Detention in Nauru
53 The next aspect of the pleading deals with the second category of documents the plaintiff seeks by further discovery. The plaintiff says he was detained by the Nauru officers (noting that these are pleaded as being agents of the defendants) in Nauru from 29 December 2001 to 3 November 2002.
54 It is pleaded that in response to the request by the officers of the Minister, the Minister directed his servants or agents to cause the asylum seekers on Christmas Island, including the plaintiff, to be removed from Christmas Island and flown to Nauru (the Nauru direction).
55 The plaintiff contends that the Nauru direction to the extent to which it related to the plaintiff was unlawful because at the time the Minister gave it, the plaintiff was entitled to rely upon the same rights under the IGOC Act previously pleaded.
56 It is asserted that the Minister in giving the Nauru direction acted unlawfully or recklessly.
57 On 29 December 2001, in accordance with the Nauru direction the plaintiff against his will was required by the defendants' officers on Christmas Island to board a civilian aircraft which then flew him from Christmas Island to Nauru without medical treatment for his arm injury or psychiatric condition having been sought or obtained.
58 The plaintiff says that on 19 June 2002 and on 8 September 2002 while in detention in Nauru the plaintiff applied to the Minister for a declaration that he was a refugee pursuant to the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 as amended by the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees 1967 (the Convention): s 5(1) and s 36(2) of the Migration Act. This Convention is incorporated into Australian domestic law by s 4 of the Migration Act. A 'refugee' is defined under Art 1A(2) of the Convention as any person who:
owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.
59 In 2002 in Nauru the plaintiff was informed by an Afghan doctor retained by the defendants to provide medical services to the asylum seekers in Nauru, that his brother Hussain had been granted a protection visa as a refugee and was living in Australia. The plaintiff then phoned his brother and spoke to him. On 3 November 2002, the Nauru officers caused the plaintiff to be flown from Nauru to Perth to give evidence at a coronial inquest into the deaths of the two women who had drowned when the Indonesian coastal vessel caught fire and sank. When he arrived in Perth, the plaintiff was detained at the Perth Immigration Detention Centre owned by the Commonwealth and operated by the Minister and/or officers of Australian Correctional Management (the ACM officers) and subsequently in privately owned and operated motels, in each case under 24 hour guard and observation.
60 The plaintiff says while detained in Nauru on about 3 October 2001 he was examined by a visiting Australian medical specialist retained by the defendants who had recommended he obtain medical treatment for his arm injury. Despite that recommendation, no medical treatment was supplied. Prior to his arrival in Perth, no arrangements had been made by the defendants for him to receive medical attention to his injured arm and hand and the plaintiff had not been informed that any such arrangements would be made while he was in Australia. He says that on 5 November 2002, solicitors acting for the plaintiff sought an undertaking from the Minister not to cause the plaintiff to be removed from Australia without giving the plaintiff's solicitors 72 hours notice of the intended removal. On the following day the ACM officers refused a request by the plaintiff for an examination of his arm injury by a Dr P Honey, a Perth consultant orthopaedic surgeon. Two days later the solicitors for the Minister wrote to the plaintiff's solicitors assuring them that the plaintiff would not be returned to Nauru until he had undergone the surgery for his arm injury.
61 Other alleged breaches of obligations owed to the plaintiff are pleaded. They relate primarily to certain events in Perth rather than onboard the Tobruk or at Nauru. Further discovery pertaining to those matters has not been sought.
62 The plaintiff asserts that communications conducted on behalf of the plaintiff were unsuccessful in achieving compliance with lawful obligations owed to the plaintiff and that on 18 December 2002 the Minister determined that notwithstanding that the plaintiff did need to undergo the surgery he would be returned to Nauru on 22 December 2002 and be brought back to Australia for the surgery at a later date if the plaintiff so desired.
63 On 20 December 2002 at about 6.00 pm the plaintiff applied for an injunction restraining the Minister from removing him from Australia. That application was opposed. The plaintiff says that in addition, the Minister refused to agree to an adjournment of the application to the following week and refused to give an undertaking that the plaintiff would not be removed as proposed. Accordingly, French J having adjourned the application to 23 December 2002, granted an interim injunction restraining the removal of the plaintiff prior to the hearing on that date. The plaintiff's application on the following day was dismissed on the basis that the Court did not have jurisdiction to make the orders sought by the plaintiff. On the same day the plaintiff was informed by the Minister's agent that he would be returned to Nauru on 25 December 2002.
64 On 24 December 2002 the plaintiff applied to the High Court of Australia for an injunction restraining the Minister from removing him from Australia. That application was also opposed by the Minister but the High Court granted the injunction restraining removal from Australia until either the 18th birthday of the plaintiff or until his principal application to the High Court had been heard and determined, whichever occurred first.
65 On 29 September 2003 the plaintiff applied to the Refugee Review Tribunal (the Tribunal) for an assessment of his refugee status pursuant to s 198C of the Migration Act. The Tribunal, on 18 December 2003, found he was a refugee within the meaning of Art 1A of the Convention on the grounds of political opinion or imputed political opinion. The defendants released the plaintiff from immigration detention on 25 February 2004 and on 26 February 2004 the Minister granted the plaintiff a three year temporary protection visa.
66 The plaintiff relies on the various pleaded duties owed by the defendants to him throughout this period and complains of breaches of those duties.
67 There is also a claim of misfeasance by the Minister in his office and an assertion that the Minister acted in contumelious disregard of the rights of the plaintiff. The plaintiff asserts that on dates unknown to him but before 11 December 2001, being the date of the First MOU and after 9 December 2002, being the date of the Second MOU, the Minister agreed with others including but not limited to the President of Nauru, the Minister for Defence, the Minister for Foreign Affairs and officers of the defendants to remove the plaintiff and others from Australia with the intention of causing injury and damage to him by depriving him of legal assistance with a view to preventing him from having access to the courts and relevant administrative tribunals of the Commonwealth and the courts of Western Australia and the Northern Territory in order to challenge the lawfulness of his detention on Christmas Island and his proposed removal from Australia and by depriving him of qualified independent assistance to assist him with the preparation of his application for a protection visa.
68 Against the Commonwealth, the relief sought is damages and interest under s 51A of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) and against the Minister, a writ of certiorari quashing the decision of the Minister to declare the Republic of Nauru a country to which non-citizens of Australia could be removed under the provisions of s 198A of the Migration Act, damages including aggravated damages, exemplary damages and interest on damages.
69 At the October 2007 hearing it was also agreed that:
three … matters in issue between the parties in relation to the period when the plaintiff was in Nauru are whether or not the plaintiff was detained while he was in Nauru, and if he was detained, whether he was detained by officers, servants or agents of the first defendant, and if so, whether such detention was lawful pursuant to the law of Nauru. The defendants will provide discovery in relation to those issues.
70 At the hearing in April 2008, I was informed that the defendants would provide four lever arch files in the day or days immediately following the hearing to the plaintiff in response to the discovery that the plaintiff was pressing in connection with this topic.
71 In other words, the plaintiff was anxious to identify the extent of the detention and by whom he was detained. To the extent discovery had been provided by the defendants, it was said that it did not answer those questions which were relevant to the pleaded issues.
72 The plaintiff also contends that in relation to the alleged false imprisonment in Nauru, the defendants deny the plaintiff was detained at all in Nauru and raised an affirmative defence by referring back to allegations pleaded in par 28.2 of the amended defence suggesting that a special purpose visa granted by the Republic of Nauru was supplied. It followed that there was denial of any restrictions on the movement of the plaintiff being imposed by officers, servants or agents of the Commonwealth and also alleged that the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the Nauru Police Force (NPF) were responsible for any such restrictions. As the plaintiff contends, there were several different agencies operating the facilities at Nauru under the MOUs. The plaintiff is anxious to isolate which agencies were responsible for and carried out which duties.
73 To this the plaintiff contends that the validity of special purpose visas granted to a different group of asylum seekers, not including the plaintiff, was considered by the High Court of Australia as the ultimate appellate court for Nauru in Ruhani v Director of Police (No 2) (2005) 222 CLR 580. As the plaintiff observes, the majority in that case held that the issue of the visas in the circumstances was valid. However, the plaintiff observes that the High Court was precluded by Art 2 of the Schedule to the Nauru High Court Appeals Act 1976 (Cth) from considering the constitutional validity of the visas. That Article provides that an appeal will not lie to the High Court of Australia from the Supreme Court of Nauru where the appeal involves the interpretation or effect of the Constitution of Nauru.
74 The plaintiff contends that the Nauru Constitution contains in Pt 2 under the heading 'Protection of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms' a number of provisions protective of those rights to which in terms of the preamble 'every person in Nauru is entitled'. The plaintiff observes that the High Court as presently constituted, acting under the provisions of s 75(v) of the Australian Constitution is not bound by the decision in Ruhani (No 2) 222 CLR 580 which may prove distinguishable on its facts alone and may consider the issue afresh in the light of the provisions of the Nauru Constitution.
75 Accordingly, the plaintiff contends that he is entitled to discovery of documents bearing on the issue of his detention in Nauru which may include those which were before the High Court bearing on the validity of his visa and which is put in issue in their affirmative defence by the defendants in pars 28.2.1 - 28.2.6 of the defence.
76 The defendants also plead that if the restrictions on his movements in Nauru constituted 'detention' the plaintiff was not detained by the officers, servants or agents of the Commonwealth and further that if he was detained in Nauru by the officers, servants or agents of the Commonwealth, any such detention was lawful pursuant to the law of Nauru.
77 Accordingly, the plaintiff argues that in issue between the parties is the fact of the detention of the plaintiff; the lawfulness of any detention; and the identity of those responsible for the detention. He says, therefore, that the nature and extent of the restrictions on freedom of movement of the plaintiff are in issue, such as, the identity of the persons responsible for determination, imposition and enforcement of those restrictions.
78 The plaintiff says that from documents which have already been discovered and are available to the plaintiff, that a number of entities were involved in the care, custody and control of detainees during the time in Nauru. The responsibility for the detention of the asylum seekers, the plaintiff contends, was squarely in issue in the proceedings before the Supreme Court of Victoria in Ali v The Commonwealth [2004] VSC 6 in which case discovery was ordered. The plaintiff says that none of the documents provided to the plaintiff reveals the chain of responsibility in respect of the detention of the plaintiff and other detainees. The defendants, having by their affirmative defences put in issue both the fact of detention and the identity of those responsible, the plaintiff is entitled to discovery of the documents relating to the issue of the detention.