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Australias highest court sanctions indefinite detention
By Richard Hoffman
24 August 2004
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In a series of landmark decisions handed down on August 6,
2004, the High Court of Australia declared that the federal government
can detain rejected asylum seekers indefinitelyperhaps for
liferegardless of their inability to be deported to any
other country and irrespective of the intolerable conditions inside
the governments immigration detention centres.
In the cases of Al-Kateb and Al Khafaji, by a
four-to-three majority, the court ruled that the government could
use the aliens power of the Australian constitution
to impose detention for as long as the government deemed it necessary.
The judges held that, even if deportation were not possible, indefinite
detention did not unconstitutionally impose punishment without
trial.
In the third case of Behrooz, by six-to-one, the court
declared that the conditions of incarceration in the countrys
remote campsno matter how harsh and inhumanedid not
provide a defence to a charge of escaping from immigration detention.
The immediate impact of the decisions was to throw at least
a dozen refugees into a legal and political back hole. After years
of imprisonment, they had been released by the Federal Court,
which ruled that it was unlawful to hold them for deportation
when there was no prospect of any other country accepting them
in the foreseeable future.
Whilst the cases concerned the imprisonment of asylum-seekers,
they have a much broader significance for the relationship between
state power and democratic rights and freedoms. They represent
a decisive break from established Australian constitutional law
concerning the ambit of executive power. They radically broaden
the scope for the government to impose detention without trial.
Members of the minority warned that the logic of the decision
could be extended to any federal power, not just immigration.
Justice Michael Kirby said the majority view had grave implications
for the liberty of the individual in this country which this court
should not endorse.
Justice William Gummow noted that the government could now,
if it wished, lock up bankrupts, for example, supposedly to protect
society. Attorney-General Philip Ruddock has already foreshadowed
invoking the rulings to detain foreign terrorists
without trial.
The judgments signal the emergence of a reactionary bloc of
judges, mirroring developments in the legal process in the United
States. The majority drew heavily from recent anti-democratic
decisions of US Supreme Court Justices Rehnquist, Scalia and Thomas
to support the judicial sanctioning of greater executive powers
of imprisonment.
The three cases
Ahmed Ali Al-Kateb, a stateless Palestinian, arrived in Australia
without valid papers in December 2000. He sought asylum because
he suffered persecution in Kuwait, where he had lived most of
his life. Long term residency or birth in Kuwait did not create
a right of citizenship or permanent residence there. His application
was rejected and, having exhausted his rights of appeal, he applied
to be removed from Australia in August 2002. However, neither
Kuwait nor Israel would allow him to enter (he sought to be removed
to Gaza, but Israel refused this request). As a result, he had
been incarcerated for four years by the time the High Court heard
his case.
Al-Kateb challenged the legality of his continued detention,
seeking a writ of habeas corpus. He argued that, as he could not
be removed to another country, his incarceration had become punitive
and was therefore beyond the scope and purpose of the Migration
Act, which requires all refugee applicants to be detained until
they are either granted a visa or deported. In addition, he argued
that his detention was unconstitutional, because only courts can
order punitive imprisonment.
Similar arguments were mounted by Abbas Mohammad Hasan Al Khafaji,
an Iraqi who was recognised as a refugee fleeing persecution in
Iraq, but refused a protection visa on the ground that he had
a right to reside in Syria, where he once lived. Under the Howard
governments changes to refugee law, asylum seekers must
seek the right of effective protection in other countries.
However, that supposed right proved to be worthless to Al Khafaji,
because Syria refused to admit him, leaving him in a legal limbo.
Mahran Behrooz, an Iranian refugee, had been detained at the
Woomera Detention Centre in the South Australian desert for nearly
two years when he escaped, along with two others. After he was
captured, he was charged with escaping from immigration detention,
a criminal offence carrying a maximum sentence of five years.
Behrooz justified his actions on the basis that the conditions
of his incarceration were so gross, harsh and inhumane that they
were an illegal form of imprisonment, under the constitution and
international law. In his trial, the government blocked the admission
of evidence regarding conditions at Woomera, insisting it was
irrelevant.
Nevertheless, the evidence placed on the record included a
report by Professor Richard Harding, Inspector of Custodial Services
in Western Australia, condemning the detention centres as an absolute
disgrace. Hardings report said the centres were in
the middle of no-where involving gross overcrowding,
broken toilets, unprivate conditions, lack of medical and dental
facilities. He described Curtin Detention Centre as almost
intolerable, adding that, such evidence as exists
indicates things are little better at the other centres.
Advice had been given to the immigration minister to close
Woomera to help avert a human tragedy of unknowable proportions.
A psychiatric nurse stated in a report that the detainees
felt that they were treated like animals, medication was fed through
wire mesh to detainees and there was a pervasive belief that suicide
was the only way out.
With only Justice Kirby dissenting, the High Court ruled 6-1
that the harshness of conditions was irrelevant to the validity
of the detention, and therefore provided no defence. Justices
Gummow, Michael McHugh and Dyson Heydon cited with approval an
opinion by Justice Scalia in a case in which the US Supreme Court
overturned earlier decisions that a prison inmate was constitutionally
entitled to medical treatment.
Legal precedents overturned
The High Court rulings were in direct conflict with previous
legal precedents, as well as international law, such as the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
1. A general constitutional limit on executive detention
Since the Magna Carta of 1215, the English constitutional system,
which Australia inherited, has curtailed the power of the executive
to detain people. A desire to guarantee freedom from arbitrary
imprisonment lay at the core of the doctrine of separation of
powers. In previous cases, the High Court has insisted that with
rare exceptions (such as mental health committals) deprivation
of liberty can only occur by order of a court following a finding
of guilt in criminal proceedings.
Justice Kirby said in his dissenting judgment in Al-Kateb:
Indefinite detention at the will of the Executive, and according
to its opinion actions and judgments, is alien to Australias
constitutional arrangements.
2. Legislation must be interpreted consistently with
basic rights
It is an established rule in English-based common law countries
that statutes will not be interpreted as abrogating fundamental
rights and freedoms unless clearly stated. Where legislation is
ambiguous or silent on the issue, it will be interpreted to make
it consistent with these rights.
Together with Kirby and Gummow, Chief Justice Murray Gleeson
said the Migration Act did not contemplate the circumstances of
stateless people who could not be deported. Yet, the majorityJustices
McHugh, Ian Callinan, Kenneth Hayne and Dyson Heydonruled
that the Acts wording explicitly authorised such detention.
3. The executive cannot judge itself
Since 1951, when the Menzies government attempted to outlaw
the Australian Communist Party, the High Court has rejected the
proposition that the executive can set the limits of its own power.
The legislation proscribing the Communist Party purported to set
out the facts that validated the ban under the federal
governments defence and other constitutional
powers.
The relevance of the Communist Party case to Al-Kateb
and Al Khafaji was the assertion by the government and
the Department of Immigration that the purpose of their detention
was deportationdespite the uncontested fact that deportation
was not possible in the foreseeable future.
4. Previous rulings on immigration laws
While upholding the legality of detention for the purpose of
deportation, two previous High Court authorities had specifically
limited such power. In 1949, when the infamous White Australia
policy still prevailed, Koon Wing Lau v Calwell established
that detention was constitutional because it did not create a
power to keep a deportee in custody for an unlimited period. The
court held that the deportee must be set free if not deported
within a reasonable time.
In 1992, in Chu Khong Lim v Minister for Immigration,
the High Court sanctioned the federal Labor governments
new system of mandatory detention. However it ruled that if detention
went beyond what was reasonably necessary for deportation, it
would assume the character of unconstitutional punishment.
Yet in the August 6 rulings, the majority held that no time
limit could be placed on detention under the aliens
power. Justice McHugh declared: Under the aliens power,
the Parliament is entitled to protect the nation against unwanted
entrants by detaining them in custody.... This assertion
contained no substantive legal reasoning. It was more akin to
a political speech in favour of indefinite detention.
Similarly, Justice Callinan suggested that detention could
be used for other purposes, in addition to deportation, to enforce
the exclusion of non-citizens. It may be the case that detention
for the purpose of preventing aliens from entering the general
community, working, or otherwise enjoying the benefits that Australian
citizens enjoy is constitutionally acceptable. If it were otherwise,
aliens having exhausted their rights to seek and obtain protection
as non-citizens would be able to become de facto citizens.
The High Court decisions mark a radical shift in the legal-constitutional
framework. Their practical effect assumes a positively Kafkaesque
dimension: segregation by incarceration, without trial for any
offence, at the will of the state, for an indefinite period, perhaps
for life, in harsh, inhuman conditions.
The rulings represent the judiciarys imprimatur for the
re-alignment of legal and political power sought by the government,
which has already exploited the war on terror to introduce
unprecedented measures of a police-state character. These include
detention without trial for interrogation, jail terms for associating
with alleged terrorists and wide-ranging and subjective definitions
of terrorism that cover many traditional forms of political dissent.
The plight of stateless detainees also throws into sharp relief
the fundamental contradiction between national-based legal systems
and the global transformation of social and economic life. The
cases reveal the increasingly intolerable barrier to human freedomincluding
the basic democratic right to live and work wherever one choosesrepresented
by the continued existence of the nation-state system.
See Also:
Refugees barred from Australia hold desperate
hunger strike in Indonesia
[16 August 2004]
People smuggler trial raises
new questions about Canberra's role in refugee deaths
[26 May 2004]
Nauru deal cements Australia's
Pacific incarceration policy
[26 April 2004]
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