The documents before the Tribunal
22 The documents before the Tribunal included the applicant's request for revocation of the original decision. The applicant's accompanying Personal Circumstances Form gave the following answer to the question Are there any other problems you would face if you have to return to your country of citizenship? If so, describe these:
I was given custody to my sister in Australia in 1998 as I was sexually assaulted by 3 members of the Weymouth Girls Home is New Zealand coming to Australia meant they were not punished or charged for what they did to me going back would reopen these things that I have blocked out for all my life.
(As in original.)
23 In an accompanying handwritten statement dated 15 December 2020, the applicant referred, again, to her sexual assault by three staff members and said that, so that these staff members would not be held accountable:
social welfare N.Z. flew me to australia to custody of my sister … who was 3 yrs older than me so sending me back to N.Z will reopen a lot of terrible things that I have tried to forget …
(As in original.)
24 Another document on which the applicant relies is her Application for Review of Decision filed in the Tribunal (the review application). In the review application, the applicant responded to the question Why do you claim the decision is wrong? as follows:
I need to stay in Australia I am in danger if I go back I have a royal commission hearing in nz soon for the trauma I went through in nz.
25 The applicant submits that this answer should be read as stating that, if she is removed to New Zealand, her removal will "revive the trauma" she previously experienced. We do not agree. When the review application is taken in isolation, the purport of the answer is unclear.
26 However, in our view, the answer must be considered in the context of an email sent to the Department of Home Affairs (the Department) on 20 August 2021 in relation to the delegate's consideration of whether the cancellation decision should be revoked. In that email, the applicant stated that she had been raped by staff members of Weymouth Girls Home and that there was "now a royal commission into charging these men". The email continued:
I'm part of the inquest I feel safe in Australia but if you send me back to New Zealand these men could find me and kill me so I cant testify.
27 Taken with the email, the answer in the review application appears to be a claim of danger in the form of apprehended physical violence against the applicant, should she be removed to New Zealand, by those whose conduct was, or was to be, the subject of the New Zealand Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care (the Royal Commission).
28 For the purposes of the Tribunal hearing, the applicant filed a Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions dated 3 November 2021. This document was prepared by the applicant's then solicitor. Undoubtedly, it was an essential part of the framework of the case which the applicant was then seeking to advance for the Tribunal's consideration. It specifically addressed the extent of the impediments the applicant would suffer if removed to New Zealand:
23. Ms Knight would have the usual impediments in settling into a new country, which would include the need to find a job and emotional and psychological stressors in moving to a new country.
24. However, in this case, the Tribunal should have regard to Ms Knight[']s childhood history and the traumatic experiences of living in that country before moving to Australia as extra factors that would make it more difficult for her to set up a new life, should [s]he be removed to New Zealand.
25. We submit that this consideration weighs in favour of the visa cancellation being revoked.
29 We observe that, while referring to the applicant's childhood history and traumatic experiences, the applicant's Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions did not elaborate on why this history, or her past traumatic experiences, would make it more difficult for her to set up life in New Zealand. The document certainly did not clearly articulate a claim that, if the applicant were to be removed to New Zealand, she would suffer future trauma by reason of her past sexual abuse.
30 In his responsive Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions dated 15 November 2021, the Minister addressed what he understood to be the applicant's concern about being removed to New Zealand - namely, her physical safety as a participant in the Royal Commission:
56. The applicant does not make any explicit non-refoulment claims in the ASFIC. However, the applicant claims to have suffered historical sexual abuse while she was resident at a girl's home in New Zealand as a child. The applicant has made a claim to the New Zealand Ministry of Social development in this regard (G22/100). The applicant states that "[she] feel[s] safe in Australia but if you send me back to New Zealand these men could find me and kill me so I cant testify".
(Emphasis in original.)
31 We observe that the last sentence in this paragraph contains a quotation from the applicant's email sent to the Department on 20 August 2021. The Minister's Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions continued:
57. It is unclear whether the applicant still relies on this statement, and if so, whether she makes any assertions about the engagement of Australia's non-refoulement obligations.
58. For completeness, the Minister submits that the applicant's claim that the perpetrators of her alleged abuse would seek to harm her to prevent her from testifying appears to be no more than speculation. In any event, there is no evidence to suggest that the New Zealand police would be either unwilling or unable to protect the applicant from the perpetrators.
59. Accordingly, this consideration should be given neutral weight by the Tribunal.
32 It seems tolerably clear that, by the time that the Minister came to file his Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions, the Minister was not cognisant of any extant claim by the applicant that, if she were to be removed to New Zealand, she would suffer future trauma by reason of her past sexual abuse.
33 For completeness, we note that the applicant's Tender Bundle dated 22 November 2021, which was prepared for the Tribunal hearing, included a letter from the Royal Commission, also dated 22 November 2021. The letter noted that: (a) the applicant had registered with the Royal Commission in June 2021; (b) the applicant was supported in her engagement with the Royal Commission by a lawyer; (c) the applicant was interviewed to "develop" a witness statement about the abuse she suffered, which the applicant later signed; and (d) the Royal Commission had referred the applicant's allegations of abuse to the New Zealand Police.
34 As part of her evidence to the Tribunal, the applicant relied on a statutory declaration she made on 19 November 2021. This declaration can also be taken as framing the case that the applicant was then seeking to advance. It was made after the Minister's responsive Statement of Facts, Issues and Contentions. It referred to the abuse the applicant suffered in care - specifically, at the hands of a music teacher at Weymouth Girls Home whom, at the time of the abuse, the applicant considered to be her boyfriend. In that part of her declaration, the applicant said:
21. In July 2021, I contacted the Ministry of Social Development and lodged a claim of sexual abuse while in care. The government had established a Royal Commission of Inquiry looking into the abuse of children while in State care.
22. In the last week or so I received an email to inform me that that the man who abused me passed in 2019. My claim would still be processed but criminal charges could not proceed.
35 Later in the declaration, the applicant said:
60. Since the Royal Commission on 4 October 2021, my childhood records were opened, the evidence was there, and I was told that the staff member that abused me was guilty of sexually assaulting me and five other girls. New Zealand Police were instructed to investigate to locate him. I was informed by email that staff member had passed away in 2019. I intend to pursue my claim as I need justice and closure to a very painful part of my life.
36 Nowhere in the declaration did the applicant advance a claim that, if removed to New Zealand, she would experience trauma based on the sexual abuse she suffered as a teenager at Weymouth Girls Home. Indeed, para 60 of the declaration referred to the applicant's pursuit of her claim of sexual abuse as bringing "closure to a very painful part of my life".
37 It seems, therefore, that, by the time of the Tribunal hearing on 25 November 2021, the physical danger, which the applicant had sensed at the time of making her application to revoke the original decision, and at the time of filing the review application in the Tribunal, had dissipated. In the Tribunal, she did not advance a claim to fear harm for that reason, or contend that any concern she had, or previously held, in that regard, was "another reason" why the original decision should be revoked.
38 However, the Tender Bundle which the applicant had prepared for the Tribunal hearing included the support letter provided by a counsellor at the Kirketon Road Centre to which the Tribunal referred at DR [44]: [13] above. The letter, which is dated 28 October 2021, stated that the applicant first attended the Centre in March 2007 and that, since that time, she had regularly accessed support from the "medical and counselling units". Relevantly to the present case, the writer of the letter, Sudhir Dean, said:
Ms Knight has disclosed that when she was a teenager, various staff members of the Weymouth Girls Home in Auckland, where she was resident, took advantage of her sexually. She informed me that the institutional response to the sexual abuse was deported from New Zealand into the care of a relative in Australia, before those staff members could be held to account for their actions. She has told me that for her to return to New Zealand would be to revisit the scene of her sexual abuse and hence would be acutely traumatic. I concur with her insight into all of these matters.
39 He also noted:
Ms Knight is concerned that deportation to New Zealand would undo the good work she has been doing to address the issues of her institutional sexual abuse, the lack of appropriate institutional response, and the profound effect these experiences have had on her adult life.
40 At the present hearing, the applicant relied on this letter as "the most clear statement" of the claim which, she said, she made, and which, on her case, the Tribunal had either overlooked or not considered.