|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australia:
New attacks on the democratic rights of refugees
By Mike Head
10 December 1998
Over the past four years Australian governments have expelled
a growing number of refugees. Since 1994 they have rejected about
10,000 refugee applications, including many from war-torn countries
such as Sri Lanka and Somalia. Of these asylum seekers, some 979
appealed to the Federal Court, but only 21 were successful in
challenging their deportation.
However, this record is not harsh enough for the Howard government.
Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock this week issued extraordinary
attacks on Federal Court judges and lawyers, accusing them of
undermining the government's strict refugee policy. Personally
backed by Prime Minister Howard, Ruddock also reintroduced legislation
to further restrict the right of asylum seekers to appeal to the
courts. The new rules will allow appeals from the Refugee Review
Tribunal to the Federal Court only in "exceptional circumstances".
Ruddock claimed that half a dozen "creative" Federal
Court judges were indulging in legal "frolics". He declared
that they were using issues of error of law to wrongly consider
cases on their merits. Speaking in parliament last Friday, Ruddock
asserted that one or two judges had "a particular view of
the world that is different to everyone else's".
Such personal attacks on judges and their traditional independence
from the government of the day are rare. Understandably, Ruddock's
remarks provoked concern in the legal profession and among human
rights organisations. His comments indicate a pre-meditated drive
to prevent any legal challenge to the government's treatment of
refugees and other unwanted arrivals.
Ruddock also denounced "unethical" migration lawyers
and agents who advertise class actions against deportations and
rejections of refugee status. He complained that class actions
had "blown out" from four cases involving 170 people
in 1994 to eight actions involving 4,830 people currently before
the courts. The Minister accused lawyers of "exploiting people
who ... are here unlawfully and want to stay in Australia".
He said he had referred advertisements by legal firms and migration
agents to an industry watchdog, the Migration Institute of Australia.
On this reasoning, lawyers would be barred from making people
aware of their legal rights and assisting them to defend themselves
in any field, whether it be refugee and immigration applications,
criminal prosecutions or consumer, tenant and environmental challenges
to corporate power. This has grave implications for democratic
rights.
Moreover, the government last week succeeded in introducing
a measure designed to financially cripple those refugees who seek
to exercise their legal rights. With ex-Labor Senator Mal Colston
voting with the government, the Senate failed to strike down new
rules limiting the right of refugees to work in Australia while
their cases are before the courts. Under the previous provisions,
refugee applicants had no automatic right to work, to claim social
security benefits or seek a Medicare card to obtain subsidised
medical treatment. The new measures restrict access even further.
Hundreds of refugees-those who arrive illegally on small boats
or without visas-are already deprived of the right to work or
receive social welfare. They are locked up in detention centres
in the most inhumane conditions in Sydney's Villawood institution
or at the remote Port Hedland facility. Now all those who remain
in the community will be subjected to similar degradation, unable
to provide for themselves and their families. In effect they will
be punished for fighting for their rights rather than accepting
deportation.
Ironically, the extended ban on seeking employment undermines
another claim made by Ruddock. He argued that the lawyers and
the courts were protecting "wealthy" asylum seekers
at the expense of those still waiting in other countries for their
applications to be determined. The ban on employment shows that
the government is specifically targeting those who have no other
means of subsistence. It is also determined not to allow any refugee
victories that might encourage pauperised people anywhere, particularly
in nearby countries such as Indonesia, from seeking entry.
As for genuinely wealthy applicants, they can literally buy
their way into the country at any time by paying anything between
$350,000 and $1 million. Such sums of capital qualify them as
business immigrants under schemes established by the previous
Labor government and extended under Howard.
The Labor Party's shadow cabinet has opposed the government's
restrictions on legal appeals, saying Labor would uphold the civil
liberties of potential refugees. "We are absolutely and utterly
against the inclusion of anything that precludes people from appealing
to the courts," opposition immigration spokesman Con Sciacca
said. This is blatant hypocrisy. The previous Labor government
made repeated attempts to block legal appeals.
In 1994 the Keating Labor government denied the Federal Court
the jurisdiction to review Refugee Review Tribunal decisions on
the grounds of denial of natural justice or unreasonableness.
This meant that refugees could no longer object on the basis that
the government-appointed Tribunal did not give their cases a fair,
unbiased or adequate hearing.
The Labor government also declared that any non-citizen in
Australia without a current visa was an "unlawful non-citizen,"
who must be detained indefinitely pending deportation. This reversed
the centuries-old principle of habeas corpus that no one
can be imprisoned without being convicted by a court of an offence.
Two harrowing cases
Two recent cases have highlighted how draconian the refugee
law has become. On November 16 the High Court-the highest court
in the land-dismissed a last-ditch appeal by a Somali refugee,
who can be identified only as SE. The court accepted that the
man could face death if sent back to Somalia, yet upheld the rejection
of his asylum application.
Only intervention by the UN Committee Against Torture and Amnesty
International, accompanied by threats of trade union bans, finally
succeeded in having SE taken off his deportation flight in Perth,
on the other side of the country. He was, however, sent to Port
Hedland, where he remains incarcerated awaiting a report by the
UN committee.
Like many refugees, SE's case is horrific. A member of a minority
Islamic community known as Shikal, he fled Somalia in June 1997
after most of his family were killed or disappeared over the previous
six years. In 1991 militia belonging to the dominant Hawiye clan
shot his father. Later one of SE's brothers was killed when a
bomb was detonated in his home. In 1994 SE's sister committed
suicide after being raped three times by the militia. Another
brother and sister are missing in Somalia, feared dead.
Leaving his wife and surviving family members in Kenya as illegal
immigrants, SE went to Italy where he was granted a one-month
visa (Somalia was an Italian colony). He paid an illegal immigrant
network an undisclosed amount, thought to be between $5,000 and
$10,000, for a fake Kenyan passport and a ticket to Bangkok, where
he was placed on a British Airways flight to Australia using fake
Italian documents.
On October 2, 1997 he was immediately detained for arriving
without a visa and taken to Melbourne's Maribyrnong Detention
Centre. On October 8, 1997 SE applied for protection. He was interviewed
by an official but given no decision for four months. After his
visa was finally refused on March 28, he sought review by the
Tribunal.
In May this year, appearing without legal representation and
speaking through an interpreter, SE told the Tribunal he would
be killed if he returned to Somalia. A Tribunal member asked him:
"Who by? Who is after you in Somalia?" SE answered:
"Yes, the people who already took my possessions and my shops,
they are still there. If they saw me hanging around, they would
see that I am first seeking for revenge, or I am seeking my rights
to get my shops back and my ... so I have to get away from their
family and away from them."
The Tribunal nevertheless concluded that "there is no
real chance that in the reasonably foreseeable future he will
face persecution".
Ruddock refused to intervene and on October 29, immigration
officials made their first attempt to deport SE. They failed amid
dramatic scenes at Melbourne airport. SE co-operated until he
was handed over to a private security guard from a company known
as P& Associates, hired to take him back to Somalia. Half-way
up the steps from the tarmac, SE sat down and started screaming.
The security guard threatened to handcuff SE and carry him on
to the plane. However, the captain of the Qantas plane refused
to take him on board, possibly saving his life.
SE was taken back to Maribyrnong and placed in isolation. Ruddock
again refused to reverse the decision. Officials informed SE that
he would be removed the next day. He sought an interim injunction
from the High Court for judicial review of the Tribunal decision.
After one judge, Michael Kirby, twice granted an injunction, Justice
Kenneth Hayne decided on November 16 that SE had no case.
Two days later, Amnesty International issued its first "urgent
action" call in an Australian case for nine years, urging
Ruddock and Qantas to stop the deportation. "He may be at
risk, immediately upon his arrival, of being arbitrarily detained,
kidnapped, tortured or extra-judicially executed," Amnesty
said. Ruddock sought legal advice and finally halted the deportation
flight on the ground that the deportation could be a breach of
an international treaty.
On November 25, Justice Hayne handed down his written reasons
for dismissing SE's appeal. With the government lashing out at
judges, Hayne seemed to be at pains to show that the High Court
would not interfere with a Tribunal decision. Incredibly, he said
SE's statement to the Tribunal that he would be killed in Somalia
did not reveal fear of persecution on account of his membership
of a clan. Therefore, the Tribunal's decision was one "reasonably
open to it".
Hayne also left the way open for the use of private contractors
such as P& I Associates to carry out forced deportations.
P & I appears to be part of a growing and no doubt lucrative
business. In his judgment, Hayne quoted from a brochure advertising
P & I as a company that "specialises in offering a complete
management service in the repatriation of inadmissibles, deportees,
stowaways, unlawful non-citizens ('inadmissibles') to the individual's
country of origin."
Hayne said the Immigration Department had asked P & I to
arrange SE's travel documents for re-entry into Somalia. Yet he
claimed there was no evidence that the Department had actually
requested escort arrangements. On this basis, the judge declined
to rule on whether such arrangements would be legal.
On the same day that Hayne gave his reasons, the Full Court
of the Federal Court rejected an appeal involving 450 Sri Lankans.
The class action, which brought together Tamils, Sinhalese, Burghers
and Muslims, challenged a government decision to cancel humanitarian
visas granted to them over the past five years. Last year Ruddock
declared that all those who arrived from Sri Lanka after November
1, 1993 were no longer eligible for protection, despite their
fears of the ongoing civil war.
Lawyers for the Sri Lankans argued that Ruddock's decision
was so unreasonable as to be invalid, that it was "arbitrary
and capricious" to allow some Sri Lankans to stay while others
had to leave, and that the decision infringed the Racial Discrimination
Act. However, the Full Court said the government's decision was
made after balancing considerations, which it was entitled to
do under the Migration Act.
Who is a refugee?
Like most governments around the world, the Australian government
applies a legal test of refugee status that deliberately excludes
the vast majority of refugees. The test is based on the 1951 Geneva
Convention on Refugees, which requires a "well-founded fear
of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality,
membership of a particular social group or political opinion".
As one legal text explains: "This means that most Third
World refugees remain de facto excluded, as their flight is more
often prompted by natural disaster, war, or broadly based political
and economic turmoil than by 'persecution,' at least as that term
is understood in the Western context." [James Hathaway, The
Law of Refugee Status, Toronto, Butterworths, 1991, 10-11]
So-called economic refugees, those seeking a better life or trying
to escape hunger and economic oppression, are entirely excluded
by the definition.
The expulsion of refugees from Australia is part of a global
trend. While companies are increasingly free to move investment
funds around the globe at will to take advantage of cheap labour,
those subjected to their dictates--the working masses--are ever
more restricted in their movement across national lines, except,
that is, when their labour is required by employers.
Two centuries ago, before the consolidation of the nation-state
system, the English common law actually protected those from other
realms. In the mid-18th century, Blackstone summarised the state
of English and international law as follows: "... great tenderness
is shown by our laws ... with regard to the admission of strangers
who come spontaneously. For so long as a nation continues at peace
with ours, and they themselves behave peaceably, they are under
the King's protection."
It was not until the French Revolution of 1789 that legislation
was introduced to control the entry of aliens to England and to
provide for their deportation. With the subsequent emergence of
the working class, most states followed suit during the 19th century.
Today the so-called alien, especially the refugee, is hounded
on every continent. The economic system based on wage labour,
private profit and the nation state cannot provide even the most
elementary democratic right to live decently wherever one chooses.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |