Inquiry into the Migration Amendment (Complementary Protection) Bill 2009
Inquiry into the Migration Amendment (Complementary Protection) Bill 2009
Australian Human Rights Commission
Submission to the Senate Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional
Affairs
30 September 2009
- Download in Word [264 KB]
- Download in PDF [72 KB]
Table of Contents
4 The need for a system of complementary protection
6 Protection from death penalty
8 Individuals unable to access complementary protection on equal terms
1 Introduction
-
The Australian Human Rights Commission (the Commission) makes this
submission to the Senate Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs
Inquiry into the Migration Amendment (Complementary Protection) Bill 2009
(Complementary Protection Bill). -
The Commission is Australia’s national human rights institution.
-
The Commission commends the Australian Government on the introduction of the
Complementary Protection Bill. The Commission has on a number of occasions
recommended the introduction of a legislated complementary protection system for
people who do not meet the definition of refugee, but nonetheless face serious
harm if returned to their country of
origin.[1]
2 Summary
-
The Commission submits that the Committee recommend the Bill be passed,
subject to a number of amendments to better protect human rights. -
The Commission welcomes many of the changes to the law proposed by the Bill
including:-
the enactment of a complementary protection regime in the Migration Act
1958 (Cth) (Migration Act); and -
the conferral of a visa with the same conditions and entitlements to
complementary protection recipients as that conferred on refugees within the
meaning of the Refugees Convention.
-
-
The Commission is nevertheless of the view that certain provisions of the
Complementary Protection Bill should be amended to fully implement
Australia’s international human rights obligations. These include:-
removal of ‘irreparable harm’ from the test in section
36(2)(aa); -
deletion of the words ‘and it will be carried out’ from section
36(2A)(b); and -
amendment of section 36(2A) to cover any act which would constitute a breach
of the ICCPR or CRC and would result in serious harm.
-
-
The Commission is concerned that the Bill does not adequately protect:
-
individuals who arrive in excised offshore places; or
-
individuals who are stateless.
-
3 Recommendations
Recommendation 1: Subject to amendments recommended in this
submission, the Complementary Protection Bill should be passed at the earliest
opportunity.
Recommendation 2: The requirement that applicants must face a risk of
‘irreparable harm’ should be deleted from the Bill.
Recommendation 3: The words ‘and it will be carried out’
in subsection 36(2A)(b) should be deleted.
Recommendation 4: The Bill should be amended to provide that Australia
has protection obligations where a non-citizen would suffer serious harm because
of a breach of his or her rights under the ICCPR.
Recommendation 5: The Bill should be amended to provide that Australia
has protection obligations where a child would suffer serious harm because of a
breach of his or her rights under the CRC.
Recommendation 6: Section 46A of the Migration Act should be
repealed.
Recommendation 7: The Government should identify options for the
resolution under the Migration Act of claims by people who are stateless.
4 The
need for a system of complementary protection
-
Australia has binding international obligations to protect people who do not
fall within the definition of refugee under the Refugee Convention, but who
nonetheless must be protected from refoulement (return) under the Convention
Against Torture (CAT), the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC). -
The Commission has, during the course of its work, come into contact with a
number of people who have had difficulty meeting the Convention definition of
refugee, and yet have compelling cases for protection which may be met by a
complementary protection system. These include such cases as:-
women who are at risk of domestic violence if returned to their countries
where, for various reasons, they cannot seek adequate protection from the
authorities -
witnesses of crime who have been threatened with death or physical injury by
criminal elements in countries where those criminal elements operate with
impunity -
people who face the death penalty in their country of origin although they
have already served a sentence for the crime in Australia.
-
-
Several examples of cases were also included in the Senate Legal and
Constitutional References Committee 2000 report, A Sanctuary under Review: An
Examination of Australia’s Refugee and Humanitarian Determination
Processes.[2] -
The European Union, Canada and New Zealand have or are soon to legislate to
enact a complementary protection
regime[3]. -
In contrast Australia currently has no effective system of protection for
such people. Instead, their claims can only be considered after they have had
their claims for refugee status rejected. They must then seek personal
intervention by the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship under section 417
of the Migration Act for a grant of a visa on public interest grounds. Although
the Minister may consider Australia’s international human rights
obligations, his or her decisions in these cases are non-compellable and
non-reviewable. The Minister is also not obliged to give reasons for his or her
decisions, which means that the decisions lack transparency, accountability and
consistency. -
One of the effects of the current system of Ministerial discretion in these
cases is the possibility of prolonged immigration detention, which may lead to
breaches of article 9(1) of the ICCPR. To get to the stage at which exercise of
the Minister’s section 417 discretion may be considered, asylum seekers
must first make an application for a refugee protection visa and apply for
review of that decision. It is not until they have exhausted that process that
they can be considered by the Minister under section 417. Once they reach the
section 417 stage, the process can take months. Overall, the process can take
years. -
This is particularly inefficient as it requires people who fear harm if
returned to their country of nationality, but who do not fall within the
definition of refugee, to frame their claim as one for refugee status so that
their real claim can be assessed at the end of that process. This means that
resources are expended and costs incurred in assessing claims that may be
unmeritorious as refugee claims, but are compelling as claims for the protection
of human rights. -
The Commission has previously recommended that the Australian Government
should introduce a legislated system of complementary protection which
incorporates the following features:-
clear criteria setting out when a person should be protected from
refoulement -
procedures that protect against errors in applying that criteria (due
process) -
mechanisms to implement Australia’s protection obligations for those
who meet the criteria (visas).
-
Therefore, the Commission
welcomes the Complementary Protection Bill, which includes these key features.
Recommendation 1: Subject to amendments recommended in this
submission, the Complementary Protection Bill should be passed at the earliest
opportunity.
5 The test for
harm
-
The proposed section 36(2)(aa) of the Migration Act provides that to be
eligible for complementary protection an individual must be:-
a non-citizen in Australia
-
who is not owed protection obligations under the Refugee Convention
-
to whom the Minister is satisfied that Australia has protection obligations
because the Minister has substantial grounds for believing that-
as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the non-citizen being
removed from Australia to a receiving country -
there is a real risk that the non-citizen will be irreparably
harmed because of a matter mentioned in subsection
(2A).
-
-
-
The explanatory memorandum to the Bill notes that the ICCPR and the CAT
require a high threshold for non-refoulement obligations to be engaged and cites
the United Nations Human Rights Committee General Comment 31 as the origin of
the ‘irreparable harm’
test.[4] The Commission agrees that
international jurisprudence suggests that a risk of serious harm is required
before a non-refoulement obligation is engaged. However, the Commission
considers that the test imposed in section 36(2)(aa) is not the correct test. -
The statement in paragraph 12 of General Comment 31 uses the term
‘irreparable harm’ as a shorthand way of referencing the serious
harms contemplated by Articles 6 and 7 of the ICCPR. It should not be understood
as a discrete requirement. The former United Nations Human Rights
Committee’s Rapporteur, Sir Nigel Rodley, has supported this
interpretation, saying:I think it should be self-evident that
paragraph 12 of General Comment 31 (for which I was the Committee’s
Rapporteur during its consideration of the text) speaks of irreparable harm to
indicate that not all human rights violations will necessarily entail an
obligation not to expose a person to them by returning them to the country in
question.[5] -
The requirement for an applicant to be at risk of irreparable harm could
lead to unintended results. For example, it might be argued that some forms of
torture such as removal of fingernails or use of electric shock batons will not
cause irreparable harm to the applicant as required by section 36(2)(aa). The
Act should not allow for such an approach. The apprehension of such forms of
torture would certainly engage Australia’s protection obligations under
CAT, which the Bill intends to import into domestic law. -
The Commission considers that a more appropriate reference to the level of
harm required to engage a non-refoulement obligation is found in General Comment
1 of the United Nations Committee against Torture. In this comment the Committee
states:Bearing in mind that the State party and the Committee are
obliged to assess whether there are substantial grounds for believing that the
author would be in danger of being subjected to torture were he/she to be
expelled, returned or extradited, the risk of torture must be assessed on
grounds that go beyond mere theory or suspicion. However, the risk does not have
to meet the test of being highly probable.The author must establish that he/she would be in danger of being tortured
and that the grounds for so believing are substantial in the way described, and
that such danger is personal and
present...[6] -
The Commission notes that the standard of proof for complementary protection
in the European Union is that ‘substantial grounds have been shown for
believing that the person concerned, if returned to his or her country of
origin... would face a real risk of suffering serious harm as defined in Article
15’.[7] A similar test is
imported into section 36(2)(aa) with the requirement that applicants for
protection are required to face ‘real risk’ of the kind of harm
outlined in section 36(2A) of the Bill. Accordingly, the removal of the
requirement for irreparable harm would more closely align section 36 (2)(aa)
with other tests applied under international law. -
Accordingly, the test contained in section 36(2)(aa) should refer to:
-
a non-citizen in Australia
-
who is not owed protection obligations under the Refugee Convention
-
to whom the Minister is satisfied that Australia has protection obligations
because the Minister has substantial grounds for believing that-
as a necessary and foreseeable consequence of the non-citizen being
removed from Australia to a receiving country -
there is a real risk that the non-citizen will face a harm of the
kind mentioned in subsection (2A).
-
-
-
Simplifying the test in section 36(2)(aa) by removing the requirement
relating to irreparable harm will also make the test easier to apply for
decision-makers. This is likely to result in more consistent and fair
decision-making.
Recommendation 2: The requirement that
applicants must face a risk of ‘irreparable harm’ should be deleted
from the Bill
6 Protection from death
penalty
-
The proposed section 36(2A) provides that the Minister may grant a visa on
complementary protection grounds where he or she believes that there is a real
risk that the non-citizen will be irreparably harmed because the non-citizen
will ‘have the death penalty imposed on him or her and it will be carried
out’. -
The Commission recommends that the words ‘and it will be carried
out’ in subsection 36(2A)(b) be deleted. These additional words are
unnecessary and are likely to present practical difficulties in implementation.
For example, it is unclear how a decision maker would satisfy himself or herself
that the death penalty will be carried out in a particular case. Short of a
country having a record of never carrying out the death penalty, it is submitted
that a decision maker could never be satisfied that the death penalty would not
be carried out. Statistically some countries may tend to delay executions or may
only carry out a small number of executions that are ordered. However,
statistics cannot predict with certainty what will occur in a given case. -
It should also be noted that these words are not used in the ICCPR or in the
second optional protocol to the ICCPR regarding the abolition of the death
penalty. -
For these reasons, the Commission considers that the words ‘and it
will be carried out’ should be deleted from section
36(2A)(b).
Recommendation 3: The words ‘and it will be
carried out’ in subsection 36(2A)(b) should be deleted.
7 Limited scope of
protection
- The proposed section 36(2A) provides that the Minister may grant a visa on
complementary protection grounds where he or she believes that there is a real
risk that a non-citizen will be irreparably harmed because the non-citizen
will:- be arbitrarily deprived of his or her life; or
- have the death penalty imposed on him or her and it will be carried out;
or - be subjected to torture; or
- be subjected to cruel or inhuman treatment or punishment; or
- be subjected to degrading treatment or punishment.
- The obligation not to return someone at risk of death, torture or cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment is well established in
international law.[8] The Commission
supports the extension of protection to people on these grounds, which cover
some of the most significant examples of serious harm. - However, the Committee should be aware that international jurisprudence
supports the extension of non-refoulement obligations based on the ICCPR and CRC
beyond the grounds contained in the Bill.
7.1 ICCPR rights
-
In its General Comments the UN Human Rights Committee (the Committee) has
considered which articles of the ICCPR may give rise to an obligation not to
return a non-citizen. -
In General Comment 31 the Committee states:
Moreover, the
article 2 obligation requiring that State Parties respect and ensure the
Covenant rights for all persons in their territory and all persons under their
control entails an obligation not to extradite, deport, expel or otherwise
remove a person from their territory where there are substantial grounds for
believing that there is a real risk of irreparable harm, such as that
contemplated by articles 6 and 7 of the Covenant, either in the country to which
removal is to be effected or in any country to which the person may subsequently
be removed.[9] (emphasis added) -
Whilst General Comment 15 states:
....in certain circumstances
an alien may enjoy the protection of the Covenant even in relation to entry or
residence, for example, when considerations of non-discrimination, prohibition
of inhuman treatment and respect for family life
arise.[10] -
These General Comments indicate that an obligation not to refoule could
arise from any article of the ICCPR. Nowak also considers that the prohibition
of refoulement which has been recognised in respect of article 6 of the ICCPR
might, in principle, be applicable to all ICCPR
rights.[11] -
The Committee outlined its views on a State Party’s non-refoulement obligations under the ICCPR in Kindler v
Canada:if a State party takes a decision relating to a person
within its jurisdiction, and the necessary and foreseeable consequence is that
that person’s rights under the Covenant will be violated in another
jurisdiction, the State party itself may be in violation of the Covenant. That
follows from the fact that a State party’s duty under article 2 of the
Covenant would be negated by the handing over of a person to another State
(whether a State party to the Covenant or not) where treatment contrary to the
Covenant is certain or the very purpose of the handing
over.[12] -
The Committee has emphasised that the threshold to be met for a
non-refoulement obligation will only be available in the most serious cases.
However the Commission is of the view that there is no reason why any of the
human rights in the ICCPR should be excluded from the possibility of such an
obligation arising if that threshold is met.
Recommendation
4: The Bill should be amended to provide that Australia has protection
obligations where a non-citizen would suffer serious harm because of a breach of
his or her rights under the ICCPR.
7.2 Children’s
Rights
-
Article 3(1) of the CRC states:
In all actions concerning
children, whether undertaken by public or private social welfare institutions,
courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies, the best
interests of the child shall be a primary consideration. -
This article is generally recognised to create a broad obligation to
consider the interests of children in view of their particular
vulnerability. -
In its General Comment 6, the Committee on the Rights of the Child adopts a
broader approach to non-refoulement than the Human Rights
Committee:...States shall not return a child to a country where
there are substantial grounds for believing that there is a real risk of
irreparable harm to the child such as, but by no means limited to, those
contemplated under articles 6 and 37 of the Convention, either in the country to
which removal is to be effected or in any country to which the child may
subsequently be removed. Such non-refoulement obligations apply irrespective of
whether serious violations of those rights guaranteed under the Convention
originate from non-State actors or whether such violations are directly intended
or are the indirect consequence of action or
inaction.[13] -
Goodwin-Gill and McAdam argue that the best interests of the child principle
contained in article 3 of the CRC may provide a ground of protection for
children fleeing generalised
violence.[14] -
The Commission is of the view that to best protect the rights of children,
the Government should enact a comprehensive complementary protection regime
specific to children in danger of serious harms.
Recommendation
5: The Bill should be amended to provide that Australia has protection
obligations where a child would suffer serious harm because of a breach of his
or her rights under the CRC.
8 Individuals
unable to access complementary protection on equal terms
- The Bill is a welcome development in increasing protection for a group of
vulnerable people to whom Australia owes protection obligations. The second
reading speech states that the Bill:. . .ensures that all people
who may be owed Australia’s protection have access to the same
transparent, reviewable and procedurally robust decision-making framework that
is currently available to applicants who make claims under the Refugees
Convention[15] - However, contrary to this statement, the Bill will not in fact extend
protection in the same way to all people to who may be owed
Australia’s protection.
8.1 Offshore entry
persons
- The Commission has previously raised concerns about the excision and
offshore processing regime. It establishes a two-tiered system under which
asylum seekers who arrive in excised offshore places have significantly fewer
legal safeguards than asylum seekers on the
mainland.[16] The Commission has
recommended that the provisions of the Migration Act relating to excised
offshore places should be repealed and that all people who make claims for
asylum should have those claims processed through the refugee status
determination system on the
mainland.[17] - Section 46A of the Migration Act excludes persons who arrive in an excised
offshore place from making a valid application for a visa, including a
protection visa, unless the Minister exercises his discretion to allow them to
do so. Under current Australian Government policy, these ‘offshore entry
persons’ are detained on Christmas Island and are processed through a
‘non-statutory’ refugee status assessment process. - The system of complementary protection introduced by the Bill is subject to
the limitation in section 46A. It will not be available to Offshore Entry
Persons unless the Minister determines that they should be entitled to make a
visa application. - The Complementary Protection Bill does nothing to alter the status quo.
Offshore entry persons remain disadvantaged compared to onshore entry persons
because of the method by which they entered Australia. - Australia’s non-refoulement obligations are not altered by the manner
in which a non-citizen arrives in Australia, or where in Australia they arrive. - By failing to extend the application of the legislated complementary
protection system to people who arrive in excised offshore places as a matter of
course, the Australian Government the two-tiered system currently in
operation.
Recommendation 6: Section 46A of the Migration Act
should be repealed
8.2 Stateless
persons
-
Australia has obligations to people who are stateless under the 1954
Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons. While the situation
of stateless people does not necessarily fall within the scope of complementary
protection, there is a need to provide an appropriate mechanism for assessing
the claims of stateless people. -
In some cases, people who are stateless may claim grounds for protection
that will fit within the definition of refugee or the new complementary
protection grounds. However, in other cases a stateless person may fall through
the cracks of protection, despite the fact that they are unable to be sent back
to their country of origin. Currently, such people may be left in a prolonged
state of limbo, in immigration detention or in the community, without a
satisfactory resolution to their case. The Commission is of the view that the
law should be amended to account for individuals in this situation. -
The Commission submits that the Committee should recommend that the
Government identify options for the resolution under the Migration Act of claims
by people who are stateless.
Recommendation 7: The Government
should identify options for the resolution under the Migration Act of claims by
people who are stateless.
[1] Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission. Submission to the Joint Standing Committee on Migration
Inquiry into Immigration Detention in Australia 4 August 2008 at
http://humanrights.gov.au/legal/submissions/2008/20080829_immigration_d…,
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. Submission to the Senate Select
Committee on Ministerial Discretion in Migration Matters 27 August 2003 at
http://www.humanrights.gov.au/legal/submissions/migration_matters.html
[2] Senate Legal and Constitutional References Committee. A Sanctuary under
Review. An Examination of Australia’s Refugee and Humanitarian
Determination Processes. June
2000
[3] In addition, the United
States has codified its obligation not to return a non-citizen where there is a
risk of torture. See McAdam, J Complementary Protection: Labor’s Point of
Departure. http://inside.org.au/complementary-protection/ (viewed 25 September 2009)
[4] Explanatory Memorandum Migration Amendment (Complementary Protection) Bill 2009
(Cth) para 51.
[5] Email from Sir
Nigel Rodley to John Gibson of the Refugee Council of Australia dated 22
September 2009.
[6] Committee
Against Torture, General Comment No. 1 - Implementation of article 3 of the
Convention in the context of article 22 A/53/44, annex IX (1997) paras 6 and
7. At http://www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/0/13719f169a8a4ff78025672b0050eba1?Opendocument (viewed 20 September 2009)
[7] Council Directive 2004/83/EC of 29 April 2004 on minimum standards for the
qualification and status of third country nationals or stateless persons as
refugees or as persons who otherwise need international protection and the
content of the protection granted. Article 2(e) http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32004L0083:EN:HTML (viewed 28 September 2009)
[8] Kindler v Canada, No. 470/1991, § 15.3, Judge v Canada, No.
829/1998, § 10.4.
[9] Human
Rights Committee, General Comment No.31 - [80] Nature of the General Legal
Obligation Imposed on States Parties to the Covenant CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13
(2004) para 12. At
http://www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/0/58f5d4646e861359c1256ff600533f5f?Ope…
[10] Human Rights Committee, General Comment 15: The Position of Aliens under the
Covenant (1986) para 5. At
http://www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/0/bc561aa81bc5d86ec12563ed004aaa1b?Ope…
[11] Manfred Nowak, UN Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: CCPR Commentary (2nd ed 2005),
150.
[12] See n.8,
Kindler
[13] Committee on the
Rights of the Child, General Comment 6: Treatment of Unaccompanied and
Separated Children Outside Their Country of Origin (1 September 2005), para
27. At
http://www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/(symbol)/CRC.GC.2005.6.En?OpenDocument
[14] Guy Goodwin-Gill and Jane McAdam, The Refugee in International Law (3rd ed 2007),
324
[15] Commonwealth,
Parliamentary Debates, House of Representatives, 9 September 2009, p4 (The Hon
Laurie Ferguson MP, Parliamentary Secretary for Multicultural Affairs and
Settlement Services)
[16] See,
for example Australian Human Rights Commission, 2008 Immigration Detention
Report: Summary of observations following visits to Australia’s
immigration detention facilities (2008), at http://www.humanrights.gov.au/human_rights/immigration/idc2008.html.
[17] Above, pp 71-72.