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Australia: Damning report on the illegal deportation of Vivian
Alvarez
By Mike Head
25 October 2005
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A report by the federal Ombudsman into the unlawful deportation
of an Australian citizen, Vivian Alvarez, has provided another
revealing glimpse into the regime set up by the Howard government
to detain refugees and suspected non-citizens.
Vivian Alvarez, a mother of two, had lived in Australia for
20 years before she was removed to the Philippines in July 2001.
Five months earlier, she had disappeared from Brisbane, in the
north-eastern state of Queensland, after receiving psychiatric
care. Her five-year-old son had been placed in foster care and
she had been placed on police missing persons lists. In May 2001
a social worker reported her to the immigration department. She
was described as visibly distressed, mentally-ill and confined
to a wheelchair after being physically injured in a road accident.
Immigration officials immediately assumed she was an unlawful
non-citizen and deported her as quickly as they could.
The Ombudsmans report found that Alvarez was deported
without any proper effort to identify her. In the lead-up to her
removal, she was denied essential medical care despite being obviously
unwell, and bundled onto a plane amid protests by health and welfare
workers that she was having fits and could not walk.
On arrival in the Philippines, Alvarez was dumped at Manila
airport without any help or follow-up. For the next four years,
the immigration department blocked persistent demands by her former
husband, Robert Young, for inquiries to be made into her case.
From July 2003, high-ranking officials in two departments, immigration
and foreign affairs, deliberately covered-up her illegal deportation,
until it became publicly known in April this year.
The Ombudsmans report stated: It is difficult to
form any conclusion other than that the culture of DIMIA [Department
of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs] was so
motivated by imperatives associated with the removal of unlawful
non-citizens that officers failed to take into account the basic
human rights obligations that characterise a democratic society.
DIMIAs culture was described as dehumanized,
with officials expected to treat refugees and other so-called
illegals with contempt and hostility. In line with
this outlook, at least one official referred to Alvarez as a possible
Philippines sex slave.
Conducted by a former police chief, Neil Comrie, the Ombudsmans
inquiry was intended to be a whitewash. Its terms of reference
barred it from conducting any assessment of the general policy
of compulsory detention or its enforcement by successive Howard
government immigration ministers, Philip Ruddock (now Attorney-General)
and Amanda Vanstone.
To some extent, the report sought to make scapegoats of three
unnamed senior immigration officialstwo in Brisbane and
one in Canberra. It recommended that consideration be given to
bringing charges against them for breaching the public service
code of conduct by knowingly burying Alvarezs case in 2003
and 2004. It quoted one of the officials, a deputy director of
DIMIAs Queensland state office, saying in September 2004:
This is terrible. Lets not spread it any wider than
it hasthan it has to be.
Yet, the report also acknowledged that the cover-up went far
beyond the three officials. Numerous other immigration officers
knew about Alvarezs unlawful removal and it had been the
subject of significant discussion in the Brisbane
office. Foreign affairs officers were also involved.
The high-level cover-up was so systematic that Alvarezs
four-year ordeal only came to light last April after a public
outcry over the discovery that an Australian permanent resident,
Cornelia Rau, had been wrongly thrown into immigration detention
and denied medical care for 10 months. The Ombudsmans report
acknowledged that if not for the Rau affair, and the ongoing efforts
of ex-husband Robert Young, Alvarezs plight would have remained
hidden.
Howard has rejected calls to sack Vanstone or Ruddock, citing
the stock-standard Howard defencethat he and
his ministers were kept in the dark by their departments. For
years, Howard has repeatedly invoked the same linemost notoriously
in blaming faulty intelligence for his fraudulent
claims that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction
in the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq.
Draconian regime continues
Alvarezs treatment flowed inexorably from the legal framework
of mandatory detention, first established by the Keating Labor
government in 1992. Section 189 of the Migration Act specifically
obliges officials to detain and, as quickly as possible, remove
from the country anyone they reasonably suspect of
being an unlawful non-citizen. It establishes a far-reaching
regime of executive detention without trial.
Following the publication of the Ombudsmans report, the
immigration department issued a belated apology to Alvarez. But
for all the statements of official regret, nothing fundamental
will change.
Many people are still being unlawfully thrown into immigration
detention. Last week, the Ombudsman, Professor John McMillan,
told a Senate inquiry he was investigating 221 cases of possible
wrongful detention. This indicates that 20 new unlawful detentions
have been notified in the past several months. McMillan also revealed
that one of the detainees had been held for 1,272 days, or almost
three-and-a-half years.
None of his reports recommendationswhich were discussed
and agreed with the government before they were releasedwill
alter any of this. They consist merely of various organisational
measures, most notably the establishment of a $50 million college
of immigration, border security and compliance to train
officials in required procedures.
As one newspaper columnist put it: The same department
that was found to be involved in a dehumanised, mechanical
process with a flawed culture, which paid insufficient
attention to detainees welfare and care needs will
do its own training to improve its own culture. It is hard to
believe.
Significantly, a recent legal ruling that the report recommends
for study at the new training college is Ruddock v Taylor,
in which the High Court overturned a false imprisonment verdict
against the former immigration minister. In doing so, by a three-to-two
majority, the judges dropped an earlier Federal Court stipulation,
in Goldies Case, that officials must make reasonable
searches and inquiries before detaining someone.
This decision effectively gives the government and the immigration
department even greater scope to arbitrarily and indefinitely
detain anyone suspected of being a non-citizen.
The government is also moving to further restrict the legal
rights of immigration detainees. Its Migration Litigation Reform
Bill 2005, currently before parliament, will curb access to the
courts by detained asylum seekers and financially punish lawyers
who represent supposedly unmeritorious applicants.
Meanwhile, Howard and Ruddock are planning to expand the use
of the immigration detention power. In the run-up to Howards
September 27 counter-terrorism summit with the state
and territory Labor premiers, they outlined plans to revoke the
citizenship of foreign-born Australian residents on security
grounds. This could soon expose a wider layer of people to the
denial of basic democratic, legal and human rights suffered by
Cornelia Rau and Vivian Alvarez.
See Also:
Elderly woman becomes another victim
of Australian immigration policy
[1 October 2005]
Callous maltreatment of refugees
in Australian detention centres
[4 August 2005]
A cynical twist in Australias
mandatory refugee detention regime
[4 April 2005]
Australian woman imprisoned
for 10 months as an illegal immigrant
[9 February 2005]
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