SZRHS v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
[2014] FCA 121
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2014-02-21
Before
Mr J, Farrell J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (17 paragraphs)
Background 6 The claims made by the husband and wife to the Department as well as their application history are summarised below. 7 The husband and wife are Indonesian nationals. Between 1986 and 2002, the husband was employed in the military; from 1998 to 2006 he was a village head; and from 2007 to 2009 he was employed as an advocate/lawyer for Legal Aid. His highest educational qualification is a Master of Laws degree completed in Indonesia between 2004 and 2006. The wife's highest educational qualification is a Bachelor of Education degree which she obtained between 2002 and 2007 and she was employed at a village school in 2007 and 2008. The protection visa application indicated that the husband and wife were married in 1994 and he lived in one location in Java during 1994-1997 and in a different location in Java during 1997-2009. The husband and wife have five children who live in Indonesia and were born there between 1995 and 2006. This is in addition to the two children who were born in Australia, who are included in the visa application. 8 In March 2004 the husband learned that the Regency would be given a tax refund to be divided among 248 villages of which the husband's village was one. With another village head, he approached officers of the Regency administration and learned that the money was being dealt with corruptly. They were offered a bribe. After further investigation they discovered more evidence of corrupt practices by officials in the Regency. A meeting was held at his home with other village heads to discuss what action to take. In early April 2004 a group of them travelled to Jakarta and spoke with the Department of Finance and the Independent Corruption Watch. On 7 April 2004 they were received by the Attorney General's Department in Jakarta and the Attorney General. They were told that this was the first time that anyone had dared to report corruption in that Regency. 9 When he returned to his village, news of these activities had become known and the next day his wife received a threatening phone call telling her to forbid her husband from being involved in revealing the corruption if he wanted to stay alive. The wife says that she received three threatening phone calls in 2004. The husband took his wife and children to his parents' home three kilometres away from where he and his wife lived. 10 In mid April 2004, the husband and his colleagues went to the regional Attorney General's office where he produced a letter from the Director of Investigations at the national Attorney General's office with his preliminary evidence about the corruption. Investigations were then commenced. 11 While the case was being investigated, the husband continually received threats, anonymous calls and intimidation. He requested legal and physical protection but the Attorney General was unable to give him physical protection due to limited personnel. The colleagues who went with him to Jakarta faced similar problems; one of them had a Molotov cocktail thrown at his home. The husband became worried and did not feel free to go to work. Eventually he decided to move his family to his parents-in-law's home, in another place. On one occasion five people with sharp instruments came to the husband's office in a vehicle and shouted rudely to tell him to stop the corruption case. Villagers assisted the husband and the rowdy people ran away after damaging furniture. On another occasion the Regent and his staff came looking for the husband at his office but he was not there because he rarely went to the office any more. 12 He was interviewed on the radio and by a journalist from one of the mass media organisations. 13 In June 2004 the husband was dissatisfied with progress in the case and went with his colleagues to the East Java Attorney General's office; the Attorney General sent a car to collect the husband out of concern for his safety. 14 The Regent and his staff came looking for the husband in the office he used as the village head. The husband was not there because he rarely went to his office anymore. 15 In August 2004 the husband was approached at his home by the head of finance in the Regency. Another village head was with the husband at the time (that village head has since disappeared). The head of finance asked the husband to stop his activities and promised money but the husband refused. Villagers remained outside to be on hand to help should it be necessary. The husband refused an invitation to the Regent's office for fear of his life. 16 In September 2004 the Regent was summoned to the Public Prosecutor's office to answer questions and that afternoon he was detained in prison. The Regent's supporters were angry. The Regent is part of Megawati Sukarnoputri's party, the PDI (Partai Demokasi Indonesia). 17 The husband did not go home and moved around to try to keep safe. His colleague who was also a village head did the same thing. The husband stayed in a number of different locations until the end of his term as village head in early 2006. He monitored developments as one by one the people involved were detained. After that the applicant worked in a legal office. One of the people who said they were from the Regent's family came to his office and was told by the receptionist that the husband no longer worked there. After that time the husband stopped working because he did not feel calm and was always anxious; he joined his wife and they later moved. 18 The wife said that she and her husband did not trust the police. As she was pregnant, they thought it was best for her to leave Indonesia. They considered Malaysia or other countries in Asia but thought them too politically unstable. In July 2007, the wife made an application to go to the United States to study (she says because she had a friend there) but it was rejected. 19 On 2 July 2008, the wife was granted a student visa valid until 20 October 2008 and she arrived in Australia on 15 July 2008; she was then three months pregnant. While his wife was in Australia, the husband moved around and could not work. On 16 April 2009, the husband was granted a student visa as a dependant of his spouse and arrived in Australia on 2 May 2009. 20 On 8 September 2010, the husband left Australia for Indonesia, returning to Australia on 23 October 2010. He went to Indonesia secretly and maintained a low profile while he was there; he went to see if it was safe for the family to return. However, he found that his life and that of his children in Indonesia continued to be at risk of harm. He was advised by family, friends and the village head that it was not safe for him to remain because his enemies continued to make enquiries about him and his whereabouts. Two of the people who had been jailed were about to be released and he feared for his safety because they would harm him if they could locate him. His information was that these people had reactivated the resources of the party network to do so. He had to leave his five children again as he did not have the financial resources required to bring them to Australia. 21 On 8 October 2008, the wife applied for a further student visa which was granted on 13 October 2008, which remained in effect to 1 December 2008. On 26 November 2008 she applied for a third student visa which was granted on 1 December 2008 and remained in effect until 15 March 2011. At that point she became unlawful. On 17 March 2011, the wife applied for a fourth student visa (with her husband as a dependant) and the husband, wife and first child born in Australia were granted bridging visas. Each of these applications was made while the wife was in Australia. 22 On 9 June 2011 the husband and wife lodged protection visa applications and the husband, wife and first child born in Australia were granted bridging visas. The husband's application for a protection visa was supported by a statement of the husband setting out his claims and by a "Report on the Situation of [husband]" by Dr Paul White, a research and policy officer of the Liverpool Migrant Research Centre, dated 12 May 2011. The wife's application was supported by her statement of claims. 23 On 15 August 2011, the fourth student visa application was withdrawn. On 16 August 2011, they were interviewed by the Delegate in relation to their applications for protection visas. 24 The husband explained his delay in applying for a protection visa on the basis that he had no knowledge of Australian immigration law and so he did not know that the option was available to him. His specialty is criminal law and he knew very little about other legal disciplines and nothing about Australian law. His delay was also because he had been looking for the right person to assist; he only recently met Dr Paul White, a political scientist who was capable of completing the necessary research and writing a submission in English on his behalf. He also wanted to locate a legal firm willing to act on his behalf pro bono because he does not have the financial resources to pay for legal representation. As a lawyer, he was aware of the benefit of legal representation. The wife said that she delayed because she was fearful of approaching the Department of Immigration and Citizenship because she had been advised by one of her teachers in Australia not to approach the Department because they might cancel her student visa.