Introductory Info
Date introduced: 4 July 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Home Affairs
Commencement: The day after Royal Assent.
History of the Bill
The Migration Legislation Amendment (Regional Processing
Cohort) Bill 2016 (the original Bill) was introduced into the House of
Representatives on 8 November 2016.[1]
It passed the third reading in the House of Representatives on 10 November
2016. It was introduced into the Senate on 10 November 2016 but was not
debated, and the Bill lapsed at the end of the 45th Parliament on 1 July 2019.
The present Bill was introduced into the House of
Representatives on 4 July 2019. It has the same name and is in near-identical
terms to the original Bill, with only one substantive difference. This
difference is found in items 31–33 of Schedule 1 of the current
Bill, which amend regulation 2.08AAA of the Migration Regulations
1994 (Cth) (the Migration Regulations). Regulation 2.08AAA was inserted
into the Migration Regulations in 2017, and therefore did not exist at the time
the original Bill was introduced. This is discussed further below under ‘Key
issues and provisions’.
A Bills Digest was prepared in respect of the original
Bill.[2]
Much of the material in the present Digest has been sourced from that earlier
one.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Migration Legislation Amendment
(Regional Processing Cohort) Bill 2019 (the Bill) is to amend the Migration Act 1958
(the Act) and the Migration Regulations to:
- indefinitely
preclude ‘unauthorised maritime arrivals’ (UMAs) and ‘transitory persons’, who
were at least 18 years of age upon transfer and were taken to a regional
processing country after 19 July 2013 (to be known collectively in the Act as a
‘member of the designated regional processing cohort’) from making a valid
application for any Australian visa
- insert
a discretionary and non-compellable personal power for the Minister to permit a
member of the cohort, or a class of persons within the cohort, to make a valid application
for a visa if the Minister thinks it is in the public interest to do so and
- indefinitely
preclude a member of the cohort from being deemed to have been granted a
Special Purpose visa under section 33 of the Act, or being deemed to have
applied for particular visas under the Migration Regulations (with an
accompanying power for the Minister to waive such exemptions).
Background
These proposed legislative amendments were first mentioned
in the media in September 2016:
Back home, Mr Dutton has ordered his department to draw up
options to toughen the law and ensure he can meet his commitment that asylum
seekers who arrive by boat will never enter Australia.
“People on Manus and Nauru will never be settled in
Australia,” he said. “Regardless of what third country people end up in, the
Government will never allow those people to settle in Australia.”
...
All asylum seekers on Nauru and Manus Island will be added to
a list of banned migrants so they are denied visas. They would trigger an alert
if they arrived in Australia in the future, even if travelling on a passport
from a new country.[3]
On 30 October 2016 the then Prime Minister, Malcom
Turnbull, and the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection, Peter Dutton,
held a joint press conference confirming the Government’s intention to
introduce legislation to prevent UMAs who were taken to a
regional processing country since 19 July 2013, from making a valid application
for an Australian visa:
That is why today, I'm announcing that the Government will
introduce legislation in the next parliamentary sitting week to amend the Migration Act to prevent irregular maritime arrivals taken
to a regional processing country, from making a valid application for an
Australian visa.
The Bill will apply to all taken to a regional processing
country since the 19th July 2013. The reason for that date is that is the date
when Labor Prime Minister Kevin Rudd declared and I quote, “As of today, asylum
seekers who come here by boat without a visa will never be settled in
Australia.” Now this Bill will reflect the Government's long standing position
and as we understand it, the bipartisan position initially set out by Mr Rudd
and since then confirmed by Mr Shorten. And that position is, and I repeat,
that irregular maritime arrivals who have been sent to a regional processing
country, that is Papua New Guinea and Nauru at the present time, will never be
settled permanently in Australia.
This will send the strongest possible signal to the people
smugglers. It will send the strongest possible signal to those who are seeking
to persuade persons currently on Nauru and in Manus that the Australian
Government will change its policy and allow them to settle here. It is
critically important that we send the clearest message. We have one of the most
generous humanitarian programs in the world. But the only reason we can do it,
the only reason it has the public acceptance that it does, is because we are in
command of our borders.[4]
The original Bill was subsequently introduced into the
House of Representatives on 8 November 2016.
Why is this Bill necessary?
The Government has put forth a number of reasons why this
Bill is needed. These include:
- to
reinforce the Government’s policy that UMAs will never be permanently settled
in Australia
- to
send a strong message to people smugglers, advocates in Australia and UMAs in
Nauru and Papua New Guinea (PNG) that UMAs will never be permanently settled in
Australia
- to
prevent future spouse visa applications being lodged by UMAs and their
Australian citizen or permanent resident partner
- to
prevent people who have been brought to Australia for medical assistance from claiming
protection and engaging the legal process which may prevent them being returned
in the future (though such persons are currently prevented from lodging a valid
visa application under section 46B of the Act)
- to
prevent UMAs arriving on a temporary visa from a country that does not accept
involuntary returns (such as Iran) which would prevent the Government from
returning such persons in the future (though the standard processing of such
applications would necessarily involve such a risk assessment)
- to
prevent non-citizens undermining the Australian Government’s return and
reintegration assistance packages and
- to
further discourage persons from attempting hazardous boat journeys and
encourage them to pursue regular migration pathways instead.[5]
While the Government has not explicitly linked the
introduction of the original Bill, nor passage of the current Bill, to the
offer from New Zealand to resettle refugees from the processing centres in
Nauru and PNG, there are indications it may be more open to that offer should
the current Bill be passed by Parliament.[6]
Detail on the New Zealand resettlement offer, and the Government’s response to
it, is provided below.
Offshore processing in Nauru and Papua New Guinea
Offshore processing of asylum seekers in Nauru and PNG was
a feature of the Howard Government’s asylum policy (the ‘Pacific Solution’) which had begun in 2001 in response to rising numbers of asylum seekers
arriving by boat. It ceased in mid-2008 under the Rudd Government which
considered it to be a ‘cynical, costly and ultimately unsuccessful exercise’.[7]
A total of 1,637 people were detained in the Nauru and Manus facilities, of
whom 1,153 (or 70 per cent) were ultimately taken from the processing centres to
Australia or other countries—around 61 per cent (705 people) of the people
settled, were settled in Australia.[8]
However, by July 2010, then Prime Minister
Julia Gillard announced in her first major policy speech that the Government
had begun having discussions with regional neighbours about the possibility of
establishing a regional processing centre (RPC) for the purpose of receiving
and processing irregular entrants to the region.[9]
It took another two years for Prime Minister Gillard’s Government
to secure the statutory and practical arrangements for asylum seekers to be
sent to third countries. On 29 August 2012 the Australian Government
signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Government of Nauru and on
8 September 2012 the Government signed an updated MOU with the PNG Government.[10]
Under these arrangements, any asylum seeker who arrived in Australia by boat
could be transferred to either Nauru or PNG for processing. The first transfer
of asylum seekers to Nauru occurred on 14 September 2012 and to PNG
on 21 November 2012.[11]
In June 2013 Kevin Rudd was reinstated as Prime Minister
and on 19 July 2013, in the lead up to the 2013 federal election, he announced that
all, not just some, asylum seekers who arrived by boat would be transferred to
PNG for processing and, if found to be refugees, would be settled there or
elsewhere in the region—they would ‘never’ be settled in Australia.[12]
A similar agreement was made with the Government of Nauru in August 2013.[13]
Upon forming Government in 2013, the Coalition Government
continued with the policy of regional processing of asylum seekers in Nauru and
PNG, and remained committed to the former Government’s policy of not allowing
any refugees processed in Nauru or PNG to settle in Australia. The Coalition argued
that settling such refugees in Australia would act as a ‘pull factor’ to other
asylum seekers in the region, fuel the people-smuggling trade, and risk the
further loss of lives at sea.[14]
Since its recommencement, the offshore
processing of asylum seekers in Nauru and PNG has proved contentious for a
number of reasons, including:
- the financial cost
- ongoing concerns about the safety and security of asylum seekers and
refugees in the processing centres and in the broader community
- ongoing concerns about the desirability and sustainability of
involuntary settlement
- prolonged uncertainty and punitive living conditions which are said to
be causing or exacerbating psychological harm and
- inadequate independent oversight and transparency.[15]
Regional settlement
Responsibility for processing refugee claims in Nauru and
PNG rests with the governments of those countries, not Australia. Those found
to be refugees have various options available in relation to their long-term
resettlement:
- those
assessed as refugees in Nauru may receive a visa to remain in Nauru for 20
years[16]
- those
assessed as refugees in PNG may be resettled permanently in PNG[17]
and
- those
assessed as refugees in either Nauru or PNG may apply for resettlement in the
United States (US) under the resettlement arrangement agreed between Australia
and the US in 2016.[18]
When then Prime Minster Kevin Rudd announced the signing
of the ‘Regional Resettlement Arrangement’ with PNG on 19 July 2013, he
emphasised that the context for negotiating such an agreement was a commitment
that no asylum seekers who arrived in Australia by boat would ever be settled
in Australia. PNG and Nauru thus became sites not only of processing, but also
of settlement. This is fundamentally different from the regional processing
arrangements that were in place under the Howard Government. All those
processed in PNG and Nauru during the Howard era, who were found to be refugees,
were subsequently settled in other countries—the majority in Australia and New
Zealand.[19]
The Australian Government further indicated in 2013 that
these arrangements represented the beginnings of a broader regional framework,
and it would be seeking to negotiate further settlement arrangements with other
countries in the region.[20]
In September 2014, Australia signed a settlement agreement with Cambodia.[21]
Under this arrangement, Cambodia agreed to accept for permanent voluntary
settlement people who have been processed in Nauru, and been found to be
refugees. Only seven people processed in Nauru were resettled in Cambodia under
this agreement and the arrangement ceased in 2018.[22]
On 13 November 2016, two weeks after the Government
announced that it was proposing to introduce the original Bill, Prime Minister Turnbull
and Minister Dutton announced that the Government had secured an agreement with
the US for a number of refugees to be settled there.[23]
Priority would be given to the most vulnerable (namely women, children and
families) and the Government’s policy remains that the arrangement ‘will not
under any circumstance be available to any future illegal maritime arrivals
(IMAs) to Australia’.[24]
Under the agreement, US authorities conduct their own refugee status
assessments and ultimately determine who the US will accept (subject also to
the successful completion of health and security checks). As at 31 July 2019,
604 refugees have been resettled in the US under this arrangement.[25]
The vast majority of people transferred from Australia to
an RPC have now had their refugee claims assessed, and those found to be
refugees have either been settled in Nauru, PNG or the US, or are awaiting
resettlement. Those found not to be refugees have either returned to their country
of origin (voluntarily or involuntarily) or are waiting to be returned. The RPC
in PNG was closed in October 2017 and those awaiting return or resettlement
were moved to transit centres elsewhere on Manus Island.[26]
The RPC in Nauru remains open, with people still residing there, but operates
as an ‘open centre’ (meaning residents may come and go from the centre and move
around the island).[27]
New Zealand
resettlement offer
In addition to the resettlement arrangements outlined
above, New Zealand has offered to assist Australia by accepting for
resettlement some of the people from the RPCs in PNG and Nauru who are found to
be refugees. There is precedent for this kind of arrangement—New Zealand had
previously assisted Australia in resettling refugees from Nauru and PNG during
the first incarnation of offshore processing under the Howard Government.[28]
The New Zealand resettlement plan was reportedly
negotiated under Prime Minister Gillard in 2013, but was abandoned by the
Coalition upon forming Government later that year. Under the agreement, New
Zealand allocated 150 places annually within its humanitarian quota for the
resettlement of refugees from the processing centres in Nauru and PNG.[29]
Then New Zealand Prime Minister John Key confirmed in
February 2016 that New Zealand had offered to assist Australia by resettling
around 150 people per year from RPCs, but that Australia had not accepted this
offer.[30]
Resettlement in New Zealand has so far been rejected by
the Australian Government due to concerns that this would create an incentive
for people to attempt a maritime journey to Australia. There are two potential
‘pull factors’ which concern the Government about this arrangement: first, that
New Zealand is a developed country, similar to Australia, and that resettlement
in any developed country will act as an incentive for more asylum seekers to
make the journey; second, and most significantly, that refugees who are
resettled in New Zealand could eventually become citizens of New Zealand and
then be entitled to live in Australia under the right of entry granted to New
Zealand citizens in the Trans-Tasman Travel Arrangement.[31]
Minister Dutton expressed these two concerns in a media interview in February
2016:
One of the things that we need to be mindful of is that we're
not creating a situation where there's a pull factor for people to come here
because they know that they're going to a particular country that might be seen
in similar terms to Australia, in terms of welfare support or in terms of
employment opportunities, whatever the motivation might be.
So it needs to be crafted carefully. For example, the way in
which the Labor Party put together a proposal with New Zealand
would mean that people could go to New Zealand,
get New Zealand citizenship and then turn up
in Australia...[32]
Since then, the Australian Government has consistently
declined to accept the offer of resettlement in New Zealand for refugees in
Nauru and PNG. However, in July 2019, Minister Dutton confirmed the offer
remained open, and in an apparent softening of its position indicated that the
Australian Government may consider it at some point, subject to national
security interests:
I have never ruled out the New Zealand option but I've made
the point and I make it again today—now is not the right time for us to be
sending people to New Zealand ...
There may be a time when we can exercise the New Zealand
option—we're grateful for it, but we will exercise that option when and if it
is in our national interest and it's not going to restart boats.[33]
Committee
consideration
Senate Legal
and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee
The Bill was referred to the Senate Legal and
Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 13
September 2019. Details of the inquiry are at the inquiry web
page. The inquiry received 30 submissions on the Bill. All submissions—other
than that from the Department of Home Affairs—opposed the Bill.
The Committee’s majority report recommended that the
Senate pass the Bill. While it acknowledged the concerns raised by submitters
and witnesses, it was of the view the measures in the Bill were ‘necessary,
reasonable and proportionate’.[34]
The Committee noted:
Evidence from the Department of Home Affairs emphasised that
while the threat from people smuggling is currently suppressed, it has not been
defeated and therefore an ongoing and multilayered approach—with a strong deterrence
message—continues to be necessary ...
By virtue of the discretionary decision-making afforded to
the minister under the bill, the bill contains appropriate safeguards with
respect to permitting valid visa applications to be made in certain circumstances.[35]
Dissenting reports were issued by Australian Labor Party (ALP)
senators and the Australian Greens which recommended the Bill be rejected
(discussed below).
Report on
2016 Bill
The Senate Legal and Constitutional
Affairs Legislation Committee reported on the 2016 Bill in November 2016,
with the majority report similarly recommending that Bill be passed.[36] The
Committee noted:
... the concerns that have been expressed about aspects of this
Bill by submitters and witnesses in the course of the inquiry. However, it has
formed the view that the Bill is part of a comprehensive suite of related
measures that together act as a deterrent to people risking their lives by
illegally coming to Australia by boat, and to those who would ply the illegal
people smuggling trade into Australia ... The committee is satisfied that the
proposed measures are necessary and that there are sufficient safeguards
incorporated within the Bill to deal with the issues that have been raised.[37]
The ALP and the Australian Greens issued dissenting
reports which recommended that the Senate reject the Bill.[38]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
In its Scrutiny Digest dated 24 July 2019, the
Scrutiny of Bills Committee referred to its comments on the original Bill.[39]
In relation to that Bill, the Committee had raised concerns with the Bill’s
retrospective application, in relation to both:
- the
fact that the Bill defines the affected group (in part) by events that had
occurred in the past (since 19 July 2013) and
- the
application of the new statutory bars to offshore visa applications lodged
after the Bill was introduced but before its commencement.[40]
Its concerns about retrospectivity are discussed in
further detail under the ‘Key issues and provisions section below’.
The Committee considered that the Bill could have
‘particularly adverse consequences for those who were children at the time the
decision was made to seek to travel to Australia’, but who had turned 18 years
old by the time of their transfer to a RPC (and thus would come within the
defined cohort the subject of the Bill).[41]
Accordingly, the Committee sought the Minister’s advice as to whether
consideration had been given to the consequences of the Bill for this group.[42]
The Minister responded to the Committee by letter dated 22
December 2016, advising that the Bill codified Government policy announced on
19 July 2013 and stating that the Ministerial discretion provided by the Bill
could be used in situations to allow visa applications in specific cases ‘and
in consideration of the individual circumstances of the case, including the
best interest of affected children and/or their age at the time a decision to
travel illegally to Australia was made’.[43]
The Committee considered that the Minister’s response did
not ‘provide additional information to that provided in the explanatory
memorandum to address with specificity the committee's concerns’.[44]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
The ALP voted against the original Bill in the House of
Representatives in 2016.[45]
ALP Senator Kim Carr is reported to have described the current Bill as ‘unnecessary, arbitrary in its application and
discriminatory in its effect’.[46]
In the Senate inquiry into the current Bill, ALP senators issued
a Dissenting Report and recommended the Bill be rejected.[47]
Their concerns included:
- that
the effects of the Bill would extend beyond its stated aims of preventing
asylum seekers who arrive by boat from settling in Australia to prohibit
members of the regional processing cohort coming to Australia ‘under any
circumstance and on any visa’
- the
Bill could permanently separate members of the same family, in breach of
Australia's international legal obligations
- the
Bill establishes a broad and vaguely defined ministerial discretion under legislation
which creates a risk of unfair and inconsistent decisions and
- the
Bill would have retrospective application on individuals who have sought asylum
in Australia since 19 July 2013.[48]
The ALP senators’ Dissenting Report concluded:
The stated aim of the bill – that it is necessary for the
continued deterrence of boat arrivals and the continued effectiveness of
Operation Sovereign Borders – has not been demonstrated by any evidence
produced by the Government. The bill’s real purpose seems to be a political
declaration of the Government’s resolve to deter boat arrivals, even though
that aim has largely been achieved by the existing policy of offshore
processing and denial of permanent resettlement in Australia. By overreaching
to make that declaration, the Government is only likely to permanently divide
families; to put many asylum seekers who have been brought to Australia for
medical or other reasons into a legal limbo and at risk of refoulement; and to
deny significant future visits by resettled refugees that could provide
significant cultural and intellectual benefit to this country.[49]
The Australian Greens also voted against the original Bill
in 2016.[50]
They made a Dissenting Report in the Senate inquiry recommending the Senate
reject the Bill.[51]
It stated:
The Australian Greens are concerned that the bill is
punitive, will impact negatively on families, and that the Government has not
demonstrated the bill is necessary to deter asylum seekers. There is no
evidence that this bill will actually achieve its stated objective ...
The Australian Greens find that the bill contravenes
international obligations to which Australia has committed, including the
rights to non-discrimination and equality, and the rights of the child and
protection of the family.[52]
The independent Member for Denison (now Clark) Andrew
Wilkie, and Centre Alliance member for Mayo, Rebekha Sharkie voted against the
original Bill in the House of Representatives.[53]
Senator Jacqui Lambie reportedly supported the original bill, as did One
Nation.[54]
Neither appears to have made any formal statement on the current Bill at the
time of writing.
Position of
major interest groups
All of the submissions to the Senate inquiry into the Bill,
other than that from the Department of Home Affairs, opposed its passage. Refugee
and human rights advocates, including the Refugee Council of Australia and the
Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), as well as legal advocacy groups
including the Law Council of Australia and Australian Lawyers for Human Rights,
are opposed to the Bill on several grounds, notably:
- that
the Act already provides sufficient power for the Minister to refuse people a
visa[55]
- that
a ban on allowing people to obtain any kind of visa to enter Australia,
including a visitor visa, is disproportionate to achieving Australia’s policy
intention of ensuring people sent to RPCs do not settle in Australia[56]
- that
the provisions are contrary to Australia’s international legal obligations
concerning unity of the family, as they may result in people being unable to
reunite with family members who are resident in Australia[57]
- that
the provisions are contrary to Australia’s obligations under the Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees to not punish refugees on the basis of
their mode of entry[58]
- that
the provisions granting the Minister discretion to lift the ban in certain
cases are an inadequate safeguard against the above concerns, and an unnecessary
expansion of the Minister’s already broad discretionary powers[59]
and
- that
the provisions will be difficult and expensive to implement in practice.[60]
Some refugee advocates, despite being opposed to the
original Bill, argued in 2018 in favour of Parliament passing it if it would
result in the Government accepting New Zealand’s offer to resettle refugees.
They reluctantly concluded that it would be an acceptable compromise, in the
face of a ‘wicked choice’, in order to achieve the desired objective of removing
people from Manus Island and Nauru.[61]
Professor Jane McAdam of the Andrew and Renata Kaldor
Centre for International Refugee Law (Kaldor Centre) at the University of NSW,
as well as being opposed to the Bill on the basis that it is contrary to
Australia’s human rights obligations, has also argued against it on the basis
that ‘unilateral enforcement would violate the terms of Australia’s agreement
with New Zealand’ under the Trans-Tasman Travel Arrangement.[62]
New Zealand Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters has expressed
concern that the provisions of the Bill could potentially lead to the creation
of two categories of future New Zealand citizens, with those who arrive via
Manus Island or Nauru subject to restrictions on their travel:
We're going to have to consider whether or not, as a result
of our 2013 commitment (to offer to take 150 refugees from Nauru), we end up
with people who are second-class citizens in New Zealand.
Do we, in our endeavour to be humanitarian about it, end up
with a substandard level of citizenship, which is not what this country is
about?[63]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill states that the
amendments will have ‘low financial impact’.[64]
Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. However, the Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees as amended by the Protocol Relating
to the Status of Refugees (Refugee Convention)[65]
is not listed as an international instrument for this purpose.[66]
The Government considers that the Bill is compatible with the listed human
rights instruments, relying predominantly on the Minister’s personal power to
‘lift the bar’ and on the basis that any limitations ‘are reasonable,
necessary, and proportionate to achieving the legitimate aim of maintaining the
integrity of Australia’s lawful migration programs and discouraging hazardous
boat journeys’.[67]
A number of Australian international refugee law experts have
suggested that the Bill is not compatible with Australia’s obligations under
the Refugee Convention. Article 31(1) of the Convention states as
follows:
Refugees unlawfully in the country of refuge
1. The Contracting States shall not impose penalties, on
account of their illegal entry or presence, on refugees who, coming directly
from a territory where their life or freedom was threatened in the sense of
Article 1, enter or are present in their territory without authorization,
provided they present themselves without delay to the authorities and show good
cause for their illegal entry or presence.[68]
A joint submission to the Senate inquiry from Professor Jane
McAdam, Professor Guy S Goodwin-Gill and Madeline Gleeson from the Kaldor
Centre, Professor Michelle Foster, Director of the Peter McMullin Centre on
Statelessness at Melbourne Law School, and Professor Ben Saul, Challis Chair of
International Law at Sydney Law School, argued that the Bill would punish
refugees and asylum seekers for entering or seeking to enter Australia by boat
in violation of Article 31(1):
First, a ‘penalty’ is not limited to criminal sanctions but
includes any serious unfavourable treatment. The proposed ban on entering
Australia is punitive in this sense, particularly given its severity – a
permanent ban on entry, for any purpose, and irrespective of the personal
circumstances of individual refugees.
Secondly, the ban would only apply to refugees who sought to
enter Australia ‘illegally’ under Australia’s immigration law. It would not
apply to refugees who entered ‘legally’ on any visa, including under
Australia’s refugee resettlement program. As such, the penalty of a lifetime
ban would be imposed ‘on account of’ illegal entry. Article 31(1) prohibits
punishing such refugees because even if entry is technically ‘illegal’ under
Australian law, everyone has the right to seek asylum under international law –
with or without a visa.
Thirdly, while Article 31(1) applies to refugees ‘coming
directly’ from a country or territory in which their life or freedom were
threatened, this does not mean that refugees are only protected from punishment
if they travel immediately to Australia from their home country. Rather, the
protection still applies to refugees who may transit through other countries on
their way to Australia, so long as those other countries did not offer
effective protection...[69]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
In its report dated 30 July 2019, the Parliamentary Joint
Committee on Human Rights reiterated its views previously provided on the original
Bill.[70]
In regard to that Bill, the Committee observed:
- ‘[the
Bill] applies what is likely to be considered an unlawful penalty for seeking
asylum, in contravention of article 31 of the Refugee Convention’
- ‘on
the information available, the proposed ban does not appear to be compatible
with the right to equality and non-discrimination’ and
- ‘[it
is unclear] whether the measure is rationally connected to and a proportionate
means of achieving its stated objective, so as to be compatible with the right
to protection of the family and rights of the child’.[71]
In response, the Minister stated that any differential
treatment of the affected cohort was for a legitimate purpose and based on
relevant objective criteria, and was:
... a proportionate response to prevent a cohort of
non-citizens who have previously sought to circumvent Australia's managed
migration program by entering or attempting to enter Australia as a
[unauthorised maritime arrival] from applying for a visa to enter Australia.[72]
The Minister further stated that the flexibility to
personally lift the visa bar and consider the individual circumstances of
applicants and their family members would enable the Government to ensure it
acts consistently with its international human rights obligations to families
and children in Australia.[73]
The Committee suggested the Minister’s discretionary power
was ‘unlikely to be sufficient to ensure that the measure is a proportionate
limitation on the right to protection of the family in the context of a blanket
visa ban’, and noted that:
... seeking to impose a penalty on those who seek to enter
Australia for the purpose of claiming asylum, cannot be a legitimate objective
for the purpose of limiting human rights under international law.[74]
It was unable to conclude the measure was compatible with
the rights to equality and non-discrimination, the right to protection of the
family and rights of the child.[75]
Key issues
and provisions
Statutory bars
Existing
provisions
The Migration Act contains statutory ‘bars’ which
prevent certain people from lodging a valid visa application, unless the
Minister exercises their discretion to allow the application. Relevantly, statutory
bars currently apply to:
- ‘unauthorised
maritime arrivals’ (section 46A) and
- ‘transitory
persons’ (section 46B)
who are in Australia and who either do not have a valid
visa or hold a temporary protection visa or bridging visa.[76]
The term ‘unauthorised maritime arrival’ (UMA) captures
people who entered Australia by sea without a valid, in-force visa, either at
an excised offshore place (such as Christmas Island) or, since 1 June 2013, at
any other place. It also captures any child born in the migration zone to a
parent who is an unauthorised maritime arrival, unless the child’s other parent
is an Australian citizen or permanent resident.[77]
The term ‘transitory person’ includes a person (and any
children) taken to a regional processing country under the Migration Act,
or taken to a place outside Australia under Divisions 7 or 8 of Part 3 of the Maritime Powers Act
2013.[78]
If the Minister thinks it is in the public interest to do
so, they may lift the statutory bar and allow a person to apply for a visa.
This discretion cannot be delegated and is non-compellable.[79]
The Minister has issued guidelines to the Department as to when cases should
and should not be referred for his consideration. Ministerial guidelines
regarding the Minister’s section 46A intervention powers currently note:
The public interest may be served by ensuring that a UMA, who
has made or wishes to make claims that may engage Australia's protection
obligations, is allowed to have those claims assessed through a statutory
process against the criteria in [section 36(2)] of the Act.[80]
Proposed amendments
While the existing statutory bars apply to UMAs and
transitory persons who are currently in Australia and on a temporary protection
or bridging visa, the changes proposed by the Bill will significantly extend
their scope to prevent certain persons from ever lodging a valid visa
application, regardless of when or from where they are applying.
Item 4 of Schedule 1 of the Bill inserts proposed
subsection 46A(2AA), which applies an indefinite statutory bar to all UMAs
who have been taken to a regional processing country after 19 July 2013, and
who were at least 18 years of age when they were first taken to the regional
processing country.
This will capture persons in Nauru and PNG under regional
processing arrangements, persons who have been transferred to Australia from a
regional processing country for medical treatment, those who have voluntarily
returned home or been involuntarily removed to their home country, and those
who have been settled in a third country (such as the United States or Cambodia).
It will also apply to UMAs who are taken to a regional processing country in
the future.[81]
Item 13 inserts proposed subsection 46B(2AA),
which applies an indefinite statutory bar to all transitory persons who have
been taken to a regional processing country under Division 7 or 8 of Part 3 of
the Maritime Powers Act, if they were at least 18 years of age when they
were first taken to the regional processing country.
This captures persons taken directly to a regional
processing country following the interception of a vessel outside of
Australia’s territorial waters.[82]
It will not extend to persons on vessels which are intercepted and turned back
if they have not been ‘taken to a regional processing country’.[83]
Ministerial discretion
Under both provisions, the Minister is able to ‘lift’ the
statutory bar and permit a person to lodge a visa application, if the Minister
thinks it is in the public interest to do so. The Minister may:
- give
to a UMA or transitory person (as applicable) a written determination that the
bar does not apply to an application for a visa of a specified class or
- by
legislative instrument, determine that the bar does not apply to an application
by a person included in a class of UMAs or transitory persons (as applicable)
for a specified class of visa.[84]
The Minister may also vary or revoke a determination, if
the Minister thinks it is in the public interest to do so.[85]
These discretionary powers are non-delegable.[86]
While a mechanism enabling the Minister to permit visa applications to be
lodged is undeniably necessary to ensure that the Act operates as intended and
to accommodate exceptional circumstances, including to enable adherence to
Australia’s international human rights obligations (albeit on a purely
discretionary and non-compellable basis), the Minister does not have a duty
(under any circumstances) to consider whether to exercise the powers.[87]
As a consequence, there is no right of review if the Minister does not decide
to lift the bar.
What is in the ‘public interest’ is not defined in the Act
or the Migration Regulations and it is purely a matter for the Minister of the
day to determine.
Legal and refugee advocacy groups have argued that the
Minister’s discretionary intervention powers, as provided for in the Bill, do
not provide a sufficient safeguard against the human rights concerns raised by
the proposed measures.[88]
The joint submission by the Kaldor Centre, Peter McMullin Centre on
Statelessness, and Professor Ben Saul, suggested that the ‘public interest’ is
an ‘amorphous and largely discretionary test that is not amenable to judicial
scrutiny’, and further argued:
The history of non-compellable, non-reviewable discretionary
power is an affront to accountability in a democratic State committed to the
rule of law. Moreover, the Bill includes no requirement for the Minister to
take into account Australia’s international human rights obligations as part of
that assessment, which is particularly concerning given that the human rights
outlined above, including the right to family unity, are indisputable and their
effective protection requires that they be backed up by law, if arbitrariness
is to be avoided.[89]
Refugee Legal submitted that in its experience, public
interest powers in the migration context ‘have been characterised by arbitrary,
inconsistent and unpredictable outcomes, in which decisions lack ordinary
standards of transparency and accountability under the rule of law’.[90]
Liberty Victoria noted that the courts have afforded the Executive broad
discretion in respect of the exercise of ‘public interest’ and ‘national
interest’ powers.[91]
The Law Council suggested that the term ‘public interest’
is ‘susceptible to different interpretation by different Ministers on opaque
grounds’, and that procedural fairness may be undermined in the exercise of
Ministerial discretions with limited transparency or review.[92]
In regard to existing intervention powers, the Law Council stated:
The exercise of Ministerial discretions has also been subject
to judicial scrutiny with regard to the requirement that he give proper,
genuine and realistic consideration to the merits of the given case. The volume
of such matters requiring the personal consideration of the Minister may make
it very difficult for him to meet this standard.[93]
(citations omitted)
Additional exclusions
In addition to the statutory bars described above, the
Bill also amends provisions of the Act and the Migration Regulations to
preclude ‘members of the designated regional processing cohort’ from being
deemed to have been granted or to have validly applied for, certain visas such
as Special Purpose Visas,[94]
the Subclass 600 (Visitor) visa in the Business Visitor stream,[95]
or a Refugee and Humanitarian (Class XB) visa.[96]
Item 1 of the Bill inserts a definition of member
of the designated regional processing cohort into subsection 5(1) of
the Act, which captures:
- all
UMAs who have been taken to a regional processing country after 19 July 2013,
and who were over 18 years of age when they were first taken to the regional
processing country and
- all
‘transitory persons’ who have been taken to a regional processing country after
19 July 2013, and who were over 18 years of age when they were first taken to
the regional processing country.
As an example of how these amendments work, regulation 2.08A
of the Migration Regulations currently provides that when a person applies for
a permanent visa, in certain circumstances their spouse, de facto partner or
dependent child may be ‘taken to have applied’ for a visa of the same class if
they make a written request to be added to the original application and have
paid the relevant application fee. Item 29 of the Bill inserts an
additional requirement in proposed paragraph 2.08A(1)(db) which is that
the additional applicant ‘is not a member of the designated regional processing
cohort’. Proposed subregulation 2.08A(3) provides that the Minister may
waive this requirement in a particular case.
Regulation 2.08AAA similarly provides for the adding of
family members to certain applications for Temporary Protection Visas and Safe Haven
Enterprise Visas. This provision is amended by items 31 to 33 of the
Bill to exclude members of the designated regional processing cohort, except
where the Minister chooses to waive this.[97]
Unlike the ‘public interest’ discretions provided for in
relation to the statutory bars (discussed above), the Bill does not provide any
further guidance as to the circumstances in which the Minister may waive the
exclusion and allow a member of the designated regional processing cohort to be
deemed to have made a valid visa application.
Retrospectivity
Many submissions to the Senate inquiry criticised the Bill’s
retrospective operation in applying visa bars to persons who have previously
travelled to Australia as unauthorised maritime arrivals. The Law Council
described the operation of the proposed amendments as follows:
The Bill operates prospectively with regard to any future
arrivals who may at a later time fall within the Cohort. It effectively places
those people on notice, prior to seeking to come to Australia, that doing so in
this manner may result in permanent ineligibility for an Australian visa.
The Bill will, however, operate retrospectively in regard to
people who fall within the Cohort upon its commencement. For those
people, the Bill ‘is prospective, but it imposes new results in respect of a
past event.’ A person’s past action in seeking to come to Australia will have
the new, and immediate, result of permanent ineligibility for any visa.[98]
(Citations omitted)
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee emphasised that, in
keeping with the rule of law, ‘people should be able to guide their actions on
the basis of fair notice about the legal rules and requirements that will apply
to them’. It questioned the retrospective operation of the Bill in light of its
stated purpose of discouraging people from attempting hazardous boat journeys,
stating: ‘for people who have already undertaken such a journey, it seems that
the proposed law can only play a punitive, rather than deterrent, function’.[99]
The AHRC similarly submitted that it ‘does not consider
that the Bill’s retrospective adverse effect on human rights is necessary,
reasonable and proportionate to prevent hazardous boat journeys and irregular
migration’.[100]
Refugee Legal argued that the amendments will:
... operate in a manner which further punishes an already
extremely vulnerable group of people for actions that occurred in the past at a
time when the Government’s current law and policies to prevent people smuggling
and travel by boat to Australia did not exist...[101]
Application
provision
The Bill also has retrospective application in relation to
certain visa applications lodged prior to commencement. Item 39 provides
that the new statutory bars for UMAs and transitory persons (provided for in proposed
subsections 46A(2AA) and 46B(2AA), respectively) will take effect at
different times depending on whether a visa application has been lodged onshore
or offshore.
Where the visa applicant is outside Australia when making
the visa application, the new statutory bar will apply to an application:
- made
after commencement (the day after Royal Assent) or
- made
before commencement but after the date the Bill was introduced into the House
of Representatives (being 4 July 2019) if the application has not been finally
determined before commencement.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes:
The Government’s intention is that from the time of
introduction of the Bill, members of the designated regional processing cohort
should not be permitted to make a valid application for a visa unless permitted
to do so by the Minister. The retrospective application of these provisions is
required to give effect to this policy, and is directed to preventing members
of the designated regional processing cohort from attempting to circumvent the
amendments by lodging an offshore visa application after introduction of the
Bill and before the commencement of Schedule 1. From the time of introduction
of the Bill, members of the designated regional processing cohort are
considered to be on notice of the Government’s intention.[102]
Where the visa applicant is in Australia at the time of
making the application, the new statutory bar will apply to an application made
after commencement (the day after Royal Assent), unless the Minister has
already ‘lifted’ an existing bar to allow the application.
The original Bill similarly sought
to apply to offshore visa applications made after the Bill was introduced in
the House of Representatives which had not been finally determined before
commencement. The Scrutiny of Bills Committee expressed concerns about this
retrospective application, stating:
The committee reiterates its long-standing scrutiny concern
that provisions that retrospectively apply provisions to the date of the
announcement of the bill (i.e. 'legislation by press release') challenges a
basic value of the rule of law that, in general, laws should only operate
prospectively (not retrospectively).[103]