SZTAL
22 Judge Driver's decision in SZTAL, which is the subject of an appeal to the Full Court and in which judgment has been reserved, can have no application to the appellant's case. Whatever the outcomes of the appeal it is distinguishable on the facts from this case. It involved the appellant's exposure to Sri Lankan prison conditions. Although the present appellant made claims about the harm he would come to upon his return, the Tribunal expressly rejected the claim that he would be imprisoned but accepted as a possibility that he might be detained briefly and then released. The Tribunal found that, at most, he would suffer "some possible harassment". The conclusion of the Tribunal at [73] was that there would be no period of imprisonment and only some harassment. Accordingly, any question of whether the harm was intentionally inflicted was not relevant. The Tribunal addressed the relevant definitions in s 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) of "cruel or inhuman treatment" and "degrading treatment or punishment" which relevantly require more than just intentional infliction of harm; the Tribunal found that the harm in his case was not, relevantly, sufficiently serious, significant, severe or extreme. No error has been established.
23 The Minister quite properly raised a possible further issue concerning whether the Tribunal may have breached s 425 of the Migration Act. The matter arises in the follow way.
24 In considering the question of what will happen to the appellant as an illegal returnee to Sri Lanka, the Tribunal found as a fact that: "if he was taken before a magistrate, I am satisfied he would be immediately given bail". In doing so, the Tribunal referred in the decision to country information which stated that returnees have been granted bail with the requirement that a family member act as guarantor. The Tribunal's finding is at [71] and there is a similar finding noting the release on personal recognisance at [51].
25 Although not relied on by the appellant, this raises an arguable claim that the Tribunal made an error of the sort identified by Griffiths J in Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZTQS [2015] FCA 1069 ("SZTQS"). The decision in SZTQS has now been the subject of consideration by the Full Court of this Court in SZTAP v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2015] FCAFC 175 ("SZTAP") which concluded that SZTQS does not stand for the high level proposition that in every case a family member being required to provide surety involves a breach of s 425 of the Act (at [76]) and that SZTQS was merely an example, specific to its facts, of the Tribunal's review jurisdiction; the decision is necessarily fact specific (at [77]).
26 The facts of this case are distinguishable from those in SZTQS. In the present case the matter of bail was not an issue, either generally or in particular, as to the need for a family member to be a guarantor. There was no suggestion that the family member would be required to actually pay money before bail was granted. In SZTQS there was evidence that on a prior occasion the appellant's mother had paid bail money for his release.
27 As in SZTAP at [79], on the facts of this case, I do not accept that it was critical to the Tribunal's finding that the appellant could apply for bail and that bail was routinely given, that a family member was required to provide surety and that therefore it was plainly an issue for the Tribunal that the appellant's family would be able to provide surety for him as an determinative factor in the mind of the Tribunal.
28 Moreover, as the plurality said at [80] in SZTAP, in the Federal Circuit Court, it appeared to have been assumed that providing surety involved the payment of money. That is not generally the case, unless the bailed person breaches the conditions of bail, and it is not the case here.
29 In any event, were it necessary, the information relied upon by the Tribunal as to the granting of bail was country information which, by reason of s 424A(3)(a) of the Migration Act, is not required to be brought to the attention of the appellant.