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Australian court finds anti-democratic World Youth Day annoyance
law invalid
By Robert Morgan
17 July 2008
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The full bench of the Australian Federal Court held on July
15 that a law imposed by the New South Wales state Labor government,
outlawing conduct that causes annoyance to Catholic
pilgrims during World Youth Day (WYD) in Sydney, was invalid.
As with last Septembers Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) summit in Sydney, Premier Morris Iemmas government
utilised WYD to enact police-state laws. The World Youth Day
Act 2006, together with the World Youth Day Regulation
2008, gave the WYD Co-ordination Authority, operating
through the NSW Police, State Emergency Services and NSW Rural
Fire Services, the power to criminalise conduct from July 1 through
to July 31, well beyond the period of WYD activities.
Clause 7 of the regulations gave the authority the power to
direct anyone in a WYD declared area to cease conduct
that was a risk to the safety of others, causes
annoyance or inconvenience to participants in
a WYD event or obstructs such an event.
Refusal to comply without reasonable excuse became
a criminal offence, with fines of up to $5,500.
The laws operate in over 600 locations throughout Sydney, including
major public areas such as the Opera House, Darling Harbour, the
Domain, the University of Sydney and the Art Gallery of New South
Wales, as well as transport sites, including railway
stations, such as Central.
The WYD Act also prohibits anyone from selling
or distributing prescribed articles in an Authority
controlled area without the authoritys approval. Areas
include a transport facility or a WYD venue or facility,
or any part of a public place within 500 metres of
such a location. The laws therefore cover a large portion of the
city centre. The prescribed items include items of apparel,
for example T-shirts, and giftware, such as button
badges and stickers, and the penalties range up to $5,000.
Rachel Evans and Amber Pike, members of the protest organisation
NoToPope Coalition challenged a portion of the laws.
The group opposes the policies of the Catholic Church on a range
of issues, and according to the Federal Court judgment, plans
to discuss questions such as Catholic Church policy on homosexuality,
contraception and abortion with WYD pilgrims at events. They will
also hand out condoms and leaflets and speak through megaphones
to express their political views.
Supported by the NSW Council for Civil Liberties, the applicants
firstly argued that the laws breached the Australian constitution.
Unlike in the United States, the constitution contains no Bill
of Rights guaranteeing individual freedoms. However, courts have
recognised an extremely limited implied right to freedom
of political communication, particularly related to making informed
electoral choices. The NoToPope Coalition said the regulations,
by criminalising annoying and inconvenient
conduct, enabled the authority to suppress discussion of the policies
of the Catholic Church, and the state and federal governments.
They also argued that the Act potentially prevented the distribution
or sale of items that had a political content.
In the alternative, the applicants said the laws were invalid
on administrative law grounds, because the regulations exceeded
the powers of the Act. While the Act allowed the executive to
make regulations to give effect to the Act, it did
not specifically authorise measures outlawing causing annoyance
or inconvenience.
A political decision by the court
In a unanimous judgment, Acting Chief Justice French and Justices
Branson and Stone invalidated only the annoyance provision
of the regulations. The judges refused to rule on the constitutional
issues, stating that if the regulation was not authorised by the
Act, it was not valid law, and the question of constitutional
validity falls away.
The Act allowed the executive to make regulations with respect
to the conduct of the public on WYD events and facilities,
but provided no definition of conduct, potentially
allowing the executive to criminalise all forms of human behaviour,
including speech and communication. But applying a traditional
common law principle, the court said parliament would not infringe
the fundamental freedom of speech without expressing
its intention with irresistible clearness.
Furthermore, the notion of annoying conduct was too subjective
and prone to idiosyncratic reactions to be enforced. The court
defined annoyance as resulting in WYD participants
being ruffled, troubled, vexed, disturbed, displeased or
slightly irritated. As the regulations stood, police and
other officials could employ their own individual assessments
of whether a Catholic pilgrim was subjectively annoyed.
By contrast, however, the court ruled that the prohibition
of inconvenience was valid because the term had an
objective content, defined as harm, injury, mischief or
trouble. Such behaviour could arise where protestors by
their locations or actions hinder or obstruct the movement of
participants or were so loud as to impair
communications between groups of participants and officials.
On the distribution and sale of goods during WYD, the court
also carefully avoided ruling on the constitutional issue. It
held that virtually all the items that the NoToPope coalition
plan to distribute, such as button badges and stickers,
did not fall within the class of WYD souvenirs, goods and merchandise.
Since the provisions did not prevent the applicants from
doing the things they want to do, no constitutional question
arose.
To some extent, the anti-democratic impunity with which the
Iemma government sought to operate was exposed at trial. Evidence
submitted by the NSW Solicitor General showed the governments
official list of WYD events included such vague phrases
as various locations and various Catholic dioceses
in Sydney. Some scheduled event times were said to be all
day. The government only produced the list after the applicants
requested it. That is, the government passed laws enabling the
WYD Authority to fine people $5,500, without even setting out
exactly where and when the laws would operate. Presumably, the
police would simply use their discretion.
Evans hailed the outcome as a major victory for the protest
movement. According to the Sydney Morning Herald,
Greens MP Sylvia Hale saluted the court for upholding the basic
rights of the citizens of NSW against the incompetence
and excess of the state government.
The courts ruling is undoubtedly a political setback
for the Iemma government, and exposed its blatant attempt to use
WYD as a pretext to greatly expand police powers. However, the
decision should not be interpreted as a landmark victory for fundamental
democratic rights. The judges relied on a narrow technicality,
which can easily be overcome. Regulations criminalising annoying
conduct can be made in the future, so long as the legislation
expresses this intent clearly.
Indeed, the judgment underscored the extent to which the Iemma
government has already extended the reach of broad police powers
into everyday life. The court stated that the general criminal
laws of the State regulating disorderly and offensive
conduct could be invoked for WYD if required. These measures
have been massively expanded in recent years, under the banner
of the war on terror, after the racial Cronulla riots
in 2005, and most recently, during and after the APEC summit.
Iemma said the government would not appeal against the courts
decision, saying it would have negligible impact on police enforcement
powers, allowing the government to achieve the same objective
of preventing protestors disrupting the pilgrims or the
events. Police can still impose a $5,500 fine for causing
inconvenience to a WYD participant, even if such conduct
is not dangerous.
The courts decision should be viewed in the context of
widespread hostility to WYD, the Catholic Church, the Iemma government,
and the constant expansion of police powers at the state and federal
level.
Ean Higgins commented in the Australian on July 5 that
hostility to the new laws had coalesced in growing interest in
the NoToPope Coalition, and around the broader democratic issue
of freedom of speech. Jesuit priest Frank Brennan said the laws
simply provided a lightning rod conductor for all those
wanting to agitate against WYD, while NSW Opposition justice
spokesman Greg Smith said the laws did more to annoy people
and provoke rebellion than anything else.
The courts ruling was aimed at defusing this situation.
The judges elected to rule on the laws before anyone had been
actually charged with a criminal offence, a scenario that could
well have led to broader political radicalisation. Their decision,
handed down on the first official day of the WYD calendar, gave
the appearance of reining in the Iemma government, while leaving
the bulk of the new laws untouched.
See Also:
Sydney's World Youth Day: a spectacle
of state-sponsored obscurantism
[17 July 2008]
Australia: Rail unions cave in amid furor
over disruption to Pope's visit
[17 July 2008]
Australia: Labor government introduces
draconian police powers for Pope's visit
[10 July 2008]
The pope's US visit: Media,
White House, Congress embrace spokesman for religious obscurantism
[21 April 2008]
Pope Benedict XVI's
political resume: theocracy and social reaction
[22 April 2005]
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