AEM20 v Minister for Home Affairs
[2020] FCA 623
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2020-05-12
Before
Katzmann J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (12 paragraphs)
Introduction 1 Subsection 501(1) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) confers a discretion on the Minister to refuse to grant a visa to a person if the person does not satisfy the Minister that he or she passes the character test set out in subs 501(6). 2 This case is concerned with a decision made by the Minister personally to refuse to grant a Safe Haven Enterprise (Class XE) visa (SHEV) on this basis. According to his Statement of Reasons, the decision was made under subpara 501(6)(ba)(i) of the Act, which at the time of the decision provided that, for the purposes of s 501, a person does not pass the character test "if … the Minister reasonably suspects that the person has been or is involved in conduct constituting … an offence under one or more of sections 233A to 234A (people smuggling)", regardless of whether the person or another person has been convicted of "an offence constituted by the conduct". The applicant applies under s 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) for constitutional writs to quash the Minister's decision and to prevent his officers, employees and agents from giving effect to it. The applicant challenges the legality of the Minister's decision on a number of grounds. For the reasons that follow, the challenge is well-made and the orders he seeks should be made.
Background 3 The applicant is a 39 year-old Afghan citizen of Hazara ethnicity who has lived in Australia for nearly a decade. He is currently in immigration detention, although he lived in the community, under a bridging visa, from 2012 until the Minister made the decision under review in November 2019. 4 The applicant fled Afghanistan in 2009. He arrived in Australia by boat from Indonesia on 19 August 2010 without a visa. In a Statement of Claims dated 10 December 2010, submitted with a request for a Refugee Status Assessment, he stated that he feared persecution in Afghanistan because of his ethnicity and religion and because he had been identified by the Taliban as a Hazara who had assisted US forces in Afghanistan XX XXXXXXX XXXXX XXXXXXXXX XX XX XXXXXXXXXXX XXX XXXXX XXXXXXXX. He claimed to be a specific target of the Taliban. He explained that the Taliban knew of his work with the US forces and had threatened to kill him. The applicant also described his attempts to reach Australia, including assistance he provided to a people smuggler in order to secure his passage, a subject to which I will return shortly. 5 The application for a SHEV was lodged on 13 October 2015, presumably after permission to do so was granted under s 46A(2) of the Migration Act. It was supported by a Statement of Claims. In a submission by the Refugee Advice and Casework Service (RACS) in support of the application, the following reasons for the applicant's fears were given: imputed political opinion as a supporter of the international community and international military forces and an opponent of the Taliban and other insurgent groups; imputed religion as an apostate because he does not practise Islam, and has lived in Australia for several years, and has a long history of working for the international forces and international organisations; membership of a particular social group, namely people who are perceived as being associated with, or supportive of the international forces, the international community and western countries; ethnicity as an Hazara; and imputed religion as a Shia because of his Hazara ethnicity. 6 The SHEV is a class of temporary protection visa. Its purpose, according to s 35A(3B) of the Act, is twofold: "to provide protection and to encourage enterprise through earning and learning while strengthening regional Australia". The primary criteria for the grant of a SHEV are the same as those which apply to other protection visas. 7 On 12 December 2012, well before the applicant was invited to apply for a SHEV, the Australian Federal Police wrote to the Minister's Department stating that it had "concerns that [he] was involved in people smuggling and [was] applying for protection in order to obtain further benefit from illegal activities". The AFP added that it was also "possible" he was providing the Department with false information "in order to obtain benefit by deception". The author of the letter, whose name was redacted, stated that the applicant was no longer the subject of an AFP investigation and had refused to be interviewed in relation to the allegation. The evidence, I interpolate, indicates that the applicant's refusal to be interviewed was based on legal advice. The author of the AFP's letter noted that the applicant had disclosed to a Serco officer that he had assisted people smugglers in Indonesia by arranging accommodation for passengers and had collected money from them. The letter referred to statements taken from six "passenger witnesses" who, it stated, had identified him from a photo board. Four allegedly stated that they had paid him various amounts of money to travel to Australia. One said that the applicant took him to a house but insisted he had never paid him any money. Another said that the man he identified as the applicant "told us that he was the smuggler who had arranged our trip from Indonesia to Australia and that we had to pay him". 8 In his Statement of Claims the applicant disclosed the following matters. He came to Australia via the UAE, Malaysia and Indonesia. While in Indonesia he paid a people smuggler $3,500 but the trip was aborted after six or seven hours. He then found a second smuggler to whom he also paid money but received nothing in exchange. He later spoke to a third smuggler, a man to whom he was distantly related by marriage. Having regard to his then parlous financial state and the danger facing him if he were to return to Afghanistan, he felt he had no option but to agree to a proposal made by this man to organise "some housing for another group" in exchange for which the applicant would pay him all the money he had with him so that he could join the proposed trip. The applicant organised accommodation for about 90 people. About six weeks later, he travelled with a group to Surabaya where he and the other members of the group were arrested and he was taken to a detention centre in Bogur. In Bogur, he was accused by the police of assisting the people smugglers. He told the police that all he had done was find housing for some of the groups in order to fund his trip. They told him this was a form of assisting the smugglers and called the AFP, who provided him with assistance. He was acquitted by the Indonesian courts of any wrongdoing and released from detention. After he was released, he contacted his family, asking them to sell their house in order to raise the money for his trip to Australia. He later paid an "Arabian smuggler" $4,500 but lost that money too after the boat broke twice at sea and had to return to Jakarta. On return to Jakarta, the applicant found yet another smuggler to whom he paid $3,000 and finally made it to Australia. 9 The SHEV application was considered by an officer in the Minister's Department (the reviewing officer) who reviewed documents and also interviewed the applicant. After the interview, additional documents were forwarded to the Department by RACS regarding "issues of concern that were raised at the interview". After considering all the material, the reviewing officer was satisfied that the applicant had met the primary criteria for a protection visa. In his decision record, published on 13 February 2018, the officer described the applicant's testimony on all aspects of his claims as "detailed, spontaneous, and fully consistent with what he [had] previously provided to the department" and found him to be "a credible and honest witness". The reviewing officer's opinion was apparently consistent with the opinion formed by the officer who undertook the initial Refugee Status Assessment. 10 According to the reviewing officer, in his interview "the applicant provided forthright and detailed information about his involvement" in a "people smuggling venture", which was also "voluntarily disclosed during the Refugee Status Assessment process". 11 The reviewing officer was satisfied that the applicant was a genuine refugee. He found that, if the applicant were to return to Afghanistan, "there is a real chance he would suffer serious harm throughout the country, including potential abduction, serious injury, death, or having his ability to subsist severely threatened, on account of his Hazara race, his perceived Shia religion, and for his membership of a particular social group, that is returnees to Afghanistan". 12 Although in his Statement of Claims the applicant said that he had been acquitted in Indonesia of any wrongdoing, apparently he later stated that he was unsure of the outcome. He apparently testified at the SHEV interview that, after the last court date, he had been sentenced to six months' imprisonment and released a week later. On the basis of this evidence and information provided by the Indonesian National Police, the reviewing officer found that the applicant had been convicted in Indonesia of violating Indonesian immigration law by providing support to persons who were in Indonesia illegally. He made the following observations about the applicant's activities in Indonesia: There is no evidence to consider that the applicant was an organiser of a people smuggling venture. By his own admission, and as evidenced by information provided by the INP, the applicant's role in the failed people smuggling venture in 2009 was to act as a go-between between the prospective passengers, and the organiser, who was the husband of his relative. Even by the information provided by the INP, at most the applicant had a low-level role in the venture, assisted coordinating accommodation, in arranging pick-ups of passengers from their accommodation, and perhaps assisting in finding vehicles to transport them, although he denies this last point. He has also said he would collect money from the passengers and deliver this to his relative. He stated he did this, and I accept, to help subsidise his own trip to Australia as part of the same venture, which was disrupted by the INP. He did not obtain any particular financial or other benefit apart from that. 13 The reviewing officer found that the statutory exclusions did not apply. In particular, the reviewing officer considered that the applicant's conduct would not fall into the category of "a serious non-political crime", such that he would be excluded from being recognised as a refugee under s 5H(2)(b). He said that it does not appear that the applicant was ever charged or convicted of people smuggling offences in Indonesia, noting that people smuggling offences were not enacted there until 2011. He considered that the "most relevant" Australian offence that might have applied to his conduct in Indonesia was s 233D ("Supporting the offence of people smuggling"), but that in view of the terms of subs 233D (2) it did not apply to him. He wrote: I have considered that the applicant provided assistance to the people smuggler for the venture that the applicant himself was planning to travel on. He was not the organiser of the venture, and did not [receive] any particular financial or other benefit apart from assisted passage. As such, and as per s233D(2) of the Act, I am not satisfied that the applicant committed any offence while in Indonesia, that would equate to an offence described in section 233D of the Act. In coming to this conclusion, I also find it a relevant consideration that the AFP, who have had access to the same information considered above, have chosen not to pursue people smuggling charges in Australia against the applicant. Taking all of the above into consideration, I find that there are not serious reasons for considering that the applicant committed a serious non-political crime before entering Australia. 14 The reviewing officer also found that the applicant was not caught by the exception in para 36(1C)(b), because he had not been convicted in Indonesia of "a particularly serious crime" within the meaning of the Act. 15 Accordingly, the reviewing officer found that the applicant satisfied the criterion for a protection visa set out in para 36(2)(a). 16 On or about 30 August 2018, the applicant received from the Department a "Notice of Intention to Consider Refusal" of the visa under s 501(1) (the August notice). The August notice referred to information in the Department's possession concerning the applicant's admitted involvement in people smuggling activities in Indonesia in or about 2009. It included copies of the heavily redacted witness statements supplied by the AFP. 17 Detailed submissions on the applicant's behalf, signed by Sharara Attai, were lodged with the Department by RACS on 8 October 2018, together with a number of documents including testimonials as to his good character and service to the Australian community. 18 On 20 December 2018, the Department sent a second notice (the December notice) to the applicant informing him that further information had been received which might be taken into account in considering whether to refuse his visa application under s 501(1). The notice enclosed a copy of a recent newspaper article XXXXXXXXXXX XXX XXXXXXXXX XX X XXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX XX X XXXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXXXX XXX XXXXXXXXX XX XXXXXXXX XXXX X XXXXXX XXXXX XXXX XX XXXXXXXXX XXX XXXXXXXXX. The article also reported that the applicant was thought to be seeking permanent residence and indicated the area in which he was then living. 19 In response to this notice, Ms Attai pointed out that the allegations reported in the article were not new but substantially the same as those raised by the Department in its August notice and which RACS had addressed in its response to that notice. She also observed that AFP officers were present at the trial referred to in the article, would have been aware of the evidence, and had already thoroughly investigated the matter but had decided not to pursue charges against the applicant. She repeated a submission made in response to the August notice that the reason the AFP made this decision was "because they could not characterise [the applicant's] conduct as constituting any of the people smuggling offences under the Act". She submitted that anything published in the media should be treated with caution since they often have ulterior motives in reporting stories, such as increasing or maintaining readership, which can lead to "sensationalism, selective reporting, hyperbole and statements drafted in a manner as to evoke outrage". She also referred to the reviewing officer's consideration of the issue, which had been discussed in the response to the August notice. 20 In her response to the December notice, Ms Attai also submitted that the newspaper article gave rise to additional protection claims. She said that, by making it known that the applicant was seeking protection in Australia, there was "an additional risk to [his] safety". She advised that the applicant now fears that, due to the publication of the article, the Taliban may think he has converted to another religion. She submitted that this increases his risk of harm, noting that the Taliban and other extremist groups are "particularly hostile to those who have returned from the West". She further advised that the applicant fears that the article increases the risk of harm to him and his family from people who had paid money to smugglers and who wanted to harm him because they could not get to the smugglers themselves. She said that the applicant had had been threatened by these people in the past and he had instructed RACS that they had already visited his house in Pakistan. She reported that the applicant contends that the article gives them "more reason to want to harm him".