Sections 5AAA and 91W of the Act
8 The Migration Amendment (Protection and other Measures) Act 2015 (Cth) inserted a new s 5AAA into the Act and amended s 91W.
9 Section 5AAA provides as follows:
5AAA Non-citizen's responsibility in relation to protection claims
(1) This section applies in relation to a non-citizen who claims to be a person in respect of whom Australia has protection obligations (however arising).
(2) For the purposes of this Act, it is the responsibility of the non-citizen to specify all particulars of his or her claim to be such a person and to provide sufficient evidence to establish the claim.
(3) The purposes of this Act include:
(a) the purposes of a regulation or other instrument under this Act; and
(b) the purposes of any administrative process that occurs in relation to:
(i) this Act; or
(ii) a regulation or instrument under this Act.
(4) To remove doubt, the Minister does not have any responsibility or obligation to:
(a) specify, or assist in specifying, any particulars of the non-citizen's claim; or
(b) establish, or assist in establishing, the claim.
10 Section 91W provides as follows:
91W Evidence of identity and bogus documents
(1) The Minister or an officer may, either orally or in writing, request an applicant for a protection visa to produce, for inspection by the Minister or the officer, documentary evidence of the applicant's identity, nationality or citizenship.
(2) The Minister must refuse to grant the protection visa to the applicant if:
(a) the applicant has been given a request under subsection (1); and
(b) the applicant refuses or fails to comply with the request, or produces a bogus document in response to the request; and
(c) the applicant does not have a reasonable explanation for refusing or failing to comply with the request, or for producing the bogus document; and
(d) when the request was made, the applicant was given a warning, either orally or in writing, that the Minister cannot grant the protection visa to the applicant if the applicant:
(i) refuses or fails to comply with the request; or
(ii) produces a bogus document in response to the request.
(3) Subsection (2) does not apply if the Minister is satisfied that the applicant:
(a) has a reasonable explanation for refusing or failing to comply with the request or producing the bogus document; and
(b) either:
(i) produces documentary evidence of his or her identity, nationality or citizenship; or
(ii) has taken reasonable steps to produce such evidence.
(4) For the purposes of this section, a person produces a document if the person produces, gives, presents or provides the document or causes the document to be produced, given, presented or provided.
11 The Explanatory Memorandum to the Migration Amendment (Protection and other Measures) Bill 2014 (Cth) stated that those amendments were to:
make clear that it is an asylum seeker's responsibility to specify the particulars of their claim to be a person in respect of whom Australia has protection obligations and to provide sufficient evidence to establish their claim
and to:
create grounds to refuse a protection visa application when an applicant refuses or fails to establish their identity, nationality or citizenship, and does not have a reasonable explanation for doing so, including when an applicant provides bogus documents to establish their identity or either destroys or discards such evidence, or has caused that evidence to be destroyed or discarded.
12 The Explanatory Memorandum continued:
Schedule 1 of the Bill contains amendments which contribute to the integrity and improve the efficiency of the onshore protection status determination process. The measures clarify the responsibility of asylum seekers and encourage complete information to be provided upfront. The measures apply to all asylum seekers regardless of their mode of arrival.
New section 5AAA makes clear that for the purposes of the Migration Act, it is an asylum seeker's responsibility to specify the particulars of their claim to be a person in respect of whom Australia has protection obligations (however arising) and to provide sufficient evidence to establish that claim. …
…
Amended section 91W and new section 91WA relate to the provision of documentary evidence of identity, nationality or citizenship for the purposes of a protection visa application and are integrity measures. Establishing an asylum seeker's identity is a critical factor in determining whether a non-citizen engages Australia's protection obligations. The amendments establish grounds to refuse the grant of a protection visa to a protection visa applicant who:
• refuses or fails to provide evidence of identity, nationality or citizenship when requested to do so;
• provides a bogus document in response to such a request or provides bogus documents for the purposes of their application; or
• destroys or disposes of documentary evidence of identity, nationality, or citizenship, or causes such evidence to be destroyed or disposed of.
The refusal power will not apply if the applicant has a reasonable explanation and either produces documentary evidence of their identity, nationality or citizenship or has taken reasonable steps to provide such evidence. …
13 The Minister's power to grant visas, including protection visas, under the Act is contained in s 65, which interacts with s 91W. Relevantly, s 65(1) provides as follows:
Subject to sections 84 and 86, after considering a valid application for a visa, the Minister:
(a) if satisfied that:
(i) the health criteria for it (if any) have been satisfied; and
(ii) the other criteria for it prescribed by this Act or the regulations have been satisfied; and
(iii) the grant of the visa is not prevented by section 40 (circumstances when granted), 91W (evidence of identity and bogus documents), 91WA (bogus documents and destroying identity documents), 91WB (applications for protection visas by members of same family unit), 500A (refusal or cancellation of temporary safe haven visas), 501 (special power to refuse or cancel) or any other provision of this Act or of any other law of the Commonwealth; and
(iv) any amount of visa application charge payable in relation to the application has been paid;
is to grant the visa; or
(b) if not so satisfied, is to refuse to grant the visa.
14 The purpose of the foregoing provisions was explained by Mortimer and Wigney JJ (Siopis J agreeing) in BGM16 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 252 FCR 97 at [62]-[63]:
62 Essential to regulating the coming into and presence in Australia of non-citizens is to understand who they are, and where they have come from. The role of false documentation in the movement of people around the world is a notorious fact. It is unsurprising the legislature has seen fit to deal with the provision of false or inaccurate documentation in express terms in many places, and in many ways, in the Migration Act as an essential part of securing the objective in s 4(1).
63 More particularly, an individual's identity, nationality and citizenship are critical in the assessment of a protection visa application. This information goes to the fundamentals of the decision-making process, such as the country of nationality against which a person's claims are to be assessed. This information will often go to the core of an applicant's claims, because who a person is and where she or he comes from are integral aspects of why she or he claims to have a well-founded fear of persecution, or to fear significant harm for the purposes of complementary protection. Finally, whether an individual's claims are accepted as credible will often depend on the decision-maker being satisfied of a person's true identity.
15 The following aspects of the foregoing provisions, which were uncontroversial between the parties, can be noted.
16 First, by s 91W(1), the Minister or an officer is empowered to request an applicant for a protection visa to produce, for inspection by the Minister or the officer, documentary evidence of the applicant's identity, nationality or citizenship. It was common ground that it is permissible for the Minister to make a generic request of an applicant seeking production of any documentary evidence of the applicant's identity, nationality or citizenship. That occurred in the present case.
17 Second, s 91W(2) requires the Minister to refuse to grant the protection visa to the applicant if four conditions are satisfied: the applicant has been given a request under subsection (1); the applicant refuses or fails to comply with the request, or produces a bogus document in response to the request; the applicant does not have a reasonable explanation for refusing or failing to comply with the request, or for producing the bogus document; and, when the request was made, the applicant was given a warning that the Minister cannot grant the protection visa to the applicant if the applicant refuses or fails to comply with the request or produces a bogus document in response to the request. It was common ground that the question whether the applicant has a reasonable explanation for refusing or failing to comply with the request is a matter for the Minister to determine. That conclusion follows from the interrelationship between s 65(1) and s 91W(2). By s 65(1), the Minister may only grant a protection visa if the Minister is satisfied that the grant of the visa is not prevented by s 91W. The conclusion is consistent with the approach taken by the Full Court in AIB16 v Minister for Immigration (2017) 254 FCR 457 at [89]-[91] (Tracey, Mortimer and Moshinsky JJ).
18 Third, s 91W(3) stipulates that s 91W(2) will not apply if two conditions are fulfilled. Those conditions are: first, that the Minister is satisfied that the applicant has a reasonable explanation for refusing or failing to comply with the request or producing the bogus document; and second, that the applicant either produces documentary evidence of his or her identity, nationality or citizenship or has taken reasonable steps to produce such evidence. It can be observed that there is a logical discord between ss 91W(2) and (3). If the first condition in s 91W(3)(a) is fulfilled and so the Minister is satisfied that the applicant has a reasonable explanation for refusing or failing to comply with the request or producing the bogus document, the third condition in s 91W(2)(c) will not be fulfilled. It follows that s 91W(2) will be inapplicable, regardless of whether the second condition in s 91W(3)(b) is fulfilled. That logical discord appears to render s 91W(3) otiose.
19 Fourth, the phrase "reasonable explanation" connotes not only that the explanation is rational, but also that the explanation is credible. To illustrate, an applicant may explain that they are unable to produce a document evidencing their identity because the document has been lost or taken from the applicant. That is a rational explanation for the failure to produce the document. However, if there is sufficient reason to doubt the credibility of the explanation, the explanation will not be reasonable. This is the meaning given to the phrase by the Full Court in AIB16, in the context of the production of bogus documents by the applicant, with which we respectfully agree:
91 Without wishing to state the obvious, the provision requires there to be an explanation for the provision of a bogus document: that is, the narrative told must explain, and connect to, the provision of the bogus document. Second, the delegate must be satisfied the explanation is "reasonable". The word reasonable connotes an explanation that is not fanciful, that is believable in the circumstances and which has sufficient rational connection to how and why the bogus document was provided. Reasonable minds between delegates may differ on this: see Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v SZMDS (2010) 240 CLR 611 at [131] per Crennan and Bell JJ.
92 It is also obvious that for an explanation to be reasonable, it must first be accepted as genuine. Not all genuine explanations will be reasonable, but all reasonable explanations will be genuine.
93 We accept the Minister's submissions about the delegate's reasoning. In the appellant's explanation, which he volunteered, there was a common substratum of facts between his claim to fear persecution and his explanation for the provision of a bogus document. In order for the delegate to determine whether he was satisfied the appellant had given a reasonable explanation about the bogus document, it was open to the delegate to examine and assess the appellant's claims to protection. Had the appellant's narrative about what happened to him in Iran been accepted, it is likely the delegate would have found there was a reasonable explanation for the purposes of s 91W. However, if the delegate found the appellant's protection claims not to be credible, it was almost inevitable the appellant's explanation would not be accepted as reasonable. The structure of the delegate's reasoning reflects an approach that was plainly open to him.
20 The foregoing observations of the Full Court in AIB16 have particular application in the present case.