Submissions
13 Counsel for Mr Ayoub submitted that it was necessary for the Minister to give "proper, genuine and realistic consideration" to the issues raised by Mr Ayoub in his responses to the notice including, relevantly, whether or not Lebanon was so dangerous that Mr Ayoub would not be returned there, whether Australia had non-refoulement obligations to Mr Ayoub and, if so, whether any other country would receive him. Counsel submitted that the Minister failed to do so. In support of this submission reference was made to Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZJSS (2010) 243 CLR 164 at [26] and Khan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1987) 14 ALD 291 at 292.
14 It was also submitted by counsel for Mr Ayoub that the Minister was required to give consideration to the prospect that, if Australia could not return Mr Ayoub to Lebanon, then he might be the subject of indefinite detention. Reference was made to NBMZ v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 220 FCR 1 and NBNB v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2014) 220 FCR 44. Each of those cases was brought by one or more applicants for a protection visa which was refused by the Minister on the basis that the applicant did not pass the character test as relevantly defined for the purpose of those cases by s 501(6) of the Act.
15 Counsel for Mr Ayoub relied, in particular, upon the judgment of Buchanan J in NBNB where, referring to the High Court's consideration of Khan, his Honour said at [122]-[123]:
[122] In NBMZ I referred to the judgment in Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZJSS (2010) 243 CLR 164, when a unanimous High Court said, with apparent approval (at [26]):
In Khan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs, Gummow J considered a migration appeal brought in 1987, when such appeals were decided under the AD(JR) Act. His Honour construed an improper exercise of power as including a reference to an exercise of a discretionary power in accordance with a rule or policy, without regard to the merits of a particular case. His Honour found that in considering all relevant material placed before him, the Minister's delegate was required to "give proper, genuine and realistic consideration to the merits of the case and be ready in a proper case to depart from any applicable policy.
(Citations omitted.)
[123] I take this to be an authoritative statement to the effect that it is not permissible to put to one side, or fail to address, the merits of a particular visa application.
His Honour went on to state at [125]-[127]:
[125] … [I]t is necessary in my respectful view for there to be proper attention to the legal and practical merits of an application when any relevant policy considerations are brought to bear.
[126] A central defect in the present case (as in NBMZ) is that the Minister failed to pay regard to some critical legal consequences of his decisions. Those consequences, in my view, may not be ignored or put aside as ones which did not need to be understood and taken into account.
[127] … In my view, it was necessary for the Minister to understand and take into account the legal (and practical) consequences of his decision to refuse a visa to each of the applicants. Those consequences arose from the interaction of ss 189 and 198 of the Act with Art 33 of the Refugees Convention. Those were not matters that the Minister could ignore or treat as irrelevant.
16 The legal (and practical) consequence that the Minister was found to have ignored in both NBNB and NBMZ was that if the applicants (who had already been found to be refugees) were not granted protection visas, then they faced indefinite detention.