Introductory Info
Date introduced: 19 September 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Home Affairs
Commencement: The day after Royal Assent.
The Bills Digest at
a glance
The Australian Citizenship Amendment
(Citizenship Cessation) Bill 2019 (the 2019 Bill) will amend the scheme for
national security-related citizenship cessation in the Australian
Citizenship Act 2007 (the Citizenship Act) to:
- replace
‘operation of law’ provisions in which Australian citizenship is automatically
renounced on the basis of certain conduct, with a ministerial-decision model
for citizenship cessation
- reduce
the sentence threshold for cessation based on conviction for certain offences, from
a sentence of at least six or ten years imprisonment (depending on when the
sentence was imposed), to a sentence of at least three years imprisonment
- change
the ‘statelessness test’ by removing the precondition that the person is a
citizen of another country and substituting a prohibition on the Minister
making a determination where the Minister is satisfied that a person will be
made stateless by the determination
- amend
the procedures for the giving of notice of a citizenship cessation and
- introduce
procedures by which a person whose citizenship ceases may apply to the Minister
for revocation.
These amendments will apply retrospectively.
Background
The Independent National Security Legislation Monitor
(INSLM) reviewed the operation, effectiveness and implications of the national
security-related citizenship loss provisions enacted in 2015. The INSLM’s
report was provided to the Government in August 2019. It recommended the urgent
repeal of the automatic citizenship loss provisions and introduction of a model
in which citizenship cessation is determined by the Minister, with a range of
safeguards. The 2019 Bill implements some, but not all, of these
recommendations.
The 2019 Bill has been referred to the Parliamentary Joint
Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) for inquiry and report. The
Committee is concurrently completing a review of the existing citizenship loss
provisions. Both reports are expected to be completed by 1 December 2019.
Key
issues
While welcoming the repeal of the automatic citizenship
loss provisions, stakeholders and the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny
of Bills (Scrutiny of Bills Committee) have expressed concern with a number of
aspects of the 2019 Bill, including that:
- reducing
the sentence threshold for conviction-based citizenship cessation is not
proportionate and lacks justification
- amending
the statelessness test will increase the risk of statelessness and narrow the
scope for judicial review
- there
has been insufficient justification provided for the Bill’s retrospective
application
- although
the INLSM’s proposed model included a limited form of merits review, the Bill
does not make provision for this and
- proposed
procedural safeguards, including automatic revocation of the cessation
determination where a court makes certain factual findings, may not be
functional and thus may not provide practical protection against arbitrary
citizenship loss and statelessness.
The proposed statelessness test is not correctly explained
in the Explanatory Memorandum and is different to the version proposed by a
2018 Bill.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the 2019 Bill is to amend the national
security-related citizenship cessation provisions in the Citizenship Act
to:
- amend
provisions relating to cessation on the basis of certain conduct so that they
apply on the basis of a ministerial decision instead of the current ‘operation
of law’ model (under which a dual-national’s Australian citizenship is
‘automatically’ renounced on the basis of certain conduct)
- for
cessation based on conviction for certain offences, reduce the threshold at
which citizenship revocation may be considered from a sentence of at least six
or ten years imprisonment (depending on when the sentence was imposed), to a
sentence of at least three years imprisonment
- remove
the precondition that the person is a citizen of another country and substitute
a prohibition on the Minister making a determination where the Minister is
satisfied that a person will be made stateless by the determination
- establish
a process by which a person whose citizenship ceases may apply to the Minister
to request this be revoked
- amend
the processes relating to the giving of notice of a cessation determination
- apply
the new conduct-related provisions retrospectively (in most cases, to conduct
that occurred on or after 29 May 2003) and
- increase
the extent to which the conviction-related provisions apply retrospectively.
Background[1]
Australian Citizenship Amendment
(Allegiance to Australia) Act 2015
The Government introduced the Australian Citizenship
Amendment (Allegiance to Australia) Bill 2015 (the 2015 Bill) in June
2015.[2]
The Bill was controversial, and was substantially amended following an inquiry
by the PJCIS, before being passed.[3]
The Australian
Citizenship Amendment (Allegiance to Australia) Act 2015 (the 2015 Act)
amended the Citizenship Act to include two new grounds on which dual
citizens could lose their Australian citizenship, and to expand one of the
existing grounds:
- Section 33AA
of the Citizenship Act provides that a dual citizen aged 14 years or
over renounces their Australian citizenship if the person ‘acts inconsistently
with their allegiance to Australia’ by engaging in specified conduct (such as
terrorist acts; foreign incursions; and providing or receiving training
connected to preparations for, engagement in, or assistance in, a terrorist
act).
- Section 35
of the Citizenship Act was expanded to provide that the Australian
citizenship of a dual citizen aged 14 years or over ceases if the person fights
for, or is in the service of, a terrorist organisation declared by the Minister
under section 35AA (new in the 2015 Bill) or serves in the armed forces of
a country at war with Australia (existing).
- Section 35A of the Citizenship Act allows the
Minister to determine in writing that a dual citizen ceases to be an Australian
citizen if:
- the
person has been convicted of an offence or offences against one or more
specified provisions (these include, amongst others, most offences against
Part 5.3 (terrorism) and offences against Part 5.5 (foreign incursions and
recruitment) of the Criminal
Code Act 1995 (Criminal Code))
- the
person has been sentenced to imprisonment for at least six years for the
conviction/s
- the
Minister is satisfied that the conduct to which the conviction/s relate
demonstrates that the person has repudiated their allegiance to Australia and
- having
regard to specified factors, the Minister is satisfied that it is not in the
public interest for the person to remain an Australian citizen.
For the purposes of this Digest, conduct-based cessation
refers to citizenship cessation under sections 33AA and 35 (and proposed
section 36B) and conviction-based cessation refers to citizenship
cessation under section 35A (and proposed section 36D) of the Citizenship
Act.
A dual citizen may lose their Australian citizenship on
any of the above grounds regardless of how they obtained that citizenship.
Threat
environment and the potential usefulness of citizenship cessation
Foreign
fighters
The 2015 amendments were enacted in the context of
terrorism threats associated with Australians fighting with overseas terrorist
and insurgent groups (‘foreign fighters’) and different forms of ‘home-grown’
terrorism. A key concern was the potential threat posed by foreign fighters to
domestic security upon their return. Citizenship revocation was one means
through which Australia and other western nations sought to address those
threats.[4]
The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) estimates
that around 230 Australians (or then Australians) travelled to Syria and Iraq
to fight with or support groups involved in the conflict, and that
approximately 110 of them are now deceased.[5]
The agency is aware of around 40 individuals having returned to Australia from
that conflict, the ‘vast majority’ of whom returned before 2016.[6]
Government agencies note that the number of Australians and others attempting
to travel to Syria and Iraq to engage in politically motivated violence has
reduced significantly, though ASIO ‘assesses individuals will continue to seek
to travel to alternative conflict zones in support of extremist groups’.[7]
While noting that identifying an exact figure is likely impossible, ASIO stated
that it is aware of around 80 Australian (or former Australian) adults remaining
in the Syria-Iraq conflict area, along with an unidentified number of their
children.[8]
As at August 2019, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) had 42 active
arrest warrants in relation to alleged foreign fighters currently offshore.[9]
ASIO has contrasted the
potential threat of the individuals who remain in Syria or Iraq with earlier
returnees:
Unlike the majority of current returnees, who spent less than
six months in the conflict zone, most of the Australian adults currently in
Syria or Iraq will have been there for an extended period of time. We can
expect the majority to have developed:
- a greater tolerance for and propensity towards violence as a
result of exposure to it over an extended period of time—either directly or
through Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) propaganda;
- increased capabilities as a result of military-type training and
combat;
- networks of security concern as a result of their co-location
with Islamist extremists from a diverse range of backgrounds; and
- established jihadist credentials as a result of activities
undertaken while in Syria or Iraq.[10]
Potential
usefulness of citizenship cessation
Having identified the
potential threats posed by such individuals, ASIO noted that citizenship
revocation, where it is available as an option, will not always be the most
suitable approach:
In a globally interconnected world, the location of an
individual offshore as a result of citizenship cessation will not eliminate any
direct threat they pose to Australian (or other) interests overseas, and it
will not prevent their reach-back into Australia to inspire, encourage or
direct onshore activities that are prejudicial to security—including onshore attacks.
In some instances, citizenship cessation will curtail the
range of threat mitigation capabilities available to Australian authorities. It
may also have unintended or unforeseen adverse security outcomes—potentially
including reducing one manifestation of the terrorist threat while exacerbating
another. There may be occasions where the better security outcome would be that
citizenship is retained, despite a person meeting the legislative criteria for
citizenship cessation—for example, where the Australian Federal Police has
criminal charges that could be pursued if the person were to remain an
Australian citizen.[11]
Similarly, the AFP stated that its primary objective is to
prosecute Australian foreign fighters where sufficient evidence exists to do
so.[12]
However, ASIO, the AFP and
the Department of Home Affairs (the Department) have argued for the continued
availability of citizenship revocation as one option, among others, for dealing
with the threat posed by Australian foreign fighters.[13]
The Department stated:
As each terrorist threat is unique, what works to address one
threat may not necessarily work for another. Australia’s counter-terrorism framework
provides government and agencies with a range of measures to manage terrorist
threats on a case-by-case basis. These measures include prosecutions in
Australia or overseas for terrorism offences committed overseas, personal
restrictions (such as control orders), continuing detention orders,
participation in countering violent extremism programmes, mutual assistance to
other countries, and citizenship cessation.[14]
While these agencies wish to retain citizenship cessation
as an option for dealing with threats to national security, some security and
legal experts have questioned the value of citizenship revocation as a national
security tool. For example, in their submission to the PJCIS’s inquiry into the
2019 Bill, Dr Sangeetha Pillai and Professor George Williams point to
Australia’s extensive counter-terrorism framework and argue that other powers,
most notably the recently established temporary exclusion order regime, may be
more appropriately used to manage threats posed by returning foreign fighters
and individuals previously convicted for terrorism offences.[15]
In their submission, Dr Isaac Kfir and Dr John Coyne from the Australian
Strategic Policy Institute argue that the rationale for national
security-related citizenship cessation is flawed for several reasons, among
them that:
- there
is no substantive empirical evidence that the possibility of losing citizenship
acts as a deterrent to engagement in violent extremism and
- citizenship cessation may weaken instead of protect Australia’s
national security by:
- feeding
the narratives of terrorist groups
- denying
opportunities to ‘deradicalise’ and/or monitor the individuals concerned
- ignoring
the value of ‘formers’ in deradicalisation efforts and intelligence gathering
and
- meaning
that foreign fighters and their families may seek new havens from which to
engage in terrorist activities.[16]
Citizenship
losses under current provisions
As at 18 October 2019, at least 17 people had lost their
Australian citizenship under provisions amended or introduced by the 2015
Act, all under the conduct-based provisions.[17]
However, the Department has stated that due to the automatic operation of the
conduct-based provisions, there may be cases where an individual’s Australian
citizenship has ceased under the law, but the Government is not aware that has
occurred.[18]
The first instance of cessation under the new provisions
was in early 2017, with the media reporting in February that year that Khaled
Sharrouf had lost his Australian citizenship after travelling to Syria in 2013
and later joining the Islamic State group (IS).[19] Sharrouf gained notoriety in Australia after
releasing photographs of his young son holding the severed head of a Syrian
soldier in Raqqa.[20]
In August 2018, the Minister for Home Affairs, Peter
Dutton, announced that another five people had lost their Australian
citizenship for ‘act[ing] contrary to their allegiance to
Australia by engaging in terrorism-related conduct’ overseas.[21] The Government did not want to confirm details about the individuals,
but media reports stated that the five comprised three men and two women in
their 20s and 30s.[22]
In November 2018, the
Government stated that a further three individuals had since lost their
citizenship ‘because of their involvement with terrorist organisations
offshore’, taking the total since 2015 to nine.[23]
In December 2018, Minister Dutton announced that Neil
Prakash had lost his Australian citizenship due to his involvement with IS.[24]
Prakash is currently serving a sentence for a terrorism conviction in Turkey,
and Australia has applied for his extradition.[25]
The ABC reported in May 2017 that it understood that Prakash would ‘face
charges including “membership of a terrorist organisation”, “advocating
terrorism”, “providing support to a terrorist organisation” and “incursions
into foreign countries with the intention of engaging in hostile activities”’
if he is extradited to Australia.[26]
Minister Dutton stated that Prakash was the twelfth dual citizen ‘whose
Australian citizenship has ceased for actions contrary to their allegiance to
Australia’.[27]
On 10 October 2019, The Australian
reported that 17 people had now lost their Australian citizenship after the 2015
Act. It stated that Nabil Kadmiry was one of the five individuals who lost
citizenship in 2019 and Zehra Duman was also believed to be in that group.[28]
The article stated that Kadmiry travelled to Syria in 2014 and was captured by
Kurdish forces in March 2019.[29]
Duman reportedly travelled to Syria to join IS in 2014, married an Australian IS
fighter and helped recruit for the terrorist organisation.[30]
Review of Citizenship
Act cessation provisions
In February 2018, the Minister for Immigration and Border
Protection (now the Minister for Home Affairs) announced that he had asked his
department to review amendments to the Citizenship Act 2007 made by
the 2015 Act that allowed citizenship cessation in certain circumstances
because he was concerned they were not working as they should.[31]
Australian
Citizenship Amendment (Strengthening the Citizenship Loss Provisions) Bill 2018
On 28 November 2018 the Government introduced the Australian
Citizenship Amendment (Strengthening the Citizenship Loss Provisions) Bill 2018
(the 2018 Bill) into the House of Representatives.[32]
The Bill proposed different amendments to section 35A of the Citizenship
Act to those proposed in the 2019 Bill. It did not proceed to second
reading and lapsed when Parliament was prorogued ahead of the 2019 federal
election.
The PJCIS’s report on the 2018 Bill included a minority
report by Australian Labor Party (Labor) members of the Committee. In light of
their significant concerns with the Bill, Labor members recommended that it not
be passed and that the provisions introduced by the 2015 Act be
referred immediately to the INSLM for review.[33]
Independent
National Security Legislation Monitor review
On 15 February 2019, the Attorney-General asked the INSLM
to complete a review of the operation, effectiveness and implications of the amendments
made by the 2015 Act by 15 August 2019.[34]
The INSLM’s report was provided to the Government in
August 2019 and tabled on 18 September 2019.[35]
The INSLM concluded that justification exists for some form of law allowing for
citizenship cessation on the basis of engagement in terrorist activity.[36]
Turning to the current provisions in the Citizenship
Act, the INSLM considered that the conviction-based citizenship cessation
powers are necessary and proportionate and generally contain appropriate
safeguards.[37]
However, he considered that the conduct-based cessation powers are neither
necessary nor proportionate, and that they do not contain appropriate
safeguards.[38]
The INSLM noted that sections 33AA and 35 apply such
that a person’s citizenship ceases ‘then and there’ upon their engagement in
certain conduct ‘by operation of law, without any further event or action such
as conviction by a jury or decision by a minister, official, judge or Tribunal
member’.[39]
He considered that the provisions:
- operate
in an uncontrolled manner so that a person who has committed the most serious
of offences and is an undoubted threat to Australia while remaining a citizen
is treated the same as one whose behaviour is at the lowest end of the
spectrums of criminal behaviour and is no longer any threat and has other significant
mitigating circumstances
- operate
in an uncertain manner: it will often not be possible for the authorities to
know when citizenship has ceased ...
- lack
the traditional and desirable accountability which comes with a person, court
or tribunal taking responsibility for a decision and being subject to
constitutionally entrenched judicial review
- cause
Australia to be in breach of its international obligations under the Convention
on the Rights of the Child as the operation of law provisions pay no regard to
the best interests of a child over 14
- will
inevitably cause real unfairness in particular cases including because of the
usual decision not to notify a former citizen they have lost Australian
citizenship, even though that person may well take irrevocable and important
steps, such as giving birth to more children, on the incorrect assumption they
remain a citizen of Australia
- lack
proper review rights ...
- lack
proper oversight in relation to allegations of maladministration because the
Citizenship Review Board comprises both intelligence and non-intelligence
personnel so that neither the IGIS nor the Ombudsman has sufficient
jurisdiction
- potentially
causes unintended and not easily contained effects on Australia’s relations with
other countries
- cause
confusion and potential legal difficulties for [the Australian Secret
Intelligence Service] and [the Australian Signals Directorate] because of
additional safeguards in the Intelligence Services Act when those agencies seek
to exercise their powers in relation to Australian citizens
- may impede criminal prosecutions or cause them to fail
because, variously:
- where
it is an element of the offence that an accused person was an Australian
citizen (Criminal Code s 119.1–.2), or where that status is a jurisdictional
requirement (Criminal Code s 15), the prosecution in a criminal trial may not
be able to prove that status beyond reasonable doubt
- where
an offence is committed wholly overseas by a person who was not then an Australian
citizen, the Attorney-General must give consent before ‘proceedings are
commenced’: Criminal Code s 16, but if that status is not known the consent may
not be obtained, potentially making the prosecution fail.[40]
INSLM recommendations
Accordingly, the INSLM recommended the conduct-based
provisions be urgently repealed and replaced with provisions under which
citizenship cessation is determined by the Minister and ‘proper safeguards’
apply.[41]
In particular, he recommended that the Minister be able to revoke a dual
citizen’s Australian citizenship if he or she is reasonably satisfied that the
relevant physical conduct element exists, and considers that there was a
repudiation of allegiance to Australia such that it is not in the public
interest for the person to remain an Australian citizen.[42]
The INSLM also made
recommendations on the process and safeguards that should apply under the new
provisions. Specifically, he recommended:
- that
the Minister not be obliged to afford procedural fairness to a person (such as
the right to make submissions or be made aware of adverse evidence against
them) prior to revoking citizenship, but must give notice of the loss of
citizenship and the right to request reconsideration, with the ability to delay
giving notice for a maximum of six months
- that
revocation decisions be subject to limited merits review in the Security
Appeals Division of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) on whether there
is reasonable satisfaction as to the existence of the requisite conduct for citizenship
loss.[43]
Agency
support for a Ministerial decision making model
ASIO, AFP and the Department have acknowledged that the
automatic operation of the existing conduct-based cessation provisions presents
a range of challenges, including impeding prosecution of certain offences and
not allowing agencies the flexibility to manage individuals based on an
assessment of the particular circumstances of each case.[44]
ASIO stated:
ASIO is supportive of an alternative model for citizenship
cessation where full and thorough consideration can be given to each
citizenship cessation case, including having regard to whether ceasing an
individual’s Australian citizenship would reduce the threat and protect
Australia and its interests from that harm.
A ministerial decision-making model of cessation would allow
ASIO and other relevant agencies scope to advise against citizenship cessation
in circumstances where the outcome would be prejudicial to security or where
the security risk could be better managed utilising other options. At present,
the current operation of law provision does not provide operational agencies
with the flexibility required to utilise citizenship cessation to maximum
effect.[45]
Statelessness in international
law
Australia has ratified both the 1954 Convention
Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons (1954 Convention)
and 1961 Convention
on the Reduction of Statelessness (1961 Convention) which create
obligations to afford certain rights to stateless persons and implement
measures to prevent and reduce statelessness.[46]
Under the Conventions, a person is stateless if they are not considered a
national by any state under the operation of its law.[47]
Australia is also a party to a number of other
international instruments, including the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, which recognise the right to acquire a nationality.[48]
These instruments do not create a general positive obligation on states to
confer nationality on stateless persons, though this duty may arise in
specified circumstances.[49]
For example, article 1 of the 1961 Convention requires states to grant
nationality to a child born in their territory who would otherwise be
stateless.[50]
International law also constrains the circumstances in
which a state can revoke citizenship. In particular, article 8(1) of the 1961
Convention provides that a state is not to deprive a person of its
nationality if doing so would render the person stateless.
There are limited exceptions to this obligation, the main
one being where the person has acquired citizenship through misrepresentation
or fraud.[51]
Article 8(3) provides a further exception if, at the time of signing, ratifying
or acceding to the Convention, a state made a declaration retaining an existing
right under its domestic law to deprive the citizenship of a person in certain
cases, including where, ‘inconsistently with his duty of loyalty to the
Contracting State’, the person ‘has conducted himself in a manner seriously
prejudicial to the vital interests of the State’.[52]
Australia did not make a declaration when acceding to the
Convention in 1973, and no such basis for depriving citizenship existed in
Australian law at the time. In contrast, the United Kingdom retained the right
to deprive citizenship on this ground.[53]
The implications of the Bill’s proposed changes for issues
of statelessness are discussed under ‘Key issues and provisions’ below.
Committee
consideration
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Intelligence and Security
The 2019 Bill has been referred to the PJCIS for inquiry
and report, with a report expected by 1 December 2019. Details of the
inquiry are at the inquiry
homepage. Some of the evidence presented to the PJCIS for this inquiry is
included in the ‘Position of major interest groups’ and ‘Key issues and
provisions’ sections of this Digest.
The PJCIS is concurrently completing a review of the amendments
made by the 2015 Act required under the Intelligence
Services Act 2001 by 1 December 2019.[54]
Details of that inquiry are at the inquiry
homepage.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing
Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills (Scrutiny of Bills Committee) had concerns
about several aspects of the 2019 Bill. It requested that the Minister provide:
- more
detailed justification for:
- changing
the statelessness test
- reducing
the sentence threshold that applies for conviction-based citizenship cessation
- providing
the Minister with a ‘broad discretionary power’ to cease a person’s citizenship
under the conduct and conviction-based provisions by reference to the
Minister’s subjective satisfaction that the person has repudiated his or
allegiance to Australia
- providing
the Minister with the power to cease a person’s citizenship under the conduct-based
provision based ‘merely on the minister’s satisfaction of the key matters
rather than the existence of those matters in fact’ and
- providing
for declarations of terrorist organisations for the purposes of the citizenship
cessation provisions instead of listing them in primary legislation
- more
detailed advice on:
- why
determinations ceasing a person’s citizenship are not subject to independent
merits review
- why
the Minister should not be obliged to observe the requirements of natural
justice when making a determination to cease a person’s citizenship
- whether
the Bill provides for adequate judicial oversight of the factual determinations
on which decisions to cease a person’s citizenship and decisions about whether
to revoke a citizenship cessation determination are based and
- the
necessity and appropriateness of significantly expanding the retrospective
application of the citizenship cessation powers and
- advice
on whether the notice requirements for citizenship cessation determinations
should be amended to require (instead of allow) the Minister to give additional
notice if the first notice was not received and the Minister is aware of the
person’s electronic address, with consequential amendment to provisions about
applications for revocation of determinations.[55]
The Minister’s response was included in the Committee’s
digest on 13 November 2019.[56]
It noted the consistency of a number of the Bill’s provisions with the
recommendations of the INSLM, and the inclusion of various safeguards to allow
an affected person to challenge a cessation decision. In relation to the
provision of notice of a citizenship cessation determination, the Minister
stated he would consider amending certain aspects of the proposed provisions in
accordance with the Committee’s recommendations.[57]
In considering the Minister’s response to the other issues raised, the
Committee reiterated its scrutiny concerns and left the matters for the
consideration of the Senate as a whole.
The Minister’s response to particular issues raised by the
Committee is discussed in further detail under ‘Key issues and provisions’
below.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of publication of this Bills Digest, there did
not appear to be any public indication of the policy position of non-government
parties and independents on the 2019 Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
Non-government
stakeholders
Stakeholders welcomed the repeal of the existing
conduct-based cessation provisions.[58]
However, several stakeholders considered that all of the national
security-related cessation provisions should be repealed in their entirety
instead of amended as proposed by the 2019 Bill, [59]
or that cessation should be possible only after conviction for a relevant
offence.[60]
If such provisions are to be retained, stakeholders recommended a range of
amendments to the 2019 Bill to reduce their scope and strengthen safeguards.
An overview of key issues raised in non-government stakeholder
submissions to the PJCIS’s inquiry into the 2019 Bill is set out in Table
1 below. Further detail is included in the ‘Key issues and provisions’ section
of this Digest.
Table 1: key
issues raised in stakeholder submissions to the PJCIS’s inquiry into the 2019
Bill
Issue
|
Submission author
|
Citizenship revocation is not an effective means of
addressing national security concerns, or has the potential to exacerbate
rather than reduce risks to security.
|
Dr Isaac Kfir and Dr John
Coyne
Dr Sangeetha Pillai and
Professor George Williams
Professor Kim Rubenstein
Australian Centre for
International Justice (ACIJ)
Liberty Victoria
|
Citizenship deprivation powers, and attempts at their
expansion, threaten the principles of integrity, stability and equality of
Australian citizenship.
|
Dr Rayner Thwaites
Professor Kim Rubenstein
Liberty Victoria
|
Reducing the sentence
threshold for conviction-based citizenship cessation from six to three years,
including that the amendment:
-
is not proportionate
- lacks justification and
- is inconsistent with a 2015 recommendation of the PJCIS that
was accepted and implemented by the Government at the time.
|
Dr Sangeetha Pillai and
Professor George Williams
Law Council of Australia (Law
Council)
Australian Human Rights
Commission (AHRC)
Dr Rayner Thwaites
Liberty Victoria
|
Lowering the threshold for determining dual citizenship
will increase the risk of a person becoming stateless by allowing the
Minister to make a citizenship cessation determination if reasonably but
mistakenly satisfied that the person will not become stateless, and narrowing
the scope for judicial review.
|
Law Council
AHRC
Science Party
Castan Centre for Human Rights
Law
Dr Rayner Thwaites
Liberty Victoria
Peter McMullin Centre on
Statelessness
Federation of Ethnic Communities’
Councils of Australia (FECCA)
United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR)
|
Increased retrospective application of cessation
provisions, including lack of sufficient justification in supporting material
and inconsistency with a 2015 recommendation of the PJCIS that was accepted
and implemented by the Government at the time.
|
Dr Sangeetha Pillai and
Professor George Williams
Law Council
AHRC
Professor Kim Rubenstein
Dr Rayner Thwaites
Liberty Victoria
|
The lack of merits review of determinations ceasing a
person’s citizenship, despite the INSLM’s recommendation that such review be
available, means there will inadequate oversight of the Minister’s powers.
|
Law Council
AHRC
Professor Kim Rubenstein
Castan Centre for Human
Rights Law
Dr Rayner Thwaites
Liberty Victoria
Peter McMullin Centre on
Statelessness
FECCA
|
The exclusion of natural justice requirements in the
making of a cessation determination, and limitations of the notice
provisions, may mean that there are inadequate procedural safeguards.
|
Castan Centre for Human
Rights Law
AHRC
Dr Rayner Thwaites
Law Council
Liberty Victoria
|
The expansion of the circumstances in which citizenship
can be revoked may raise questions about the constitutional validity of the
Bill.
|
Dr Sangeetha Pillai and
Professor George Williams
Law Council
Immigration Advice and Rights
Centre
Liberty Victoria
|
Human rights implications and potential inconsistency with
international law/obligations.
|
Castan Centre for Human
Rights Law
Peter McMullin Centre on
Statelessness
UNHCR
AHRC
ACIJ
Prosecute; don’t perpetrate
|
Source: Submissions
to PJCIS, Review of the Australian Citizenship Amendment (Citizenship
Cessation) Bill 2019.
Operational
agencies
As noted above, ASIO and the AFP have acknowledged that
the automatic operation of the existing conduct-based cessation provisions
presents a range of challenges. Both agencies support the alternative model
recommended by the INSLM and proposed in the 2019 Bill.[61]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that the financial
impact of the 2019 Bill is low and that any costs will be met from within
existing resources.[62]
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 2019
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act.
The Government has assessed the 2019 Bill as engaging a
number of human rights, including the right to freedom of movement and choice
of residence, right to enter one’s own country, equality before the courts and
tribunals, and the best interests of the child. However, it considers that the
Bill is compatible, claiming that to the extent that the provisions limit human
rights, the limitations are reasonable, necessary, balanced with safeguards,
and proportionate to the Bill’s purpose of providing for the cessation of
citizenship of persons who ‘through certain conduct incompatible with the
shared values of the Australian community, sever that bond and repudiate their
allegiance to Australia’.[63]
A number of human rights bodies have argued that parts of
the 2019 Bill are not compliant with Australia’s international human rights
obligations. The AHRC has stated that although the Bill improves the human
rights compatibility of the citizenship loss regime through the repeal of
self-executing citizenship loss provisions, ‘several aspects of the Bill do not
remedy previously identified human rights concerns’ while other aspects ‘also
create new human rights concerns’.[64]
The concerns about the
Bill’s compatibility related to the following human rights:
- the
right to enter and remain in one’s own country, provided for under article
12(4) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR)[65]
- the
rights of the child under the Convention on the Rights of the Child,[66]
including the right of children to preserve their identity, including
nationality and family relations, and requirement on governments to consider
the best interests of the child in decision-making[67]
- international
obligations regarding statelessness and arbitrary deprivation of nationality
(as discussed above under ‘Statelessness and international law’)[68]
and
- the
prohibition against retrospective criminal laws under article 15(1) of the
ICCPR, including the imposition of a heavier penalty than was applicable at the
time the offence was committed.[69]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had not
yet reported on the 2019 Bill at the time of publication of this Bills digest.
Key issues
and provisions
The 2019 Bill will implement the INSLM’s key
recommendation of replacing the automatic operation of the existing
conduct-based cessation provisions with a model based on ministerial
determination that takes account of whether an individual’s conduct represents
a repudiation of his or her allegiance to Australia and whether citizenship
revocation is in the public interest in the particular circumstances of each
case. It will also reduce the sentence threshold for consideration of
citizenship revocation based on conviction for certain offences, reduce the
dual citizenship threshold, and increase the extent to which the provisions
apply retrospectively. The Bill also introduces a mechanism by which a person
can request that the Minister revoke a citizenship cessation determination. However,
unlike the model recommended by the INSLM, the Bill does not provide for any
merits review of citizenship cessation decisions.
Basis for
Ministerial cessation determination
The proposed amendments will
allow the Minister to cease the citizenship of a person:
- under proposed subsection 36B(1) on the basis of prescribed conduct (‘conduct-based
cessation’) or
- under proposed subsection 36D(1) on the basis of the person’s conviction for a
prescribed offence and a sentence of a total period of imprisonment of at least
three years (conviction-based cessation).
Under both provisions, the
Minister will also be required to be satisfied that:
- the
relevant conduct demonstrates that the person has repudiated their allegiance
to Australia[70]
and
- that
it would be contrary to the public interest for the person to remain an
Australian citizen.[71]
Under both provisions, the Minister is not permitted to
make a citizenship cessation if the Minister is satisfied that a person would
then become ‘a person who is not a national or citizen of any country’; that
is, a stateless person (the ‘stateless person exception’). The same stateless
person exception is currently used in other provisions of the Citizenship
Act relating to citizenship revocation on the basis of offences or fraud or
special residence requirements.[72]
Conduct-based
cessation provisions
Existing
provisions
The Citizenship Act currently
provides that a person aged 14 years or over, who is a national or citizen of
another country:
- renounces
their Australian citizenship if they act ‘inconsistently with their allegiance
to Australia’ by engaging in specified conduct (such as terrorist acts; foreign
incursions; and providing or receiving training connected to preparations for,
engagement in, or assistance in, a terrorist act) (section 33AA) or
- ceases
to be an Australian citizen if they fight for, or are in the service of, a
terrorist organisation declared by the Minister under section 35AA or
serve in the armed forces of a country at war with Australia (section 35).
Both provisions currently apply such that a person’s
citizenship ceases immediately upon their engagement in certain conduct, by
operation of law.[73]
INSLM
criticism
The INSLM considered that having a person’s citizenship
cease automatically, in the absence of any consideration about the particular
circumstances of each case, was neither necessary nor appropriate, and had
‘serious problems in the international law context’.[74]
Accordingly, the INSLM recommended that these provisions be urgently repealed
and replaced with provisions under which citizenship cessation is determined by
the Minister and ‘proper safeguards’ apply.[75]
In response to the INSLM’s recommendation, the 2019 Bill
will repeal and replace those provisions.[76]
This Digest focuses on the differences between the current and proposed
provisions.
Proposed
provisions
Proposed section 36B
will cease a person’s citizenship when they engage in the specified conduct
(which will be the same as under existing sections 33AA and 35), but only
after a determination is made by the Minister.[77]
To make such a determination, the Minister must be satisfied that:
- a person aged 14 years or older:
- engaged
in conduct specified in proposed subsection 36B(5) while outside
Australia or
- engaged
in conduct specified in any of proposed paragraphs 36B(5)(a)–(h) while
in Australia, has since left Australia and has not been tried for an offence in
relation to that conduct[78]
- the
conduct demonstrates that the person has repudiated their allegiance to
Australia and
- it
would be contrary to the public interest for the person to remain an Australian
citizen.[79]
The Minister must not make such a determination if
satisfied that the person would, if the determination were made, become
stateless (see below under ‘Statelessness test’).[80]
The rules of natural justice will not apply to the making
of a decision or the exercise of a power under proposed section 36B.[81]
This means the Minister is not required to advise the person of the case
against them, and provide an opportunity to respond, prior to making a
decision.[82]
However, a person may apply to the Minister for revocation of a determination,
and the Minister will be required to observe the rules of natural justice in
considering such an application (see below under ‘Minister’s discretion to
rescind citizenship cessation’).
Intent
behind conduct
Subsection 33AA(3) of the Citizenship Act currently
provides that the cessation provision only applies when the specified conduct was
done:
- with the intention of advancing a political,
religious or ideological cause; and
- with the intention of:
- coercing,
or influencing by intimidation, the government of the Commonwealth or a State,
Territory or foreign country, or of part of a State, Territory or foreign
country; or
- intimidating the public or a section of
the public.
The listed intentions are the same as the intentions in
the definition of ‘terrorist act’ used in the Criminal Code.[83]
The above intention-based limitation on the conduct
captured will not apply to that same conduct as specified in proposed
paragraphs 36B(5)(a)–(h). The Explanatory Memorandum explains this change
as follows:
The omission of the intent element from new section 36B is
supported by the requirement that a person has repudiated their allegiance to
Australia, as it serves to narrow the class of people that may otherwise be
subject to the provisions.[84]
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee was concerned about this
change, and the Law Council considered that the requirement for the conduct to
be done with the intent outlined above should be retained on the basis that ‘intention
as well as conduct is necessary to justify the significant step of stripping a
person of citizenship, particularly where it is being done in the absence of a
person being convicted in a court of a criminal offence’.[85]
Proposed subsection 36B(7) will replicate the
limitations on when a person is taken to be in the service of a declared
terrorist organisation in existing subsection 35(4) of the Citizenship
Act.
Public
interest test
Proposed section 36B
requires the Minister to determine whether it would be contrary to the public
interest for a person to remain an Australian citizen. Under proposed
section 36E the Minister must consider the same factors as currently specified
when determining whether to exempt a person from the operation of current
sections 33AA and 35, in particular:
- the
severity of the relevant conduct
- the
degree of threat posed by the person to the Australian community
- the
person’s age
- if
the person is under 18 years of age, the best interests of the child as a
primary consideration
- whether
the person is being or is likely to be prosecuted for the relevant conduct
- the
person’s connection to the other country of which they are a national or
citizen, and the availability of the rights of citizenship of that country to
the person
- Australia’s
international relations and
- any
other matters of public interest.
Application
of the new provisions
Current sections 33AA and 35 of the Citizenship
Act apply to conduct engaged in on or after 12 December 2015.[86]
Proposed section 36B will have broader retrospective application.[87]
See under ‘Retrospective application’ below.
Conviction-based
cessation provisions
Existing
provisions
Currently, section 35A
of the Citizenship Act allows the Minister to determine in writing that
a person ceases to be an Australian citizen if:
- the person has been convicted of an offence or offences against:
- Subdivision A
of Division 72 of the Criminal Code (international terrorist activities
using explosive or lethal devices)
- Subdivision B
of Division 80 of the Criminal Code (treason)
- Division 82
of the Criminal Code (sabotage), other than section 82.9 (preparing
or planning for a sabotage offence)
- Division 91
of the Criminal Code (espionage)
- Division 92
of the Criminal Code (foreign interference)
- Part 5.3
of the Criminal Code (terrorism), other than: section 102.8
(associating with terrorist organisations), Division 104 (control orders)
or Division 105 (preventative detention orders)
- Part 5.5
of the Criminal Code (foreign incursions and recruitment, including
entering or remaining in a declared area) and/or
- section 6
(foreign incursions) or 7 (preparations for foreign incursions) of the repealed
Crimes (Foreign
Incursions and Recruitment) Act 1978[88]
- the
person has been sentenced to imprisonment for at least six years for the
conviction/s
- the
person is a national or citizen of a country other than Australia at the time
of the determination
- the
Minister is satisfied that the conduct to which the conviction/s relate
demonstrates that the person has repudiated their allegiance to Australia and
- having
regard to specified factors, the Minister is satisfied that it is not in the
public interest for the person to remain an Australian citizen.
Proposed
provisions
Proposed section 36D will largely replicate
provisions currently in section 35A (which will be repealed by the 2019 Bill).
However, the 2019 Bill will
make two key changes—it will:
- lower
the minimum sentence threshold from six years to three years (see below) and
- change
the statelessness test (see below under ‘Statelessness test’).
The Bill will also change the point at which the rules of
natural justice apply. Under section 35A, the rules of natural justice
apply to decisions by the Minister under subsection 35A(1) to cease a
person’s citizenship (in accordance with a PJCIS recommendation on the
2015 Bill).[89]
The rules of natural justice will not apply to the making of a decision or the
exercise of a power under proposed section 36D.[90]
This means the Minister is not required to advise the person of the case
against them, and provide an opportunity to respond, prior to making a
decision.[91]
However, a person may apply to the Minister for revocation of a determination,
and the Minister will be required to observe the rules of natural justice in considering
such an application (see below under ‘Minister’s discretion to rescind
citizenship cessation’).
Lowering the
sentence threshold
The 2015 Bill as introduced did not require that a person
be sentenced to any minimum period of imprisonment before they could lose their
Australian citizenship on the basis of one or more convictions. Following its
consideration of that Bill, the PJCIS recommended that the Minister only be
able to revoke a person’s citizenship following conviction where a sentence of at
least six years imprisonment, or multiple sentences totalling at least six
years imprisonment, had been imposed.[92]
The PJCIS considered that restricting the operation of the provision on the
basis of offence was not sufficient on its own:
While limiting the provision to more serious offences is an
appropriate measure to better define the scope of conduct leading to
revocation, the Committee notes that even following a conviction there will
still be degrees of seriousness of conduct and degrees to which conduct
demonstrates a repudiation of allegiance to Australia. Therefore, the Committee
recommends that loss of citizenship under this provision not be triggered
unless the person has been given sentences of imprisonment that together total
a minimum of six years for offences listed in the Bill.
Some members of the Committee were of the view that a lower
or higher threshold was preferable; however, on balance it was considered that
a six year minimum sentence would clearly limit the application of proposed section
35A to more serious conduct. It was noted that three years is the minimum
sentence for which a person is no longer entitled to vote in Australian
elections. Loss of citizenship should be attached to more serious conduct and a
greater severity of sentence, and it was considered that a six year sentence
would appropriately reflect this.[93]
The 2018 Bill would have removed the sentence threshold
entirely for certain offences, while retaining the six-year threshold for
others. The proposed removal of the threshold was supported by former INSLM
Bret Walker, but opposed by academics and organisations that made submissions
to the PJCIS’s inquiry into that Bill.[94]
The 2019 Bill will instead reduce the sentence threshold
from six to three years. The Government has provided limited justification for
this proposed change, only stating that the revised threshold ‘reflects the
seriousness of a criminal conviction for a terrorism offence’.[95]
This change was not recommended by the INSLM. Given that
the INSLM found section 35A to be necessary and proportionate on the basis
of the current thresholds, including ‘a substantial sentence of imprisonment of
six years or more’ imposed by a court, Parliament might have expected that more
detailed justification would be provided for a proposal to apply the provision
to less serious conduct.[96]
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee and several stakeholders
noted the lack of justification for this change.[97]
They noted the PJCIS’s 2015 recommendation and the rationale behind it, and
considered that amending this threshold could lead to disproportionate and
unjust outcomes, and possibly weaken the connection between the law and the
relevant constitutional head of power.[98]
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee sought more detailed justification from the
Minister.[99]
The Minister stated that lowering this threshold ‘better acknowledges the
seriousness of conduct that has resulted in conviction for a terrorism
offence’; and that while conviction will prompt consideration for citizenship
cessation, that consideration will also have regards to factors such as the
severity of the conduct involved.[100]
The Committee did not consider that this response adequately explained why the
amendment is necessary or appropriate, and drew its concerns to the attention
of Senators.[101]
Application
of the new provisions
Current section 35A of
the Citizenship Act applies to:
- convictions
obtained between 12 December 2005 and 11 December 2015 for which a person was
sentenced to at least 10 years imprisonment and
- convictions
obtained from 12 December 2015 onwards for which a person was
sentenced to at least six years imprisonment. [102]
As outlined below, proposed section 36D will have
broader retrospective application.[103]
Statelessness
test
Currently, only a person ‘who is a national or citizen of
a country other than Australia’ (a ‘dual citizen’) can have their citizenship
ceased under sections 33AA, 35 and 35A.[104]
The dual citizen requirement is a precondition for the Minister’s decision.
Just as a person must be 14 years old before the Minister has power to order a
citizenship cessation under those sections, so the person must also be a dual
citizen.
This means the Minister currently has to have evidence of
a person’s dual citizenship before the Minister can make a determination. If
there is not sufficient evidence for the Minister to be satisfied that the
person has dual citizenship, the Minister has no jurisdiction and cannot
proceed. This also has implications on review. Currently, if the Minister makes
an error about the person’s citizenship status when making a determination,
that is a jurisdictional error and a person could apply to the High Court or
Federal Court for judicial review.
By contrast, proposed subsections 36B(2) and 36D(2)
will prevent the Minister from making a cessation determination only if the
Minister is satisfied the person would then ‘become a person who is not a
national or citizen of any country’ (that is, a stateless person). The
Explanatory Memorandum does not provide a reason for the change, stating only
that it ‘differs slightly’ from existing provisions. It explains that under the
proposed provisions:
... the Minister needs to be satisfied that the person would
not become a person who is not a national or citizen of any country. The
Minister will be required to turn his or her mind to the issue, using the
materials available to him or her at the time.[105]
However, this is not an accurate explanation of the test
the Minister must apply. Under the proposed changes, the Minister does not have
to be satisfied that the person would not become stateless before making a
cessation determination. The Minister is only prevented from making a
determination if he or she is positively satisfied that a person would be
stateless if their Australian citizenship was ceased. Looking for evidence of
either another nationality, or of no nationality, is not required for the
Minister to lawfully exercise the cessation power.
While the Minister’s determination must be based on the
available evidence, under the proposed statelessness test, the onus of
obtaining evidence no longer falls on the Minister but on the person subject to
the determination. Additionally, their opportunity to produce such evidence
under the terms of the Bill will only arise after the determination has been
made. Provided there is some suggestion that the person might have another
citizenship, and possibly in the absence of any evidence at all, the Minister
is entitled to conclude that he or she cannot be satisfied that the person will
become stateless.
In submissions to the PJCIS inquiry, legal bodies,
academics and human rights groups raised concerns that the Bill has the
potential to breach Australia’s international obligations regarding
statelessness.[106]
The Peter McMullin Centre on Statelessness stated that the proposed change to
the statelessness test ‘is clearly, and concerningly, a lowering of the
threshold’, and allows a ‘temporal gap and predictive element to the minister’s
discretionary powers’.[107]
Noting the complexity of determining dual citizenship, which includes
considering how foreign nationality laws are implemented in practice, the
Centre expressed concern that the accuracy of the Minister’s decision ‘may be
less robust’, with more limited scope for judicial review than under the
existing law.[108]
In terms of the Bill’s compatibility with international human rights
obligations, the Centre stated:
We remain concerned that the proposed amendments to the Act
raise critical issues concerning their compatibility with Australia's
obligations under Article 8 of the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of
Statelessness, as well as other international human rights law obligations.
... We briefly note that both the Act and Bill in its current
form also create a real risk that even if a person is a dual national, he or
she may be rendered de facto stateless, whereby a person who is nominally a
citizen in a country other than Australia may not be able to exercise rights
associated with citizenship in practice. They may also be unable to return to
their country of citizenship, if they are, for example, a refugee due to a
well-founded fear of persecution. There is therefore a real possibility that
the revocation of citizenship under these amendments may result in lengthy, if
not indefinite detention, in violation of Australia's obligations under Article
9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.[109]
Submitters raised concerns with the shift from a
requirement that a person must be a citizen of another country, to a
prohibition on the Minister making a determination if satisfied a person would become
stateless as a result. Dr Raynor Thwaites stated:
International law requires that, at the moment of deprivation
of citizenship, a person is not rendered stateless. It does not allow for the
much looser requirement, contemplated by the proposed Bill, that a person not
‘become’, after some unspecified interval of time, stateless. Further, whether
a person is rendered stateless is a matter of fact and law, independent of the
Minister’s opinion or ‘satisfaction’.[110]
The AHRC recommended the current dual citizenship test be
retained as a precondition to the exercise of the Minister’s power, describing
this as providing:
... stronger legislative protection against statelessness, by
increasing the likelihood that a correct decision will be made as to the
citizenship status of a relevant person, by virtue of the obligations on the
Minister in decision-making and the intensity of available judicial review.[111]
Dr Sangeetha Pillai and Professor George Williams
recommended the Citizenship Act be amended to prescribe a process for
determining a person is a dual citizen before citizenship cessation.[112]
The Law Council made a similar proposal, suggesting that a statutory
determination process should follow the procedure prescribed by the UNHCR in
its Handbook on the Protection of Stateless Persons.[113]
Number of
individuals potentially impacted
Reducing the minimum sentence threshold to three years,
changing the statelessness test, and expanding the retrospective application of
the security-related citizenship cessation provisions will expand the pool of
individuals who may be considered for revocation. At the time of publication of
this Digest, the Government had not made public an estimate of the number of
individuals potentially affected by these changes.[114]
Notice of
citizenship cessation
Notice requirements currently apply to the existing
citizenship cessation provisions under the Citizenship Act.[115]
Proposed section 36F departs from the existing provisions in a number of
ways.
Proposed section 36F will provide that if the
Minister makes a cessation determination, the Minister is required to provide
written notice to the person as soon as practicable after the determination is
made. However, the Minister may delay giving notice by up to six years—this is
discussed further below. The Minister may also give notice of the determination
to other persons as appropriate.[116]
Method of
notice
Proposed subsection 36F(2) will provide that notice
must be sent by prepaid post to the address of the place of residence last
known to the Department. The Minister may also send the notice electronically,
but only if satisfied the person did not receive the postal notice, and if the
Minister becomes aware of the person’s electronic address.[117]
These requirements are more prescriptive than those under
the existing scheme, which does not specify any particular method by which
notice must be given.[118]
Some stakeholders expressed concern about the adequacy of the provision, with
the AHRC stating:
Service by mail to the place of residence last known to the
Department may be inadequate actually to reach the person. The Department may
not have current residential addresses for every Australian citizen. The
Commission also notes that proposed s 36F(3) does not require service by email
if the Minister is satisfied that the person did not receive the notice by
mail, rather the Minister ‘may’ effect service by email again... The Bill is
silent about what happens if the Minister is satisfied that the person did not
receive the notice by mail but becomes aware of the current physical address
for a person.[119]
The AHRC recommended that proposed section 36F be
amended to require that all reasonable attempts be made to ensure effective
service of a notice of citizenship cessation, noting that this would be
consistent with the current provisions, which require the Minister to ‘give, or
make reasonable attempts to give’ notice.[120]
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee suggested that it may be appropriate to amend proposed
subsection 36F(3) to state that the Minister must (rather than may)
give additional notice where the original notice is not received and the
Minister is aware of the person’s electronic address.[121]
In response to the Scrutiny of Bills Committee’s report, the Minister indicated
that he would consider amending proposed subsection 36F(3) in accordance
with the Committee’s recommendation.[122]
Content of
the notice
Proposed subsection
36F(5) will provide that the notice must:
- include
a statement that the Minister has determined that the person has ceased to be
an Australian citizen
- in
the case of a determination under proposed subsection 36B(1), include a
basic description of the relevant conduct
- in
the case of a determination under proposed subsection 36D(1), specify
the conviction(s) and sentence(s) to which the determination relates
- specify
the date of the notice and
- set
out the person’s rights of review.
The notice will be required
not to contain any operationally sensitive information, or information the
disclosure of which:
- could
prejudice Australia’s security, defence or international relations, or the
performance of the functions of a law enforcement or security agency
- could
endanger a person’s safety or
- would
be likely to be contrary to the public interest for any other reason.[123]
These are substantially similar to the existing notice
provisions.[124]
However under the current law, where the Minister makes a cessation
determination under existing section 35A, the notice must include ‘the reasons
for the decision to make the determination’.[125]
In contrast, under proposed subsection 36F(5) there will be no
requirement that reasons be provided for the Minister’s decision beyond the
factual issues noted above. The notice will not be required to state, for
example, the factors which contributed to the Minister’s assessment that it
would be contrary to the public interest for the person to remain an Australian
citizen.
The AHRC expressed concern that in the absence of further
requirements for reasons, notices may be given that contain very little detail,
‘making it difficult for a person to effectively respond to any relevant
adverse allegations or to make submissions about why the determination should
be revoked’.[126]
The AHRC questioned whether the requirement that the Minister provide reasons
for refusing a request for revocation (see below under ‘Minister’s revocation
power’) was sufficient to address these issues, noting that this would not
inform a person of the case against them in advance of making their
application for revocation.[127]
Delaying
notice
The Citizenship Act currently allows the Minister
to determine in writing that a notice should not be given to a person if
satisfied that doing so could prejudice the security, defence or international
relations of Australia, or Australian law enforcement operations. The Minister
must consider whether to revoke such a determination no later than six months
after making it, and at least every six months subsequently for the five years
after the determination.[128]
The Act is silent as to what happens at the end of these five years, but there
does not appear to be any further obligation on the Minister to serve a notice.
Under the 2019 Bill, proposed section 36G will similarly
provide that the Minister may determine in writing that a notice should not be
given to a person if satisfied that doing so could prejudice the security,
defence or international relations of Australia, or Australian law enforcement
operations. However, unlike the current scheme, this cannot be done
indefinitely—if the determination has not been revoked within five years after
being made then it is taken to have been revoked, though the Minister can
extend the determination once, for an additional year.[129]
During the period in which the determination is in force, the Minister must
consider whether to revoke it at least every 90 days.[130]
This departs from the timeframes recommended by the INSLM,
who suggested that the Minister should have the power to defer notice for 90
days, with a one-off option to extend this for a further 90 days. The INSLM
stated: ‘six months is a sufficient maximum period to withhold notice’.[131]
Minister’s discretion
to rescind citizenship cessation
Existing
provisions
The existing conduct-based cessation provisions provide
that the Minister may rescind a notice of citizenship cessation and exempt a
person from the effect of the relevant provision.[132]
If the Minister does so, the person’s citizenship is taken to never have
ceased.[133]
This rescission power is non-compellable: there is no mechanism for a person to
apply to, or for a court to order, the Minister to consider exercising the
power to rescind the notice.[134]
Where citizenship is lost following a conviction under section 35A, the
Minister can only revoke a cessation determination if the relevant conviction
is overturned or quashed by a court.[135]
Proposed
provisions
Proposed section 36H will establish a new process
for the revocation of citizenship cessation determinations, by which a person
may apply to have the determination revoked, and will ultimately have the
ability to review the Minister’s decision (or failure to make a decision) in
court.
Proposed subsection
36H(2) will require an application for revocation to be made no later than
the later of:
- 90
days after the date of the cessation determination notice and
- if
the notice was subsequently sent to the person’s electronic address in
accordance with proposed subsection 36F(3), 30 days after the electronic
notice.
One consequence of this is that the timeframes in which a
person may apply for revocation will run (and expire) regardless of whether the
person actually received the notice served. The Scrutiny of Bills Committee
suggested that this be amended to provide for 90 days to apply for revocation
where notice is subsequently served electronically.[136]
In response, the Minister stated he would give consideration to amending proposed
subsection 36H(2) to provide an affected person a period ‘greater than 30
days’ to make an application for revocation where notice has been served
electronically.[137]
The Law Council recommended that the provision be amended
to allow for discretion to accept an application for revocation outside the
legislative timeframes, noting:
... something as significant as the loss of citizenship requires
some capacity for flexibility for a person to bring an application for
revocation outside the prescribed time limit. It is consistent with natural
justice principles that a meritorious revocation application should not be
precluded due to an arbitrary time limit.[138]
Once a revocation
application is received, the Minister will be required to consider it and
either revoke the cessation determination (effectively restoring the person’s
citizenship as if it had never ceased),[139]
or refuse the application. The Minister must revoke the determination if
satisfied that either:
- at
the time the determination was made, the person was not a national or citizen
of any other country or
- for
a determination made under proposed subsection 36B(1), that the person
did not engage in the relevant conduct.
In any other circumstances, the Minister may revoke
the determination if satisfied that doing so would be in the public interest,
as provided for under proposed section 36E (see above).
The Minister must provide the person with written notice
of the decision, which includes (if the application is refused) the reasons for
the decision and the person’s rights of review.[140]
Unlike the original determination, in responding to the revocation request the
Minister must observe natural justice requirements.[141]
However, the Minister’s notice will be subject to the same national
security/public interest restrictions on the disclosure of information that
apply to notices of the original cessation determination.[142]
Proposed section 36J provides that the Minister may
also revoke a cessation determination on the Minister’s own initiative, on
public interest grounds. In comparison with proposed section 36H, this
provision does not expressly provide that the Minister must or may revoke a
determination on the basis of being satisfied that a person has been made
stateless or did not engage in the conduct which gave rise to the original
cessation. In such circumstances, the Minister may be able to revoke a
cessation determination on the basis that it would be in the public interest;
however, the Minister would not be compelled to do so.[143]
Automatic
revocation of citizenship cessation determination
In its submission to the PJCIS inquiry, the Department
stated that ‘as an additional safeguard, the Bill includes a provision whereby
if a court finds the person was not a national or citizen of another country at
the time of the determination, their citizenship is taken never to have
ceased’.[144]
However, there are questions as to how this would work in practice.
Proposed section 36K
will provide for the automatic revocation of the Minister’s citizenship
cessation determination in certain circumstances. If the determination is
automatically revoked, the person’s citizenship will be taken never to have
been ceased.[145]
To trigger an automatic revocation of a conduct-based cessation, a court could
find either:
- that
a person was in fact rendered stateless by the Minster’s determination[146]
or
- that
a person did not in fact engage in the conduct which the Minister was satisfied
they had engaged in.[147]
The practical question is how a person could persuade a
court to make such a finding. Judicial review by the courts examines only
whether a decision complies with the limits imposed by law.[148]
The cessation determinations to be made by the Minister do not rely on the same
two facts that would trigger revocation.
A court could determine that a person was in fact
stateless at the relevant time and it would not necessarily follow that the
Minister had made a relevant error. On the terms of the Bill, the Minister only
has a duty not to make a determination if satisfied, on the evidence available,
that a person would be made stateless. If the Minister reaches a reasonable
conclusion on the evidence available, there will be no error.
A court reviewing the Minister’s determination would not
need to find as a fact whether or not a person would be made stateless by the
determination when examining the lawfulness of the Minister’s determination. The
Minister would have a reasonable objection that exploration of such facts was
not relevant to the issue before the court.[149]
A court which accepted that the questions of fact were
relevant would effectively be reviewing the matter ‘on the merits’. That would
be a substantial departure from its normal review jurisdiction and although the
court might regard itself as authorised to engage in that examination by the
words of proposed section 36K, it is much more likely that the court
would require clear words conferring a jurisdiction to review the merits.
It is therefore, a real possibility that the automatic
revocation provisions of the Bill cannot practically function, and the
appearance of an additional safeguard may therefore be illusory.
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee pointed to these issues in
questioning the scope of protections provided by proposed section 36K,
stating:
... in a judicial review proceeding under section 75 of the
Constitution, the court’s only role is to test whether the minister exceeded
their jurisdiction. In these circumstances, the court may determine that the
minister was lawfully ‘satisfied’ of the relevant matters without being
required to determine whether the considerations of the minister were factually
correct. The result is that in a section 75 judicial review proceeding, the
court would not be required to determine whether the person did not engage
in the conduct to which a section 36B determination relates. Neither
would a court, in a judicial review of a section 36B or 36D determination,
necessarily, be required to make a factual finding as to whether a person is a
national or citizen of a foreign country.[150]
[Emphasis added]
In response to the Scrutiny of Bills Committee, the
Minister reiterated that decisions would be subject to judicial review by the
Federal Court and High Court, and stated that proposed section 36K
does not limit the scope of the court’s powers or the usual grounds of judicial
review, but rather ‘sets out additional consequences’ if the court makes
certain findings.[151]
However, the Minister did not explain whether it would be possible for the
court to make such findings in the course of judicial review proceedings. The
Committee considered the Minister’s response had ‘not adequately addressed’ its
concerns, and reiterated that in determining whether the Minister was lawfully
‘satisfied’ of certain matters, a court will not be required to determine
whether the Minister’s findings were factually correct.[152]
It further reiterated that its concerns about the adequacy of judicial
oversight ‘are exacerbated by the breadth of the powers granted to the minister
and the exclusion of procedural fairness for initial decisions’. The Committee
drew its scrutiny concerns to the attention of senators and left to the Senate
as a whole the adequacy of judicial oversight of the factual determinations on
which cessation determinations are to be based.[153]
Submissions to the PJCIS inquiry also expressed doubts
about the extent to which proposed section 36K will provide a safeguard
against statelessness. The Law Council noted that ‘this “safeguard” is
contingent on the person being able to bring a court action in Australia
against the decision of the Minister’.[154]
The UNHCR noted that the avenues of appeal of a finding
regarding a person’s dual-citizenship status ‘would appear to shift the onus
onto the individual to establish the absence of a particular nationality or
citizenship’ and argued that individuals (and particularly children) may face
significant difficulties clarifying their nationality status with the competent
authorities in other countries.[155]
The Peter McMullin Centre on Statelessness also pointed to
the practical difficulties faced by courts in determining a person’s foreign
citizenship status:
Australia made a pledge to the United Nations in 2011 'to
better identify stateless persons and assess their claims', yet there still
exists a 'lack of consistency and clarity concerning the methods for
ascertaining whether a person is indeed a citizen of another state'.[156]
(Citations omitted)
External
oversight mechanisms
Judicial
review
A person can apply to the High Court under section 75(v)
of the Constitution,
or the Federal Court under section 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903,
for a writ of Mandamus or prohibition or an injunction against the Minister in relation
to a decision by the Minister:
- that
a person has ceased to be an Australian citizen under proposed sections 36B
or 36D or
- to
refuse a request for revocation under proposed section 36H.[157]
Courts conducting judicial review are limited to
considering whether a decision has been affected by an error of law—that is,
whether the decision-maker has acted outside the lawful limits of their
authority.[158]
This is distinct from merits review, in which a review body (such as the AAT)
considers all evidence about the merits of a decision, and determines whether
the ‘correct or preferable’ decision has been made.[159]
The Bill and explanatory materials are silent on whether
there is also a right of review under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial
Review) Act 1977 (the ADJR Act), but that Act does not currently
exclude decisions made under the Citizenship Act, and a right of review
does not appear to be excluded in the Bill.
Absence of
merits review
A key issue raised by stakeholders is the absence of any
provision for merits review in the 2019 Bill. A limited right to merits
review was a feature of the model recommended by the INSLM. In his report, the
INSLM acknowledged the views of a number of submitters about the importance of
full merits review being available for citizenship deprivation decisions, but
concluded:
It is not appropriate, however, to have the AAT exercising a
discretion that turns on judgements about quintessentially political matters
such as how the deprivation of an individual’s citizenship would affect
Australia’s international relations. A Minister is better placed to make those
judgments, and take responsibility for them in the Parliament, than the AAT.
At the same time, however, there seems to be no good reason
why the Security Division of the AAT could not review what probably would be
the key issue in many decisions by the Minister; namely, whether the person
engaged in particular (terrorist like) conduct. To an extent, the Security
Division can already deal with that issue in conducting a review of qualified
security assessments.[160]
The INSLM’s proposed model provided that following an
unsuccessful application to the Minister for revocation of a citizenship
determination, a person may apply to the AAT for review of the affirmation of
the revocation decision. The AAT would be limited to determining ‘whether the
information permitted a state of reasonable satisfaction that the person
engaged in the conduct that formed the basis for the deprivation
determination’, with the onus on the applicant to satisfy the AAT to the
contrary.[161]
The INSLM also recommended a series of procedures for the AAT review, including
the ability for the AAT to appoint a special advocate if certain information
certified as sensitive could not be disclosed to the applicant.[162]
In submissions to the PJCIS inquiry, legal and human
rights bodies and academics argued that the procedural safeguards provided for
by the 2019 Bill are insufficient.[163]
The Law Council described the absence of the availability of merits review as a
‘major deviation from the model as recommended by the INSLM’, and argued that
this was exacerbated by the fact a person has no opportunity to make
submissions to the Minister prior to the cessation determination. It
recommended that the INSLM’s proposed merits review model be implemented.[164]
Rayner Thwaites noted that the Bill ‘ignores the substance and the detail of
the INSLM’s recommendations’ on review and accountability, and suggests ‘this
conveys an impatience with, and a misunderstanding of the importance of, limits
and accountability on executive power’.[165]
Professor Kim Rubenstein pointed to the significance of a
cessation determination—proposed section 36L will provide that a person
whose citizenship ceases under proposed sections 36B and 36D can never
again become an Australian citizen—to recommend: ‘a security division of the
AAT should be given that power to ensure accountability around these
significant and life changing decisions’.[166]
The AHRC similarly noted the potential of citizenship cessation to ‘gravely
affect a person’s interests and basic human rights’, and suggested that
although the 2019 Bill implements an internal review process (through the
Minister’s power to revoke a determination), ‘further consideration by the
original decision maker should not be a replacement for merits review before an
independent decision-maker’.[167]
The AHRC recommended a broader form of merits review than that recommended by
the INSLM, in which the AAT could review whether the Minister could reasonably
have been satisfied:
- the
relevant conduct demonstrates the person repudiated their allegiance to
Australia and
- it
would be contrary to the public interest for the person to remain an Australian
citizen.[168]
Reporting
requirement
Item 11 will repeal
and substitute subsection 51B(1) of the Citizenship Act, to provide that
as soon as practicable after each reporting period (that is, every six months),[169]
the Minister must table a report in each House of Parliament that sets out:
- the
number of citizenship cessation notices given by the Minister under proposed
paragraph 36F(1)(a) during the period
- for
each notice that was given, a brief statement of the matters that were the
basis for the determination and
- the
number of notices given by the Minister under proposed subsection 36H(4),
revoking a citizenship cessation notice, during the period.
INSLM and
PJCIS review and oversight of provisions will continue
Item 14 will amend the definition of ‘counter‑terrorism
and national security legislation’ in the Independent
National Security Legislation Monitor Act 2010 to replace the existing
reference to sections 33AA, 35 and 35A of the Citizenship Act with
a reference to the proposed new provisions.
Item 15 will amend the Intelligence
Services Act 2001 to replace the current requirement for the PJCIS to
complete a review of sections 33AA, 35 and 35A of the Citizenship Act
by 1 December 2019 with a requirement to complete a review of the proposed
provisions by 30 June 2021.
As the PJCIS does not have the power to initiate
own-motion inquiries, it would appear that it may not have the power to
complete and report on its current review of sections 33AA, 35 and 35A unless
it does so before the proposed amendments to the Intelligence Services Act commence.
Retrospective
application
Conviction-based
cessation
The PJCIS was asked to consider as part of its inquiry
into the 2015 Bill whether then proposed section 35A should apply
retrospectively to convictions obtained before the proposed commencement of 2015
Bill.[170]
The PJCIS noted that retrospective application was opposed by most of the
participants in that inquiry ‘on the basis that it would be contrary to the
rule of law’.[171]
While acknowledging those concerns, the PJCIS determined that it was
appropriate that the Minister be able to consider citizenship revocation based
on convictions obtained no more than ten years before the proposed commencement
of 2015 Bill where sentences of at least ten years had been imposed.[172]
The PJCIS’s recommendation was implemented in the 2015 Act.
The 2019 Bill will
considerably expand the retrospective application of the provisions for
relevant convictions. In particular, it will provide that proposed
section 36D applies to relevant convictions occurring on or after 29 May
2003, where a sentence of at least three years imprisonment was imposed
(29 May 2003 was the date when the terrorism offences captured by proposed
section 36D commenced[173]).[174]
The effect of that expansion will be:
- provisions
for citizenship cessation on the basis of a relevant conviction will now also
apply to convictions obtained between 29 May 2003 and 11 December 2005 for
the first time
- the
sentence threshold that currently applies for convictions obtained between
12 December 2005 and 11 December 2015 will be retrospectively lowered
from ten to three years and
- the
sentence threshold that currently applies for convictions obtained from
12 December 2015 onwards will be retrospectively lowered from six to
three years.
The Statement of
Compatibility provides the following justification for the proposed
retrospective application of both the conduct and conviction-based provisions:
Past terrorist-related conduct is widely recognised as
repugnant and a contradiction of the values that define our society. It is
appropriate to take past conduct into consideration in order to ensure the
safety and security of Australia and its people, and to ensure the community of
Australian citizens is limited to those who continue to retain an allegiance to
Australia. The discretionary nature of the cessation provisions and the public
interest criteria the Minister may regard in making a determination prevent
arbitrary application.[175]
The Explanatory Memorandum
also states that while this change will capture more convictions:
... conviction for a specified offence is simply the starting
point for the Minister to make a citizenship cessation determination, that
being a determination that can be made only after having regard to a number of
factors. This is appropriate when considering a determination of this gravity.[176]
The Government’s argument is essentially that because a
sentence imposed for a terrorism conviction is only one of several criteria
that must be met for a person’s citizenship to cease, it is appropriate to
retrospectively capture additional past convictions. However, that has been the
case since the provisions were enacted in 2015—conviction and sentence has
never been the sole criteria for cessation under the conviction-based
provisions.
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee and several stakeholders
raised concerns about the retrospective application of the proposed new
sentencing threshold and the lack of accompanying justification.[177]
Some stakeholders noted that the proposed retrospectivity is inconsistent with
the PJCIS’s previous recommendation and its underlying rationale. Several
considered that the Government had not put forward sufficient justification for
the significant expansions proposed.[178]
The Law Council noted that the proposed expansions could mean that a person
convicted up to 16 years ago and whose sentence ended several years ago
could now be subject to ‘a citizenship determination that did not even exist at
the time the person committed the original offence’.[179]
Conduct-based
cessation
Neither section 33AA, nor the expansion of
section 35 of the Citizenship Act to include fighting for or being
in the service of a terrorist organisation, were applied retrospectively by the
2015 Act. The Government did not propose that those changes apply
retrospectively, and the PJCIS was not asked to consider the issue in its
inquiry into the 2015 Bill.
The 2019 Bill will apply the updated conduct-based
cessation provisions in proposed section 36B to conduct specified
in paragraphs 36B(5)(a)–(h) (conduct currently covered by section 33AA)
that was engaged in on or after 29 May 2003.[180]
The Government’s
justification is that the retrospective provisions are appropriate because:
- the
provisions concern conduct viewed as repugnant
- citizenship
revocation on the basis of conduct will now be discretionary instead of
self-executing and
- the
Minister is required to consider certain matters before making an individual
determination.[181]
Citizenship cessation on the basis of fighting for, or
being in the service of, a terrorist organisation will continue to be possible
only for conduct engaged in on or after 12 December 2015.[182]
No limit will be placed on the retrospective application
of citizenship cessation on the basis of serving in the armed forces of a
country at war with Australia.[183]
A determination may be made on the basis of such conduct engaged in before or
after commencement.[184]
As with the conviction-based provisions, the Scrutiny of
Bills Committee and several stakeholders raised concerns about the
retrospective application of the proposed new conduct-based provisions.[185]
Cessations
in force before commencement
Item 17 will provide that where a person’s
citizenship ceased under the existing operation of law provisions (sections
33AA and 35) prior to commencement, the Minister will be taken to have made a
citizenship cessation determination under proposed subsection 36B(1) in
relation to the person.[186]
This will effectively deem the loss of citizenship to have occurred as a result
of a decision by the Minister, although the Minister did not actually make such
a decision. Sub-item 17(3) will provide that where the Minister has
given, or made reasonable attempts to give, a cessation notice to the person:
- the
notice is taken to have been given under proposed section 36F at the
time the Minister gave (or first reasonably attempted to give) the notice prior
to commencement and
- the
person cannot apply for revocation of the determination under proposed
section 36H.
Statelessness
test
The 2019 Bill’s proposed changes to the statelessness test
will be retrospectively applied in the same way. That is, the new, lower
threshold will be applied not only to conduct or convictions that occur after
the amendments are enacted, but also to conduct or convictions dating back to May 2003
(and even earlier where the relevant conduct is serving in the armed forces of
a country at war with Australia).
Constitutional
validity
At the time the 2015 Bill was introduced and debated,
concerns were raised by legal academics about its constitutional validity.
These included concerns that parts of the Bill may lack the support of a
constitutional head of power, potentially falling outside the scope of the
‘aliens’ power under section 51(xix) of the Constitution, and may
constitute a vesting of judicial power in the executive, in breach of the
separation of powers.[187]
To some extent these concerns were addressed in Government amendments to the
Bill, introduced in response to recommendations of the PJCIS.[188]
Nonetheless, it has been suggested that potential difficulties could remain.[189]
In their minority report to the PJCIS inquiry into the
2018 Bill, Labor members of the Committee expressed concern about the
constitutionality of the proposed amendments, and provided a legal opinion by
Peter Hanks QC which suggested there would be ‘substantial risk’ that they
would be found unconstitutional.[190]
The INSLM considered constitutional issues as part of his
review, concluding that the existing citizenship loss provisions are supported
by a combination of constitutional heads of power.[191]
The INSLM also disagreed with arguments submitted by legal academics that the
current provisions infringe constitutional limitations, stating that he did not
consider there to be ‘any significant constitutional defects’ in the current
legislation or in relation to his recommendations.[192]
To date, there has been no constitutional challenge to the
validity of the amendments made by the 2015 Act. Some of the
constitutional issues raised regarding the existing legislation have been
raised once again in relation to the current Bill—these are discussed in the
‘Key issues and provisions’ section of this Digest.
Although, as discussed above under ‘Constitutional
validity’, the INSLM’s report concluded that there were no significant
constitutional defects in either the current citizenship deprivation laws or
under the model proposed by the INSLM, some legal bodies and academics have
raised questions about the constitutional validity of aspects of the 2019 Bill.
Particular concerns were raised about proposed section 36B, with
stakeholders suggesting that allowing the Minister to make findings of fact
about conduct which constitutes an offence under the Criminal Code, may
amount to an unacceptable interference with judicial power.[193]
The Immigration Advice and Rights Centre argued:
Such a finding, which in our view should be reserved for a
court, could be made on the basis of information that is unreliable, untested
and where the Australian citizen has not had an opportunity to be heard or
respond to the allegations labelled against them. The finding by the Minister
about conduct may be lawful so long as it is reasonable and open on the
material that is available. This is a most unacceptable basis for a citizen to
be excluded from their membership of the Australian community.
There is further concern about whether proposed section 36B
amounts to an unacceptable interference with judicial power. In Djalic v
MIMIA, the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia stated:
“It is a fundamental principle of the
Australian Constitution, flowing from Chapter III that the adjudication and
punishment of criminal guilt for offences against a law of the Commonwealth is
exclusively within the province of courts exercising the judicial power of the
Commonwealth.”[194]
The Law Council also queried whether there is a
constitutional head of power to support the Commonwealth’s power to enact
citizenship deprivation laws; while acknowledging the INSLM’s conclusions on
these issues, it nonetheless noted:
... it will ultimately be a matter for the High Court to
determine just how significant any constitutional ‘defects’ may be and it is
critical therefore that the Committee continues to assure itself of the
constitutional validity of the Bill prior to any recommendation regarding the
Bill’s possible enactment.[195]
Concluding comments
The 2019 Bill will implement the INSLM’s key
recommendation of replacing the automatic operation of the existing
conduct-based cessation provisions with a model based on ministerial
determination that takes account of whether an individual’s conduct represents
a repudiation of his or her allegiance to Australia and whether citizenship
revocation is in the public interest in the particular circumstances of each
case.
It will also introduce a mechanism by which a person can
request that the Minister revoke a citizenship cessation determination. However,
legal and human rights bodies and academics argued that the procedural
safeguards provided for by the 2019 Bill are insufficient. A key concern for
stakeholders and the Scrutiny of Bills Committee was that, unlike the model
recommended by the INSLM, the Bill will not provide for any merits review of
citizenship cessation decisions.
Additionally, while the Bill provides for automatic
revocation of a cessation decision if a court makes certain factual findings
(that a person does not have another nationality, or has not engaged in the
relevant conduct), there are questions as to how this will operate in practice.
The 2019 Bill will also reduce the sentence threshold for
consideration of citizenship revocation based on conviction for certain
offences, change the statelessness test, and significantly increase the extent
to which the provisions apply retrospectively. These further changes, none of
which were recommended by the INSLM and some of which conflict with
recommendations of the PJCIS that were reflected in the 2015 Act, have also
attracted criticism from stakeholders and raised concerns for the Scrutiny of
Bills Committee.