Chapter 4
Key Issues – Schedule 2
4.1
This chapter discusses the key issues raised in submissions and evidence
in respect of Schedule 2.
4.2
Schedule 2 relates to the ability of a small group of individuals:
- who are in the migration zone, and
- who had their application for a protection visa on the grounds of being
a refugee rejected prior to 24 March 2012,
being eligible to apply again for a protection visa, this time
on the grounds of complementary protection.
4.3
The committee notes that it is concurrently conducting a separate
inquiry into the Migration Amendment (Regaining Control Over Australia's
Protection Obligations) Bill 2013. The Migration Amendment (Regaining Control
Over Australia's Protection Obligations) Bill 2013 would remove the
complementary protection provisions from the Migration Act. As a result there
would be no statutory basis for making a claim on complementary protection
grounds. Instead, complementary protection claims would be assessed by the
minster in accordance with his discretionary powers under section 417 of
the Migration Act.
4.4
The committee acknowledges the difficulty many witnesses faced in
separately considering the two pieces of proposed legislation. The committee
notes witnesses concerns such as:
The Law Council is also concerned that the current inquiry is
occurring before the fate of these complementary provisions are known, making
it difficult for the committee to assess the validity of the proposed rationale
for the amendments to schedule 2.[1]
4.5
Nevertheless, this chapter will focus solely on the submissions and
evidence in relation to schedule 2 of the Bill considered in this inquiry.
Key issues identified by submitters and witnesses
4.6
The committee received eight substantive submissions in relation to
Schedule 2. Only the department's submission supported the amendments
contained in Schedule 2.
4.7
Refugee Advice & Casework Service (Aust) Inc. (RACS) submission was
representative of the views of many submitters in relation to Schedule 2:
RACS' position is that asylum seekers who were not previously
assessed against complementary protection ought to have the right to have their
claims assessed now that complementary protection is integrated into the
eligibility for a protection visa.[2]
4.8
Similarly, the Immigration Advice and Rights Centre submitted in
relation to Schedule 2:
The number of cases is realistically a limited class as those
who had their cases finally determined prior to 24 March 2012 never had an
opportunity to have claims raising complementary protection issues assessed in
a more thorough process. Also, it may be that because their complementary
protection claims were not considered to be relevant for the purposes of the
Refugee Convention, that they were not raised at either the primary or review
levels.[3]
4.9
The Law Council of Australia's evidence was consistent with many
submissions received by the committee when it highlighted the following:
The amendments in schedule 2 raise concerns as they have the
effect of precluding a certain cohort of asylum seekers affected by the Federal Court's
decision in SZGIZ from having their protection claims assessed against the
complementary protection criteria now contained in section 36 of the Migration
Act. In other words, this particular group of asylum seekers—some of whom may
have substantiated claims for protection under the convention against torture,
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights or the Convention on
the Rights of the Child—would not be able to apply for a protection visa on
these grounds, because an earlier claim made on different grounds had been
rejected. This would be an unfair result for this cohort of
asylum seekers who, due to the timing of legislative provisions, missed out on
the chance to have their protection claims assessed under the current statutory
process. [4]
4.10
Many submitters also questioned the need for the amendments in Schedule
2 given the small number of individuals who would be able to make new
complementary protection claims following the court's decision in SZGIZ.
For example:
The Law Council also queries why these amendments are
necessary, particularly given that the number of applicants potentially
affected by SZGIZ is relatively small given that the changes were nearly two
years old since the complementary provisions came in. [5]
4.11
However, whilst the department was unable to quantify the likely numbers
that would be subject to the amendments in Schedule 2, the department indicated
it had already received 760 repeat protection visa application since the
decision in SGZIZ.[6]
4.12
Moreover the department submitted it was not simply the case that those
who had unsuccessfully applied for a protection visa on the grounds of being a
refugee applying again for a protection visa on the grounds of complementary
protection. Unsuccessful applicants could make a number of applications for a
protection visa:
....for example a person who previously applied unsuccessfully
in their own right, may now seek to reapply as a member of the family unit of
another person on and vice versa.... [7]
4.13
In evidence before the committee, the department reiterated its view
that the changes proposed in Schedule 2 were simply designed to restore the
legal position that existed prior to the court decision in SZGIZ:
This is again just reinstating what was previously understood
to be the position: that, if you had been refused a protection visa or had a
protection visa cancelled since last entering Australia, you were not able to
apply for another protection visa without the bar being lifted.[8]
4.14
Further, the department clarified that the group of individuals impacted
by Schedule 2 had in fact had their complementary protection claims assessed by
the department:
...we need to consider as well that it is not that those people
did not get any consideration of their complementary protection claims; they
got them considered in a different way. There was a separate process for
consideration of complementary protection that was in place for many years
before the amendments made on 24 March.[9]
4.15
Whilst a number of submitters acknowledged this, the Refugee Council of
Australia's views were consistent with many submissions when it noted that:
in the department's submission they talk about additional
safeguards existing to prevent the forcible return of people who are at risk of
significant harm, on complementary grounds, and the Refugee Council does not
accept that these processes offer an adequate means of assessing complementary
protection claims[10]....
[For example] it is not a compellable or reviewable process, so the minister is
actually not obligated to intervene in those cases.[11]
4.16
In response to concerns such as this, the department outlined the steps
the government would take to ensure that Australia upheld it obligations under
international law:
The way that the government would make sure that our protection
obligations are met is that, in the appropriate cases where, for instance, new
information comes forward that suggests the person is owed protection
obligations, that would be put before the minister for his consideration to
lift the bar to allow another protection visa application to be made.[12]
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