstration of unlawful conduct.[188]
The Department of Home Affairs indicated that it had legal
advice concerning the constitutionality of the February Bill and that while it
considered that a right of abode exists, ‘it's not a right that can't be
modified by a statute’.[189]
In additional comments to the PJCIS report, Labor members
expressed concern about the constitutional issues raised by submitters and stated
that the Government should:
- specifically ask the Solicitor-General to provide it with advice
on how the Bill could be amended (if at all) to ensure that it has strong
prospects of withstanding any constitutional challenge; and
- provide a copy of the Solicitor-General’s advice to the Committee
for review.[190]
The Government has reportedly ruled out sharing the legal
advice it has received on TEOs.[191]
Exclusion of procedural fairness
Clause 26 will provide that the Minister is
not required to observe any requirements of procedural fairness in exercising a
power or performing a function under the Act. While the content of procedural
fairness is not fixed, it generally involves two requirements being met—the
fair hearing rule (which ‘requires a decision maker to afford a person an
opportunity to be heard before making a decision affecting their interests’)
and the rule against bias (which ‘ensures that the decision maker can be
objectively considered to be impartial and not to have pre-judged a decision’).[192]
In a practical sense, a key implication is that the Minister will not be
obliged to give a person notice that he or she intends to make a TEO, impose a
condition under a return permit, or revoke or vary a return permit; or an
opportunity to present information that might be relevant to such a decision.
Several stakeholders objected to the exclusion of
procedural fairness from a scheme that carries such significant consequences
for individuals, and the Scrutiny of Bills Committee was concerned about this
aspect of the February Bill.[193]
The Explanatory Memorandum to the February Bill provided limited
justification for the exclusion. It noted that an individual subject to a TEO
or a return permit will have access to judicial review, and stated:
Procedural fairness requirements, specifically enabling the
potential subject of a TEO to respond to allegations made against them, can
frustrate the policy intention of this Bill by providing advance notice that
they are being considered for a TEO. Such a requirement may also be practically
difficult to implement in circumstances where that individual is overseas,
potentially in conflict zones.[194]
The LCA noted that explanation (which has since been
included in the Explanatory Memorandum for the TEO Bill[195])
and suggested that if providing procedural fairness would frustrate the policy
intent of the Bill, ‘this indicates that the desired policy settings are not
compatible with the rule of law’.[196]
Review of Ministerial decisions
Stakeholders were concerned at the lack of access to
independent review of ministerial decisions relating to TEOs and return
permits. As noted above, the Explanatory Memorandum for the TEO Bill states
that a person subject to a TEO or a return permit will have access to judicial
review.[197]
However, one avenue of such review will be excluded by clause 27,
which will provide that the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 does not apply to decisions made
under the Act. The Explanatory Memorandum states that this clause, which was
not included in the February Bill, has been included because review under
that Act ‘largely replicates the review that is already undertaken by the
reviewing authority’.[198]
This ignores the fact that the making of a TEO, which will be the only decision
reviewed by a reviewing authority, is only one of several decisions that the
Minister will be able to make (others for which individuals may wish to seek
review include the variation of a TEO, imposition of a condition under a new or
varied return permit, and revocation of a return permit).
Further, the LCA and Ananian-Welsh, Blackbourn and
McGarrity consider that several aspects of the Bill will mean that judicial
review will be ‘limited and inadequate’ because:
- the
person will be outside of Australia when the order is made and prevented from
returning to Australia to access judicial review, to seek legal advice or to
obtain support from family members;
- the
Minister's powers are extensive in scope, broadly defined and concern matters
of national security upon which the courts have little choice but to defer to
the Executive and its agencies;
- TEOs
are not subject to procedural fairness guarantees or any other safeguards or
prescribed criteria that could be relied upon by an applicant to challenge a
TEO; and
- the
person subject to a TEO is not entitled to reasons and, even if information was
requested, meaningful information is unlikely to be provided because of claims
concerning the impact on national security.[199]
The AHRC, LCA and the Scrutiny of Bills Committee also considered
that affected individuals should have access to full independent merits review
(not just judicial review) of decisions relating to TEOs and return permits.[200]
While judicial review is limited to consideration of whether a decision
involved an error of law, merits review considers all evidence about the merits
of a decision to determine whether the ‘correct or preferable’ decision was
made.[201]
Reporting
and review
Annual
reports
Clause 31 will require the Government to
report annually on the operation of the Act, and set out certain information to
be included in each report. The Minister will be required to table a copy of an
annual report in each house of Parliament within 15 sitting days of receiving
it. Information that the Minister is satisfied is likely to prejudice national
security may be excluded from the tabled report, but must be provided to the
PJCIS.
This provision implements a recommendation of the PJCIS on
the February Bill.[202]
Review of the proposed law
The Consequential Amendments Bill will
- enable the INSLM to review and report on the operation,
effectiveness and implications of the Counter-Terrorism (Temporary Exclusion
Orders) Act 2019 (the Act) (partially implementing a recommendation of the
PJCIS) and
- amend the functions of the PJCIS to include monitoring and
reviewing the exercise of powers under the Act, and conducting a review of the
operation, effectiveness and implications of the Act within three years of its
commencement, implementing recommendations of the PJCIS.[203]
The TEO Bill does not include a sunset clause.[204]
The PJCIS asked the Department of Home Affairs whether consideration had been
given to the inclusion of such a clause. An officer stated:
This is one particular moment in time, but there'll be other
circumstances where there'll be foreign fighters offshore. It doesn't require a
rise of the Caliphate for this to be the point in time. It's just that we have
a number of people who are offshore. This will be a long time in the running,
but, no, there's no reason a sunset clause hasn't been put in at the moment.[205]
Concluding comments
The Australian Government already has a significant suite
of powers available to it to deal with the threats posed by foreign fighters.
The Bill would add to the existing framework by providing a specific mechanism to
facilitate the managed return of individuals of counter-terrorism interest where
there is insufficient evidence to support extradition and immediate prosecution.
Stakeholders have objected to the Bill on the grounds that
the Government has not demonstrated the need for the new powers, that the Bill
may not be constitutionally sound, and that it may be inconsistent with
international human rights law and international obligations to exercise
criminal jurisdiction over people suspected of engaging in terrorism.
Some of the concerns raised by stakeholders will be
addressed through amendments in the TEO Bill (compared to the
February Bill) and through the Consequential Amendments Bill, both of
which will implement PJCIS recommendations. However, the Government has chosen
not to implement those recommendations in full (failing to implement some
altogether, and implementing some in part). Some stakeholder concerns,
including allowing the imposition of TEOs on minors, exclusion of procedural
fairness and lack of merits review, were not the subject of PJCIS
recommendations and have not been addressed in the Bills.