Title | Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 |
Database | Bills Digests |
Date | 05-08-2020 |
Source | Bills Digest Service |
Parl No. | 46 |
Author | PETRIE, Claire, (DPS) SPINKS, Harriet |
Citation Id | 7477991 |
Key item | Yes |
Major subject | Drug use and abuse Immigration detention centres Ministerial discretion Mobile devices Refugees Search and seizure Security measures |
Minor subject | Bills Legislative amendments Legislative instruments |
Pages | 25p. |
Volume | no. 002 (2020-21) |
System Id | legislation/billsdgs/7477991 |
ISSN 1328-8091
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BILLS DIGEST NO. 2, 2020â21 5 AUGUST 2020
Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 Claire Petrie Law and Bills Digest Section Harriet Spinks Social Policy Section
Contents
The Bills Digest at a glance .............................................. 3
History of the Bill ............................................................ 4
Purpose of the Bill ........................................................... 4
Background ..................................................................... 4
Mobile phone ban in immigration detention centres ......................................................................... 4
Legal challenge to mobile phone ban ......................... 7
Differences with the first Bill ....................................... 8
Committee consideration ................................................ 9
Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee ................................................ 9
Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills .............................................................................. 9
Policy position of non-government parties/independents...................................................... 9
Position of major interest groups................................... 10
Concerns about prohibition of mobile phones ......... 11 Concerns about increased securitisation of immigration detention .............................................. 12
Concerns about expanded coercive powers ............. 13 Support for the Bill .................................................... 13
Financial implications .................................................... 14
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights.............. 14
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights ... 14 Key issues and provisions .............................................. 15
âProhibited thingsâ and immigration detention facilities ..................................................................... 15
Ministerâs power to determine prohibited things .. 15
Date introduced: 14 May 2020
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Home Affairs
Commencement: On the earlier of Proclamation, or six months after Royal Assent.
Links: The links to the Bill, its Explanatory Memorandum and second reading speech can be found on the Billâs home page, or through the Australian Parliament website.
When Bills have been passed and have received Royal Assent, they become Acts, which can be found at the Federal Register of Legislation website.
All hyperlinks in this Bills Digest are correct as at August 2020.
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Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 2
Immigration detention facilities .............................. 16
Scope of Ministerâs power ...................................... 16
Search and seizure powers ....................................... 17
Existing powers........................................................ 18
Expanding the purposes for which search powers may be used ............................................... 19
Visibility of thing is not relevant ............................ 19
New statutory powers to search immigration detention facilities ................................................... 20
Authorised officersâ assistants .............................. 21
Commentary .......................................................... 21
Dealing with items found during searches and screening procedures .............................................. 21
Seized things .......................................................... 22
Prohibited things ................................................... 22
New power of Minister to direct seizures ............... 23 Commentary .......................................................... 23
Concluding comments ................................................... 24
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The Bills Digest at a glance The Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 (the Bill) will amend the Migration Act 1958 to allow the Minister to determine, via a disallowable legislative instrument, that an item is a âprohibited thingâ in relation to immigration detention facilities and immigration detainees.
The Government has indicated that items that will be prohibited will include things such as mobile phones and SIM cards, internet capable devices, and illegal drugs. While a broad range of items are likely to be prohibited, the Bill appears to be a reaction to an attempt by the Government in 2017 to seize mobile phones from people held in immigration detention centres, which was found by the Federal Court to be invalid.
The Bill will also:
⢠allow authorised officers and officersâ assistants to search, without a warrant, immigration detention facilities operated by or on behalf of the Commonwealth, including with the use of detector dogs
⢠expand search and seizure powers in relation to immigration detainees and
⢠allow the Minister to direct that an officer must exercise his or her seizure powers in certain circumstances.
The Government has pointed to the changing immigration detention population profile in explaining its rationale for the proposed amendments, noting that individuals with significant criminal histories now comprise a large proportion of the detention population. The Government also argues that the availability of mobile phones in immigration detention is enabling criminal behaviour including drug distribution, and facilitating threats between detainees and towards detention centre staff.
The Bill was referred to the Senate Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs for inquiry and report by 5 August 2020. Submissions to the inquiry raised numerous concerns with the Bill. Common themes identified in submissions were: that the measures contained in the Bill are unnecessary and disproportionate in relation to the security risks posed in immigration detention; that the Ministerâs power to prohibit items is unreasonably broad; and, specifically, that prohibiting mobile phones in immigration detention will unreasonably limit detaineesâ rights to privacy and political communication, and contact with family members and legal representatives. Stakeholders also expressed concern about the expansion of coercive powers such as strip searches.
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills raised concerns that the amendments unduly infringe detaineesâ personal rights and liberties because the powers will apply to the entire detention population, not just high-risk detainees. It also raised concerns about: prohibited things being determined by the Minister instead of specified in the Act; broad discretionary powers being provided to the Minister; and the delegation of administrative powers.
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights noted that the Billâs measures were likely to engage, and could limit, a range of rights, including the right to privacy; right to humane treatment in detention; right to protection of the family; right to freedom of expression; childrenâs rights; and the prohibition against torture, cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment.
An earlier Bill with similar policy intent was introduced in September 2017, and passed the House of Representatives in February 2018. However it did not pass the Senate, and lapsed at the end of the 45th Parliament in July 2019.
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History of the Bill The Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017 (the first Bill) was introduced into the House of Representatives on 13 September 2017.1 It passed the third reading in the House of Representatives on 7 February 2018. It was introduced into the Senate on 8 February 2018 but was not debated, and the Bill lapsed at the end of the 45th Parliament on 1 July 2019.
This Bill was introduced into the House of Representatives on 14 May 2020. It is similar in intent and scope to the first Bill. However it is not in equivalent terms to that Bill and there are some notable differences. These are discussed below under âBackgroundâ and âKey issues and provisionsâ.
A Bills Digest was prepared in respect of the first Bill.2 Much of the material in the present Digest has been sourced from that earlier one.
Purpose of the Bill The purpose of the Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 (the Bill) is to amend the Migration Act 1958 to:
⢠allow the Minister to determine, by legislative instrument, that a thing is a âprohibited thingâ in relation to immigration detention facilities and immigration detainees
⢠allow authorised officers and officersâ assistants to search, without a warrant, immigration detention facilities operated by or on behalf of the Commonwealth, including with the use of detector dogs
⢠strengthen search and seizure powers in relation to immigration detainees and
⢠allow the Minister to direct that an officer must exercise his or her seizure powers in relation to certain items.
Background The Bill will amend the Migration Act to allow the Minister to determine, by legislative instrument, that an item is a âprohibited thingâ in relation to immigration detention facilities and detainees, and allow prohibited things to be searched for and seized. The Government has indicated that items that will be prohibited will include things such as mobile phones and SIM cards, internet-capable devices, illegal drugs, and medication taken without a prescription.3
The Bill is broadly similar to the first Bill. However, it includes changes which address concerns raised by the Committees that examined the first Bill. These issues are discussed further in this section below and in the âProvisionsâ section of this Digest.
Mobile phone ban in immigration detention centres While the Bill will allow for a broad range of items to be prohibited, much of the discussion around the Bill centres on the intended prohibition of mobile phones. This is consistent with the policy
1. Parliament of Australia, âMigration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017 homepageâ, Australian Parliament website. 2. C Barker and H Spinks, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017, Bills digest, 53, 2017â18, Parliamentary Library, Canberra, 2017. 3. A Tudge (Acting Minister for Immigration), âSecond reading speech: Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration
Detention Facilities) Bill 2020â, House of Representatives, Debates, 14 May 2020, pp. 3441â3442.
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intent of the first Bill, which was introduced following an attempt by the Government in 2017 to seize mobile phones from people held in immigration detention centres. This was prevented through action in the Federal Court (as discussed further below).
For many years it was Government policy to not permit asylum seekers who had arrived in Australia irregularly by boat (irregular maritime arrivals, or IMAs) to have mobile phones in immigration detention centres. In contrast, other cohorts in immigration detention facilities, such as those who have overstayed their visas or had their visas cancelled on character grounds, had been permitted to have mobile phones. This policy was not legislated, but was articulated in the Departmentâs Procedures Advice Manual.4 The then Department of Immigration and Border Protection (DIBP, now the Department of Home Affairs) advised a Supplementary Budget Estimates hearing in October 2016 that the policy of not permitting IMAs to have mobile phones in detention was not new, and that it was âimplemented to address the risk of IMAs passing on sensitive operational information to contacts outside of the detention environment, particularly during the peak boat arrival periodâ.5
In November 2016 the DIBP announced that it would begin restricting access to mobile phones to all people in immigration detention, with access to be completely phased out by February 2017.6 The measure was described as comprising part of âOperation Safe Centresâ, which was âaimed at stamping out illegal activity across the immigration detention networkâ.7 According to then Australian Border Force (ABF) Commander Detention Operations:
Mobile phones can create a serious risk to the safety of detainees, staff and visitors to immigration detention facilities ⦠Some detainees have used them to organise criminal activities, threaten other detainees, create or escalate disturbances and plan escapes by enlisting outsiders to assist them. 8
The DIBP reiterated this position when questioned about the policy of removing mobile phones from detainees at an Additional Estimates hearing in February 2017 when the then Commissioner of the ABF, Roman Quaedvlieg, stated that âthe use of mobile phones for any number of nefarious activities in our centres is broad and across the networkâ.9 Commissioner Quaedvlieg gave evidence that the decision to ban mobile phones in immigration detention centres had been made by him personally, and was supported by the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection. In offering a rationale for the policy Commissioner Quaedvlieg stated:
What prompted the implementation of that policy was my fundamental concern that we were unable to manage a secure and safe amenity for detainees within our detention network. It is a well-known fact that in custodial settings things like mobile phones are not just contraband and currency but are actually utilised to ferment a whole range of activities, including escapes and the smuggling of contraband into the centres, and, indeed, the maintenance of criminal enterprises from within the centre out in the real
4. Department of Immigration and Border Protection (DIBP), Procedures Advice Manual (PAM3) Detention Services Manual (DSM), Chapter 8 (Safety and Security), December 2017, LEGENDcom database. Until July 2016, the mobile phone ban as articulated in the DSM applied to only IMAs and those in border screening detention. The policy as articulated in the December 2017 version of the DSM applied to all detainees. The current version of the DSM is no longer available on LEGENDcom.
5. Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Answers to Questions on Notice, Immigration and Border Protection Portfolio Supplementary Budget Estimates 2016â17, Question SE16/079. 6. DIBP, New measures to combat illegal activity within immigration detention facilities, media release, 21 November 2016. 7. Ibid.
8. Ibid.
9. Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Official committee Hansard, 27 February 2017, p. 132.
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world. It is not a modern custodial setting where mobile phones are available to the population of our centres. 10
In further information provided on notice following that Committee hearing, the DIBP outlined six case studies of incidents in immigration detention centres in which mobile phones had been used to plan or commit what it described as âillegal activitiesâ. These included: communicating with protesters outside the centres to organise major demonstrations and disturbances; planning and executing escapes; and threatening to commit assault.11
The decision to restrict detaineesâ access to mobile phones was further justified as being necessary in the context of the changing profile of detainees. For many years following the increase in unauthorised maritime arrivals beginning in 2009, the immigration detention population in Australia was made up largely of IMAsâin 2011â12 there were 14,438 IMAs in detention, compared to 2,216 visa overstayers and 480 people whose visas had been cancelled.12 However, with large numbers of IMAs being released from detention on bridging visas, and increasing numbers of people being subject to visa cancellation on character grounds following an expansion of the Ministerâs cancellation powers, the immigration detention population profile has changed significantly.13
When the policy of banning mobile phones was announced by DIBP in November 2016, it stated that IMAs comprised less than a third of the detention population, and there was a much larger cohort of detainees who were the subject of visa cancellation following criminal behaviour.14 As at 31 May 2020 the immigration detention population comprised 1,458 people, of which 505 (34.6 per cent) were IMAs and 675 (46.3 per cent) were section 501 visa cancellations (cancellation on character grounds). The remaining 278 were non-immigration cleared air arrivals, seaport arrivals, visa overstayers, and those whose visa had been cancelled on other grounds.15
This changing immigration detention population profile was highlighted by the Minister in his second reading speech introducing the first Bill, as a reason for requiring the legislative power to ban certain items in immigration detention facilities.16 This same justification has been given by the Minister as a reason for introducing the current Bill:
This government has strengthened section 501 of the Migration Act to better protect the Australian community from non-citizen nationals who commit serious crimes. These changes have allowed the government to cancel the visas of more than 4,600 individuals who have committed criminal offences in Australia.
This action has resulted in a significant increase in the number of detainees with criminal histories in our immigration detention facilities. Today, a large proportion of the detention population are unlawful noncitizens who have criminal histories.
10. Ibid. 11. Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Answers to Question on Notice, Immigration and Border Protection Portfolio, Additional Budget Estimates 2016â17, Question AE17/046. 12. J Phillips and H Spinks, Immigration detention in Australia, Background note, Parliamentary Library, Canberra, 2013, p. 41. 13. The Ministerâs cancellation powers were significantly expanded by the Migration Amendment (Character and General Visa
Cancellation) Act 2014. 14. DIBP, New measures to combat illegal activity within immigration detention facilities, op. cit. 15. Department of Home Affairs (DHA), âImmigration detentionâ, Immigration detention and community statistics summary, DHA
website, 31 May 2020. 16. P Dutton, âSecond reading speech: Migration Legislation Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017â, House of Representatives, Debates, 13 September 2017, pp. 10180â10181.
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Some of these detainees have a history of child sex offences or violent crimes, including murder and domestic violence. Others have come to immigration detention with significant histories of drug-related offences or proven links to criminal organisations, such as outlaw motorcycle gangs and other organised crime groups. Unfortunately, some of these individuals seek to continue criminal activities and associations while in detention centres.
One of the most critical challenges in managing immigration detention is the continuing incursion, distribution and use of illegal drugs and contraband items, and associated criminal activity. Officers of the Australian Border Force (ABF) cannot fully maintain the safety, security and good order of immigration detention facilities, because legislation does not support them to remove illegal or dangerous items from detention facilities.
17
Legal challenge to mobile phone ban When questioned by Senators about the policy of banning mobile phones in immigration detention centres in February 2017, Commissioner Quaedvlieg confirmed that the power to confiscate mobile phones from people in immigration detention was not set out in existing legislation, and that this was something that was being considered by the Government.18 Thus, when the ban on mobile phones in immigration detention was announced in November 2016, such a ban was a matter of policy, not law. The same was true of the earlier policy of not permitting IMAs in immigration detention to have mobile phones.
Following the DIBPâs announcement in November 2016, action was launched in the Federal Court of Australia by lawyers from the National Justice Project, on behalf of around 80 detainees, seeking to prevent the Department from confiscating detaineesâ mobile phones. At first instance, the Court granted a temporary injunction in February 2017, preventing the DIBP from seizing detaineesâ mobile phones.19
Subsequently, in June 2017 the Full Court of the Federal Court heard an appeal against the injunction, which centred not on the reasons for granting the injunction, but on whether the Federal Court had jurisdiction to impose the injunction in the first place. The Full Courtâs decision, handed down on 17 August 2017, confirmed that it did have jurisdiction and the injunction should be upheld.20 Following this decision the Government moved quickly to legislate power to remove mobile phones (and other items) from immigration detainees, with the first Bill being introduced into Parliament less than one month later.
In June 2018, while the first Bill was before the Parliament, the Federal Court ruled that the Migration Act did not provide any power for the Department to implement a blanket ban on mobile phones in immigration detention.21 It also ruled that actions by authorised officers to
17. A Tudge, âSecond reading speech: Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020â, House of Representatives, Debates, 14 May 2020, pp. 3441â3442. 18. Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Official committee Hansard, op. cit., p. 135. 19. ARJ17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 250 FCR 446, [2017] FCA 263 at [1]â[2]. âCourt orders halt
Border Force phone confiscation plansâ, The Sydney Morning Herald, 20 February 2017, p. 5. 20. Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v ARJ17 (2017) 250 FCR 474, [2017] FCAFC 125. A separate interlocutory (temporary) injunction was dissolved by the Federal Circuit Court of Australia, which found that the removal of mobile phones
was authorised by the Migration Act and did not amount to a denial of procedural fairness. See SZSZM v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2017) 321 FLR 162, [2017] FCCA 819. However, this decision had no effect on the injunction imposed by the Federal Court, and was not binding on the Federal Courtâs ultimate decision regarding the legality of the ban. The applicant in SZSZM appealed against the judgment of the Federal Circuit Court. This appeal was heard together with the application in ARJ17 which sought a declaration that the blanket policy of banning mobile phones in immigration detention was invalid. 21. Federal Court of Australia, ARJ17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 257 FCR 1, [2018] FCAFC 98.
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search for and seize mobile phones from detainees in accordance with the proposed ban were invalid.22 This Federal Court ruling, and the fact that the first Bill did not proceed through the Senate, mean that immigration detainees are currently able to keep their mobile phones. The current Bill marks the second occasion on which the Government seeks to legislate the power to prohibit mobile phones (and other items) in immigration detention centresâa power the Federal Court has determined the Migration Act does not currently provide.
Differences with the first Bill The first Bill was strongly opposed by refugee advocates, human rights groups, and legal organisations. Their objections to that Bill centred largely around concerns that: removing mobile phones from refugees and asylum seekers was a breach of their rights and would restrict their access to legal and social support networks; the provisions would contribute to an increased securitisation of immigration detention facilities, making these facilities increasingly prison-like; and that it would give the Minister unreasonably broad powers to prohibit items, particularly as legislative instruments determining items to be prohibited things would not have been disallowable.23
The Australian Greens (the Greens) opposed the first Bill entirely, while the ALP indicated it was not opposed in principle, but had concerns with some of the detail.24 The first Bill passed the House, but without the support of the ALP or the cross bench, it did not progress in the Senate.
The current Bill attempts to achieve the same policy objective as the first Billâthat is, prohibiting, and providing for the search for, and seizure of, certain items in immigration detention facilities. However this Bill differs from the first Bill in some notable ways:
⢠the Ministerâs declaration that certain items are âprohibited itemsâ will be a disallowable instrument, whereas under the first Bill it would not have been disallowable
⢠medications and supplements prescribed or supplied by an authorised health service provider for a detaineeâs use cannot be prohibited things in relation to the detaineeâthe first Bill would have allowed for these items to be prohibited things
⢠the use of detector dogs will only be authorised for searches of immigration detention facilities, not for searches of detainees or people entering an immigration detention facilityâthe first Bill would have allowed detector dogs to be used to search detainees and people entering a detention facility
⢠the powers to search for, and seize, prohibited things will expressly not apply to detainees who are in community detention (that is, they are the subject of a residence determination under section 197AB of the Migration Act). The first Bill did not exclude people in community detention from these powers and
⢠this Bill gives the Minister the power to make a legislative instrument directing an authorised officer (or an authorised officer in a specified class of relevant officers) to seize a thing by exercising one or more specified relevant seizure powers. This power did not feature in the first Bill.
22. Ibid.
23. For detail see C Barker and H Spinks, op. cit. 24. Labor Party Senators, Dissenting report, Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017 [Provisions], The Senate, Canberra, 2017, pp. 27â34; Australian Greens, Dissenting report, Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting
Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017 [Provisions], The Senate, Canberra, 2017, pp. 35â37.
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Most of these differences are designed to address issues raised by the various Committees that inquired into the first Bill.25 However several stakeholders remain opposed to this Bill, arguing that these amendments do not adequately address their concerns about the first Bill. These issues are further addressed below in the âPosition of major interest groupsâ and Key issues and provisionsâ section of this Digest.
Committee consideration
Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee The Bill has been referred to the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 5 August 2020. Details of the inquiry are at the inquiry homepage. Some of the evidence presented to the Committee for this inquiry is included in the âPosition of major interest groupsâ and âKey issues and provisionsâ sections of this Digest.
Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills The Scrutiny of Bills Committee considered the Bill in its report dated 10 June 2020.26 The Committee raised concerns about, and requested further advice on, several aspects of the Bill, notably:
⢠infringements on detaineesâ personal rights and libertiesâin particular the fact that the powers will apply to the entire detention population, not just high-risk detainees, and therefore low-risk detainees may be subject to unnecessary restrictions on their rights and freedoms
⢠significant matters being determined by delegated legislationâin particular the fact that the specific items to be prohibited will be decided by Regulation, rather than set out in primary legislation
⢠broad discretionary powersâspecifically in relation to allowing the Minister to direct that an officer must exercise a seizure power and
⢠delegation of administrative powersâspecifically in relation to the provisions allowing for âauthorised officersâ and âofficerâs assistantsâ to exercise search and seizure powers, while not requiring that these people be government employees. The Committeeâs view is that only government employees with appropriate training should be authorised to exercise coercive powers.27
At the time of writing, the Ministerâs response has not been received by the Committee.28 Some of these issues are addressed further in the âKey issues and provisionsâ section of this Digest.
Policy position of non-government parties/independents The ALP has not formally stated its position on the current Bill. It voted against the first Bill in the House of Representatives.29 It was not opposed to that Bill in principle, rather it was concerned about the detail. Its dissenting report following the inquiry of the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee recommended that the first Bill be passed with certain amendments.30 Some of
25. Tudge, op. cit. 26. Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Scrutiny digest, 7, 2020, The Senate, Canberra, 10 June 2020, pp. 16â21. 27. Ibid. 28. Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, âMinisterial responsesâ, Australian Parliament website. 29. Australia, House of Representatives, âMigration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017â,
Votes and proceedings, HPV 94, 2017â18, 7 February 2018, p. 1332. 30. Labor Party Senators, Dissenting report, Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017 [Provisions], op. cit.
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the ALPâs concerns with the first Bill have been addressed in this Bill (for example, it recommended that detector dogs be used to search facilities, but not detainees) but many have not (for example, it recommended that âprohibited thingâ should be defined in statute, not by legislative instrument, and that search powers should be limited to cases where an officer has a reasonable suspicion that a detainee is in possession of a prohibited thing).
The Greens are opposed to the Bill in its entirety, describing it as âmassive overreachâ and a âtransparent attempt to cut people in immigration detention off from the outside worldâ.31
At the time of writing, none of the minor parties or independents has formally stated a position on the Bill. The first Bill was opposed in the House of Representatives by the independent Andrew Wilkie, and Centre Allianceâs Rebekha Sharkie, both of whom voted against it, while Katterâs Australian Party MP, Bob Katter, voted in favour.32
Position of major interest groups Several key stakeholder groups have identified concerns with the Bill in their submissions to the current Senate inquiry. For example, the Australian Human Rights Commission considers that the Bill may result in âunreasonable limitations on human rightsâ, and has expressed particular concern with three key aspects of the Bill:
⢠that a general prohibition on mobile phones, which is not limited to specific individuals or cohorts, would unreasonably limit a range of human rights
⢠that the Bill does not require an officer to have a reasonable suspicion that a detainee is in possession of a prohibited item before conducting a search and
⢠that strip searches should not be authorised for items that are not unlawful.33
The AHRC also considers that the Ministerâs power to declare items to be prohibited items is unreasonably broad, and could encompass a wide range of items which are not inherently dangerous.34
The Law Council of Australia (LCA) believes that âthe proposed prohibition, search and seizure powers are not necessary or proportionate to achieving the Billâs stated purpose of ensuring the health, safety and security of detainees, staff and visitors to an immigration detention facility.â35 It raised several specific concerns, notably:
⢠the Bill grants an exceptional level of discretion to the Minister regarding the scope and exercise of coercive powers, which may be an inappropriate delegation of power from the Legislature to the Executive
⢠the purpose of immigration detention must be administrative, not punitive, and the provisions in the Bill risk immigration detention facilities becoming too prison-like
31. N McKim, Prohibited items Bill, media release, 14 May 2020. 32. Australia, House of Representatives, Votes and proceedings, 94, 2017â18, op. cit., p. 1332. 33. Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [Submission
no. 26], 11 June 2020, pp. 5â6. 34. Ibid., pp. 15-18. 35. Law Council of Australia (LCA), Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into
Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [Submission no. 64], 29 June 2020, p. 10.
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⢠the prohibition of mobile phones and internet-capable devices will adversely affect the timely and confidential provision of legal information and advice, and the rights of detainees, and
⢠the Bill does not provide sufficient safeguards or oversight of the exercise of expanded search and seizure powers.
These, and many other, submissions to the Senate inquiry into the Bill have highlighted specific concerns with multiple aspects of the Bill. Concerns generally centre around three key thematic issues: the intended prohibition on mobile phones; the âsecuritisationâ of immigration detention; and the increased use of coercive powers.
Concerns about prohibition of mobile phones The policy of removing detaineesâ mobile phones has, for many years, been criticised by refugee advocates, who argue that, for asylum seekers in immigration detention, mobile phones provide access to their families and social networks, which is important for their mental health, as well as ensuring critical access to their legal representatives.36 This was also a common theme amongst submissions to the Senate inquiry into the Bill, with several advocacy groups expressing the view that access to mobile phones is crucial for the mental well-being of detainees, and for them to be able to access legal representation in a timely and confidential manner.37 The AHRC noted that, in the course of its visits to immigration detention facilities, detention centre staff, as well as detainees themselves, had commented on the mental-health benefits of mobile phones.38
The importance of mobile phones in allowing detainees to contact family and friends was highlighted as being of particular importance in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic for two reasons: first, because the pandemic has led to face-to-face visits to detention centres being temporarily suspended, meaning virtual contact is the only form of contact available; and, second, because personal mobile phones reduce the risk of transmission of disease that would be associated with the use of shared phones and computers.39
In addition, some stakeholders argue that prohibiting mobile phones in immigration detention will infringe detaineesâ right to political communication, and impair transparency and accountability. The Andrew and Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at the University of New South Wales (Kaldor Centre) argues that detaineesâ ability to document conditions inside detention centres using mobile phones and to communicate with journalists âfacilitates transparency and promotes accountability, and it should not be erodedâ.40 The Kaldor Centre also believes that the Billâs perceived limiting of detaineesâ implied freedom of political communication would leave it open to constitutional challenge.41
36. For example, see Refugee Action Coalition Sydney, Federal Court injunction granted to stop Immigration seizing mobile phones, media release, 19 February 2017. 37. For example see AHRC, op. cit.; Andrew and Renate Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law (Kaldor Centre), Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in
Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [Submission no. 23], 15 June 2020; Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [Submission no. 40], 11 June 2020. 38. AHRC, op. cit., pp. 8â9. 39. For example see AHRC, op. cit.; Kaldor Centre, op. cit. 40. Kaldor Centre, op. cit., p. 7. 41. Ibid., p. 10.
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The Minister has stated that the Governmentâs intention is not to institute a blanket ban on mobile phones (as it has attempted to do previously), and that the power to prohibit and seize mobile phones will be targeted at certain individuals and cohorts:
While not introducing a blanket ban on mobile phones in detention, we are proposing to allow the minister to direct officers to seize mobile phones from certain categories of people, while providing officers with the discretion to search for and seize mobile phones in other circumstances. So people who are not using their mobile phone for criminal activities or activities that affect the health, safety and security of staff, detainees and the facility will still be able to retain their mobile phones.
42
However, several stakeholders are concerned that, notwithstanding the Ministerâs assertion that the intention is to prohibit and seize items in a targeted fashion, the Bill does not actually limit the Ministerâs power in this regard. As the Human Rights Law Centre notes:
contrary to statements in the Explanatory Memorandum that the amendments will provide for âa targeted, intelligence-led, risk-based approachâ to seizures of items, the proposed powers are designed to allow for blanket bans on items that apply regardless of individual circumstances. 43
Concerns about increased securitisation of immigration detention Several migrant and refugee advocacy groups are concerned that asylum seekers and other ânon-criminalâ detainees will be subject to the same restrictions and prohibitions as âcriminal detaineesâ (those who have had their visas cancelled following a criminal conviction), and view the Bill as a further step towards what they describe as the increased securitisation of immigration detention.
For example, Liberty Victoria argues that âthe amendments proposed by the Bill follow an increasing trend of âsecuritisationâ of immigration detention in recent years ⦠The potential for increasing and normalising the use of searches, including strip searches, is a further move of âsecuritisationââ.44
The LCA goes further in arguing that treating immigration detention centres as though they are prisons, and subjecting detainees to the sorts of rules imposed in the criminal justice system, is not only unjust but also outside the Governmentâs power:
The Law Council wishes to clarify that the purpose of immigration detention is administrative, not punitive. Immigration detention differs from criminal detention in that it is administrative in character and is not triggered by criminal offending or suspicion. It is impermissible for immigration detention to become punitive in character, as this would offend against the constitutional principle that the judicial power of the Commonwealth can only be vested in Chapter III courts.
45
As discussed above, the Minister and the former ABF Commissioner have argued that the Bill is a necessary response to the changing profile of detainees in immigration detention. However, refugee and human rights advocates argue that applying restrictive measures aimed at criminal detainees to non-criminal asylum seekers (and others) is unjust. For example, the Refugee Council of Australia (RCOA) stated:
42. Tudge, op. cit., p. 3442. 43. Human Rights Law Centre, Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [Submission no. 43], 11 June 2020, p. 3.
44. Liberty Victoria, Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [Submission no. 33], 11 June 2020, pp. 3â4.
45. LCA, op. cit., p. 10.
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There is no denying that, following changes to the character cancellation provision, the number of people in detention who had spent time in correctional facilities, and consequently had their visas cancelled, has increased. It is understandable that the management of the risks some members of this group may present might require the implementation of more restrictive detention management policies in relation to them. However, increasingly the enforcement-centred approach to the management of detention facilities is becoming the default practice. That our immigration detention facilities are still accommodating a great number of vulnerable and low risk people is being ignored, and there seems to be deliberate disregard of the fact that all of these people are in administrative detention and are not deprived of liberty because they committed a crime.
46
Concerns about expanded coercive powers Stakeholders have expressed concern that the expanded search powers contained in the Bill, particularly in relation to the use of strip searches, are unnecessary and disproportionate to the security threats posed in the detention environment.
The Human Rights Law Centre argues:
Strip searches are degrading and dehumanising procedures that should only be permitted in exceptional circumstances involving a risk to life or safety. ⦠It is unnecessary and inappropriate to strip search a person for the kind of everyday objects that could be prohibited under the Bill. 47
The AHRC is concerned that the expanded search powers provided for in the Bill will disproportionately limit detaineesâ right to privacy48 and that the Bill does not provide for adequate oversight of the power to perform strip searches.49
The use of strip searches was of particular concern to many stakeholders in the context of vulnerable cohorts, who may have experienced past trauma. For example, the RCOA stated:
Considering the prevalence of historical, pre-existing trauma in the immigration detention population, the fact that many are fleeing persecution and traumatic experiences, and lower rates of trauma-informed training and practices for the detention guards, the practice of strip searching will be of added concern in immigration detention facilities.
50
Support for the Bill While most submissions to the inquiry opposed the Bill, or had concerns about its current form and scope, one key stakeholder submission expressed unqualified support. Serco, the company which is contracted to provide onshore immigration detention services, states that the Bill âwill help achieve the health and safety outcomes Serco aims to provideâ.51 It argues that the provisions of the Bill will benefit the health and safety of detainees, as well as immigration detention staff. In relation to the safety of staff members, it cites cases in which detainees have collected information about, and images of, staff members, and posted them to social media using mobile phones or internet-capable devices, resulting in harassment and intimidation of staff members.
46. Refugee Council of Australia (RCOA), Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into the Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [submission no. 27], June 2020, p. 3.
47. Human Rights Law Centre, op. cit., p. 8. 48. AHRC, op. cit., p. 20. 49. Ibid., p. 27. 50. RCOA, op. cit., p. 9. 51. Serco Asia Pacific, Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into Migration
Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions], [Submission no. 22], 15 June 2020.
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Serco acknowledges that the provisions of the Bill will apply to all detainees, not just those considered high risk, but considers that this is appropriate in the circumstances. It argues that âthis Bill, if enacted, will have a net improved benefit for the health and safety of all detainees and staff.â52
Stakeholder concerns are further explored in the âKey issues and provisionsâ section of this Digest.
Financial implications The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill states that there will be no financial impact.53
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights (Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the Billâs compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The Government considers that the Bill is compatible.54
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights reported on the Bill on 17 June 2020.55 The Committee noted that the measures in the Bill were âdesigned to ensure that the Department of Home Affairs can provide a safe and secure environment for staff, detainees and visitors in an immigration detention facilityâ, and that if they could achieve this objective, the measures would likely promote the right to security of the person.56 However, the Committee noted the Billâs measures were also likely to engage, and could limit, a range of other rights, including the right to privacy; right to humane treatment in detention; right to protection of the family; right to freedom of expression; childrenâs rights; and the prohibition against torture, cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment.
In considering whether the Billâs limitations on these rights are reasonable, necessary and proportionate, the Committee noted:
⢠the impact that banning mobile phones would have on detaineesâ private lives, their ability to be in regular contact with family, and their right to correspond with others without interference
⢠the potential for a blanket ban that applies to all detainees, regardless of the level of risk they may pose
⢠the absence of limitations on the types of things the Minister may prescribe as being prohibited
⢠if mobile phones and other electronic devices were banned, it is not clear whether alternative communication avenues would provide a similar degree of privacy and access to family, friends, legal advisors or other support persons
⢠the expansion of the bases on which strip searches can be conducted raised questions as to whether the expanded powers are consistent with the requirement under international human rights law that strip searches be conducted only when absolutely necessary
52. Ibid., p. 3. 53. Explanatory Memorandum, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020, p. 4. 54. The Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights can be found at pages 35â42 of the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill. 55. Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (PJCHR), Human rights scrutiny report, 7, 2020, 17 June 2020, pp. 69â86. 56. Ibid., p. 76.
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⢠the absence of information regarding oversight of the use of force by authorised officers, and absence of any legislative requirement that officers be trained in the use of force or how to conduct strip searches and
⢠that the Bill would enable authorised officers and their assistants to conduct searches (other than strip searches) without the need for any suspicion that a detainee has a prohibited thing in their possession.
The Committee requested further information from the Minister on a range of matters connected with these points.57 At the time of writing, the Ministerâs response has been received but not yet published by the Committee.58
Key issues and provisions
âProhibited thingsâ and immigration detention facilities Summary
Proposed section 251A of the Migration Act gives the Minister the power to make a legislative instrument determining a thing to be a âprohibited thingâ in relation to a person in detention or in relation to an immigration detention facility. The Minister must be satisfied that either possession of the thing is prohibited by an Australian law, or possession or use of the thing in an immigration detention facility might be a risk to health, safety, security or the order of the facility.
Unlike the corresponding provision in the first Bill, the current Bill:
⢠provides that an instrument made by the Minister will be disallowable and
⢠specifies that a medication or health care supplement cannot be a âprohibited thingâ in relation to a person for whom that medication or supplement has been prescribed.
Ministerâs power to determine prohibited things Item 2 inserts proposed section 251A into the Migration Act. This provides that the Minister may make a legislative instrument determining a thing to be a prohibited thing in relation to a person in detention or in relation to an immigration detention facility, if satisfied that either:
⢠possession of the thing is prohibited by law in a place or places in Australia (proposed paragraph 251A(2)(a)) or
⢠possession or use of the thing in an immigration detention facility might be a risk to the health, safety or security of persons in the facility, or to the order of the facility (proposed paragraph 251A(2)(b)).
An item subject to a determination under proposed paragraph 251A(2)(a) will only be a prohibited thing in relation to a person in detention or in relation to an immigration detention facility if possession of the thing is unlawful under a law of the Commonwealth, or a law of the state or territory in which the person is detained or the facility located.59 The Explanatory Memorandum notes that this provision will allow the Minister to determine controlled drugs as a prohibited thing.60
57. Ibid., pp. 75â76, 81, 85. 58. Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights, âMinisterial responsesâ, Australian Parliament website. 59. Proposed paragraph 251A(1)(a) inserted by item 2 of the Bill. 60. Explanatory Memorandum, pp. 7â8.
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There are two differences between the provision in the current Bill and the version in the first Bill:
⢠the current Bill specifies that a medication or health care supplement cannot be a prohibited thing in relation to a particular person if it has been prescribed or supplied for the personâs individual use by an authorised health service provider61 and
⢠under the current Bill, a determination made by the Minister under proposed section 251A will be subject to Parliamentary disallowance.62 This would allow either the full or partial disallowance of such an instrument.63
Both of these changes were proposed as Government amendments to the first Bill.64
Immigration detention facilities Proposed subsection 251A(5) defines an immigration detention facility as:
⢠a detention centre established under the Migration Act or
⢠another place approved by the Minister in writing under the Actâthis is known as an Alternative Place of Detention.65
This definition means that the power to determine a thing to be a prohibited thing, and the search and seizure powers which may operate in respect of such things, will apply beyond immigration detention centres, to include alternative places of detention such as hospitals and hotels.
As discussed elsewhere in this Digest, the search and seizure powers in respect of prohibited things (unless weapons or escape aids) cannot be used in respect of detainees covered by a residence determination or non-citizens who have not been immigration cleared but are not in detention.66
Scope of Ministerâs power The scope of the Ministerâs power to determine that an item is a prohibited thing because it might cause a risk to the health, safety or security of persons in detention and detention facilities is very broad. A note to proposed paragraph 251A(2)(b) gives examples of things that may be considered to fall into this category, specifically:
⢠mobile phones
⢠SIM cards and
⢠computers and other electronic devices designed to be capable of being connected to the internet.
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee raised concerns that the terms of proposed subsection 251A(2):
are not defined and it is not clear on the face of the primary legislation what might constitute an item that might pose a risk to the âorder of the facilityâ. 67
61. Proposed subsection 251A(3) inserted by item 2 of the Bill. 62. Proposed subsection 251A(4) inserted by item 2 of the Bill. 63. Subsection 42(1) of the Legislation Act 2003 (Cth) provides for the bringing of a notice of motion to disallow âa legislative instrument or a provision of a legislative instrumentâ.
64. Government amendments, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017. 65. Explanatory Memorandum, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020, pp. 3, 10. 66. Proposed subsection 252(4B). 67. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, op. cit., p. 18.
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The Committee noted its general view that significant matters, such as what is prohibited in immigration detention facilities, should be included in primary legislation unless there is a sound justification for the use of delegated legislation. It stated that its scrutiny concerns were âheightened by the potential consequences flowing from declaring an item to be a prohibited itemâ.68 The Committee sought the Ministerâs âmore detailed adviceâ as to why it is necessary and appropriate to allow the Minister to determine prohibited items by legislative instrument, and whether the Bill could be amended to include âadditional high-level guidanceâ regarding when the power may be exercised, including providing a definition for âorder of the facilityâ.69
A number of submissions to the Senate inquiry also raised concerns about the threshold required for the Minister to make a determination under this provision. The Kaldor Centre pointed to the requirement that possession or use of the thing âmightâ be a risk, describing this as a âvery low and poorly defined risk thresholdâ, which could conceivably allow an extremely broad range of things to be determined to be prohibited, including pens, paper, clothes and bedsheets.70 The Human Rights Law Centre similarly argued that the proposed power is sufficiently broad to allow the prohibition of âinnocuous, everyday objects like pens and paper, if the Minister wished to control peaceful demonstrations in detentionâ.71
Liberty Victoria has suggested the amendments confer on the Minister of the day âan unjustifiably broad personal power to prohibit anything he or she personally wished to ban from immigration detention, including items that pose no specific threatâ.72
Search and seizure powers Summary
The Bill expands the purposes for which existing search and seizure powers may be used, to include finding and seizing a prohibited thing. It also introduces a new statutory power to search immigration detention facilities and provides for the use of dogs in searching these facilities. Authorised officers may be assisted by other persons in performing most of their powers and functions under these provisions.
The Bill differs from this aspect of the first Bill in the following ways:
⢠it provides the Minister with the power to make a non-disallowable legislative instrument directing seizure of a thing (proposed subsection 251B(6))73
⢠it limits the use of a dog to searches of immigration detention facilities; the first Bill additionally provided for the use of a dog in conducting screening procedures
⢠it expressly provides that the seizure of a prohibited thing is not authorised in respect of detainees covered by a residence determination or non-citizens who have not been immigration cleared and are not in immigration detention (proposed subsection 252(4B)). The first Bill was silent on this issue and
⢠it removes references to search powers being used in respect of prohibited things âhiddenâ on a person, or in their clothing or property, and expressly states that the visibility or intentional
68. Ibid., pp. 18â19. 69. Ibid., p. 19. 70. Kaldor Centre, op. cit., p. 3. 71. HRLC, op. cit., p. 2. 72. Liberty Victoria, op. cit., p. 4. 73. See footnote 97.
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concealment of a thing is not relevant to the exercise of such powers (proposed subsections 251B(1)â(4)).
Existing powers Division 13 of Part 2 of the Migration Act provides powers of examination, search, detention and identification that are exercisable in particular places or in relation to particular people. Existing sections 252â252G set out the powers of authorised officers primarily in relation to people detained in immigration detention and people entering immigration detention facilities. The powers that may currently be exercised in relation to detainees are:
⢠searching detainees, their clothing and any property under their immediate control (section 252)
⢠conducting screening procedures in relation to detainees (including requiring a detainee to walk through screening equipment, passing hand-held screening equipment over a detainee and passing things in the detaineeâs possession through screening equipment or examining them by x-ray) (section 252AA)
⢠conducting strip searches of detainees (section 252A and 252B) and
⢠retaining certain items found in the possession of detainees in the exercise of the above powers (sections 252 and 252C).
Currently, officers may exercise those powers against detainees for the purposes of finding out if there is hidden on the detainee, in his or her clothing, or in his or her possession a weapon or other thing capable of being used:
⢠to inflict bodily injury or
⢠to help the detainee or another person escape from immigration detention.74
Strip searches are only permitted where an authorised officer suspects on reasonable grounds that such a thing is hidden on a detainee, in his or her clothing or in a thing in his or her possession, and suspects on reasonable grounds that it is necessary to conduct a strip search to recover the thing. A strip search may only take place if ordered by a magistrate (for a detainee aged 10â18 years) or authorised by a senior Department official (for an adult detainee).75
The powers that may currently be exercised in relation to people about to enter a detention centre (under section 252G) are:
⢠requesting that they undergo screening procedures
⢠requesting that a person allow an authorised officer to inspect things in the personâs possession, remove some or all of his or her outer clothing, remove items from his or her pockets and/or open things or remove their contents for inspection (if an authorised officer suspects on reasonable grounds that the person about to enter has in his or possession a thing that might endanger the safety of detainees, staff or other persons in the facility or disrupt the order or security arrangements in place) and
74. Migration Act, paragraph 252(2)(a) and subsections 252AA(1), 252A(1). Section 252 applies to searches of detainees and also non-citizens who have not been immigration cleared. It also allows for searches to be conducted for the purpose of finding out whether there is hidden on a person or his or her clothing or property a document or other thing that is, or may be, evidence for grounds for cancelling a personâs visa.
75. Migration Act, subsection 252A(3). Strip searches of detainees under the age of ten are prohibited under section 252B, which provides rules and safeguards for the conduct of strip searches.
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⢠requesting that a person leave certain items in a specified place while the person is in the facility.
Under subsection 252G(7) of the Migration Act a person who does not comply with a request made under section 252G may be refused entry.
Expanding the purposes for which search powers may be used The Bill will amend sections 252â252G to expand the purposes for which the search and screening powers outlined above may be usedâunder the changes, the powers may also be exercised in order to find prohibited things in the possession of detainees or people entering immigration detention facilities.76
A prohibited thing found in the exercise of those powers will be dealt with differently depending on whether it is prohibited because possession of the thing is unlawful, or because it could pose a risk in the immigration detention environment (see further below).
Visibility of thing is not relevant Proposed subsections 251B(1) and (2) clarify that a search power may be exercised or a screening procedure conducted for a thing, whether or not the thing is visible to the authorised officer beforehand, and whether or not the thing has been intentionally concealed. In amending the existing search powers, the Bill also removes references to a thing being âhiddenâ on a detainee (or in their clothing or property).
These changes were not in the first Bill, and appear intended to address certain findings of the Full Court of the Federal Court in ARJ17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection.77 As part of its finding that the Departmentâs policy to impose a blanket ban on mobile phones and SIM cards in immigration detention centres was invalid, the Court found that the Department could not rely on the existing search and seizure powers under the Migration Act to authorise the policy. Although the Department argued that the ânatural and ordinary meaning of section 252â authorised the removal of phones and SIM cards pursuant to the blanket policy, the Court found that this was not the case.
In separate judgements, Justices Rares and Flick pointed to the language of subsection 252(2), which authorises a search âto find out whether there is hidden on the personâ a weapon or thing capable of being used to inflict bodily injury or help the person to escape from immigration detention. Justice Rares held that the reference to âhidden on the personâ provided an important qualification of the purpose for which the search power could be exercised:
The fact that the purpose is to âfind outâ if there is intentional concealment supplies the statutory justification for the search being without warrant. The purpose that s 252(2) prescribes is not merely to search for a weapon, document or other thing; rather, it is to find out if the detainee has hidden (i.e. intentionally concealed) a weapon, document or other thing.
The policy and implementation plan seek to avail of the power to search for the former, not the latter purpose. That is not a use of the power in good faith. 78 (Emphasis in original)
76. Item 4 repeals and replaces subsection 252(1); item 8 repeals and replaces subsection 252AA(1); item 11 repeals and replaces subsection 252A(1); item 14 amends paragraph 252A(3)(a); and item 31 repeals and replaces subsection 252G(3). 77. Explanatory Memorandum, p. 3. 78. ARJ17 v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2018) 257 FCR 1, [2018] FCAFC 98, Rares J at paragraphs 80â81. Also
see Flick J at paragraph 106.
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The Court held the meaning of the terms âhiddenâ and âfoundâ could not be expanded to permit the retention of an item under section 252 which was already in plain sightâsuch as a mobile phone placed on top of a detaineeâs books or clothes.79
The amendments in the Bill to remove references to the exercise of search powers in respect of things which are âhiddenâ, and the express provision in proposed section 251B that search and screening powers may be exercised in relation to items which are already visible, remove constraints on the use of these powers which the Federal Court had identified.
New statutory powers to search immigration detention facilities While Division 13 of Part 2 of the Migration Act provides statutory powers to search people, it does not extend to searches of places. The Explanatory Memorandum to the current Bill states:
Currently, there are limited bases upon which searches of areas within an immigration detention facility for items that may pose a risk to the safety and security of detainees and other persons can be done. 80
Item 19 inserts proposed section 252BA into the Migration Act to provide statutory authorisation for searches of immigration detention facilities which are operated by or on behalf of the Commonwealth. This extends (but is not limited) to accommodation, administrative and common areas, detaineesâ personal effects, detaineesâ rooms, medical examination areas and storage areas.81 Searches will be permitted for the same purposes as those of detainees, that is, to find a weapon or escape aid, or a prohibited thing.82 Proposed subsection 252BA(3) provides that an authorised officer may search the facility for a thing whether or not the officer has suspicion there is such a thing at the facility.
An authorised officer must not use more force against a person or property, or subject a person to greater indignity, than is reasonably necessary to conduct a search.83
Proposed subsections 252BA(4)â(6) provide for the use of a dog in conducting searches of immigration detention facilities. If using a dog in conducting a search, the officer must take all reasonable precautions to prevent the dog touching any person and must keep the dog under control. However, if the authorised officer complies with these requirements, the use of the dog will not be unlawful because of the behaviour of the dog, including if the dog touches a person.
This is a narrower provision for the use of dogs in searches than was provided for under the first Bill. Unlike that Bill, this Bill does not permit the use of a dog to search a detainee, though will permit the use of a dog to search a detaineeâs personal effects.84 Nonetheless, some submissions to the Senate inquiry expressed concern about any use of detector dogs in the immigration detention context, noting that the use of detector dogs may cause considerable distress to detainees with past experiences of torture and trauma.85
79. Ibid., paragraphs 77â78, 82. 80. Explanatory Memorandum, p. 22. 81. Proposed subsection 252BA(1) inserted by item 19 of the Bill. 82. Proposed subsection 252BA(2) inserted by item 19 of the Bill. 83. Proposed subsection 252BA(7) inserted by item 19 of the Bill. 84. Proposed paragraph 252BA(1)(d) and proposed subsection 242BA(4), inserted by item 19 of the Bill. For discussion about the
scope of the power to use detector dogs under the first Bill, see: Barker and Spinks, Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017, op. cit., pp. 14â15. 85. See, for example, Public Interest Advocacy Centre, Submission to Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 [Provisions],
[Submission no. 29], 10 June 2020; Law Council of Australia, op. cit., p. 29.
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Authorised officersâ assistants Item 19 inserts proposed section 252BB, which provides that an authorised officer may be assisted by other persons in exercising powers or performing functions or duties in conducting:
⢠a search of an immigration detention facility under proposed section 252BA or
⢠the seizure of a thing under sections 252C, 252CA or 252CB in relation to such a search.
Such assistance must be necessary and reasonable, and an assistant is not permitted to use a dog.86 Beyond these limitations, an authorised officersâ assistant has similar powers to those of the authorised officer under the relevant provisionsâthey may enter the immigration detention facility, and may exercise any of the same powers, and perform any of the same functions and duties as are conferred on the officer in relation to the search and seizure, in accordance with any directions given by the authorised officer.87
Anything done by an assistant under this provision is taken to have been done by the authorised officer.88
Commentary The Scrutiny of Bills Committee raised concerns about the powers conferred on authorised officers and their assistants, reiterating its position that coercive powers should generally only be conferred on government employees with appropriate training, particularly where such powers authorise the use of force (as is the case with proposed subsection 252BA(7)).
The Committee noted that an authorised officer does not need to be a government employee, and pointed to the absence of any legislative guidance as to who may be an authorised officerâs assistant, how they are to be appointed and whether they are to have any particular expertise or training. It requested the Ministerâs advice as to:
⢠who is intended to be authorised as an âauthorised officerâ and âauthorised officerâs assistantâ, and whether these will include non-government employees
⢠why it is necessary to confer coercive powers on assistants and
⢠what training and qualifications will be required of persons conferred with these powers, and why the Bill does not provide legislative guidance on this.89
At the time of writing this Digest, the Ministerâs response had not been received.
Dealing with items found during searches and screening procedures Under the current provisions in the Migration Act, an authorised officer may take possession of and retain certain things found in the course of a search, or strip search, of a detainee, or a screening procedure conducted in relation to a detainee.90 Existing sections 252D and 252E allow things seized during a screening procedure or strip search to be retained beyond an initial 60 days on successful application to a magistrate.
86. Proposed subsection 252BB(1). 87. Proposed subsection 252BB(2). 88. Proposed subsections 252BB(3), (4). 89. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, Scrutiny digest, 7, 2020, op. cit., p. 21. Definitions of authorised officer and officer are contained
in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act. 90. Migration Act, subsection 252(4) and section 252C.
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The Bill amends sections 252 and 252C and inserts proposed section 252CA to make provision for dealing with prohibited things located in the exercise of those powers and certain items located in searches of immigration detention facilities.91 It also inserts proposed subsection 251B(6), allowing the Minister to direct the seizure of a thing, including in relation to a specified class of persons, a particular thing or class of things, or a particular facility or class of facilities.92
Seized things Things, other than prohibited things, found in the course of a search of an immigration detention facility under proposed section 252BA will be dealt with in the same way as things found in the course of searches of detainees under sections 252AA and 252A. This will mean:
⢠a thing that might provide evidence of the commission of an offence against the Migration Act may be seized and must generally be returned if it is decided it will not be used in evidence or after 60 days and
⢠a weapon or escape aid may be seized and is then forfeited or forfeitable to the Commonwealth.93
Prohibited things Prohibited things found during searches and screening procedures may be seized, and will then be dealt with differently depending on the grounds on which they are prohibited.
If a prohibited thing is seized because its possession is unlawful, it will be dealt with in the same way as weapons and other things capable of being used to inflict bodily injury or help a detainee to escape from immigration detention.94
If a prohibited thing is seized on the grounds that its possession in an immigration detention facility might be a risk to the health, safety or security of persons in the facility or the order of the facility, the authorised officer must:
⢠if it appears that the item belongs to a detainee, take all reasonable steps to return the item to the detainee when he or she leaves immigration detention and
⢠if it appears that the item belongs to someone else, take all reasonable steps to return the item to that person.95
However, there are some limitations on the seizure of prohibited things which are not unlawful:
⢠seizure is not authorised if it is from a detainee covered by a residence determination who is residing at the place specified in the determination, or from a non-citizen who has not been immigration cleared and is not in detention96 and
⢠a medication or health care supplement may not be seized in the course of a search of an immigration detention facility if there are reasonable grounds for an authorised officer to consider the medication or supplement is possessed or controlled by a particular detainee, and
91. Items 5, 21â23. 92. Inserted by item 2 of the Bill. 93. Migration Act, section 252C as amended by items 21 and 22. 94. Subsection 252(4) as amended for searches of detainees; section 252C as amended for screening procedures in relation to
detainees, strip searches of detainees and searches of immigration detention facilities; section 252G as amended for screening procedures in relation to persons about to enter immigration detention facilities. 95. Proposed subsections 252(4A); proposed sections 252CA and 252CB, inserted by item 23. 96. Proposed subsection 252(4B).
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Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 23
is not a prohibited thing in relation to the particular detainee (because it is prescribed or supplied for their individual use).97
If, after taking all reasonable steps to return the item, an authorised officer considers on reasonable grounds that the item cannot be returned for certain listed reasons (including that the owner cannot be identified), the item is forfeited to the Commonwealth.98
New power of Minister to direct seizures Proposed subsection 251B(6) gives the Minister the power to make a legislative instrument directing an authorised officer (or an authorised officer in a specified class of relevant officers) to seize a thing by exercising one or more specified relevant seizure powers.99 The direction may require the seizure of a thing in relation to:
⢠a person in a specified class of persons, or all persons, to whom the relevant seizure power relates
⢠a specified thing, a thing in a specified class of things, or all things, to which the relevant seizure power relates
⢠a specified immigration detention facility, an immigration detention facility in a specified class of facilities, or all immigration detention facilities and/or
⢠any circumstances specified in the directions (for example, a particular period during which the direction is to take effect).
Unlike an instrument determining something to be a âprohibited thingâ, a seizure direction by the Minister will not be disallowable.100
Commentary This power was not in the first Bill. The Explanatory Memorandum states that the provision:
⦠would allow the Department to implement, for example, a targeted, intelligence-led, risk-based approach in relation to the seizure of mobile phones, SIM cards and other prohibited things from detainees in facilities specified in a binding Ministerial direction, based on risk assessments and operational security.
101
Some stakeholders, particularly those in the legal sector, noted that these provisions confer quite broad discretionary powers on the Minister, and expressed concern that few limitations are placed on them, nor are they subject to parliamentary oversight through the disallowance process. For example, the LCA believes that there is a âworrying lack of limitations on the exercise of these powersâ, and:
⦠the Minister is being granted an unjustifiably broad discretion to make blanket decisions affecting the lives of persons in immigration detention, without sufficient oversight. It appears possible to make a
97. Proposed subsection 252CA(3). 98. Proposed subsection 252(4D) for searches of detainees; otherwise proposed subsection 252CB(2). 99. Relevant seizure power is defined under proposed subsection 251B(7) as a power to seize anything under the following provisions: paragraph 252(4)(a) or 252(4A)(a) (relating to general powers of personal search and seizure); subsection 252C(1)
(relating to general seizures in the context of screening and strip searches of detainees and searches of facilities); and subsection 252CA(2) (relating to seizure of prohibited things in the context of screening and strip searches of detainees and searches of facilities). 100. The Legislation (Exemptions and Other Matters) Regulation 2015 (Cth) specifies that an instrument that is a direction by a Minister to any person or body is not subject to disallowance (clause 9, item 2 in table). It also specifies that an instrument made under Part 2 of the Migration Act (the Part of the Act into which proposed section 251B is inserted) is not subject to disallowance (clause 10, item 20 in table). 101. Explanatory Memorandum, p. 13.
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Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 24
direction compelling seizure with respect to âall personsâ to whom the relevant seizure power relates, âall thingsâ to which it relates, and âall detention facilitiesâ under âany circumstancesâ. There is no test by which the Minister must be reasonably satisfied of any matters before making such an instrument. This is a power which can be applied in a blanket fashion, and has the effect of overriding the authorised officerâs discretion to exercise the power in a manner which responds to the circumstances.
102
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee queried why the Explanatory Memorandum does not provide a justification for the inclusion of such a âbroad discretionary powerâ, and requested more detailed advice from the Minister as to:
⦠why it is considered necessary and appropriate to provide the minister with broad discretionary powers to require an authorised officer to exercise seizure powers via non-disallowable legislative instrument in circumstances where there is limited guidance on the face of the primary legislation as to when the powers may be exercised.
103
Concluding comments This Bill proposes to amend the Migration Act to strengthen existing search and seizure powers in immigration detention facilities, and to provide for particular items to be prohibited in immigration detention facilities. These measures are justified by the Government as being a necessary response to the changing immigration detention population profile resulting from significantly increased numbers of visa cancellations, leading to detention centres being populated with large numbers of people with criminal histories.
However, the Bill raises several issues which are worthy of consideration. Of key concern is whether the measures contained in the Bill are necessary and proportionate in response to the security threat posed by the cohort of high-risk detainees identified by the Government as the target group for the expanded search and seizure powers. Several stakeholders have argued that it is unnecessary, and unjust, for these restrictive measures to be applied across the entire immigration detention network, to all detainees, including the non-criminal visa cancellation cohort and vulnerable asylum seekers. The Scrutiny of Bills Committee and the PJCHR also questioned the proportionality of the measures in the Bill on that basis. The measures contained in the Bill are viewed by many as further evidence of the trend towards increasing securitisation of the immigration detention system, and there is broad agreement amongst refugee and human rights groups that it is inappropriate for immigration detention centres to be managed as though they are prisons.
More specifically, the proposed Ministerial power to prohibit items has been criticised by multiple stakeholders, as well as the Scrutiny of Bills Committee, as being unreasonably broad. The prohibition power contained in the Bill appears to be a reaction to a Federal Court decision preventing the implementation of a ban on mobile phones in immigration detention centres, and much of the discussion about the Bill has focused on the issue of access to mobile phones. However the effect of this provision will be much broader than simply banning mobile phonesâit will allow the Minister to prohibit almost any item he or she wishes if satisfied that it âmightâ pose a risk in the immigration detention environment.
The Bill also significantly expands existing screening, search and seizure powers in immigration detention facilities. Many stakeholders expressed concern about the expansion of these coercive
102. LCA, op. cit., p. 26. 103. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, Scrutiny digest, 7, 2020, op. cit., p. 20.
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Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2020 25
powers, particularly the use of strip searches for prohibited things other than those that are unlawful. Some stakeholders also raised concerns about who will be permitted to exercise the expanded powers and whether they would have sufficient training and qualifications.
There is general agreement across stakeholder groups and the parliamentary scrutiny committees that the measures contained in the Bill will act to limit the rights of immigration detainees in a broad range of waysâfrom restricting the rights to privacy and access to communications via a prohibition on mobile phones, to potentially impinging on the right to freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment through the use of strip searches. The question the Parliament will therefore need to consider in relation to the Bill is whether it accepts that these rights-limiting measures are necessary, reasonable and proportionate in response to the risks posed in the immigration detention environment.
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