On Friday, Health Minister Greg Hunt announced an emergency declaration under the Biosecurity Act, temporarily banning Australian citizens (and everyone else) from entering Australia if they have been in India in the previous fortnight. If anyone tries to circumvent the ban, they will face a fine of $66,000 or five years in prison.
Australia is the only country in the world that has attempted to prevent, by law, its own citizens from coming home — and the legal basis for this is in the act.
The Biosecurity Act gives incredible powers to the government once a “human biosecurity emergency” has been declared. Section 477 gives the health minister power to “determine any requirement that he is satisfied is necessary to prevent or control the entry of the disease into Australia”. This can include “requirements that restrict or prevent the movement of persons between specified places”.
The act requires Hunt to be satisfied that the ban is likely to be effective in or contribute to keeping COVID-19 out, that it is “appropriate and adapted” to the purpose, that it is “no more restrictive or intrusive than is required”, and that it will apply no longer than is necessary.
This power overrides any other law; meaning that the only other place we can look for moderation is the constitution.
But first, a distraction: Australia’s obligations under international law. Two Australian citizens stranded overseas recently applied to the United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) for an order requiring Australia to bring them home. They invoked Article 12(4) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which says that “no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country”. Australia is a signatory to the covenant.
The UNHRC issued an interim order requesting our government bring the applicants home, pending a full hearing of the case. But here’s the problem: international conventions and covenants to which Australia is a party have no force under Australia law, unless they have been explicitly adopted by legislation here. The covenant has not, so the government can ignore it along with the UNHRC’s ruling. Which it will.
So, back to the constitution. It says nothing about Australian citizens’ rights. In fact it doesn’t mention the concept of citizenship at all. In 1901, when it was made, citizenship was still a fuzzy concept. More importantly, the Australian people were — both before and after federation — considered by law to be British subjects and nothing more.
But ask any Australian citizen whether they think they have an inalienable right to return home whenever they wish, and they’ll say of “course I do… don’t I?” The wording of the international covenant simply reflects what we’d assume anyway.
Therefore, it’s reasonable to read between the lines of the constitution and see if it confirms an implied right — in the same way the High Court says that it creates an implied freedom of communication on government and political matters, as an essential aspect of our system of democracy.
The question has never been considered by the courts, although there is a little bit of tangential support from a High Court case in 1988. This dealt with the validity of a law forcing airlines to pay an “immigration clearance” fee for arriving passengers, including Australian citizens.
The court, in passing, said that citizens have “under the law, the right to re-enter the country, without need of any executive fiat or ‘clearance’, for so long as he retained his citizenship”. Unfortunately, the judges didn’t mention which law. Unless it was the constitution, that law would be overridden by the Biosecurity Act anyway.
It may be that we have an implied right of return, as a necessary attribute of citizenship, which in turn is an essential component of our system of elected government — since citizenship carries both a right and an obligation under our law to enrol and vote.
If so, it’s unlikely to be held by the courts to be unlimited. They would accept that the return right, like all our other freedoms recognised by law, is subject to the government’s ability to make laws — within its constitutional powers — for the public good. It would be wrong to suppose that Typhoid Mary had an absolute right to fly home and get super-spreading without interference.
I do think, however, that there’s a solid case to argue that this ban on citizens returning from India is illegal. There are three parts to the argument.
First, that Hunt has misapplied his own power, because the blanket ban exceeds what is “appropriate and adapted”.
Second, that there is a right to return for Australian citizens, constrained by the power to impose restrictions only to the extent that they are necessary to protect the wider public interest. The Biosecurity Act gives the government many powers, including to enforce quarantine and even forcibly detain individuals to prevent or contain spread.
Third, that if the Biosecurity Act does allow this ban, then it is invalid because it falls outside the powers which the constitution gives to the Commonwealth Parliament. It’s not covered by the quarantine or immigration powers, so I can’t really see a constitutional basis for it at all.
It’s not hard to imagine measures the government could have spent the past year putting in place for such a contingency as this: that there are 9000 Australian citizens trapped in India, and they need to be rescued. It could be done.
Therefore, what the government has done is unlawful. Apart from being disgraceful. And racist.
If you assume, as I do, that the government has looked at the effect on it’s popularity with the electorate of this move, it is likely that they have noted the likelihood of little push back from “the man in the street”. A sad reflection on the probability that racism is alive and well amongst the general population?
Pretty much. And either the government shares those opinions and discriminates racially with sincere enthusiasm, or else it does not, yet has no compunction about cynically exploiting racism in the wider public. What the government does not have is any decency or integrity.
Implicit bias’ always manifest in intuitions. It’s why you’ll get bewildered reactions from powerful white americans when you argue their judiciary and law enforcement institutions may be systemically discriminating against african americans; they would argue their institutions were set up to be impartial, failing to acknowledging the subconscious biases behind the white men who set up those institutions.
They weren’t subconscious, the biases were front and centre. Slaves didn’t count as humans, women were inferior beings. The biases were deliberately built into the constitution. Some later amendments have removed some of them.
As usual, they will have ignored the response of the woman in the street.
What on earth happens if your visa runs out in the country where you are? What then?
Deportation I guess. What a mess we create when governments overreach.
What then? – Go To Jail Go directly to Jail. Do not pass GO, do not collect $200
It’s all just a game to the clowns running this place.
Do you think Morrison cares ?
Has the Federal governance & ordinance of the nation state of Australia been reduced to a one boy circus band !?
Professor Godbotherer would care if he knew how many Indians vote LNP
Many nations would give extensions and meanwhile many Australians would be in the grey zone on expired visas; many nations gave blanket residency extensions in ’20.
Depends where you are/depart from, for many nations it’s merely a warning, a fine or you cannot return for 6-12 months.
It’s actually Australia, like Turkey, that has some of the most draconian immigration penalties, including detention and propensity to lock people up for visa overstays of even just several days….
Untrue.
Nobody who has overstayed their visa is prevented from leaving this country.
Their passport is endorsed and they told that they cannot apply for another visa for a minimum of two years.
To be deported for overstay one is generally detained till flights can be arranged (it has happened when someone enquires face to face at their office with expired visa…..):
‘Between 2016 and 2017 the Department of Home Affairs tracked down 15,885 people who were overstaying their visas and kicked them out of the country or placed them in detention. People caught overstaying can face detention, deportation and bans from re-entering Australia for a minimum period of three years.‘ (SBS)
Not sure what ‘passport endorsed’ means?
Most countries like Australia issue new passports hence it’s the personal details which matter…..
I specified someone leaving the country, having overstayed.
You write – in BOLD – of those apprehended for overstaying – a crime.
Apples & watermelons.
In both cases, their ID will be recorded on DIMIA’s system and consideration of future visa applications considered accordingly.
Not my bold, but that of SBS article and does not exclude nor excuse Australia for applying draconian actions vs. other nations; my original post.
Logic not your forte – got it!
This really feels like a cover-up for the piecemeal quarantine system we have at the moment. A country with many Australians fleeing a COVID-infested country are a biosecurity risk because our hotel quarantine system doesn’t do a good enough job of quarantining. If we had proper quarantine camps, this wouldn’t need to be an issue.
…. Another reason for this government to resist investing in such national public health infrastructure?
The excuses so far trotted out by the federal government for not building decent quarantine facilities mostly revolve around how long it would take, with also some whining about the cost. This means, assuming the government is actually trying to be evidence-based and logical (yes I know), that it believes:
Where is the government getting this advice?
And given how easily the government can be persuaded to chuck $ billions at its corporate mates for all sorts of shonky nonsense and gross electoral bribery, why does it not see building quarantine facilites as another great opportunity for corporate welfare in marginal electorates?
I thought we already had a convenient ‘quarantine’ facility…off-shore on Christmas Island???
At least the authorities could start bringing Australians home…should be room for 2,000 or more each fortnight.
Weren’t people brought home from Wuhan in China at the beginning of this pandemic and quarantined on Christmas Island?
What is different now???
As you say, Christmas Island was used for a time to quarantine anyone travelling here from Wuhan. But in the last few days Dutton has insisted it’s not fit for purpose as a quarantine facility, and if we cannot trust Dutton…
What’s changed since it was being used for that nobody is saying. But it seems quite likely it’s really not up to the job, since it was certainly not designed and built as a quarantine facility, and it is also ridiculously expensive to site such facilities on remote islands if they are going to be built and operated to any acceptable standard.
didn’t Spud say recently that hotel quarantine works just fine?
Yes, he said that too. Christmas Island is of course not hotel quarantine so there’s no necessary contradiction.
It was ‘good enough’ for Chinese….
Thank you for the legal exposition, Michael.
Setting aside the ethnicity concerns, by the following argument there’s a humanitarian crisis affecting Australian citizens, by the following argument.
Infection rates in India are sitting north of 20%, with some cities potentially higher. By your figure of an estimated 9,000 Australians in India, that’s 180 potentially infected at the moment. Of these, some expected 36 cases will be serious, and due to an overwhelmed medical system, serious cases are likely to be untreatable and therefore fatal — typically within 2 to 8 weeks.
This argues that rather than banning flights from India, up to 36 lives could be saved if Indian flights were prioritised.
“Unlawful”? “Disgraceful”? “Racist”? …. Sounds like “Scotty’s Wholly Trinity”?
If that be so Klewso, then PM Morrison has full and open support for ‘selectively’ denying Indian-Aussies wishing nay, pleading, to return home.
Allegedly, Australians in their millions have flocked to support, acknowledge, our PM’s management of Pandemic. So it is reported.
Could it be Australia is truly racist? Hmmm, just one more short step . . . to an Australian Krystallnacht? Weird isn’t it? Even Andrew Bolt’s headline today reads in part ‘I am ashamed of Australia . . . .”
Personally, as I understand the discourse. There are grounds regarding ‘unlawful’; certainly ‘disgraceful’; as a judgement, and ‘racist’ also when compared with Expats fleeing USofA?
I’m washing my brown shirt – don’t want to look out of place…..
And my local haberdasher can’t keep up with demand for new ones.
Ah Klewso, we live in a changing world. Certainly, a changing nation. Brown, bad. But not so bad . . as say ‘black’? Yet!
“Tomate : pomodoro”.
The trifecta of cruelty.