Kafka would be so pleased. That our courts of law have become completely at ease with identifying every refugee and asylum seeker by letters and numbers rather than their names, that’s delightful enough. But the High Court, in its latest ruling in favour of the Morrison government’s policy of eternal uncertainty for anyone who dares float towards our sacred shore, has now put the icing on the post-modern cake.
Our protagonist is AJL20 (if you missed my first point, the earlier authorities cited by the court in this decision include M76/2013, M96A/2016, ASP15/2016, WAIS and plain M).
AJL20 arrived here in 2005 from Syria on a child visa. In 2014 the government cancelled his visa on character grounds because of a criminal conviction. He became, in the lexicon of the Migration Act, an “unlawful non-citizen” and went into immigration detention, remaining there until late 2020 when a Federal Court judge ordered his release. The government appealed to the High Court, which last week ruled 4-3 in its favour.
The particular problem was that, for 14 months in 2019-20, AJL20’s detention had been both purposeless and potentially limitless. Between his original detention in 2014 and July 2019, AJL20’s applications for protection visas had been winding through the byzantine processes of the Immigration Department before the minister finally refused to grant him one. That was the end of his hope of staying in Australia — leaving only deportation back to Syria.
He wasn’t deported, however, and the department did nothing about deporting him. Its reasoning was that to do so would be to send him to a place where he would quite likely die, Syria being what it is. Australia has obligations of non-refoulement (to not send people back to a place of danger) under the Refugee Convention.
However, the convention is not part of Australian law and there is nothing legally stopping us from ignoring it. More importantly, the Migration Act was amended by this government to explicitly provide that, for the purposes of its mandatory stipulation, unlawful non-citizens must be removed from Australia “as soon as reasonably practicable”, our non-refoulement obligations are “irrelevant”.
AJL20, unsurprisingly, had never asked to be sent back to Syria. The government, caught between the mandate that he not be allowed to stay here and its preference to not send him there, simply left him to rot in immigration detention.
In the Federal Court, Justice Mordecai Bromberg had ruled that AJL20’s detention since July 2019 was unlawful. The basic legal principle, protected by the constitution, is that detaining a person against their will is something only the courts can do as punishment for a crime. The principle has a few exceptions, such as being held in remand pending trial, scheduling a person for mental health reasons, or (relevantly) detaining an unlawful non-citizen who is physically in Australia.
Detention of a non-citizen, the courts have said, is not punitive, provided it is only for the purposes which the Migration Act serves: either pending the possible granting of a visa, or pending deportation. The government has no power to detain non-citizens otherwise; if it did, that would be necessarily punitive and therefore constitutionally impermissible.
Bromberg said that, because the government had effectively given up trying to deport AJL20, his detention had become indefinite and was therefore illegal.
Four High Court judges disagreed. Their decision says that although the government wasn’t doing anything about AJL20’s situation, it was supposed to be removing him “as soon as practicable” because that’s what the Migration Act requires it to do. Therefore it was in breach of the act, and the only legal remedy for that is to force it to do its job.
That is — and here’s where it gets literally Kafkaesque — AJL20’s detention could continue, lawfully, forever, despite the government’s failure to deport him, as it is required, to a place where he will be killed, and the only thing the law can do to help him is to force the government to deport him to Syria. If he asks.
The other three judges said that that’s a bit nuts. The detention of AJL20 stopped being lawful the moment the government stopped doing anything about bringing it to an end. It could achieve that in two ways: by deporting him, or by giving him a visa to stay. The one thing it couldn’t do is what it did, which is nothing at all.
The minority judges also gave a nod to Kafka in their acknowledgment of the legal consequences of their (and Bromberg’s) interpretation of the law. Because the detention was illegal, AJL20 was entitled to habeas corpus and an order for his immediate release, as Bromberg had ordered. However, unless he was then granted a visa, or voluntarily left the country, the Migration Act then mandated that he be immediately taken back into detention (as an unlawful non-citizen, which he still was and is).
What does this mean? For AJL20, and for every other poor sucker caught in the surrealist maze of our immigration system, it means going back into detention which the High Court has now narrowly confirmed can continue literally forever without ever constituting a form of punishment.
Confirmed: indefinite detention of asylum seekers is lawful. All hope to the contrary, under the current High Court at least, is gone.
I find it completely impossible not to hold the entire legal profession in contempt.
The three occupations most deleterious to the common weal are economists, lawyers & politicians.
Some may differ as to the ranking.
It is no surprise that the most training (sic!) most commonly found in parliament/s is lawyer.
On local councils it tends to be R/E agents.
Jesus wept, for justice . . . and we got a conservative government? Latest poll shows Morrison increased his vote. Where is the nearest temple; I have a need to destroy some chattels, goods and mindless citizens.
What a sad, snobby country we’ve become.
It would be nice if we just treated all humans humanely. All equal
To complete the social circle, it appears we now have uneducated narrow-minded xenophobic bogans sitting on the High Court. At least that provides a wider field from which to nominate their eventual replacements.
The High Court interprets the law. These laws were made by governments, and for the last decade or so, by a conservative government. The answer is to remove the callous, cruel un-caring mob and vote in a government that is competent and caring.
Yes, I know but it was a split decision, so it was open to the four in favour to listen more closely to the 3 against. That they chose otherwise reflects on them.
And who would that be? The ALP? Lol.
‘Draco’ give me the name of one government minister who does not have a more experienced and more competent and honest opponent on the Labor front bench (and I include Morrison in that request)
Ah, the ‘I was just a obeying orders’ defence, I’m sorry, but if that’s what it comes down to, our judiciary deserve our contempt. It’s as if our last line of defence is giving up on us.
The Liberal Party has corrupted every other institution. Why would the High Court be exempt?
Especially if observing the modus operandi of the GOP regarding the appointment of US Supreme Court judges (and apparently replicated in states) to use the judiciary, politically, to promote white Christian nationalist conservativism, via contentious court cases.
You may consider “…narrow-minded xenophobic bogans sitting on the High Court.” to be uneducated but I doubt that to be true – what you probably (thought [sic!] that you) meant was “…coz I don’t agree” which is an entirely different cup of hemlock.
Not one to be lightly supped.
I’ve never understood the partisan politics of the high court. How can it be that there is more than one interpretation? What it comes down to is that it’s a bad law if more interpretations are possible.
Even more irksome is that the higher they rise and the more wealthy they get, the more they mix with, and have theirs filled by the most elitist, least in touch grifters in our society. No wonder we see the outcomes we do…