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New Zealand: Algerian asylum seeker wins appeal over security
risk status
By John Braddock
16 October 2007
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In a significant blow to the New Zealand Labour government
and the countrys Security Intelligence Service (SIS), Algerian
asylum seeker Ahmed Zaoui last month won his appeal against an
SIS ruling that he was a security risk and should be deported
as a suspected terrorist. In a sudden U-turn, SIS director Warren
Tucker announced on September 13 that the security agency had
dropped its nearly five-year opposition to Zaouis claim
for asylum.
The ruling resulted from an appeal lodged by Zaouis lawyers
against the SISs security risk certificate.
The appeal, itself a highly secretive process held behind closed
doors, involved a review of classified top-secret SIS files that
Zaoui was not allowed to see. Conducted over a four-week period
by the agencys director, it was the final legal step available
to Zaoui before the immigration minister ruled on his deportation.
This is the first time a security risk certificate has been
challenged. The fact that the SIS was forced to lift the certificate
after more than four years of legal wrangling underlines the bogus
nature of the US-led war on terror to which the New
Zealand government subscribes. While feigning distance from the
Bush White House over the past seven years, Labour has adjusted
New Zealands immigration and terrorism laws in line with
sweeping US attacks on fundamental democratic rights.
Zaoui, a former MP for the Islamist Front Islamique du Salut
(FIS) in the Algerian parliament, arrived in Auckland in December
2002 on a false passport and claimed asylum. He was jailed without
charge and spent 240 days in solitary confinement. Authorities
persistently claimed he was a suspected terrorist, despite his
being declared a genuine refugee by the Refugee Status Appeals
Authority (RSAA).
In reaching its conclusion, the RSAA was scathing of the SIS,
saying it had relied on uncorroborated Internet news stories,
many of which included disinformation spread by the Algerian military
regime. The RSAA granted Zaoui refugee status on the grounds that
if he were sent back to Algeria, he would almost certainly be
imprisoned, tortured and possibly executed.
The government refused to act on the RSAA report. Instead it
backed the SIS, which claimed to have evidence not available to
the RSAA that justified the security certificate. Both Prime Minster
Helen Clark and then Immigration Minister Lianne Dalziel endorsed
the SISs efforts to keep the evidence secret, saying that
to release it, or even a summary of its contents, would jeopardise
New Zealands working relationships with overseas security
services. According to Dalziel, if such classified security information
were not treated confidentially, we simply wont receive
it.
Zaoui fought deportation, spending almost two years in prison
waiting for his case to be decided as he sought a review of his
security certificate. He was released on bail by the Supreme Court,
despite the governments opposition, in December 2004 under
the supervision of an Auckland religious order.
In the course of the case, the Labour government exploited
a series of anti-democratic laws to incarcerate Zaoui, abrogate
his basic rights and defend the activities of the SIS and its
sister security agencies overseas. Although the law allows for
the immigration minister to withdraw the certificate issued against
Zaoui at any time, the government steadfastly refused to do so.
The immigration minister even refused to issue visas to allow
Zaouis wife and four children to enter the country, leaving
them in limbo as refugees in Malaysia.
Zaouis detention was carried out under a previously unused
provision of the Immigration Act, inserted by the last National
government as part of a crackdown on refugees and immigrants.
At the time, Labour had denounced the amendment as dangerous,
saying people could be detained for lengthy periods without knowing
why.
Amid protests from civil liberties groups and increasing public
opposition, Dalziel accused Zaouis lawyers of being responsible
for extending their clients incarceration by pursuing court
action. A subsequent police complaints authority report revealed
that an undercover agent was put in a cell with him in an attempt
to extract information that would incriminate him.
In 2004, Labour unsuccessfully appealed a High Court ruling
that Zaouis human rights be considered as part of the review.
The High Court made two findings in Zaouis favour. One ordered
the SIS to present him with a summary of secret evidence used
to incarcerate him without trial. The second ruled that Zaoui
was entitled to have broad human rights considerations taken into
account in the reviewparticularly in view of his possible
fate if deported to Algeria.
Against this background, SIS director Tucker went to considerable
lengths in his announcement to exonerate both the agency and the
government from any fault. While accepting that Zaoui was in
2007 not deemed to be a security risk, Tucker declared that
when he arrived in 2002 he had been clearly a risk.
Tuckers predecessor Richard Woods had been forced to resign
after making a comment revealing personal partiality over the
case.
According to the SIS, three things had now changed. Firstly,
Zaoui had during the review process been more frank
about previously undisclosed information, some of which could
have been prejudicial to his case. Secondly, the SIS had received
fresh classified information about the nature of Zaouis
association with so-called terrorist groups in Algeria.
Thirdly, the length of time he had been in New Zealandand
his elevated public profilemitigated some of the risks.
Before finally lifting the certificate, the SIS required Zaoui
to sign a contract, sworn on the Koran, promising not to engage
in any criminal acts or incite violence and to subject himself
to constant SIS monitoring.
The fact is, however, that the SIS never produced any evidence
linking Zaoui with terrorist activities and he was no more a risk
when he first entered the country than today. Moreover, Tucker
himself revealed that the US and another unnamed country had since
granted citizenship to two of Zaouis associates with links
to the same political groups as he. The bogus nature of the SIS
claims against Zaoui was underlined by the refusal of the director
to answer any questions at his press conferencethe first
given by any head of the agency.
Prime Minister Clark also refused to be drawn on the matter,
simply saying it was an independent statutory decision
and that the director had her full confidence. Foreign
Minister Winston Peters, who leads the right-wing populist NZ
First Party, immediately denounced the decision as advertising
New Zealand as a soft touch for illegal immigrants.
Clark has already moved to ensure that the case is not repeated
by legislating harsher measures. She recently put before parliament
a major revision to the immigration laws, which would give officials
new powers to remove alleged terrorists, including expanded rights
to the unchallenged use of secret information.
The new rules will extend the type and sources of classified
information that can be used against anyone entering the country.
In addition to the SIS, the police and other government agencies
will be entitled to pass on classified information about overseas
arrivals, which can then be used to order their immediate removal.
An applicant will not be allowed to see the information, though
a non-classified summary will be providedwhere
possible.
Deportation procedures allowing multiple appeals to different
bodies will ended. Four independent immigration and refugee appeal
bodiesthe Residence Review Board, the RSAA, the Removal
Review Authority and the Deportation Review Tribunal will be replaced
by a single body called the Immigration and Protection Tribunal.
This is a clear move do away with the RSAA, which proved to be
an unwelcome impediment to the government and the security service
in the Zaoui case.
In another development, a parliamentary select committee has
decided that reviews of the status of designated terrorists
should be removed from the High Court. The so-called Terrorism
Suppression Amendment Bill, which has cross-party support except
for the Greens, proposes that the courts current three-yearly
reviews be made the prime ministers sole prerogative. According
to the committee, judgments about national security are more properly
made by the executive. The bill virtually eliminates any court
review of the process by which organisations or individuals become
designated as terrorist.
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