Key points
- The Migration Amendment (Removal and Other Measures) Bill 2024 will amend the Migration Act 1958 to allow the Minister to issue written directions to a ‘removal pathway non-citizen’ to facilitate their removal from Australia; introduce criminal penalties for refusing or failing to comply with such directions and empower the Minister to reverse a protection finding in relation to a lawful non-citizen who is on a removal pathway.
- The Bill will also confer a discretionary personal power on the Minister to designate a country as a ‘removal concern country’ which would have the effect of preventing citizens from that country from applying for a visa where they are outside Australia.
- In the context of subsequent court decisions following the High Court of Australia’s judgment in NZYQ v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs, the Bill will provide for a statutory expectation that ‘removal pathway non-citizens’ will cooperate in relation to their removal from Australia.
- The Government intended to pass the Bill in the week it was introduced; however, the Bill was referred to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee for inquiry with the support of the Opposition and the crossbench. While the Committee recommended that the Bill be passed, Coalition Senators who participated in the inquiry, the Australian Greens and Senator David Pocock all prepared dissenting reports.
- The Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills and the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights have both noted a range of issues with the scope, provisions and speed of passage of the Bill.
- Key stakeholders have commented on the broad scope of the Bill and the significance of the amendments, questioning whether the measures are proportionate or effective.
- The Bill has raised widespread concern particularly amongst community groups and service providers on the consequences it will have on affected individuals and social cohesion.
Introductory Info
Date introduced: 26 March 2024
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Home Affairs
Commencement: The day after Royal Assent
Purpose of the
Bill
The purpose of the Migration
Amendment (Removal and Other Measures) Bill 2024 (the Bill) is to amend the
Migration
Act 1958 to:
- set
out in legislation a Parliamentary expectation that ‘removal pathway
non-citizens’ will voluntarily leave Australia, cooperate with steps taken to
arrange their lawful removal from Australia, and not attempt to obstruct or
frustrate their removal from Australia
- give
the Minister the power to make written directions to a ‘removal pathway
non-citizen’ to facilitate their removal from Australia
- introduce
criminal penalties for refusing or failing to comply with a valid removal
pathway direction, including requiring courts to impose a mandatory minimum
sentence
- confer
a discretionary personal power on the Minister to designate a country as a ‘removal
concern country’, by legislative instrument, if the Minister thinks it is in
the national interest to do so and
- empower
the Minister to reverse a protection finding in relation to a lawful
non-citizen who is on a removal pathway.
The Bill will also make amendments to clarify the
application of provisions introduced by the Migration
Amendment (Bridging Visa Conditions) Act 2023.
Background
Power to remove non-citizens from Australia
Since they were inserted on 1 September 1994, Divisions 7
and 8 of Part 2 of the Migration Act have provided for the mandatory
detention and mandatory removal from Australia of an ‘unlawful non-citizen’,
being someone who is a non-citizen in Australia who does not hold a valid visa.
As noted
by the High Court of Australia, ‘the basic structure and the text of the
critical provisions of Divs 7 and 8 have not altered’ since they were
introduced.
Section
189 of the Migration Act requires that all ‘unlawful non-citizens’
must be taken into immigration detention. Section
198 of the Migration Act provides that unlawful non-citizens in
immigration detention must be removed from Australia ‘as soon as reasonably
practicable’.
While removal can be effected on a ‘voluntary’ basis under
subsection 198(1), if a person does not cooperate with the processes to remove
them to their country of origin, they may be removed involuntarily. According
to the Department of Home Affairs, in 2022–23 there were 2,184 unlawful
non-citizens removed from Australia and 90 unlawful non-citizens were removed
involuntarily (p. 48).
However, as noted in the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Bill (p. 22), certain countries refuse to accept
involuntary repatriation of their citizens and may, for example, refuse to
issue travel or identity documents for the person. As noted by the Australian
Human Rights Commission (AHRC), ‘There is currently no obligation on a
non-citizen to assist with efforts to give effect to their removal’ (Submission
68, p. 3).
The NZYQ decision and subsequent legislative responses
High Court’s decision in NZYQ v Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs
On 8 November 2023, the High Court of Australia in the
case of NZYQ v
Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs (NZYQ
decision) ordered the release of an individual known as NZYQ from immigration
detention. NZYQ had been in immigration detention since 2018 after his
temporary protection visa was cancelled following conviction for child sex
offences. Because NZYQ is a stateless Rohingya person from Myanmar, he could
not be removed to his country of origin. This meant he faced the prospect of
indefinite detention in Australia. As Professor
Spencer Zifcak from the Australian Catholic University notes:
He had relatives in Saudi Arabia and Bangladesh. But there
was no real prospect that he could be provided with a right to enter or reside
in either country. Given his criminal conviction there was also little or no
chance that any other country would accept him. So, there was no reasonable
prospect of his removal from Australia becoming practicable. He was stuck
indefinitely, and perhaps for life, in immigration detention.
In making
orders for his release, the High Court ruled
that NZYQ’s detention was unlawful ‘by reason of there having been and
continuing to be no real prospect of the removal of the plaintiff from
Australia becoming practicable in the reasonably foreseeable future’. In its
judgment (which was released following the initial orders) the High Court found
that indefinite immigration detention was unconstitutional because it was
punitive – the Constitution
sets out that punishment may only be ordered by a court, and not, as in this
case, by powers under the Migration Act. The High Court unanimously
overruled its 2004 finding in Al-Kateb
v Godwin, where a 4–3 majority of the Court upheld the validity of
provisions of the Migration Act requiring the continuing detention of
unlawful non-citizens even where their removal was not reasonably practicable
in the foreseeable future.
In its decision
in NZYQ, the High Court provided some clarity on when detention would be
considered lawful:
Release from unlawful detention is not to be equated with a
grant of a right to remain in Australia. Unless the plaintiff is granted such a
right under the Migration Act, the plaintiff remains vulnerable to removal
under s 198. Issuing of a writ of habeas corpus would not prevent re-detention
of the plaintiff under ss 189(1) and 196(1) of the Migration Act in the future
if, and when, a state of facts comes to exist giving rise to a real prospect of
the plaintiff’s removal from Australia becoming practicable in the reasonably
foreseeable future. Nor would grant of that relief prevent detention of the
plaintiff on some other applicable statutory basis, such as under a law
providing for preventive detention of a child sex offender who presents an
unacceptable risk of reoffending if released from custody. [para 72]
Passage of subsequent legislation
Following the release of NZYQ, a further cohort of over
150 people have progressively been released from immigration detention.
On 16 November 2023, the Government introduced the Migration
Amendment (Bridging Visa Conditions) Bill 2023. This Bill passed both
Houses that day and received Royal Assent on 17 November. The amendments
made by the Migration
Amendment (Bridging Visa Conditions) Act 2023 have the effect of providing for the grant of
bridging visas (specifically Subclass 070 (Bridging (Removal Pending)) Visa R (Bridging
Visa R)) to non-citizens in the ‘NZYQ-affected cohort’ released from
immigration detention with certain monitoring conditions placed on them. A
person commits an offence if they breach a relevant condition. New conditions
and the provisions under which they must or may be imposed were inserted into
the Migration
Regulations 1994.
On 27 November 2023, the Government introduced the
Migration Amendment (Bridging Visa Conditions and Other Measures) Bill 2023,
which passed both Houses on 6 December as the Migration
and Other Legislation Amendment (Bridging Visas, Serious Offenders and Other
Measures) Bill 2023. The Bill as introduced made a number of amendments
following the rapid introduction and passage of the Migration Amendment
(Bridging Visa Conditions) Act 2023 (see the Bills
Digest for the Bill as introduced). The Bill as passed included substantial
additional amendments to introduce a new Community Safety Order scheme and
provide for its operation for the NZYQ-affected cohort (see the supplementary
Explanatory Memorandum).
Impact of the NZYQ decision and subsequent court decisions
As noted by the AHRC, at the time the Bill was introduced
there was ‘uncertainty about whether the principle of NZYQ will apply to those
non-citizens who refuse to cooperate with efforts to facilitate their removal’ (Submission
68, p. 7).
On 30 November 2023, days after the NZYQ decision, the
Federal Court of Australia ordered
the release from detention of an Iranian national referred to as AZC20 who
could not be returned to Iran unless he consented and cooperated with Iranian
authorities to facilitate the issuance of a travel document. As summarised by
the AHRC:
Ultimately, Justice Kennett found that the circumstances of
the applicant in AZC20 meant that he was unable to cooperate with efforts to
effect his removal to Iran, predominantly due to his subjective fear of
persecution there, and his mental health preventing him from changing his
approach. He was, however, willing to be removed to any other country. (Submission
68, p. 7)
On 11 January 2024, the Federal Court of Australia dismissed
the case of an Iranian citizen, known as ASF17, who refused to engage with
the removal process to that country, upholding the validity of his continued
detention. The Government contended that if a person is not cooperating with
their removal process, this does not constitute grounds for release from
immigration detention under the NZYQ decision because the prospect of their
removal may become practicable in the foreseeable future, that is, if the
person should choose to cooperate. The applicant in ASF17 filed an appeal of
the decision to the Full Federal Court, with the Government intervening to have
it heard before the High
Court (see further below).
Against this backdrop, the Federal Court had also ordered
the release of two Iranian nationals in circumstances where there was no real
prospect of them being released from detention because they have not cooperated
with the removals process.[1]
As noted
by constitutional law expert, Anne Twomey, the inconsistent approach taken by
the lower courts led to the Government seeking to have the High Court hear the
matter of ASF17. She discussed
the impact that decision may have had on those currently in immigration
detention:
If the High Court were to decide that a person could prevent
their deportation by refusing to cooperate and could use this to cause their
release into the community, it would give detainees a great incentive to refuse
cooperation in deportation matters.
Stakeholders such as the Law Council of Australia (Submission 71, p. 7) and the
Andrew & Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at UNSW Sydney
(the Kaldor Centre; Submission 11, p. 3) noted that
the decision in NZYQ, and the expected decision in the matter of ASF17, appear
to have led to the introduction of the Bill. When asked whether the Bill was in
response to the forthcoming ASF17 decision in a Committee hearing on 26 March
2024, the Department
of Home Affairs stated:
The passage of this legislation or not has no relevance to
the outcome of that High Court case, because that court case is really
considering immigration detention for the purposes of the executive function,
which is a legitimate, non-punitive purpose of detaining someone, and the
accepted reasons for that are where it's for the purpose of removal or where
it's for the purpose of processing a visa. In the NZYQ decision it was found
that if you're not doing one of those two things and there is no real prospect
of removal you need to release the person from immigration detention. The ASF17
case will be looking at whether you can reach that threshold even if there
would be a real prospect of removal if the person were to cooperate but they're
not cooperating. So, it's really testing whether the reason that you can't
remove someone matters. In our view, no, this legislation isn't being driven by
that High Court case, in the sense that it will operate equally in relation to
someone who's in immigration detention or someone who's on a bridging visa R.
(p. 10)
However, in its later submission to the Legal and
Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, the Department acknowledged that
it ‘cannot rule out the possibility of further court decisions that could have
a material impact on critical aspects of the migration system’:
For example, if a court were to draw a new constitutional
limit on the power of the Executive to lawfully detain a non-citizen who is not
cooperative towards their lawful removal – i.e. where the non-citizen’s
cooperation is material in determining whether there is a real prospect of
removal from Australia becoming practicable in the reasonably foreseeable
future – a key attribute of Australia’s sovereignty could be severely
circumscribed. There could be a greatly diminished capacity for the Parliament and
Executive to create and administer an orderly migration system, including
detention arrangements for unlawful non-citizens who are required to be removed
from Australia.
The implication of non-citizens enlivening a constitutional
entitlement to release into the Australian community by choosing not to
cooperate with removal, would require new responses by Government to bolster
the migration framework.
Moreover, a court decision that gives significance to the
choices of some non-citizens on whether to cooperate or not cooperate with
their removal would present new challenges to the Government in determining
appropriate visa and entry arrangements for countries that do not cooperate
with involuntary removal of their own nationals. (Submission
75, p. 8)
High
Court’s decision in ASF17 v Commonwealth of Australia [2024] HCA 19
On 10 May 2024, the High Court handed down its decision in
ASF17
v Commonwealth of Australia, unanimously dismissing the appeal from the
Federal Court and finding that ASF17’s continuing detention under subsections
189(1) and 196(1) of the Migration Act ‘does not exceed the temporal
limitation on the valid application of those provisions imposed by Chapter III
of the Constitution’ [para
49].
In the majority decision, the High Court found that where
there is a real prospect of removal becoming practicable in the reasonably
foreseeable future, the Government has the power to detain a person who is a
non-citizen ‘if and for so long as removal could be achieved in the reasonably
foreseeable future were the detainee to decide to cooperate in the undertaking
of administrative processes necessary to facilitate that removal’ [para
42].
The Government
and the Opposition
both welcomed the High Court’s decision in ASF17.
Committee consideration
Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation
Committee
The Bill was referred to the Senate Legal and
Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 7 May
2024. Details of the inquiry are at the Committee’s
homepage.
The Committee received
over 120 submissions and held one
public hearing into the Bill. The Committee had also previously held a
hearing on 26 March 2024 as directed by the Senate Chamber at which the
Department of Home Affairs gave evidence.
On 7 May 2024, the Committee tabled
its report, which recommended
that the Bill be passed and that the Minister considers community impacts
when designating a country as a removal concern country. There were also three
dissenting reports tabled by the Coalition Senators who participated in the
inquiry, the Australian Greens and Senator David Pocock.
Coalition Senators supported
the policy intent of the Bill but made
a number of recommendations ‘focused on additional safeguards and
improvements to the operation to the bill in response to the concerns raised in
this inquiry’:
- Recommendation
1: Proposed subsection 199B(1) be amended to reflect the Government’s
stated intention that the cohort of ‘removal pathway non-citizens’ be only
those individuals who have neither legal proceedings (relevant to their
migration status) on foot, nor any pending ministerial intervention
requests. Alternatively, consideration could be given to amending
section 199D(2) to expand the circumstances in which a removal pathway
direction cannot be given to include circumstances where judicial review proceedings
are still on foot or there is an outstanding application for Ministerial
intervention.
- Recommendation
2: Subsection 199B(1)(d) be amended to clarify that the power only applies
to additional visas issued for non-citizens to maintain lawful status in the
community while making arrangements to depart or be removed from Australia.
- Recommendation
3: Subsection 199B(1)(d) should be amended to specifically refer to
prescription by regulation under section 504 of the Migration Act 1958 to
remove any doubt that the exercise of the power will be by way of delegated
legislation subject to disallowance.
- Recommendation
4: The Bill be amended to insert a requirement after section 199D(5) that,
prior to giving a removal pathway direction in relation to any child, the
Minister must conduct an assessment of whether the direction is in the best
interests of the child, as one of the factors to be considered by the Minister
prior to making a removal pathway direction.
- Recommendation
5: Consideration be given to amending the Bill to provide for the
additional safeguards proposed by the Scrutiny of Bills Committee in relation
to the Minister’s power to give removal pathway directions; namely: (a)
providing a minimum time for compliance which would allow a person to take
steps to comply and seek legal advice; and (b) better delimitation of the
directions that may be given by the Minister.
- Recommendation
6: The imposition of mandatory minimum criminal penalties elevates the need
for additional safeguards to be inserted into the Bill through amendment
(including through the amendments proposed in recommendations 1 to 5 of this
report). Proposed amendments to the Bill should be considered in this context.
- Recommendation
7: Within seven days of the end of each month, the Minister should be
required to provide a statement to be tabled in Parliament in relation to each
removal pathway direction which is given by the Minister during the month with
the detail proposed by the Coalition in its amendments to the Bill moved in the
House of Representatives.
- Recommendation
8: The power to declare a country as a removal concern country be redrafted
to require the Minister to consider a set of factors which must be considered
prior to making a designation (e.g. those factors required to be included under
section 72 of the UK's Nationality and
Borders Act 2022), including the potential impact on Australian
diaspora communities of making such a declaration.
- Recommendation
9: The Minister and/or the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence
and Security (PJCIS) be required to review the decision to declare a country as
a removal concern country on a regular basis and be required to table in both
Houses of Parliament the reasons why continued designation of a country as a
removal concern country is justified.
- Recommendation
10: The reasons for a declaration of a country as a removal concern country
not being subject to disallowance should be clearly explained in the
Explanatory Memorandum. If a declaration is not subject to
disallowance that elevates the need for further details to be provided in the
Bill with respect to the circumstances in which a declaration would be made.
- Recommendation
11: Any declaration of a country as a removal concern country should be
subject to sunsetting after three years.
- Recommendation
12: That the exemptions under section 199G(2) from the prohibition on
applying for visas should be expanded to include: parents of independent
children, grandparents, siblings and dependent persons (to take into account
non-western kinship systems as suggested by the Parliamentary Joint Committee
on Human Rights).
- Recommendation
13: That Government should:
(a) undertake
a comprehensive review of all mitigating measures (and resourcing requirements
for such measures) beyond strategic communications that may be required to
mitigate any potential ‘pull factors’ that may arise from the Bill; and
(b) commit
to agreeing to implement such measures in the event the Bill is passed to
ensure that any ‘pull factors’ are mitigated to the full extent practical.
- Recommendation
14: The Government should restore the Operation Sovereign Borders framework
in full by: (a) reinstating temporary protection visas; (b) reversing the
budget cuts to border protection; and (c) restoring maritime patrols and aerial
surveillance levels to at least the levels in 2020-21.
- Recommendation
15: A statutory review should be undertaken with respect to the exercise of
the powers under the Bill after five years of operation. The review
should be open to public submissions.
- Recommendation
16: It is recommended that a note to drafting be added to proposed section
199B to clarify the Department’s intention not to capture other holders of
Subclass 050 (Bridging) General Visas.
- Recommendation
17: Given the nature of the powers granted to the Minister under the Bill,
it is recommended that the Bill be amended as detailed in this report to
provide additional safeguards.
The Australian Greens
recommended that the Bill ‘should be rejected in full’, citing a number of
concerns including the impacts of designating a country as a ‘removal concern
country’ (which the Greens refer to as a ‘travel ban’), the inclusion of
significant criminal penalties and the number of people who would be impacted
were the Bill to be passed. The Australian Greens also noted that all
submitters to the inquiry, except for the Department and the Australian Federal
Police, opposed the Bill.
Senator Pocock also recommended
that in the first instance the Bill not be passed and the Government provide ‘access
to an expedited re-application process to everyone who has been subjected to
the “Fast Track system”, including access to merits review’. He also made a
number of recommendations aimed at supporting people whose protection claims
were assessed by the fast-track process in the event the Bill was to be passed.
Senator Pocock also recommended that the proposed mandatory minimum sentence for
refusing or failing to comply with a removal pathway direction be deleted from
the Bill and that the denial of visas to citizens of a ‘removal concern
country’ only apply to government officials of that country and their immediate
family members.
Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
In its fifth report of
2024 (pp. 2–9), the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
raised a number of issues with respect to the Bill, including:
- the
ability to expand the scope of people that may be subject to removal pathway
directions by legislative instrument
- the
broad power of the Minister to give removal pathway directions
- the
lack of legislative time limits with respect to removal pathway directions
- the
use of mandatory minimum sentences
- the
expansion of the classes of persons for whom the minister is empowered to
overturn a protection decision
- the
ability of the Minister to designate a country as a ‘removal concern country’
by legislative instrument and
- the
speed with which the Bill is anticipated to pass the Parliament.
Some of these issues are discussed further in the ‘Key
provisions and issues’ section of this Bills Digest.
The Committee also made broader comments around the rushed
passage of recent legislation in the Home Affairs portfolio outside of the
normal parliamentary processes, noting that such ‘rapid changes prevent
certainty in the law’ and that legislation which may trespass on personal
rights and liberties should be subject to a high level of parliamentary
scrutiny.
Policy position of non-government parties/independents
On the morning the Government introduced the Bill and
scheduled it for debate (26 March 2024), the Government separately provided the
Opposition
and crossbench
with briefings on the Bill.
In debate in the House of Representatives, Opposition and
crossbench members were critical of the Government’s stated urgency of the
Bill.
The Greens stated
that the Government had not provided a ‘reasonable explanation’ for the
urgency, and were
critical of the Bill’s provisions, stating it would give the Minister
‘outrageous powers’.
The member for Warringah, Zali
Steggall, stated that there were ‘grave questions about the consequences
and the far-reaching implications of this legislation’ and found it
‘disappointing’ that the Bill was to be passed ‘with no delay, no scrutiny and
no debate’. She proposed
amendments which would require the Minister to hold an independent review
of the Bill’s amendments 3 months after commencement, and provide that the
Minister must not give a removal pathway direction to a person suffering from
domestic abuse or homelessness.
The member for Goldstein, Zoe
Daniel, stated that ‘this is the third time that we’ve been asked to
support legislation designed to address the High Court’s insistence that
sentencing is a matter for the courts, not a decision for governments, and each
time that legislation has proved vulnerable to further High Court action’.
Independent members were also critical of the Bill’s
provisions. The member for North Sydney, Kylea
Tink, called for amendments to ensure ‘at a minimum’ the measures would
only apply to the NZYQ cohort and raised concerns on international law,
particularly with regard to the best interests of the child.
The member for Wentworth, Allegra
Spender, stated
‘I absolutely acknowledge the need to have a way to remove the people who do
not have the right to live in Australia, but this is not the way to do that’,
and also criticised the Opposition for not agreeing to a motion for adjournment
on the Bill to allow for further scrutiny and debate.
The Shadow Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Dan
Tehan, stated that
‘if we can’t look at the detail, if we can’t make sure that there are no
unintended consequences, this legislation might not do the job that the
minister is hoping that it will do’. The Opposition proposed amendments that
would require the Minister to prepare a statement
regarding each removal pathway direction, and a monthly
statement about the number of individuals who were released from
immigration detention during the preceding month, both to be tabled in each
House of Parliament.
Mr Tehan called
for a Senate inquiry into the Bill that evening, as did other Opposition
members (the Senate
directed the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee to hold
the hearing). However, the Opposition voted with the Government to pass
the Bill in the House of Representatives.
In the Senate, the Greens continued to criticise the
Government’s urgency on the Bill and called
for the Bill to be referred to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs
Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 24 June 2024.
Senator David
Pocock supported an inquiry, stating ‘it was very unclear last night [at
the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee hearing of 26 March]
why this is so urgent’. Senator Pocock proposed a
number of amendments for the committee of the whole debate which would
require review of the operation of the Bill’s amendments, impose a sunsetting
arrangement on the Bill’s amendments, and oppose proposed subsection 199E(2)
(mandatory sentence of imprisonment).
Senator Pauline Hanson’s proposed
amendments would increase the applicable terms of imprisonment for a person
refusing to cooperate with their removal process.
Referral
of the Bill to the Legal
and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee passed with the support of
the Opposition and the crossbench, with an amended reporting date of 7 May as
proposed by the Opposition.
Some individual members and senators within the major
parties have raised concerns on the Bill. The ALP member for Bennelong, Jerome
Laxale, reportedly
wrote to his constituents regarding the proposal to not accept visa
applications from removal concern countries, noting he had raised the matter
with the Minister and encouraging them to make submissions to the committee
inquiry. The same media report noted information provided on condition of
anonymity that some Labor members were concerned about the removal concern country
provisions, and that the Opposition planned to introduce amendments to broaden
the exemptions available for the measure.
Shadow Minister for Home Affairs, Senator James Paterson,
later stated
in an interview that the Opposition wanted to ensure there were no
‘unintended consequences’ of the Bill and that any new powers granted to the
Minister came with ‘appropriate safeguards’. Senator Paterson stated that the removal
concern country provisions might not be effective in encouraging countries to
accept the return of their citizens, or as a ‘threat’, and that it was:
… ludicrous to think that the Australian government
threatening to ban Iranians applying for visas is all of a sudden going to
change the posture of the Iranian government on this or anything else.
He further argued that the proposed measures might lead to
more asylum seekers arriving irregularly by boat if they were prevented from
applying for a visa to enter Australia.
Recently-appointed Shadow Assistant Minister for
Multicultural Engagement (and deputy chair of the Legal and Constitutional
Affairs Legislation Committee), Senator Paul Scarr, was
reported as urging a ‘sensitive and empathetic’ approach to the debate,
encouraging all parliamentarians to listen to the views of community groups on
the issue.
Position of major interest groups
Submissions to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs
Legislation Committee inquiry were overwhelmingly opposed to the Bill.
Stakeholders have raised a broad range of concerns with the provisions of the
Bill and its potential wider impacts.
Key issues raised included:
- the
short timeframes for consultation and consideration of the Bill
- the
broad scope of the Bill, including the range of people it may directly affect,
the significant impacts it may have on them, and the adequacy of the safeguards
provided for
- that
the measures in the Bill may not be effective or adequately justified, and that
its objectives might be better achieved through other means
- the
wider impact on individuals, communities and social cohesion.
Stakeholder comments on specific provisions of the Bill
are covered in the ‘Key issues and provisions’ section below.
Comments on short timeframes
Community groups and service providers in particular
criticised the tight timeframe for the inquiry and the consequent limited
consultation this permitted with their communities, highlighting the
significant impacts the Bill may have on them.
Multicultural Australia states that due to the short
timeframes,
… we have not been able to engage with our community partners
or invite community members for detailed discussion or advice on the proposed
Bill. We are also concerned that the lack of consultation with migrant
communities means the voices of communities directly impacted by the Bill are
not included. (Submission
67, p. 2)
Legal academics at the Faculty of Law at the University of
Technology Sydney, Dr Anthea Vogl and Dr Sara Dehm, stated:
The speed with which the Bill has been drafted and opened for
inquiry is a barrier to meaningful engagement and response from the community, experts,
and advocates, as well as those who will be most affected by these reforms. (Submission
80, p. 1)
Other submissions which have raised these concerns include
(but are not limited to): the Kaldor Centre (Submission
11), the Settlement Council of Australia (Submission
44), the Forum of Australian Services for Survivors of Torture and Trauma (Submission
45), the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (Submission
59) and the Refugee Advice and Casework Service (Submission
73).
Comments on the scope and impacts of the Bill
Many stakeholders were concerned that the Bill would have
broad and significant impacts and would not provide sufficient safeguards for
affected people or sufficient constraints on the powers granted to the
Minister. (See also the ‘Key issues and provisions’ section below for specific
stakeholder arguments.)
The Kaldor Centre stated it had ‘serious concerns about
the scope and ramifications’ of the Bill and that it ‘gives the Minister
extraordinarily broad and ill-defined powers’ (Submission
11, p. 3). The submission goes on to provide arguments stating that the
Bill ‘does not adequately protect against risks of refoulement’ (the
return of a person to a country where they may face persecution; pp. 4–5) and
that the designation of a removal concern country would be ‘a discretionary
ministerial power that requires little consultation and is unlikely to be
subject to administrative or judicial review’ (p. 8).
The Multicultural Youth Advocacy Network Australia stated:
… the opaque nature of decision-making under such enhanced
ministerial powers could erode public trust in the immigration system. Without
clear guidelines or the requirement for detailed public reasoning behind
decisions, there is a risk that policy implementation could become
inconsistent, leading to perceptions of bias or unfair treatment. (Submission
46, p. 5)
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) broadly addresses Australia’s international obligations and
protection framework, and draws attention to international refugee law, notably
the 1951 Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951 Convention). Its submission
argues that the Bill provides ‘inadequate protections against refoulement’,
including:
... processes that are expanded in the Bill to determine that
non-refoulement obligations are no longer owed to non-citizens do not adhere to
the requirements of the cessation provisions of the 1951 Convention, also
contributing to a heightened risk of refoulement for those captured by the
operation of the Bill. (Submission
65, p. 3)
In addition,
UNHCR emphasises that safeguards are also needed to ensure
that removal pathway directions are not given in circumstances which would be
inconsistent with Australia’s international human rights obligations. (Submission
65, p. 16)
Amnesty International Australia was ‘particularly
concerned that this Bill would breach Australia’s obligations’ under the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights in preventing citizens of
particular countries from applying for visas (Submission
26, pp. 5–6).
Many submissions were concerned that the Bill’s provisions
captured not only the people affected by the NZYQ decision, but would also
include certain Bridging visa E holders, notably people subject to the ‘fast track’ protection visa
assessment process established by the Migration and
Maritime Powers Legislation Amendment (Resolving the Asylum Legacy Caseload)
Act 2014, and ‘transitory persons’ brought from detention facilities in
Papua New Guinea and Nauru for medical treatment in Australia. See for example
the Refugee Council of Australia (Submission
41), the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (Submission
59) and the Refugee Advice and Casework Service (Submission
73).
Submissions raised concerns on family reunion regarding a
number of provisions of the Bill. These included family members being unable to
visit or join relatives in Australia if prevented by the removal concern
country visa application measures, and that the Minister would not be required
to consider the best interests of the child or family separation when issuing a
removal pathway direction.
The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre stated that the latter
measure ‘contravenes Australia’s obligations under the Convention on the Rights
of the Child’ (Submission
59, p. 13) and, regarding the removal concern country provisions:
Although there are limited exceptions to the entry ban
regarding families, they are not sufficient and many people will be unfairly
punished by the Bill. Family members such as adult children, siblings, parents
of adult children and grandparents are not listed as exceptions to the entry
ban. Further, the limited exceptions do not consider the nature of family
relationships in non-Western contexts, where extended family members such as
aunties, uncles and cousins have close ties and are considered as immediate
family members. (Submission
59, p. 11)
The Settlement Council of Australia ,a peak body
representing migrant and refugee services and allied organisations, stated on
the removal concern country provisions: ‘This would be a blanket collective
punishment of thousands of people who would have no connection to the alleged
offence of certain individuals’ (Submission
44, p. 2).
A number of submissions labelled the removal concern
country provisions as ‘discriminatory’ in potentially excluding certain
nationals from making valid visa applications. The Kaldor Centre stated that
‘punishing people who may wish to work, study in or visit Australia for the
actions of their government is punitive’ (Submission
11, p. 8) and argued that challenges in returning non-citizens to their
home countries is a matter of diplomacy.
Comments on the effectiveness of the Bill
A number of submissions argued that insufficient reasoning
had been given as to why the Bill was necessary. The Forum of Australian
Services for Survivors of Torture and Trauma stated that the Government:
… has not provided compelling reasons for proposing
exceptional measures that are likely to have profoundly adverse impacts on
people who are affected directly as well as on their family members and
communities. (Submission
45, p. 4)
The Law Council of Australia states that the Bill:
… poses serious questions about Australia’s adherence and
commitment to international law, both as to treaties that Australia has
ratified and as to customary international law. No evidence of any serious or
widespread problem to justify this response has been produced by proponents of
the Removal Bill. (Submission
71, p. 5)
The Refugee Advice and Casework Service states that the
Bill ‘does little to meaningfully address indefinite detention or better manage
the migration system’ (Submission
73, p. 3).
The Refugee Advocacy Network argues that the Bill ‘is
simply not necessary, as the government already has the power to detain and
remove’ (Submission
42, p. 1).
In addition to general concerns over the Bill’s
introduction of criminal penalties for people refusing to cooperate with a
removal direction, stakeholders argue that the measure is unlikely to have the
intended effect of encouraging people to agree to removal.
The Commonwealth Ombudsman provided a submission in his role
as the National Preventive Mechanism under the Optional Protocol to the
Convention Against Torture (OPCAT) for places of detention under the control of
the Commonwealth and in his role under the Migration Act as responsible
for reviewing certain detention arrangements. The submission stated that it
was:
… possible that the deterrence potential of a prison term has
been over-estimated and that some people on a removal pathway will choose
non-compliance with a ministerial direction over removal and remain in a cycle
of detention and imprisonment for prolonged periods or even indefinitely. (Submission
105, p. 3)
It further expressed concern:
… that creating a potential cycle of indefinite detention and
incarceration is not a durable solution, is contrary to the intended purpose of
the Bill and risks falling short of our obligations under OPCAT to prevent
torture and ill-treatment in places of detention. (p. 3)
The Multicultural Youth Advocacy Network stated that
imprisoning individuals ‘does little to persuade them to return to countries
where they face the threats of persecution or death, especially when some have
already endured detention for a decade’ (Submission
46, p. 3).
Labor for Refugees NSW/ACT notes that the Australian Labor
Party National Platform 2023 stated that ‘Labor opposes mandatory sentencing.
This practice does not reduce crime but does undermine the independence of the
judiciary, lead to unjust outcomes and is often discriminatory in practice’
(cited in Submission
19, p. 2).
The Migration Institute of Australia questioned the
effectiveness of the removal concern country provisions, noting:
The experience of the U.S. shows that the threat of visa
sanctions have not proven successful against countries such as Iran, Iraq,
South Sudan, and Russia. The U.S experience also appears to suggest that a more
nuanced visa sanction strategy, focusing on particular visa categories, is more
effective in attaining the intended objectives. (Submission
77, pp. 9–10)
Submissions also noted that implementing the removal
concern country provisions could affect Australia’s international relations,
including diplomatic engagement. The Immigration Advice and Rights Centre
stated that it would be ‘an international embarrassment’ and could affect
Australia’s reputation as a skilled migration destination (Submission
72, p. 5). The International Commission of Jurists stated that the proposed
scheme ‘is discriminatory in nature and can do nothing but harm to
international relations’ (Submission
5, p. 3).
Some submissions noted the possibility of unintended
consequences if visa options were closed to certain nationals under the removal
concern country provisions. The Refugee Council of Australia argued that the
measure could close safe and regulated complementary pathways for people of
refugee backgrounds and impact other areas of migration and international
relations:
… result[ing] in poor diplomatic and bilateral relations
between Australia and banned countries. It has the potential to impact
bilateral trade, the education sector, tourism and relationships with
international organisations. (Submission
41, p. 8)
According to the Settlement Council of Australia, it may
also result in more people seeking to arrive in Australia via irregular means (Submission
44, p. 2).
Some submissions, in recommending that the Bill not be
passed, proposed alternative approaches to some of the challenges facing
Australia’s asylum system.
UNHCR acknowledged the challenges of returning persons not
in need of international protection, noting it was ‘not new or unique to
Australia’ (Submission
65, p. 1). However, it reiterates concerns expressed in previous submissions
to inquiries and representations to the Australian Government that:
… some of the legal and administrative measures adopted by
Australia, including the insertion of restrictive statutory criteria […] are
not consistent with a proper interpretation of Australia’s obligations under
the 1951 Convention and international human rights law. (Submission
65, p. 2)
It stresses the need for greater international cooperation
on returns, and that:
Return strategies are well complemented by opportunities for
regular migration, group-based regularization programmes and possibilities for
certain individuals to legalize their stay if established criteria are met. (p.
19)
The Kaldor Centre submission also refers to UNHCR’s
statements on returns, and further states:
… the most effective approach to facilitating removals
consistently with international law is to ensure that refugee status
determination procedures are both fast and fair. The longer a person has been
in Australia, the greater the legal and practical barriers to removal. At the
same time, where an applicant feels they have not had an opportunity to have
their protection claims fairly assessed, the more reluctant they may be to
accept voluntary removal from the country. To the extent that certain non-citizens
who do not have protection needs continue to refuse to cooperate with their
removal, such situations are better resolved on an individual basis, according
to the specific reasons for refusal, rather than blanket criminal provisions. (Submission
11, p. 10)
The Refugee Council of Australia ‘recognises that returns
are part of a well-functioning asylum system’ but that the measures proposed in
the Bill ‘will not facilitate voluntary removals. The more likely scenario is
that people will face imprisonment and a further deterioration of their trust
in the process and willingness to engage’ (Submission
41, p. 9). It recommends more ‘tailored, individual support to people’,
identification of barriers to return, and notes that long delays in processing
contribute to the challenges (pp. 9–11).
The Refugee Advice and Casework Service also recommends
‘reforming the protection assessment process’ stating that ‘adequate community
support and engagement can do much to lower risk of recidivism, and benefits
the Australian community as a whole’ (Submission
73, p. 13).
Comments on impacts on individuals, communities and social
cohesion
Stakeholders noted the broad scope of individuals the Bill
would affect, both directly and indirectly. Service providers and advocacy
groups reported that the Bill had already created concerns in their
communities.
The Forum of Australian Services for Survivors of Torture
and Trauma stated that the Bill has created ‘considerable anxiety among clients
and refugee background communities’ (Submission 45,
p. 2). The Federation of Ethnic Communities’ Councils of Australia (FECCA)
similarly noted:
The proposed amendments are causing significant concerns
among our communities – concerns about security, belonging, and dignity,
casting a shadow over their sense of belonging to Australian society and trust
in the Australian Government. (Submission
69, p. 3)
Regarding the removal concern country measures, FECCA
stated it ‘risks marginalising existing communities from the banned countries
within Australia, undermining the Government’s efforts to support and promote
social cohesion’ (p. 5).
The Multicultural Youth Advocacy Network stated these
issues extended to the Bill as a whole:
By potentially casting a wide net over what constitutes
grounds for visa cancellation or refusal, the legislation may stigmatise
refugees and asylum seekers, exacerbating existing prejudices and lead to
increased discrimination against migrant communities. (Submission
46, p. 3)
The Australian Iranian Community Alliance included in its
submission the preliminary findings of a rapidly conducted survey on people of
Iranian birth or background in Australia. It found 82% of respondents reported
increased ‘stress and anxiety due to the bill’ (Submission
74, p. 21).
The Settlement Council of Australia stated:
Beyond the legal implications of the Bill, it is pertinent to
consider the social cohesion impact of measures such as these, which break the
trust of thousands of Australians from refugee and migrant backgrounds in the
Australian government. (Submission
44, p. 3)
Many community and advocacy groups provided case studies
or potential scenarios of clients or community members who could be affected by
the Bill, including: the Human Rights Law Centre (Submission
18), the Migrant Workers Centre (Submission
29), the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (Submission
59), the Edmund Rice Centre for Justice and Community Education (Submission
64), the Immigration Advice and Rights Centre (Submission
72), the Refugee Advice and Casework Service (Submission
73) and the Australian Iranian Community Alliance (Submission
74).
Financial implications
The Government considers
that the amendments will have a low financial impact (p. 3).
Statement of Compatibility
with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011, 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 and considers
that the Bill is compatible ‘in most respects’ with these rights and freedoms
(see pp. 20–35 of the Explanatory
Memorandum).
The Government states that the Bill engages the following
rights:
According to the Government, ‘to the extent that the
measures in this Bill limit human rights, they do so in order to maintain the
integrity of the migration system’.
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (PJCHR) provided
substantial comments on the Bill and raised a number of concerns, as well
as recommending amendments to the Bill (pp. 16–43).
With respect to the power of the Minister to issue removal
pathway directions, the PJCHR noted that these provisions engaged multiple
rights, including:
- that
mandatory minimum criminal penalties for non-compliance with a removal pathway
direction are incompatible with the rights to liberty and to a fair trial
- depending
on what a removal pathway direction required a person to do (or not do), it may
also engage and limit the right to privacy and freedom of assembly, association
and expression
- such
directions may have flow on effects which may limit other rights, including the
right to protection of the family and rights of the child and
- there
may also be a risk that some individual cases may engage the absolute
prohibition against non-refoulement.
The PJCHR noted that the designation of removal concern
countries ‘would likely have a disproportionate impact on persons in Australia
of the same nationality as that of a removal concern country, and so would
engage and limit the right to equality and non-discrimination’. It may also
limit the right to protection of the family.
With respect to the power of the Minister to reverse a
protection finding, the PJCHR considered that this may engage and limit the
right to health in relation to affected persons and in certain circumstances
may limit the rights to protection of the family, a private life, and freedom
of movement. Further, whether or not these provisions are compatible with
Australia’s obligations in relation to non-refoulement would depend on the
quality of the decision-making as to whether a person is owed protection
obligations.
Key issues and provisions
Removal pathway directions
Key provisions
Proposed duty to cooperate in relation to removal
Proposed subsection 199A(1) provides that it is the
Parliament’s expectation that ‘removal pathway non-citizens’ will voluntarily
leave Australia, cooperate with steps taken to arrange their lawful removal
from Australia, and not attempt to obstruct or frustrate their removal from
Australia.
The Explanatory Memorandum is silent as to why there is a
specific need to include such a clear statement of the Parliament’s intention
as to how these provisions will operate instead of leaving it for the court to
interpret.
In its submission to the inquiry into the Bill, the Law
Council questioned the insertion of these provisions, noting that this approach
appeared to be novel and that ‘in the short time available, we were unable to
find reference to a similar “Parliamentary expectation” elsewhere in
Commonwealth primary legislation’ (Submission 71, p. 8).
Definition of ‘removal pathway non-citizen’
Proposed subsection 199B(1) provides that a
‘removal pathway non-citizen’ is:
- an
unlawful non-citizen who is required to be removed from Australia under section
198 as soon as reasonably practicable
- a
lawful non-citizen who holds a Subclass 070 (Bridging (Removal Pending)) visa
(BVR)
- a
lawful non-citizen who holds a Subclass 050 (Bridging (General)) visa and at
the time the visa was granted, satisfied a criterion for the grant relating to
the making of, or being subject to, acceptable arrangements to depart Australia
and
- a
lawful non-citizen who holds a visa as prescribed via the regulations.
As explained by the Department of Home Affairs:
The definition of ‘removal pathway non-citizen’ is broader
than just those unlawful non-citizens who are required to be removed from
Australia under section 198 of the Migration Act. Many non-citizens who were
released from immigration detention following the High Court’s decision in NZYQ
were granted BVRs. The intention is that lawful non-citizens who hold a BVR
should be required to cooperate with efforts to facilitate their removal, or to
determine whether there is a real prospect of their removal becoming
practicable in the reasonably foreseeable future. In addition, there are many
non-citizens in the community who have been issued with a Subclass 050
(Bridging (General)) visa who at the time of visa grant were granted the visa
on the criterion that they make acceptable arrangements to depart Australia. (Submission
75, p. 10)
Proposed subsection 199B(2) provides that the
definition of ‘removal pathway non-citizen’ includes those for whom a
protection finding has been made within the meaning of subsections 197C(4)–(7)
of the Migration Act. Subsections 197C(4)–(7) set out the circumstances
in which a ‘protection finding’ will be made in respect of a person during the
consideration of a protection visa application and reflects the circumstances
in which Australia has non-refoulement obligations under international law in
respect of a person.
However, the Minister will not be able to issue removal
pathway directions where a non-citizen cannot be removed due to the operation
of subsection 197C(3). This provision provides that despite subsections 197C(1)
and (2), the removal power under section 198 does not authorise the removal of
an unlawful non-citizen to a particular country if:
- the
non-citizen has made a valid application for a protection visa that has been
finally determined
- in
the course of considering the application, a protection finding was made for
the non-citizen with respect to the particular country (regardless of the
outcome of the visa application) and
- none
of the following apply:
- the
decision in which the protection finding was made has been quashed or set aside
- the
Minister is satisfied the non-citizen is no longer a person in respect of whom
a protection finding would be made or
- the
non-citizen has asked the Minister, in writing, to be removed to the particular
country.
Section 197C was recently amended by the Migration Amendment
(Clarifying International Obligations for Removal) Act 2021 following the
Federal Court of Australia’s decisions in DMH16
v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection and AJL20
v Commonwealth of Australia which had interpreted section 197C as
previously drafted as being inconsistent with Australia’s non-refoulement
obligations under international law.[2]
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security is currently
conducting a review into these amendments.
Power of the Minister to issue removal pathway directions
Proposed subsection 199C(1) will give the Minister
the power to make written directions to a ‘removal pathway non-citizen’ to
facilitate their removal from Australia, including:
- completing,
signing and submitting a passport application form, including doing and
providing all things required for the application process by the passport
issuing authority
- providing
specified documents or information to the Department or another specified
person or
- attending
an interview or appointment with an officer or another specified person.
The scope of things the Minister may direct a person to do
under proposed subsection 199C(1) is an exhaustive list though there are
no objective considerations the Minister must consider when exercising this
power, including whether it would be reasonable in the circumstances for a
person to be able to comply with the directions.
Proposed subsection 199C(2) further empowers the
Minister to issue directions to do or not do a thing if satisfied the measure
is reasonably necessary to determine whether there is a real prospect of
removal under section 198 becoming practicable in the reasonably foreseeable
future, or to facilitate removal under section 198.
The Minister may give a removal pathway non-citizen more
than one removal pathway direction. However, the Minister must not give a
direction to a removal pathway non-citizen to do something that is the subject
of a direction previously given by the Minister to the non-citizen, and for
which the period specified in the direction has not ended. Under proposed
subsection 199C(3), the Minister also has the power to revoke a direction.
The Bill does not provide for any restrictions on the time limit in which the
Minister can require a person to comply with the directions.
Proposed section 199D provides that the Minister
cannot give a removal pathway direction to:
- non-citizens
who cannot be removed to a particular country because of subsection 197C(3)
(where a protection finding has been made as set out above)
- non-citizens
who have made a valid application for a protection visa which has yet to be
finally determined
- a
removal pathway non-citizen where that non-citizen holds a BVR subject to
certain monitoring conditions (within the meaning of subsection 76B(4) of the Migration
Act) and where there would be overlap between a removal pathway direction
and an instruction or specification given under the monitoring condition
- a
child under 18 (though a direction may be given to their parent/guardian if
they are also a removal pathway non-citizen).
The Minister must also not give a removal pathway
direction requiring a person to not commence, discontinue or take or not take
particular steps in the conduct of court or tribunal proceedings, or not to
make, or to withdraw, a visa application made under the Migration Act.
Non-compliance with a removal pathway direction
A removal pathway non-citizen who refuses or fails to
comply with a valid removal pathway direction commits an offence under proposed
subsection 199E(1). The maximum penalty for non-compliance is 5 years
imprisonment or 300 penalty units ($93,900), or both.[3]
Upon conviction, a court must impose a sentence of
imprisonment of at least 12 months. This is referred to as a ‘mandatory minimum
sentence’ as it requires the court to impose a minimum sentence as opposed to
leaving it the judge’s discretion.
Proposed subsection 199E(3) provides that proposed
subsection 199E(1) does not apply where a person has a reasonable excuse
for refusing or failing to comply with the removal pathway direction, though
the following are not considered a reasonable excuse:
- a
genuine fear of persecution or significant harm
- a
claim to non-refoulement
- a
belief that the person will suffer other adverse consequences.
As noted by the Scrutiny of Bills Committee, the Explanatory
Memorandum does not provide any guidance beyond these exclusions as to how
the defence of reasonable excuse may be understood and states:
There are restrictions in section 199D on the giving of a
removal pathway direction to a non-citizen in relation to whom a protection
finding has been made where the direction relates to the country with respect
to which the finding was made, or who has made an application for a protection
visa that is not finally determined. Those are matters that constrain the
Minister’s power to make a direction. However, where no such limitation is
engaged, subsection 199E(4) makes it clear that certain subjectively-held fears
do not amount to a ‘reasonable excuse’ for the purposes of subsection 199E(3).
(p. 13)
According to the Department of Home Affairs:
The intention of this provision is to ensure that where a
person’s protection claims have already been considered as part of a protection
visa process, and found not to engage Australia’s non-refoulement obligations,
including because their fears of being subjected to harm are not well-founded,
the person should not be able to rely on claiming that they still fear harm to
excuse their non-cooperation with removal. (Submission
75, p. 14)
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee stated that
the inclusion of the reasonable excuse defence ‘may also suggest that the power
of the minister to give directions under proposed section 199C may be overly
broad’ and ‘the breadth of the term ‘reasonable excuse’ may result in persons
complying with directions even when it may be lawful for them to refuse to do
so’ (p. 5). The Committee noted that ‘many
of the matters that could be taken to be reasonable excuses would have been
more appropriately dealt with by better delimitation of the directions which
can be lawfully given by the Minister’ (p. 5).
The defendant also bears the evidential burden in relation
to the ‘reasonable excuse’ and it is therefore the responsibility of the
non-citizen to provide evidence relating to whether they have a reasonable
excuse for their non-compliance (proposed subsection 199E(3)). As noted
by the Law Council, ‘certain matters that may be relevant to a reasonable
excuse defence, such as whether compliance with a removal pathway direction is
practically impossible, are not peculiarly within the knowledge of a defendant’
(Submission 71, p. 19).
According to the Department of Home Affairs:
Since not complying with a direction will be a criminal
offence, operational guidance will be developed to ensure that directions to
compel the provision of information are reasonable in the circumstances of the
person. Since a person cannot be directed to provide information to a
protection finding country, or while their protection visa application is on
foot, the guidance could, for example, deal with the situation where a person
has made credible new claims in respect of that country that are under consideration.
(Submission
75, p. 14)
However, given the significant penalties attached to this
offence, it is unclear why these matters have not been set out in the primary
legislation instead of being set out in operational guidance.
Key issues
Broad category of people who may be ‘removal pathway
non-citizens’
Stakeholders have raised concerns about the broad nature
of the power to prescribe lawful non-citizens without any apparent connection
to a removal pathway as ‘removal pathway non-citizens’.[4]
The Explanatory
Memorandum does not provide any clarity on what categories of lawful
non-citizens may be prescribed in the future. As noted by the Law Council, the
scope of this power:
… might include holders of refugee or humanitarian visas who
have not committed an offence, not failed to pass the ‘character test’—not done
anything wrong at all—and are yet made liable to a direction. It might include
persons who have established themselves in Australia for years and have
Australian citizen children. It may include, for example, the holders of
certain classes of business visas, making the holders liable to comply with
removal directions. (Submission 71, p. 9).
Stakeholders were also concerned about the implications
for people assessed under the fast track process by the Immigration Assessment
Authority (which is due to be abolished by the intended passage of the Administrative
Review Tribunal Bill 2024) who were subsequently refused a protection visa.[5]
The PJCHR has previously
considered that the fast track review process was incompatible with
Australia’s obligations of non-refoulement (discussed further below) and noted
that UNHCR has considered it ‘to have been a defective mechanism by which to
assess protection claims’ (pp. 29–30).
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee also raised
significant concerns with the decision to allow for additional categories
of people to be prescribed by way of delegated legislation, noting the
seriousness of the penalties for failing to comply with a removal pathway
direction and the lack of justification provided in the Explanatory
Memorandum (p. 3).
Risk of refoulement
Under international law, refugees and asylum-seekers are
entitled to two partially overlapping sets of rights: those which States are
obliged to respect, protect and fulfil under international human rights law,
and the specific rights of refugees arising from the Convention
Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967
Protocol.
The principle of non-refoulement (non-return) applies both
in respect of recognised refugees, and those whose claims for protection have
not been finally determined (asylum seekers). Therefore, Australia has an
obligation to not return asylum seekers to their country of origin until their
claim for protection has been determined.[6]
According to UNHCR:
To prevent refoulement, return of people who have claimed
international protection should only be pursued for those whose claims have
been refused by a final decision through a formal refugee determination process
that is fair and in line with international standards. Such a process needs to
involve the examination of complementary forms of protection under
international human rights law. There should also not be any additional grounds
under international human rights law or compelling humanitarian reasons for the
person’s continued stay in the host country. (Submission
65, p. 2)
Stakeholders have raised concerns that the new power to
issue removal directions may ‘result in people who do have protection needs
being forced to return to countries where they would be at risk of persecution
or other forms of serious harm’ (Submission 11, p. 4). The PJCHR cautioned
that there may be a risk that some individual cases may engage the absolute
prohibition against non-refoulement, particularly those individuals that were
assessed under the ‘fast track’ process (pp. 28–29). The Human Rights Law
Centre (HRLC) noted that ‘while the Bill does not permit a direction to be made
requiring a person to assist in their removal to a country in respect of which
they are owed protection, this safeguard does not apply to people whose claims
for protection have never been properly or fairly assessed under the fast-track
system’ (Submission 18, p. 9).
UNHCR stated that the ‘exemptions afforded under the
current Bill by proposed subsection 199B(3) further embeds the flawed premise
that subsection 197C(3) provides adequate protection against refoulement’ and
that safeguards are needed to ensure that removal pathway directions are not
given in circumstances which would be inconsistent with Australia’s
international human rights obligations (Submission
65, pp. 8, 16). Stakeholders also raised concerns regarding the scope of
the ‘reasonable excuse’ defence to the proposed new criminal offence of not
complying with a removal pathway direction (proposed section 199E). This
defence does not apply if the person ‘has a genuine fear of suffering
persecution or significant harm if removed to a particular country’. Nor if the
person ‘is, or claims to be’ a refugee, or if they believe they would suffer ‘other
adverse consequences’. The Law Council queried ‘why the Australian Parliament
would not want to ensure that there can be no doubt about whether such risks
exist’ (Submission 71, p. 17).
Stakeholders have also questioned whether the requirement
to comply with a removal direction may itself create a situation of a real risk
of significant harm if a person is removed to that country. For example, the
Law Council outlined a scenario where compliance with a direction may lead to a
future risk of persecution:
A removal pathway direction under section 199C can include
requiring a person to provide documents, attend an interview with or report to
any person, which would include authorities of the country of origin. It is that
act, forced by the direction, that could precipitate the attention of
authorities of that country to the person which may not otherwise have been
raised, by reason of that country conducting checks of social media (a practice
which the Department of Home Affairs also uses for people wanting to enter or
re-enter Australia), or making enquiries of Australia about the nature of
protection claims made (which the Migration Act does not prohibit Australia
from disclosing). (Submission 71, p. 13)
Implications for the rights of children
Stakeholders have raised significant concerns regarding
the impact the provisions of the Bill will have on children.
For example, the AHRC recommended in the first instance
that the provisions allowing for a removal pathway direction to be provided to
the parent or guardian of a child be deleted and alternatively, additional
safeguards would be required for the Bill to be potentially compliant with the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (Submission
68, p. 11). The Kaldor Centre also argued that the provisions in their
current form contravene the Convention on the Rights of the Child (Submission 11, p. 5).
In its submission, the Law Council stated:
Instead, extraordinarily, parents are coerced—under the
threat of criminal sanction and at the risk of mandatory imprisonment—to
themselves undertake the steps for removal for their children, regardless of
their fears for their wellbeing. If a parent refuses to comply because he or
she genuinely fears for the persecution of a child if removed, the mandatory
imprisonment provision in subsection 199E(2) will result in forcible separation
of the family. By way of example, had such legislation been in place when the
Nadesalingam family were in detention, they would have been forced under the
Removal Bill to undertake such steps for their children and would then have
been removed from Australia. (Submission 71, p. 12)
Stakeholders have also raised concerns about the impact
the Bill will have on family unity, with UNHCR arguing that the protections
currently provided for in the Bill are inadequate to appropriately preserve and
protect family unity (Submission
65, pp. 16–17). The PJCHR stated
that it was unclear whether the impact of the person’s removal from Australia
on their family members would constitute a ‘reasonable excuse’:
The statement of compatibility further states that a person
may argue that they have not complied with a removal pathway direction because
removal would separate them from family members. This would appear to suggest
that a person may raise a separation from their family members as a ‘reasonable
excuse’ in the context of a prosecution being raised against them for an
offence under proposed 199E. However, it offers no indication as to whether it
is intended that such an argument would constitute a reasonable excuse in the
context of the offence, or the likelihood that such an argument would be
successful in court. (p. 28)
A number of stakeholders recommended that the Bill be
amended to require the Minister to consider the best interests of the child and/or
the right to respect for the family prior to making a removal direction.[7]
The application of disproportionate criminal penalties and
use of mandatory minimum sentences
Many submissions described the introduction of criminal
offences for certain persons who refuse or fail to comply with a valid removal
pathway direction as ‘criminalisation’ and ‘disproportionate’.
For example, the AHRC expressed concern that these
provisions:
… [are] not in the spirit of [Global Compact for Safe,
Orderly and Regular Migration], nor recommendations by the United Nations High
Commissioner on Refugees, to penalise individuals who have arrived in Australia
from State parties who are failing to uphold their obligations under
international norms. Criminalising the failure to act in this context is
unprecedented. The Commission has been unable to find any similar provisions in
the laws of comparable jurisdictions within the limited time available to provide
this submission. (Submission
68, p. 14)
Dr Abul Rizvi, former Deputy Secretary of the Department
of Immigration, argued in evidence
to the Committee that the High Court decision in the case of AZC20 had
‘created the incentive for noncitizens to not cooperate in their removal’ (see
also Anne
Twomey’s article noted above). He stated:
There must be some penalty for noncooperation. The question
is whether the penalties for noncooperation as proposed in this bill are
proportionate to ensuring cooperation in the vast majority of circumstances and
whether penalties are the only or best option in all cases. In some cases, it
may be better to also offer incentives for return, such as reintegration
assistance, that may also be better from a taxpayer perspective. The jail
options should be used as a last resort, such as in criminal deportee cases.
Against that background, the proposal in this bill for a minimum mandatory
sentence of 12 months may be excessive. (p. 30)
As discussed above, stakeholders have also questioned
whether the imposition of these penalties will give effect to the Government’s
policy intentions. The Law Council noted that ‘Ironically, the criminalisation
of non-compliance may actually make it much harder to remove persons in some
cases, because the receiving country will be asked to receive a person who has
criminal convictions’ (Submission 71, p. 14). The AHRC argued that being faced
with the prospect of detention in a criminal setting is unlikely to be viewed
as a more effective motivator than either remaining in mandatory immigration
detention or being subject to Australia’s offshore processing regime (Submission
68, p. 15). The Commonwealth Ombudsman shared similar concerns, noting that
they had ‘recorded instances of detainees expressing a preference for
incarceration over immigration detention due to the certainty and better range
of meaningful activities that can be attached with a prison term’ (Submission
105, p. 3).
Stakeholders have also strongly opposed the inclusion of
mandatory minimum sentences. The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre argued that ‘The
Bill’s imposition of a mandatory minimum sentence is unprecedented and
disproportionate to the nature of the offence of non-compliance with a
ministerial direction’ (Submission
59, p. 10). According to the Kaldor Centre, ‘there is no precedent in
Australian law for a failure to comply with a direction resulting in mandatory
imprisonment – not even in the context of terrorism offences’:
The only comparable provisions involve a failure to comply
with police directions to move on under various state laws, which establish a
couple of offences (concerning failure to disclose identity) that may be
punished by up to 12 months’ imprisonment. In some states, reportable
offenders (such as child sex offenders) who fail to produce electronic devices
when directed by police may face up to five years’ imprisonment.
However, across all these existing provisions, the gaol terms are maximum
sentences, not mandatory minimum sentences. (Submission 11, p. 7)
In its report, the
Scrutiny of Bills Committee reiterated its concerns that the use of such
sentences ‘impedes judicial discretion’ as ‘courts should not be limited in
their ability to impose sentences with regard to the circumstances of the
offending’ (p. 4). The PJCHR also stated that the imposition of a mandatory
minimum sentence of imprisonment for non-compliance with a removal pathway
direction ‘engages and limits the right to liberty and right to a fair trial’
(p. 20).
In its submission, the Law Council also compared the
maximum penalty (5 years imprisonment) with other offences in the Criminal Code
which carry the same maximum penalty, which include:
- corrupting
benefits given to, or received by, a Commonwealth public official
- abuse
of public office
- using
a carriage service to menace, harass or cause offence
- using
a carriage service for violent extremist material.
The Law Council argued that this demonstrates ‘the
unjustifiably high nature of the proposed maximum penalty’, noting it ‘does not
sit well with the Attorney-General’s Department’s Guide to Framing
Commonwealth Offences, Infringement Notices and Enforcement Powers’. The
Law Council also noted ‘the availability of less disproportionate civil penalty
provisions under the Migration Act’ (Submission 71, pp. 14–15).
Reversing a protection finding
Key provisions
As discussed above, subsection 197C(3) of the Migration
Act provides that unlawful non-citizens cannot be removed to a country if
they have made a valid application for a protection visa that has been
determined, and in the determination process a protection finding was made
(regardless of whether or not a visa was granted).
Section 197D establishes a mechanism whereby the Minister
can essentially revisit the decision to make a protection finding with respect
to an unlawful non-citizen under subsection 197C(3). These provisions were
inserted as Government
amendments to the Migration
Amendment (Clarifying International Obligations for Removal) Bill 2021
during debate on the Bill in the House of Representatives. As noted by the
Department of Home Affairs, ‘At present, it is only possible to revisit a
protection finding using the mechanism in section 197D of the Migration Act for
an unlawful non-citizen’ (Submission
75, p. 17).
Items 3–7 of Schedule 2 of the Bill will amend
sections 197C and 197D to provide that a protection finding can also be
revisited in relation to a lawful non-citizen who holds a visa as a removal
pathway non-citizen.
As explained by the Department of Home Affairs:
Following the High Court’s decision in NZYQ, the Government
now faces circumstances in which this power needs to be expanded to certain
non-citizens who hold a visa – particularly BVR holders. The Bill therefore
proposes amendments to allow the Minister to revisit the protection findings of
those removal pathway non-citizens who hold a specified type of bridging visa
(being a BVR or a Subclass 050 (Bridging (General)) visa who at the time of
visa grant satisfied a criterion relating to the making of, or being subject
to, acceptable arrangements to depart Australia or another visa prescribed for
the purposes).
The affected persons are those who have a protection finding
who hold a bridging visa and are on a removal pathway following the refusal or
cancellation of a visa and who have, in most cases, completed merits review and
judicial review of those visa decisions. Without this amendment, the Migration
Act would not provide a means to revisit a protection finding while a removal
pathway non-citizen is in the community on a visa. (Submission
75, p. 17)
In the Explanatory
Memorandum, the Government refers to this amendment as a ‘minor and
technical amendment’; however it would appear that these amendments are
significantly expanding the classes of persons for whom the Minister is
empowered to overturn a protection decision (p. 3).
Key issues
In considering these amendments, the Scrutiny of Bills
Committee commented:
This is clearly a significant and rights affecting matter and
it is not clear to the committee why such a power is necessary as it has not
been fully explained in the explanatory memorandum. It is also unclear to the
committee whether any procedural fairness protections apply in relation to any
decisions made by the minister to overturn an existing protection decision. (p.
6)
Stakeholders have also raised significant concerns with
these provisions, citing:
- existing
concerns with section 197D
- the
limited scope to review a person’s refugee status under international law
- the
lack of procedural fairness
- the
broad nature of the power and limited safeguards
- the
lack of justification provided by the Government.
For example, the Human Rights Law Centre stated:
… the Bill seeks to expand upon a power that is already in
conflict with Australia’s obligations at international law through amendments
that would allow the Minister, in an unspecified process, to unilaterally
review protection findings for visa holders, some of whom have been in the
community lawfully for years. The proposed power is at large; it is not limited
by or referable to considerations ordinarily relevant to the cessation of
refugee status, such as the past persecution suffered by the visa holder and
the extent of their connection to the community. The proposed expansion of the
s 197D power is a matter of grave and serious concern. (Submission
18, p. 11)
UNHCR noted that there very few circumstances in which a
person’s refugee status legitimately ceases under the Refugee Convention:
The 1951 Convention does not envisage a loss of status
triggered by domestic visa arrangements (such as through visa cancellation on
character grounds), nor a requirement for refugees to periodically re-establish
their refugee status – either as a result of the grant of temporary protection
or effective loss of refugee status as a result of a Ministerial decision under
section 197D of the Migration Act.
(Submission
65, 19).
The Law Council questioned the need to provide the
Minister with an ‘extraordinary degree of discretion’ to revisit protection
findings, particularly given the rushed insertion of section 197D:
We understand that the power to unwind protection findings
under section 197D has not, to date, been exercised. The expansion of the power
to broader groups in the current context raises concerns about the underlying
motivation. Persons who cannot be removed to their country of origin because
doing so would contravene a protection finding, but who have been found to fail
the criterion for a protection visa in section 36(1)(c) due to previous
criminal offending, cannot be indefinitely detained following the High Court’s
decision in NZYQ. In this context, a culture of encouraging reconsideration and
revocation of protection findings so that a person can be removed is very
concerning. It is likely to result in refoulement of persons in need of
protection. (Submission 71, p. 27).
The AHRC opposed the expansion of section 197D, though as
an alternative recommended amending the Bill to insert objective criteria for
the exercise of the power to make a finding that an unlawful non-citizen is no
longer a person in respect of whom any protection finding would be made (Submission
68, pp. 21–23).
Designation of removal concern countries
Proposed subsection 199A(2) provides that it is the
Parliament’s expectation that a foreign country will cooperate with Australia
to facilitate the lawful removal from Australia of a non-citizen who is a
national of that country.
Proposed section 199F confers a discretionary
personal power on the Minister to designate a country as a ‘removal concern
country’, by legislative instrument, if the Minister thinks it is in the
national interest to do so.
Before making a designation, the Minister must first
consult with the Prime Minister and the Minister administering the Diplomatic
Privileges and Immunities Act 1967 (currently the Foreign Minister).
While the rules of natural justice will not apply to the exercise of this
power, the Minister will be required to table a copy of the designation in both
Houses of Parliament within two sitting days after the day the designation is
made, including a statement of reasons for making the designation.
The effect of designating a country as a ‘removal concern
country’ is that non-citizens from that country who apply for a visa outside of
Australia will not be granted a visa. Proposed subsection 199G(2)
provides for certain exceptions to this bar on visa applications, including:
- dual
citizens of other countries who hold a passport that is in force
- spouses,
partners or dependent children of Australian citizens, permanent visa holders
or people who are usually residents of Australia
- parents
of children in Australia and
- applications
for grants of a Refugee and Humanitarian (Class XB) visa.
Proposed subsection 199G(3) provides the Minister
with a broad power to determine, via legislative instrument, classes of persons
or classes of visa which fall within these exceptions. According to the
Department of Home Affairs:
These exceptions would likely include approved diplomatic and
consular officers and other international representatives, returning permanent
residents of Australia and other persons in respect of whom Australia may have
international obligations or commitments, such as international trade
obligations. To illustrate, the legislative instrument power could be used to
specify the Diplomatic (Temporary) (Class TF) visa, the Temporary Work
(International Relations) (Class GD) visa, or the Return (Residence) (Class BB)
visa. (Submission
75, p. 16)
The Minister will also have the personal power to lift the
bar for particular persons where the Minister thinks it is in the public
interest to grant them a visa (proposed subsection 199G(4)).
Key issues
As discussed above in the ‘position of major interest
groups’ section, stakeholders have questioned the effectiveness of these
amendments in achieving their intended purpose and the risks to international
relations that may arise. Stakeholders have also argued that there are less
restrictive means of achieving the Government’s policy objectives. For example,
the Law Council commented:
… barring visa applications from nationals of entire
countries may be considered a sledgehammer response which will affect vast
numbers of nationals who are subject to autocratic regimes and have not
contributed to government decision-making regarding returning nationals. (Submission 71, p. 22).
The PJCHR noted
that ‘no information is provided [in the Explanatory Memorandum] as to why
other, less rights restrictive alternatives (such as a bar only on specific
visa types) would be ineffective to achieve the stated objective’ (p. 36).
The AHRC examined similar schemes adopted by other
countries in its submission to the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation
Committee (Submission
68, pp. 19–21). It noted that ‘Unlike the UK and the US, the Bill includes
no mandatory factors for the Minister to consider, when they decide to exercise
their discretion in the national interest’ and recommended that the Bill, if it
is to be passed, be amended to include a set of factors that the Minister must
consider prior to designating a removal concern country. The Kaldor Centre
raised similar concerns, noting that the US legislation:
… first considers whether a country is being deliberately
uncooperative or is just unable to cooperate due to mitigating factors, such as
disasters or limited capacity (for example, as a result of law enforcement
issues, inadequate records, and/or an inefficient bureaucracy) (Submission 11, p. 9).
The Migration Institute of Australia made a similar
recommendation to AHRC and also recommended that proposed subsection 199G(1) be
amended to establish ‘that the Minister can deem certain classes of visa
applications to be invalid by way of legislative instrument, rather than
relying on a blanket ban on all visa applications from citizens of a “removal
concern country”’ (Submission
77, p. 4).
Concerns have also been raised regarding the
discriminatory impact the provisions may have on certain groups of people. The
PJCHR stated:
As this measure would render all applications for visas from
nationals of a specific country invalid (subject to some exceptions), it would
likely have a disproportionate impact on persons in Australia of that same
nationality, and so may engage and limit the right to equality and
non-discrimination. (p. 35)
The Human Rights Law Centre argued that the proposed
travel ban is ‘both discriminatory in its likely application to only certain
countries, and indiscriminate in its extension to the vast majority of people
from those countries’:
While the government has failed to disclose the countries on
its blacklist who may be subject to the travel ban, there has been widespread
speculation that Iran is likely to be considered due to the Iranian
government’s unwillingness to facilitate the non-voluntary return of its
nationals. The Bill does not explain why the 70,899 people living in Australia
who were born in Iran, of which over 60% are Australian citizens, should be
kept apart from their families. Or indeed, why people of any particular nationality
should be separated from their families due to the policies of foreign
governments. (Submission
18, p. 13)
Concluding comments
While the High Court has clarified that the continuing
detention for a non-punitive purpose that is occurring because of a voluntary
decision of the detainee is lawful, the expediated passage of the Bill through
Parliament risks creating unintended consequences and limits the ability for
appropriate parliamentary scrutiny and debate.