Introductory Info
Date introduced: 10 December 2020
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Home Affairs
Commencement: Sections 1 to 3 commence on Royal Assent. Schedule 2, and Parts 1 and 2 of Schedule 1, commence on the earlier of Proclamation or six months after Royal Assent. Part 3 of Schedule 1 commences immediately after the later of: the commencement of Parts 1 and 2 of Schedule 1; or the commencement of the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia Act 2021.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Migration and Citizenship Legislation
Amendment (Strengthening Information Provisions) Bill 2020 (the Bill) is to
amend:
- the
Migration Act
1958 (Cth) to:
-
amend the protections for confidential information provided to
the Department of Home Affairs by law enforcement and intelligence agencies in
relation to character test decisions, partly in response to a 2017 High Court of
Australia decision and
-
expand the definition of non-disclosable information,
which is not required to be provided to a visa applicant or visa holder in connection
with decision-making under the Act and
- the
Australian Citizenship
Act 2007 (Cth) to:
-
insert provisions equivalent to those in the Migration Act
protecting confidential information provided to the Department by law
enforcement and intelligence agencies
-
provide for the issuing of non-disclosure certificates preventing
the disclosure of certain documents or information to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (AAT) and
-
provide for the delegation of the Secretary’s powers and
functions.
Structure of
the Bill
The Bill has two Schedules:
- Schedule
1, Part 1 amends the protected information provisions in the Migration
Act, and inserts the same provisions into the Australian Citizenship Act
- Schedule
1, Part 2 makes consequential amendments to the Freedom of
Information Act 1982 and Inspector of
Transport Security Act 2006
- Schedule
1, Part 3 amends references to the Federal Circuit Court in the Migration
Act and Australian Citizenship Act to reflect changes to be made by
the Federal
Circuit and Family Court of Australia Act 2021 and
- Schedule
2 amends the Australian Citizenship Act to provide for the issuing
of non-disclosure certificates and the delegation of the Secretary’s powers and
functions.
Background
Natural
justice and disclosure of information
The common law recognises that administrative
decision-makers have a duty to afford a person ‘procedural fairness’, or
‘natural justice’, before making a decision that affects them. The Australian
Law Reform Commission explains that procedural fairness:
... traditionally involves two requirements: the fair hearing
rule and the rule against bias. The hearing rule requires a decision maker to
afford a person an opportunity to be heard before making a decision affecting
their interests. In Kioa v West, Gibbs CJ said that the ‘fundamental
rule is that a statutory authority having power to affect the rights of a
person is bound to hear him before exercising the power’. The rule against bias
ensures that the decision maker can be objectively considered to be impartial
and not to have pre-judged a decision.[1]
The requirement to afford a person a ‘fair
hearing’ typically requires a decision-maker to:
- give
prior notice that a decision will be made which affects their interests
- disclose
the ‘critical issues’ to be addressed, and the information that is credible,
relevant and significant to the issues and
- provide
a reasonable opportunity for the person to present their case—this may be
through an oral or written hearing, depending on the circumstances.[2]
These common law requirements may be
modified or excluded by statute, but only where the intention to do so is
unambiguously clear. The High Court has stated that the exclusion of principles
of natural justice may only occur by ‘plain words of necessary intendment’,[3]
and that the principle of legality provides a presumption:
... that it is highly improbable that Parliament would
overthrow fundamental principles or depart from the general system of law,
without expressing its intention with irresistible clearness.[4]
The Migration Act modifies or
excludes natural justice requirements in various ways. In particular, as
discussed below, it restricts the circumstances in which relevant information
or documents may be disclosed to persons beyond the primary decision-maker
(that is, the Minister or a Departmental delegate). These provisions permit or
require certain information to be withheld from a visa applicant or visa holder—and
in some cases, a court or tribunal—on the grounds of national security or the
public interest.
The Australian Citizenship Act currently
has more limited restrictions on procedural fairness and the disclosure of
information. These largely arise in the context of citizenship cessation, where
natural justice is expressly excluded, the Minister may delay giving notice to
a person that their citizenship has ceased, and disclosure of certain
information is prevented on security or other public interest grounds.[5]
Protected
information under the Migration Act
Sections 503A to 503D of the Migration Act protect
information shared with the Department of Home Affairs by certain law
enforcement and intelligence agencies (including some government departments), in
connection with decisions to cancel or refuse to grant a visa on character
grounds.[6]
Where such information is communicated on the condition of confidentiality, it
cannot be disclosed further, including to the visa holder or visa applicant to
whom the information relates, or to a court, tribunal or parliamentary
committee.[7]
However, following consultation with the relevant agency, the Minister may authorise
disclosure in specified circumstances and subject to conditions.[8]
Section 503A was first inserted into the Migration Act
in 1998, as part of a suite of amendments which largely established the
character test in its current form.[9]
At the time of its introduction, then-Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs, Philip Ruddock, explained that section 503A would better
facilitate the sharing of criminal intelligence and related information, as:
... at present, it is difficult for my department to use such
information in making character decisions because its
disclosure might be threatened. Australian and international law enforcement
agencies are reluctant to provide sensitive information unless they are sure
that both the information and its sources can be protected. Greater protection
for such material would complement broader national and international
strategies to counter transnational crime and the activities of those
associated with it.[10]
The Federal Court has noted that the provisions
effectively ‘remove what would otherwise be an entitlement to natural justice,
or procedural fairness, for a person who is subject to the application of the
character test’ in relation to a visa refusal or cancellation.[11]
While a visa applicant or visa holder is typically entitled to receive notice
of, and an opportunity to respond to, adverse character information on which
the Minister (or delegate) might base a decision to refuse to grant or cancel a
visa, this is not the case for information protected by section 503A.
Which
agencies?
The provisions apply to confidential
information provided to the Department by gazetted agencies—these
are defined as Australian law enforcement or intelligence bodies specified by
the Minister in a notice in the Gazette, foreign law enforcement bodies for a
country specified by the Minister in a notice in the Gazette, or war crimes
tribunals.[12]
The most recent Gazette notice, which commenced on 1 April 2016, specifies 42 Australian
agencies or bodies as well as 285 foreign law enforcement countries (or parts
of countries) for the purposes of section 503A.[13]
Specified Australian agencies include federal intelligence agencies, the Australian
Federal Police (AFP) and state and territory police, as well as the Australian
Taxation Office and federal and state government community and social services
agencies.
Court access
to protected information
Under the current provisions, a court can only access
protected information where disclosure is authorised by the Minister. The
Minister is not under any duty to consider authorising the disclosure.[14]
However, this limitation has been found by the High Court to be partly invalid,
and so its effect is restricted.
High Court
challenge
The validity of section 503A was subject to a High Court
challenge in 2017, in the cases of Graham v Minister for Immigration and
Border Protection and Te Puia v Minister for Immigration and Border
Protection (Graham and Te Puia).[15]
The applicant in each case was a New Zealand citizen who was resident in
Australia, and whose visa was cancelled on character grounds under subsection
501(3) of the Migration Act. In each case, the Minister’s decision was
based on information protected from disclosure under section 503A, preventing
the applicant from having access to a copy of the information or any details of
it.[16]
Before the High Court, the plaintiffs sought
a writ of prohibition to prevent the Minister from acting on his decision to
cancel the visas, and a writ of certiorari to quash the decisions, on the basis
that subsection 503A(2), prohibiting disclosure of protected information, was
invalid. They argued that the provision, by permitting the withholding of
admissible documents from judicial proceedings, amounted to an impermissible
interference with the essential function of federal courts to find facts
relevant to the determination of rights in issue.[17]
A 6:1 majority of the High Court rejected
the argument that subsection 503A(2) substantially impaired the institutional
integrity of federal courts;[18]
however, it found the provision was invalid to the extent that it would prevent
the production of relevant information to the High Court in its original
jurisdiction under section 75(v) of the Constitution,
or to the Federal Court exercising the same original jurisdiction under the Judiciary Act 1903.
Section 75(v) of the Constitution provides the High Court with original
jurisdiction in respect of matters where ‘a writ of mandamus or prohibition or
an injunction is sought against an officer of the Commonwealth’. Section 39B of
the Judiciary Act provides the Federal Court with the same original
jurisdiction.
The High Court majority stated:
What Parliament cannot do … is enact a law which denies to
this Court when exercising jurisdiction under s 75(v), or to another court when
exercising jurisdiction within the limits conferred on or invested in it under [the
Constitution], the ability to enforce the legislated limits of an
officer’s power. The question whether or not a law transgresses that
constitutional limitation is one of substance, and therefore of degree. To
answer it requires an examination not only of the legal operation of the law
but also of the practical impact of the law on the ability of a court, through
the application of judicial process, to discern and declare whether or not the
conditions of and constraints on the lawful exercise of the power conferred on
an officer have been observed in a particular case.[19]
In this case, the Court found that the practical impact of
subsection 503A(2) was to prevent the High Court or Federal Court from
obtaining access to a category of information relevant to the purported exercise
of power under review, and therefore relevant to the Court’s determination of
the legality of that exercise of power.[20]
The provision operated in practice ‘to shield the purported exercise of power
from judicial scrutiny’, and to ‘[strike] at the very heart of the review for
which s 75(v) provides’.[21]
To the extent that it did this, the Court held that subsection 503A(2) was
invalid.
Section 503A remains otherwise valid.[22]
This means, for example, that the Minister may still validly prevent protected
information from being disclosed to a visa holder or applicant, or to a
parliamentary committee or tribunal.
The current Bill responds in part to the High Court’s
decision. It enables the High Court, Federal Court or Federal Circuit Court to
order the Minister to disclose protected information to the Court, and sets out
a scheme for the Court’s handling of such information.
Validation
of Decisions Act
In September 2017, in anticipation of the
High Court’s decision on the issue of invalidity of subsection 503A(2),
Parliament passed the Migration
Amendment (Validation of Decisions) Act 2017 (Validation of
Decisions Act). The Act commenced on 6 September 2017—the same day the
High Court’s decision was issued in Graham and Te Puia.[23]
It inserted section 503E into the Migration Act, which protected the
validity of any character test decisions made before commencement of the Validation
of Decisions Act, in which the Minister may have relied on, had regard to
or failed to disclose information covered by section 503A, or made the decision
on the basis of an erroneous understanding of section 503A, in the event that
section 503A was found wholly or partly invalid.[24]
Other
protections against disclosure
The Migration Act contains other provisions
preventing the disclosure of information or documents in certain circumstances.
Non-disclosable
information
Although the Act typically requires adverse information to
be provided to a visa applicant or visa holder prior to a decision being made,
and an opportunity given to them to respond, these requirements do not apply to
a category of information called ‘non-disclosable information’—broadly defined
as information, the disclosure of which the Minister considers would be contrary
to the national or public interest. This is discussed further below under ‘Key
issues and provisions’.
Non-disclosure
certificates
The Migration Act also provides for the issuing of
non-disclosure certificates. These can prevent the Department from giving relevant
information to the AAT for the purposes of the Tribunal conducting merits
review of migration decisions, if the Minister believes such disclosure is
contrary to the public interest because of prejudice to security, defence or
international relations, or because it would disclose Cabinet deliberations or
decisions.[25]
In other circumstances, the Minister may certify on public
interest grounds that information must not be disclosed other than to the AAT—this
permits the Tribunal to have regard to the information but prevents it from
disclosing it to other persons, including to the applicant or their legal
representatives.[26]
Alternatively, the Minister may certify that it would be contrary to the public
interest for information to be disclosed and leave it to the discretion of the
Tribunal as to whether the information should be provided to the applicant or a
witness.[27]
Committee
consideration
Legal and
Constitutional Affairs Committee
On 4 February 2021, the Bill was referred to the Senate
Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs for inquiry and report
by 10 March 2021. Fifteen submissions were received, a number of which argued
that insufficient time had been provided for the inquiry.[28]
The Committee issued its report on 10 March 2021, with the
majority recommending that the Bill be passed.[29]
The majority report stated:
The committee recognises the concerns put forward by some
inquiry participants that the bill may result in negative impacts on procedural
fairness. Ultimately, the committee holds the view that this bill has a
legitimate purpose and that its provisions are reasonable, necessary and
proportionate.
The committee encourages the government to consider
additional safeguards such as the creation of a special advocate program to
represent the interests of the applicant when the court has ruled against
disclosure.[30]
ALP Senators and the Australian Greens issued separate,
dissenting reports opposing the Bill—these are discussed further under ‘Policy position of non-government
parties/independents’.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee reported on the Bill on 29
January 2021.[31]
The Committee raised concerns about the following matters:
- provisions
in the Bill may ‘continue to operate to undermine the practical efficacy of
judicial review in many cases’—the Committee noted that under the framework
proposed by the Bill:
- the
court has ‘no flexibility to seek any feedback from the applicant to assist in
performing its judicial review task’
- in
determining whether disclosure of information would create a real risk to the
public interest, the court is not able to balance that risk against the
possibility the applicant may assist the court in proper exercise of its
judicial review function
- the
court is not able to disclose part of the secret information, even where
partial disclosure could assist the court without creating a real risk of
damage to the public interest
- intelligence
and law enforcement agencies within the scheme are specified by way of Gazette
notice rather than primary or delegated legislation and
- the
Minister has no obligation to consider the exercise of power to allow disclosure
of protected information, including to tribunals undertaking merits review of
relevant decisions[32]
and
- measures
in the Bill may limit parliamentary scrutiny and Parliament’s ability to review
or oversee executive decision-making, by preventing protected information from
being disclosed to a parliament or parliamentary committee—the Committee noted
the Senate has ‘well-established processes in which the executive may make
claims for public interest immunity’[33]
- provision
for evidentiary certificates to be prima facie evidence of the fact that
information was communicated to an officer by a gazetted intelligence or law
enforcement agency may impede ‘one of the few substantive bases for review
under the new protected information framework’[34]
- the
Bill abrogates the natural justice hearing rule and seeks to limit the rules of
natural justice in relation to AAT reviews[35]
- regulations
may prescribe additional matters to which the court may have regard in
determining whether disclosure would create a real risk to the public interest—the
Committee noted that no justification is provided as to why it is necessary for
such significant matters to be set out in delegated legislation[36]
and
- the
Bill amends the Australian Citizenship Act to provide the Secretary with
broad powers to delegate any or all of their powers or functions under the Act
or the regulations.[37]
The Committee requested further advice and information
from the Minister on each of these matters except for the delegation issue, in
respect of which it noted that detailed information was provided in the
Explanatory Memorandum.
The Minister’s response was published and considered by
the Committee on 17 March 2021.[38]
The Minister emphasised that law enforcement and intelligence agencies provide
confidential information to the Department on the basis that it can be
protected from disclosure, and that the designation of information as
confidential is done by the individual agencies. The Minister pointed to the
sensitive nature of the information involved to argue that permitting partial
disclosure would risk damaging the public interest, and that imposing a duty on
the Minister to consider whether to authorise disclosure to Tribunals would not
be appropriate. The Minister further noted that gazetted agencies would be
publicly identifiable and therefore did not need to be listed in primary or
delegated legislation.[39]
On the issue of restricting parliamentary scrutiny, the Minister
advised that public interest immunity may not provide the kind of comprehensive
protection required for the full range of confidential information protected
under the Bill.[40]
In respect of evidentiary certificates and the capacity to lead hearsay
evidence, the Minister stated that this was crucial to allowing the Court to
exercise its functions and simultaneously protect highly sensitive and
confidential information.[41]
The Minister further advised that allowing delegated legislation to prescribe
further matters relevant to the Court’s determination of whether to disclose
information would provide flexibility and allow the relevant matters to
‘reflect changing circumstances and evolving security challenges’.[42]
In response, the Committee reiterated its scrutiny concerns,
including that the provisions in the Bill may operate to undermine the
practical efficacy of judicial review, and curtail the Parliament’s powers and responsibility
to effectively review executive decision-making.[43]
It left to the Senate as a whole the appropriateness of the measures in the
Bill.
Policy position of non-government
parties/independents
Labor Senators and the Australian Greens issued separate,
dissenting reports to the Senate Committee report, opposing the Bill.
Labor Senators recommended the Bill not be passed in its
current form.[44]
The minority report raised concerns with insufficient timeframes for the
conduct of the Senate inquiry, recommending that the Bill be sent to the
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security for further inquiry,
as well as undergo detailed stakeholder consultation to ensure ‘a genuine
consultation process that considers the real-world impact of the Bill’.[45]
Labor Senators expressed concern about a range of aspects of the Bill,
including: its constitutionality; the potential impact on the independence of
the courts; the expansion of executive powers; the impact on access to justice,
particularly in light of the potential consequences of migration and
citizenship decisions; and the concerns of foreign governments including New
Zealand in the context of visa cancellations and citizenship revocation. It
recommended an extensive list of amendments if the Government decided to
proceed with the Bill.[46]
The Greens also recommended that the Bill be rejected.[47]
They cited concerns from submitters and the Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Human Rights about the Bill’s impact on the right to a fair hearing and due
process; potential infringement of section 75(v) of the Constitution;
and the Bill’s impact on AAT merits review and parliamentary scrutiny. The
Greens argued that ‘no clear or compelling case has been made by the government
for the bill.’[48]
Other non-government parties and independents do not
appear to have commented on the Bill at the time of writing.
Position of
major interest groups
All submissions to the Senate inquiry, other than the
Department’s, opposed the Bill. Similar issues were raised across the
submissions—the key points made are summarised below.
Sufficient
existing protections
Many submitters pointed to existing mechanisms by which
the Government may protect the disclosure of confidential or national security
information, arguing that no compelling case had been made as to why a separate
scheme was required for migration and citizenship decisions.[49]
They pointed to two mechanisms in particular:
- National Security
Information (Criminal and Civil Proceedings) Act 2004 (NSI Act),
which prevents the disclosure of national security information in federal criminal
and civil proceedings where the disclosure is likely to prejudice national
security, except to the extent that doing so would seriously interfere with the
administration of justice[50]
and
- the
doctrine of public interest immunity, both under the common law and section 130
of the Evidence
Act 1995 (Cth), which protects information from disclosure in the
course of litigation if the court determines that disclosure would injure an
identified public interest.[51]
Pointing to the ‘expansive’ definition of national
security information under the NSI Act, the Law Council of
Australia stated:
The Law Council queries what confidential information that
would pose a risk of harm should it be disclosed is not covered under the NSI
Act, noting the very expansive definition of ‘national security information’...
It considers that if the Government wishes to argue the necessity of
maintaining this protected information regime in the Migration Act in addition
to the NSI Act regime, it needs to make clear the additional harm there is to
be remedied, which cannot be dealt with under the broader NSI Act.[52]
Further noting the availability of public interest
immunity claims, which it suggested would appear to cover the ‘Minister’s
central concern about protecting ‘the operations, capabilities and sources of
law enforcement and intelligence agencies’’, the Law Council stated that ‘it
cannot identify why information beyond this type of information relating to
character decisions should be kept confidential’.[53]
The Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) noted that
the Explanatory Memorandum for the Bill states that the current framework
protecting against harmful disclosure of confidential information ‘does not
adequately capture the type of confidential information which is critical to
character-related decision-making, such as a person’s criminal background or
associations’. The AHRC argued that there therefore ‘appears to be no concern
about the adequacy of the protection of national security information’, and
that the issue appears to be in relation to the balancing exercise performed by
a court in assessing a claim for public interest immunity. The AHRC stated:
The Explanatory Memorandum acknowledges that it would be open
to the Executive to make a claim for public interest immunity in relation to
information about these additional matters such as a person’s criminal
background or associations. However, it says that the test applied by a court
or tribunal in assessing a claim for public interest immunity— weighing
competing public interests and potentially releasing information if it forms
the view that it is in the interests of justice to do so—creates a ‘real risk’
that some confidential information may be released.
It appears that the rationale for this Bill is based in a
view that public interest immunity is insufficient and that it is aimed at
further limiting the discretion of a court or tribunal to release information
the Government considers confidential.[54]
(Emphasis added)
Legal Aid NSW stated that ‘no examples are provided of the
inadequacy of the current arrangements… In our experience the Department
already resorts too readily to exclusions without proper consideration of the
nature of the contents’.[55]
Restricting
right to fair hearing
A central concern of many submitters has been that the
measures proposed in the Bill will significantly restrict procedural fairness,
and particularly the right to a fair hearing of persons affected by a negative
citizenship or migration decision made in connection with protected
information. They have argued that this is particularly important in light of
the gravity of the implications of such decisions.
Refugee organisations have emphasised that these concerns
are heightened for refugees, asylum seekers and stateless persons. The United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) stated:
The cancellation or refusal of a visa on character grounds
has significant consequences for asylum-seekers, refugees and stateless persons
in Australia. The ordinary operation of Australian law has the practical effect
that a person whose visa is cancelled or refused on character grounds remains
in detention until they are removed from Australia. Where a person is not able
to be removed, because they continue to be in need of international protection,
Australian law allows them to remain in immigration detention indefinitely…
In view of the nature of the risks involved and the grave
consequences of an erroneous determination, including the risk of return in
breach of Australia’s non-refoulement obligations, it is essential that
asylum-seekers, refugees and stateless persons be afforded full procedural
safeguards and guarantees at all stages of the visa and citizenship determination
process.[56]
The Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law has
described the framework as ‘heavily unbalanced’ with the potential to ‘deprive a
large number of individuals who are denied or stripped of an Australian visa or
Australian citizenship of the chance to respond to key information relied upon
to reach a decision against them’. It further argued that ‘these things are
particularly dangerous given that the consequences of losing a visa or
citizenship for an individual are dire’.[57]
Restraints
on discretion of court
Particular concerns were raised about the fact that the
Bill specifies an exhaustive list of factors to which a court may have regard
in determining whether disclosure of protected information (including to the
applicant) would create a real risk of damage to the public interest.[58]
Many interest groups have noted that the factors which the court may consider all
weigh against disclosure—the court is not permitted to consider ‘broader
factors in determining the public interest, including the interests of the
administration of justice… or the potential ramifications of the information
and proceedings for the applicant or their family’.[59]
It was also noted that the existing list of factors for
the court to consider includes ‘such other matters (if any) as are specified in
the regulations’, enabling the Government to specify additional matters through
delegated legislation.[60]
Legal bodies including Victorian Legal Aid, Legal Aid NSW
and the Law Council recommended various amendments to the public interest test
for the courts, including:
- making
the factors the court can consider inclusive, rather than exclusive[61]
- enabling
the court to consider and balance competing objectives in addition to those
currently prescribed, including the right to a fair hearing, issues of
procedural fairness and any other matter the court considers relevant to the
proper administration of justice[62]
and
- removal
of the ability for additional factors to be prescribed through delegated
legislation.[63]
Impact on ability to challenge decision
Submitters expressed strong concern that the measures in
the Bill limit the ability for the person to whom the information relates to effectively
challenge an adverse decision made against them. One key concern was that the
applicant is unlikely to be able to make submissions to the court on whether
information should be disclosed, due to the requirement that parties may only
do so if they are aware of the content of the information and did not acquire
that content unlawfully.[64]
Submitters pointed out that applicants will rarely be aware of the relevant
information or be able to lawfully acquire it.[65]
The Kaldor Centre noted that this effectively means:
…at the preliminary hearing the Minister will be able to put
forward arguments for non-disclosure of the information, while nobody will be
able to present counterarguments weighing in favour of disclosure.[66]
Victorian Legal Aid argued:
The ability of the court to hear from both parties about the
public interest in disclosure or non-disclosure is important to the court’s
ability to balance risks. It is also important to the integrity of the system,
as it ensures that agencies remain accountable for the veracity of the
information they seek to pass on. The affected person should be allowed to make
submissions and tender evidence about the disclosure of protected information
and the weight attributed to it. The affected person should not be subject to a
blanket exclusion from the hearing; this should be done rarely, after careful
balancing of the risks.[67]
More broadly, concerns were raised that the inability to
access protected information will adversely affect a person throughout the
decision-making process, by ‘limiting the applicant’s ability to obtain and
understand the underlying reasons for an adverse decision in which confidential
or protected information is relied upon’.[68]
The Australian Human Rights Commission stated:
A key aspect of a fair hearing is the principle of ‘equality
of arms’. This principle requires that each side be given the opportunity to
contest all of the arguments and evidence adduced by the other party.
Further, the Bill runs counter to a strong tradition at both
common law and in Commonwealth legislation, that the state should not be
permitted to rely on secret evidence in cases where a person’s liberty is at
stake.[69]
A number of submitters recommended the Bill make provision
for the applicant’s interests to be represented. UNHCR suggested that some
adjustment to the proposed procedures be considered, stating its belief that:
it is possible to implement a process that protects the
interests of the State but which also offers asylum-seekers, refugees and
stateless persons access to the evidence against him or her, and which would
allow some meaningful opportunity to challenge the information and adverse
decision upon which it is made.[70]
Suggested amendments included:
- allowing
the applicant’s lawyer or a special advocate to be present at the preliminary
hearing dealing with the confidential information[71]
- allowing
an applicant to make submissions going to the nature of the protected
information and the weight to be attributed to it, with the court retaining the
discretion as to whether or not to exclude an applicant from a hearing[72]
- development
of a list of authorised, security-cleared legal representatives to review and
respond to confidential information on behalf of their client, as is provided
for under the NSI Act[73]
- requiring
that where the court determines that disclosure of protected information would
create a real risk of damage to the public interest, it must make an order requiring
a relevant person to give the applicant sufficient information, including by
way of summary of the information or a statement of relevant facts, to enable
the applicant to make meaningful submissions[74]
- and/or
permitting the court to order partial disclosure of information—for example, as
much information as can be revealed without risking the safety of members of
the relevant intelligence or security agencies.[75]
AAT and state/territory courts
Submissions also noted that the Bill imposes further
limitations on the power of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) to access
protected or non-disclosable information. Unlike the Federal Circuit Court,
Federal Court or High Court, the Bill does not provide the AAT with the power
to order disclosure of information by the Minister—the Tribunal can only access
such information if the Minister allows the disclosure or the Court orders the
disclosure. In circumstances where the Minister allows the AAT to view
protected material, the Tribunal will be prevented from disclosing the
information to the applicant.[76]
Legal Aid NSW, for example, noted:
this further limitation on the AAT’s power to have access to
what is now called non-disclosable information is an unjustified limitation on
the ability of the AAT to conduct a proper merits review of the reviewable
decision.
Merits review is a crucial right for an applicant facing visa
cancellation or refusal on character grounds. The rights of the visa holder are
substantially affected as a cancellation/non-revocation decision carries a
lifetime bar on re-entry to Australia and as noted above, may impact on other
fundamental rights (e.g. not to be returned to a county where they face
persecution or significant harm). A tribunal may be lower in the judicial
hierarchy, but for an applicant it represents the last time that the merits of
their case can be argued. If they do not succeed at the tribunal then they are limited
to arguing jurisdictional error in the superior courts.[77]
Other legal organisations noted that merits review of
character decisions involves tight statutory timeframes, which may be impeded
by a requirement that the applicant seek judicial intervention in order to
access protected information. For example, Refugee Legal stated:
In most circumstances, where the AAT’s jurisdiction is
limited by strict statutory timelines, such intervention would not be possible
to achieve in a timely manner. Such delays are of serious concern, as they
inevitably result in deprivation of liberty, prolonged separation of families
and exacerbation of mental ill-health of vulnerable persons.[78]
This point was also made by Carina Ford Immigration
Lawyers, who suggested that consideration be given to amending the Bill to
empower the AAT, in such circumstances, to make timetabling orders to allow for
the suspension of the application before it to allow applicants to both
consider their options in respect of protected information, and pursue any
application for disclosure in an appropriate court.[79]
Legal Aid NSW also queried the Bill’s potential impact on
proceedings in courts other than the High Court, Federal Court and Federal
Circuit Court, noting that while those three courts may order production of
protected information, state and territory Supreme and other courts have no
such powers. It expressed concern that the proposed protected information
framework ‘may extend to prevent the disclosure or production of evidence in
criminal and related proceedings for Commonwealth offences and in respect of
high risk terrorist offender applications’.[80]
Fallibility
of information
Stakeholders further noted that information from
intelligence and law enforcement agencies will not always be completely
accurate, and may be ‘incomplete, unreliable or erroneous’.[81]
The Refugee Council of Australia stated:
Information obtained from intelligence and law enforcement
agencies is not always reliable or accurate. Information may be missing crucial
details, may not give the whole picture of events, or may be missing broader
context. This may result [in] errors in decision making where decision makers
are only relying on documents provided by intelligence and law enforcement
agencies. This risk of incorrect decisions being made is increased when
applicants are denied a chance to respond to confidential information or
provide additional documents that may assist the decision maker coming to the
correct and preferable decision in accordance with the law…
For example, in 2012 the Australian Government appointed an
Independent Reviewer of Adverse Security Assessments to review the Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) adverse security assessments given to
the Department of Home Affairs in relation to people who have been found to be
refugees but who have not been granted a protection visa because of an adverse
security assessment… After the appointment of an Independent Reviewer of
Adverse Security Assessments, at least 57 refugees who had previously been
assessed by ASIO as a high security risk had their assessments downgraded to
either qualified or the lower level ‘nonprejudicial’ status. This demonstrates
that information provided by intelligence and law enforcement agencies is
fallible, and further review of such information may assist decision makers,
including the courts, from reaching the correct determination.[82]
Uncertain
scope of the Bill
Submitters also queried the uncertain and potentially very
broad scope of the Bill, noting that the proposed protected information
framework under both the Migration Act and Australian Citizenship Act
is enlivened by a decision of a gazetted agency to communicate
information as confidential information.[83]
The Law Council argued that the definition of gazetted
agency grants an ‘overly broad discretion to the Executive to determine
the gatekeepers, and potential scope, of the proposed legislative scheme’.[84]
It noted that a ‘very broad range of bodies’, beyond those traditionally
considered law enforcement or intelligence bodies, may fall within this
definition, and that gazette notices are not subject to parliamentary review.[85]
It suggested that this definition, in connection with the absence of any
definition for the term confidential information, appeared to
protect any information from disclosure that any of the gazetted agencies
‘subjectively consider should be confidential’:
With respect to Australian gazetted agencies, this could
include information relating, for example, to individuals’ cognitive
disabilities or other health information, to welfare payments or other social
security information, to low level offences such as minor road traffic offences
or shoplifting. It could also include information which is politically
sensitive, or may embarrass a Minister or department, such as information which
discloses poor administration.
With respect to gazetted agencies which are foreign law
enforcement bodies, the relevant information may concern activities that are
considered crimes in other countries but not in Australia, or for which fair
trial guarantees are lacking (eg, regarding charges arising from corrupt
systems). It may include, essentially, any information. The threshold appears
to be left to each gazetted agency to determine and the Bill includes no
independent safeguard to achieve appropriate levels of consistency and no
avenue for review.[86]
The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre also argued that the decision
types affected by the Bill are too wide, with many ‘in no way related to any
national security issues, which is the usual rationale provided for why some
modification to usual standards of public and transparent legal processes, is
considered necessary’.[87]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that the Bill will have
no financial impact on Government revenue.[88]
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
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
considers that the Bill is compatible.[89]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (PJCHR) reported
on the Bill on 3 February 2021.[90]
The Committee found the Bill to engage and limit the right to a fair hearing
and (so far as it relates to decisions about the expulsion or deportation of
non-citizens from Australia) the prohibition against expulsion of aliens
without due process, to the extent that it restricts a person’s access to
information relevant to the decision which affects them, and excludes the
person from hearings where they are not lawfully aware of the contents of the
information.[91]
The PJCHR stated that while it considered the Bill to pursue
the legitimate objective of upholding law enforcement and intelligence
capabilities, it required further information to assess the proportionality of
the proposed measures. The Committee noted a number of concerns, including:
- the
Bill being drafted in broad terms, which require courts to consider the
potential damage to the ‘wider concept of public interest, not only national
security, in determining whether to order onwards disclosure’, therefore
appearing to create a lower threshold for prohibiting disclosure[92]
- whether
there are sufficient safeguards in place, noting that the court’s role is ‘severely
restricted by the practical operation’ of the provisions, which:
- effectively
exclude the applicant and their legal representatives from proceedings which
consider the disclosure of information
- prescribe
an exhaustive list of matters to which the court must have regard, giving it
‘minimal flexibility’ to consider matters and information it considers
appropriate and necessary in each case
- do
not permit the court to undertake a balancing exercise which involves weighing
the risk of damage to the public interest against the right to a fair hearing
or other matters it considers appropriate or necessary and
- does
not permit the court to treat individual cases differently, such as by ordering
partial disclosure or a summary of confidential information[93]
and
- that
while review of migration and citizenship decisions in the AAT and courts is
‘theoretically available’, the proposed measures ‘appear to render the practical
efficacy of review meaningless in many cases’:
Without access to all relevant information, notably critical
information on which the decision was based, it is unclear on what basis an
affected person would be able to effectively challenge the decision.
Furthermore, as discussed above, the court’s ability to properly perform its
judicial review task is severely hampered by the measure. This raises serious
concerns that there may not be effective access to review.[94]
To assess the proportionality of the proposed measures,
the PJCHR requested the following advice from the Minister:
- why
it is necessary and appropriate to use ‘public interest’ rather than ‘national
security’ as the threshold concept for determining whether confidential
information can be disclosed
- why
it is necessary and appropriate for the matters specified in proposed
subsections 52C(5) and 503C(5), to which the Court must have regard in
determining whether disclosure of information would create a real risk of
damage to the public interest, to be exhaustive
- why
procedural fairness, particularly as it relates to the applicant, is not
included as a matter to which the Court must have regard
- what
other matters are likely to be specified in regulations for the purposes of proposed
subsections 52C(5) and 503C(5)
- why
it is not possible to allow the Court to disclose the relevant information—or a
summary of it—to the extent necessary to ensure procedural fairness in
circumstances where partial disclosure could be achieved without creating a
real risk of damage to the public interest
- why
there is no provision for a special advocate or equivalent safeguard to be able
to represent the applicant’s interests if it is determined that relevant
information be withheld and
- what,
if any, other safeguards exist to ensure the proposed limit on the right to a
free trial and prohibition against expulsion without due process are
proportionate.[95]
The Minister’s response was published by the Committee in
its report dated 17 March 2021.[96]
The Minister advised the measures in the Bill are necessary to strengthen the
Government’s ability to uphold public safety and the good order of the
Australian community, and that they provide safeguards to the applicant by
allowing the courts to decide how much weight to give to the confidential
information submitted in evidence.[97]
The Minister stated:
The balance reflected in the Bill will enable law enforcement
agencies to continue to provide confidential information to the Department to
make fully informed visa and citizenship decisions on character grounds, while
providing fairness to applicants seeking merits or judicial review of a
departmental decision. This is essential to the Government's core business of
regulating, in the national interest, who should enter and remain in Australia,
and who should be granted Australian citizenship and the privileges which
attach to it.[98]
The Committee concluded there was a significant risk the
Bill’s measures impermissibly limit the right to a fair hearing and the
prohibition against expulsion of aliens without due process. It stated that the
Court would have ‘minimal flexibility’ to treat different cases differently and
would have difficulty properly testing the reliability, relevance and accuracy
of protected information. The Committee further noted that access to review
might not be effective in practice because the applicant is unable to access
critical information on which the decision was based.[99]
It suggested the proportionality of the Bill’s measures may be assisted if it was
amended to provide:
- the
matters specified in proposed subsections 52C(5) and 503C(5), to which
the Court must have regard in determining whether disclosure of information
would create a real risk of damage to the public interest, be non-exhaustive to
enable the Court to consider any other appropriate and necessary matter
- proposed
subsections 52C(5) and 503C(5) specify the Court must have regard to
procedural fairness and the rights of the applicant
- the
Court be afforded the discretion to disclose partial information, or a summary,
where doing so does not create a real risk of damage to the public interest and
- a
process by which a special advocate or equivalent safeguard be created to
represent the applicant’s interests if it is determined the relevant
information cannot be disclosed to the applicant.[100]
Protection
against non-refoulement
In submissions to the Senate inquiry into the Bill, the
Kaldor Centre and Refugee Council of Australia noted the PJCHR had not
considered the Bill’s impact on the principle of non-refoulement—the
prohibition on removal of persons to countries in which they have a
well-founded fear of persecution or otherwise face a real risk of serious harm.[101]
The Refugee Council stated:
…compliance with the obligation of non-refoulement requires
that sufficient safeguards are in place to ensure a person is not removed in
contravention of this obligation.
Inherent in this obligation is the requirement that
applicants be afforded a fair hearing and a chance to present their case. The
procedural fairness requirement of the non-refoulement obligation ensures
states are adhering to their non-refoulement obligation and not returning
refugees back to harm. As such, under international law, refugee applicants
must be afforded a fair process and the right to address any adverse
information used in deciding their case…
There is no derogation permissible from the obligation to
ensure refugee applicants are afforded procedural fairness, including a chance
to review and respond to any adverse information. The Bill as it stands would
deny certain applicants this right, in contravention with Australia’s
non-refoulement obligations.[102]
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) similarly
argued that the Bill represents a ‘further weakening of the ability of
Australian law to ensure the protection of asylum-seekers, refugees and
stateless persons in accordance with relevant international instruments to
which Australia is party’.[103]
Key issues
and provisions
Migration
Act amendments
Protected information—existing provisions
Existing sections 503A, 503B, 503C and 503D of the Migration
Act deal with the use and disclosure of information (‘protected
information’) that meets the following criteria:
- it
is communicated to an authorised migration officer (a
Commonwealth officer exercising powers or performing duties under the Migration
Act)
- it
is communicated by a gazetted agency (an Australian or foreign
law enforcement agency or intelligence body specified by the Minister in the Gazette,
or an international war crimes tribunal)
- it
is communicated on the condition that it be treated as confidential and
- it
is relevant to the exercise of a power under sections 501–501CA of the Migration
Act (the character test powers).[104]
Such information cannot be disclosed other than to the
Minister or another authorised migration officer for the purpose of exercising
one of the character test powers.[105]
Subsection 503A(2) provides that if an authorised officer or the Minister
receives information under these provisions, they must not be required to
divulge or communicate it to, or give the information in evidence before, a
court, tribunal, parliament, parliamentary committee or any other body or
person.
Permitted
disclosures
Currently, the only circumstances in which
protected information may be disclosed is where the Minister makes a written
declaration under subsection 503A(3), authorising disclosure to a specified Commonwealth
officer, court or tribunal. The Minister must consult the gazetted agency from
which the information originated before making such a declaration.[106]
The Minister’s power to make a declaration is non-compellable.[107]
However, as discussed above, this has been found invalid by the High Court to
the extent that it prevents the High Court or Federal Court from obtaining
access to information relevant to the purported exercise of power under review,
and therefore relevant to the Court’s determination of the legality of that
exercise of power.
A person or body to whom information is disclosed under
these provisions, is restrained from further disclosing the information (unless
a new declaration is made).[108]
Court powers
and orders
Under the existing scheme, there is no provision for a
court to order disclosure of protected information.
Sections 503B and 503C provide that on application by the
Minister, the Federal Court and Federal Circuit Court may make permanent and interim
non-disclosure orders, respectively, in anticipation of the Minister making a
declaration permitting disclosure of protected information to the Court. The
non-disclosure orders may be in such form as the Court considers appropriate
for the purpose of ensuring that, if such a declaration comes into force, any
information disclosed to the Court is not disclosed to:
- the
applicant in relation to the substantive proceedings
- the
legal representative of the applicant or
- any
other member of the public.[109]
Non-disclosure orders may exclude members of the public
from all or part of the hearing, prevent publication of a report of (or
relating to) all or part of the proceedings, or prevent access to Court files
or records which contain the protected information.[110]
In making a permanent non-disclosure order, the Court’s discretion is
limited—it must only have regard to matters contained in subsection 503B(5).
These include matters such as the confidential nature of the information;
Australia’s national security and international relations; the potential for
disclosure to discourage future information-sharing by gazetted agencies and
informants; the need to avoid disruption to national and international law
enforcement and intelligence efforts; and the interests of the administration
of justice.
It is an offence to engage in conduct which contravenes a
non-disclosure order, or interim non-disclosure order, with an applicable
maximum penalty of two years imprisonment.[111]
Protected information—amendments
Item 9 of Schedule 1 repeals sections 503A to
503D, and inserts proposed sections 503A to 503D.
The same information is treated as protected
for the purposes of the proposed provisions.[112]
As with existing section 503A, an authorised Commonwealth officer who receives
such information may disclose it to another officer or the Minister for the
purpose of exercising powers in relation to the character test.[113]
Proposed paragraph 503A(2)(b) inserts an additional circumstance in
which protected information can be disclosed—where it is disclosed to an
authorised Commonwealth officer or Minister for the purposes of the exercise of
certain powers under the Australian Citizenship Act.
Proposed section 503D states that the protected
information provisions apply to information relating to a gazetted
agency in the same way as they apply to information communicated by the agency.
This protects, for example, the relevant agency’s name, and is equivalent to existing
section 503D.
Permitted
disclosures
Proposed subsection 503B(1) provides the Minister
with a power to make written declarations authorising the disclosure of
specified information otherwise protected under proposed section 503A.
This is equivalent to the Minister’s power under existing subsection 503A(3) of
the Migration Act—as is the case with the existing power, the Minister
will not have a duty to consider whether to make a declaration.[114]
As with the current provisions, a Commonwealth officer to
whom information is disclosed in accordance with a Ministerial declaration must
comply with any conditions specified in the declaration.[115]
Any person or body receiving information in accordance with a declaration must
not disclose it or voluntarily produce it in evidence before a court, otherwise
than as permitted by the declaration.[116]
Additionally, a Minister, Commonwealth officer or tribunal member must not be
required to produce the information to a court (subject to proposed section
503C, discussed below).[117]
Proposed subsection 503B(9) expressly
states that the rules of natural justice do not apply to the consideration or
exercise of the Minister’s power to issue a declaration. This means the
Minister is not required to provide notice of their intention to issue or not
issue a declaration (for example), or provide affected persons with the
opportunity to be heard on the issue. There is no similar statement under the
existing provisions.
Additionally, the Minister’s power to make a
declaration is non-compellable, which means a person cannot challenge the
Minister’s failure to make a declaration, or to even consider whether to make a
declaration.[118]
A declaration is not a legislative instrument.[119]
New offences
Unlike the current provisions, which only make it an
offence to breach non-disclosure orders made by a court, the Bill creates two
new offences in relation to protected information.
Proposed subsection 503A(6) makes it
an offence for an authorised Commonwealth officer to disclose protected
information to another person otherwise than as provided for under proposed
sections 503A, 503B or 503C.
Proposed subsection 503B(7) provides for an offence
where a Commonwealth officer receives information in accordance with a Ministerial
declaration subject to one or more conditions, and contravenes the
condition(s).
The maximum penalty for both offences is two years’
imprisonment. The Explanatory Memorandum states that the creation of these
offences ‘highlights the seriousness with which the Government regards’
unauthorised disclosures of protected information and breaches of conditions
relating to such information.[120]
It further states that the applicable penalty:
… reflects the fact that Commonwealth officers are in a
trusted position to access certain sensitive and confidential information in
order to carry out their duties, and that this position comes with the
responsibility to protect such information. This is due to the severe impact
that unauthorised disclosures could have on the public interest – including
compromising national security.[121]
Court powers
and orders
Unlike the current provisions, proposed subsection
503C(1) gives the High Court, Federal Court or Federal Circuit Court the
power to order the Minister to cause specified information to be produced to,
or given in evidence before, the Court. This new power appears to largely
respond to the High Court’s decision in Graham and Te Puia,
recognising that the Government cannot prohibit information being provided to
the High Court or Federal Court where doing so would impede the courts
exercising of their original jurisdiction to review the legality of
administrative actions.
The power to make a disclosure order exists
where:
- the
relevant court is satisfied the information is ‘protected information’ under proposed
subsection 503A(1) and
- the
production or giving of the information is for the purposes of substantive
proceedings relating to the exercise of one of the character test powers.[122]
If information is produced to, or given in evidence
before, the court in accordance with a disclosure order under proposed
subsection 503C(1), a party to the substantive proceedings may make
submissions concerning:
- the
use that the Court should make of the information (including any weight to be
given to the information) and
- the
impact that disclosing the information may have on the public interest—the
party may also tender evidence on this issue if appropriate.[123]
However, a party may only make such submissions if they
are aware of the content of the information, and the content of the information
was not acquired (by the party or another person) unlawfully or in breach of
confidentiality requirements.[124]
If a party does not meet these criteria, the Court must
order that they be excluded from the hearing of any submissions regarding the
use of the protected information—this is the case even if the party is the
applicant to the substantive proceedings. The Court must also order that no
part of the proceedings relating to the information is to be published, and
that no person has access to Court files or records containing that information
without consent of the Court.[125]
After considering the information and any submissions made
in relation to it, the Court must determine whether disclosing the information
would create a real risk of damage to the public interest, and if so, must not
disclose the information to any person, including the applicant and any other
party to the substantive proceedings or their legal representatives. In making
this assessment, the Court must only have regard to the following
matters that it considers relevant:
- the
fact the information was originally communicated to an authorised Commonwealth
officer by a gazetted agency on condition that it be treated as confidential
information
- the
risk that disclosure may discourage gazetted agencies and informants giving
information in the future
- Australia’s
relations with other countries
- the
need to avoid disruption to national and international law enforcement,
criminal intelligence, criminal investigation and security intelligence efforts
- the
protection and safety of informants and people associated with informants
- the
protection of the technologies and methods used (whether in or out of
Australia) to collect, analyse, secure or otherwise deal with criminal
intelligence or security intelligence
- Australia’s
national security and
- such
other matters, if any, specified in the regulations.[126]
Non-disclosable information—amendments
In addition to the amendments to the protected information
provisions of the Migration Act, item 6 of Schedule 1
amends the definition of non-disclosable information in
subsection 5(1) of the Act.
Although the Migration Act generally requires
adverse information to be given to a visa applicant where it is relevant to a
decision to refuse to grant a visa,[127]
and to a visa holder where it is relevant to a decision to cancel their visa,[128]
non-disclosable information is exempted from these requirements.
Similarly, the AAT does not have to provide non-disclosable information
to an applicant even where it will be relevant to the Tribunal’s decision in
the applicant’s matter.[129]
Currently, the definition of non-disclosable
information means information or matter:
- whose
disclosure would, in the Minister’s opinion, be contrary to the national
interest by prejudicing Australia’s security, defence or international
relations, or by involving the disclosure of Cabinet deliberations or decisions
- whose
disclosure would, in the Minister’s opinion, be contrary to the public interest
for a reason that could form the basis of a claim by the Crown in right of the
Commonwealth in judicial proceedings or
- whose
disclosure would found an action by a person, other than the Commonwealth, for
breach of confidence.
Item 6 inserts proposed paragraph (aa) into
the definition, to capture information or matter:
- which
was disclosed by a gazetted agency and is relevant to the exercise of, or in
relation to, a character test power and
- the
further disclosure of which would, in the Minister’s opinion (after consulting
the gazetted agency), be contrary to the national interest.
The effect of the amendment will be to expand the types of
information which do not have to be provided to a person both before an adverse
decision is made in respect of a visa, and when providing written reasons for a
visa decision.
The amended definition will apply in relation to
particulars, reasons or documents given after commencement of item 6.[130]
Application
The new offences under proposed subsections 503A(6) and
503B(7) will apply in relation to any contravention occurring after
commencement of Part 1 of Schedule 1.[131]
All other amendments to the Migration Act will apply in relation to:
- any
protected information, whether it is communicated or originated before or after
commencement and
- to
any court, tribunal or parliamentary proceedings, whether they are commenced
before or after commencement.[132]
Citizenship
Act amendments
Protected
information—existing provisions
Currently, the Australian Citizenship Act contains
limited provisions protecting information from disclosure on security grounds. There
are no existing provisions akin to sections 503A to 503D of the Migration
Act which specifically dealing with confidential information conveyed to
the Department by law enforcement and security agencies.
The existing provisions relate primarily to citizenship
cessation. The Minister is typically required to give a person notice of their
citizenship having ceased and the basis for this.[133]
However, information must not be disclosed to a person where it includes
operationally sensitive information;[134]
where disclosure could prejudice Australia’s security, defence or international
relations, or the performance by a law enforcement or security agency of its
functions; or where disclosure could endanger a person’s safety or otherwise be
contrary to the public interest.[135]
Similar provisions apply in respect of applications to the Minister for
revocation of a citizenship cessation determination,[136]
and revocations on the Minister’s own initiative.[137]
Protected
information—amendments
Items 1 to 3 of Schedule 1 amend the Australian
Citizenship Act to provide for the protection of certain information from
disclosure. These provisions are in largely equivalent terms to proposed
sections 503A to 503D of the Migration Act, discussed above.
Item 3 inserts proposed provisions 52A to 52D
into the Australian Citizenship Act. Proposed subsection 52A(1) provides
that information will fall within the scope of these provisions if it is
communicated to an authorised Commonwealth officer by a gazetted agency on the
condition of confidentiality, and is relevant to the exercise of a power under
or in relation to the following:
- refusal
of an application for citizenship by descent under section 17
- refusal
of an application for citizenship on the basis of adoption under section 19D
- refusal
of an application for citizenship by conferral under section 24
- the
cancellation of an approval of citizenship by conferral, on the basis that the
person is not of good character (section 25)
- a
determination under subsection 26(3) that a person delay making the pledge of
commitment for a specified period of time
- refusal
of an application to resume citizenship under section 30
- revocation
of citizenship on the basis of certain criminal offences or fraud (section 34)
- cessation
of citizenship for engaging in specified conduct demonstrating the person has
‘repudiated their allegiance’ to Australia (section 36B) and
- cessation
of citizenship on the basis of certain criminal convictions (section 36D).[138]
The same restrictions on disclosure of such information as
provided for under the Migration Act apply under the Australian
Citizenship Act. An authorised Commonwealth officer or the Minister may
disclose protected information for the purpose of one of the provisions listed
above, or the exercise of one of the character test powers under the Migration
Act.[139]
The Minister may also authorise disclosure to a specified Minister,
Commonwealth officer, court or tribunal, by way of a written declaration under proposed
subsection 52B(1). The Minister must consult the gazetted agency from which
the information originated before making such declaration.
Offences
The proposed provisions also contain
offences equivalent to those inserted into the Migration Act, discussed
above. It is an offence for a Commonwealth officer to:
- disclose
protected information other than as authorised by proposed sections 52A, 52B
or 52C[140]
or
- contravene
a condition (or conditions) imposed by the Minister as part of a written
declaration under proposed subsection 52B(1).[141]
Each offence is punishable by a maximum penalty of two
years’ imprisonment.
Court powers
and orders
Proposed section 52C provides that
the High Court, Federal Court or Federal Circuit Court may order the Minister
to cause protected information to be produced to, or given in evidence before
the Court, if it is for the purpose of proceedings relating to the exercise of
a power under one of the provisions of the Australian Citizenship Act,
as set out above.
The procedures, powers and restrictions provided
for under proposed section 52C are the same as those provided for under proposed
section 503C of the Migration Act, discussed above.
Application
provisions
The amendments to the Australian Citizenship Act will
apply to any information captured by proposed subsection 52A(1), whether
it is communicated or originated before or after commencement of Part 1 of
Schedule 1 of the Bill. The amendments will similarly apply to any court,
tribunal or parliamentary proceedings commenced before or after commencement.[142]
Non-disclosure
certificates and the AAT
Schedule 2 of the Bill makes other amendments to
the Australian Citizenship Act relating to the disclosure of
information, including to provide for the issuing of non-disclosure
certificates by the Minister.
The Migration Act currently permits the Minister to
issue a non-disclosure certificate preventing the Secretary of the Department
from providing a document or information to a merits review tribunal, where the
disclosure would be contrary to public interest:
- because
it would prejudice Australia’s security, defence or international relations or
- because
it would involve the disclosure of Cabinet deliberations or decisions.[143]
Item 5 of Schedule 2 inserts proposed
section 52G into the Australian Citizenship Act. This provides, in substantively
identical terms to the Migration Act provisions, that the Minister may
issue a non-disclosure certificate preventing the Secretary from disclosing a
document or information to the AAT on the grounds that it would prejudice
Australia’s security, defence or international relations or involve Cabinet
disclosures.
The provision enables certain information relied on by the
Minister (or a delegate) in making citizenship decisions to be withheld from
the AAT. The effect of this is different from withholding information from a
court undertaking judicial review. The AAT is required to make a decision
afresh (or de novo) based on the relevant information before it
at the time of reconsideration, rather than review the original
decision-maker’s exercise of power.[144]
Consequently, the withholding of information under proposed section 52G
means that the Tribunal cannot take such information into account when making
the ‘correct and preferable’ decision in a particular matter.
However, proposed section 52H does permit the
disclosure of certain confidential information to the AAT, but not necessarily
to the applicant in the Tribunal matter. It applies to a document
or information which is either:
- subject
to a non-disclosure certificate issued on public interest grounds (other than
those covered by proposed section 52G) which could form the basis for a
claim by the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, in a judicial proceeding, that
the document should not be disclosed or
- given
to the Minister, or an authorised Commonwealth officer, in confidence.
Where the Secretary gives the document or information to
the AAT in accordance with a requirement under the Australian Citizenship
Act in relation to the Tribunal’s review of a decision, the Secretary:
- must
notify the Tribunal that proposed section 52H applies and
- may
give the Tribunal any written advice the Secretary thinks relevant about the
significance of the document or information.
After receiving such notice, the AAT may have regard to
the document or information for the purpose of exercising its powers in
relation to the reviewable decision, and if it thinks it is appropriate to do
so, may disclose any matter contained in the document, or the information, to
the applicant or any other person who has given evidence to the Tribunal in the
matter.[145]
If the AAT discloses a matter under this provision, and is
satisfied it is in the public interest that further disclosure be prohibited or
restricted, it must give a non-publication or non-disclosure direction to this
effect under the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal Act 1975.[146]
The provision allows the AAT to take a document or
information into account when making its decision, without the applicant being
provided with such information or given an opportunity to respond, unless the
AAT thinks it is appropriate to do so. The High Court has previously determined,
in respect of equivalent provisions in the Migration Act, that
procedural fairness requires the AAT to notify the applicant of the existence of
a notification by the Secretary.[147]
Secretary’s delegation power
Item 7 of Schedule 2 inserts proposed
subsection 53(3) into the Australian Citizenship Act, providing that
in addition to the existing delegation powers of the Minister, the Secretary
may also delegate to any person all or any of the Secretary’s functions or
powers under the Act or Regulations. This replaces the Secretary’s broad
delegation power under section 53 of the Australian Border
Force Act 2015 to the extent that the existing provision applies to the
Secretary’s powers and functions under the Australian Citizenship Act.[148]
Concluding comments
The Bill’s amendments to the protected information
provisions in the Migration Act respond in part to the High Court’s
decision in Graham and Te Puia. The amendments recognise that Parliament
cannot prevent disclosure of information to the High Court or Federal Court
where doing so will impede the exercise of either court’s original jurisdiction
to review the legality of administrative actions, and set out parameters by
which the courts may use and disclose such information. The Bill also introduces
the same protected information provisions into the Australian Citizenship
Act.
While these amendments enable courts to access information
for purposes of conducting judicial review of a decision made under the Migration
Act or Australian Citizenship Act, they have been strongly
criticised by legal, refugee and human rights groups for restricting an
applicant’s ability to effectively challenge an adverse decision made in
reliance on protected information. The Bill provides that a court may disclose
such information to an applicant or their legal representatives only where it
determines that doing so would not create a real risk of damage to the public
interest, with the statutory test not permitting the court to consider public
interest factors favouring disclosure, such as procedural fairness and the
proper administration of justice. An applicant is not permitted to make
submissions regarding disclosure unless they have lawfully obtained access to
the information.
Furthermore, outside of the protected information
provisions the Bill expands the circumstances in which certain information
relevant to migration or citizenship decisions can be withheld. This includes
by extending the definition of ‘non-disclosable information’ under the Migration
Act, and providing for the issuing of non-disclosure certificates under the
Australian Citizenship Act.