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Malaysia’s Reputation Tarnished in Australian Court
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Malaysia’s Reputation Tarnished in Australian Court | Malaysia’s Reputation Tarnished in Australian Court |
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| Wednesday, 21 September 2011 08:47am | |
©LoyarBurok (Used by permission)by Tommy Thomas
This post, which was originally published in two parts, is reproduced from here (Part 1) and (Part 2). Tommy Thomas examines the Australian High Court decision in the refugee swap case, and wonders how Malaysian courts would have dealt with the issue. A. The Australian Proceedings The recent decision of the highest court in Australia, its High Court, which received tremendous worldwide publicity, substantially damaged Malaysia’s international standing, particularly in the way it treats refugees and asylum-seekers. Malaysia’s refusal to ratify the 1951 Geneva Convention on Refugees (“the Refugee Convention”) cost us dearly in the litigation. It is therefore critical that Malaysia immediately adopts the Refugee Convention so that it meets standards acceptable under public international law. Further, Malaysia must urgently enact laws to protect refugees and asylum-seekers, and give them proper status in our domestic law. This article considers the Australian decision, and how a similar case would have been treated by our Courts under our laws. In Plaintiff M70/2011 and Plaintiff M106/2011 v. Minister for Immigration and the Commonwealth of Australia, the High Court of Austalia, by a 6-1 majority, declared that Malaysia could not qualify as a “specified country” within the meaning of Section 198A of the Migration Act, 1958 of Australia (“the Migration Act”) for the purposes of receiving refugees, and granted an injunction restraining the Defendants from taking the Plaintiffs to Malaysia. The Plaintiffs are citizens of Afghanistan, and arrived by boat at the Australian territory of Christmas Island on 4th August 2011. They had travelled through Pakistan, Dubai, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Both Plaintiffs are Shia Muslims. Both claim to have a well-founded fear of persecution in Afghanistan on grounds that would, if established, make them “refugees” to whom Australia owes protection obligations under the Refugees Convention. Lacking visas, both are “unlawful non-citizens” and “offshore entry persons” with the meaning of the Migration Act. Both were detained upon arrival at Christmas Island. Both Plaintiffs are subject to a new administrative regime, established by the Australian Government, for the transfer to Malaysia of up to 800 asylum seekers irregularly arriving in Australia by sea after 25th July 2011. The regime was set up pursuant to an Arrangement between the governments of Australia and Malaysia entered into on 25th July 2011 (“the Arrangement”). On 7th August 2011, an officer of the Department of Immigration determined that Plaintiff M70 was liable for removal from Australia, and should be taken to Malaysia under the Arrangement. In respect of Plaintiff M106, the only impediment to his removal was the establishment in Malaysia of relevant support services for unaccompanied minors (he being 16 years old). Neither Plaintiff wished to go to Malaysia voluntarily. The critical provision in the Migration Act Section 198A, the material parts of which read:
The Plaintiffs commenced these proceedings on 7th August 2011. On 8th August 2011, a single judge of the High Court (Justice Hayne) made an interlocutory order restraining the Minister from removing the Plaintiffs from Australia pending the disposal by a full court of their case. The case was heard by the full bench of the High Court on 17th August. Judgment was delivered on 31st August 2011. The grounds running to 96 pages are posted at AUSTLII. Among the materials considered by the Minister before he declared that in his judgment Malaysia satisfied the four criteria under Section 193A(3) was an assessment provided by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (“DFAT”). The DFAT Assessment made the following nine salient points:
In these circumstances, it comes as a surprise that the Australian Minister took the position that the conditions enumerated in Section 198A (3) were satisfied. The High Court took a contrary view. A review of the majority judgments will indicate that the High Court decided that Malaysia cannot be a “specified country” within the meaning of Section 198A of the Migration Act, 1958 for the following three principal reasons:
The concluding paragraphs of the judgment of Chief Justice French are instructive:-
Likewise, this paragraph from the Joint Judgment of Justices Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan and Bell:-
Numerous other passages in the majority judgments are also not flattering to Malaysia. There is no doubt that the lack of any recognition or protection under the laws of Malaysia to refugees and asylum-seekers was the fundamental cause for the Australian High Court’s decision. The image of Malaysia as a decent, law abiding member of the world community and of the Commonwealth has received a massive battering by reason of this decision. Our image must be immediately repaired, and that can only occur if concrete legislative and executive measures are quickly taken. Anyway this is the right thing to do. B. Parallel Proceedings in Malaysia What would have happened if the same 2 Plaintiffs (or other refugees in a similar position) had filed legal proceedings in the courts of Malaysia (“the Courts”) seeking a declaration that the Government of Malaysia cannot lawfully let them into Malaysia and an injunction restraining the Government from permitting them to enter Malaysia? There are no legal or factual impediments to the Courts possessing the necessary jurisdiction to determine such a suit. In other words, the courts of both countries have jurisdiction to determine the matter. In some respects, the dispute represents two sides of a coin. It would be apparent to a Malaysian lawyer that the Australian action is founded in that branch of public law previously known as administrative law, but now fashionably described as judicial review. Because the Australian Constitution is not supreme, no constitutional issues were discussed in the judgment of the High Court. If this dispute had been filed in our Courts, on the other hand, additional over-riding claims could have relied upon by the Plaintiffs, namely, that their “life” and “personal liberty” would be violated in breach of those fundamental liberties enshrined in Article 5(1) of our Federal Constitution or not being treated equally under Article 8(1). Thus, they would theoretically enjoy constitutional protection in Malaysia. Having regard to actual submissions made in court in recent times by the Attorney-General, on behalf of the Government of Malaysia, in judicial review matters, which submissions have invariably been accepted by our Courts in what are deemed politically sensitive cases similar to our hypothetical case brought by the refugees, the case for the refugees would fail in Malaysia for any one of these technical or procedural reasons: Insofar as substantive law is concerned, we can see that Clause 16 of the Arrangement between the 2 countries reads as follows:
One can expect our Courts to readily accept a submission that this means that the Arrangement creates no legal obligation on the Government of Malaysia; hence, the Government is under no duty to do anything, and cannot be sued on it. Further, it would be successfully argued that the Plaintiffs cannot sue on an Arrangement to which they were not a party to. Finally, no injunction would lie against the Government by reason of Section 29 of the Government Proceedings Act, 1955. If the Plaintiff couched their relief in terms of an Order for Prohibition in a judicial review application, that too would be refused. In other words, the merits of such an action would never have been determined by our Courts. Hence, the ultra vires rule in administrative law, which is the foundation of the Australian High Court’s decision (although described in different language), and the Part II fundamental liberties under our Constitution would never be triggered in the hypothetical Malaysian case. The abject failure of our Courts to stand as the arbiter between the all-powerful State and a meek individual or an uninfluential organization has resulted in its abysmal reputation in the common law world. Whatever internationally reputable judges like Eusoffe Abdoolcader, Suffian and Harun Hashim brought to our Judiciary in the 1970’s and 1980’s, altogether vanished after the judicial crisis of 1988. By contrast, the instant decision of the High Court of Australia is yet another demonstration of its standing as one of the four greatest courts in the Commonwealth, along with the supreme courts of United Kingdom, India and Canada. They have achieved their unparalleled reputation in the common law world because of the consistently high standards of their judges, both in the conclusions they have reached (regardless of the identity or status of the parties in front of them) and the process of their reasoning. When the facts and the law warrant such a conclusion, judges in these courts have not acted in a deferential manner to the executive, and have often found against it. The only true measure of a judge’s greatness is his written judgment. That is how a judge is judged, both contemporaneously and by posterity. Lords Atkin, Reid, Denning and Wilberforce of the United Kingdom, Justices Bora Laskin and Brian Dickson of Canada, Justices Owen Dixon and Anthony Mason of Australia and Justices Gajendragadkar and Patanjali Shastri of India are hailed as giants because of their judgments. Infallible, they were not; perfect, they were not; but they are all well respected and renowned for what they have left behind through their decisions. The Malaysian Bar looks forward to the leadership of incoming Chief Justice Arifin Zakaria to impress upon the judges in the superior courts on the importance of writing sound judgments which will assist the coherent and principled development of our laws, thereby enhancing the reputation of our Courts. Cases like Subramanian Subakaran v PP [2007] 1 CLJ 470 and Tun Naing Oo v PP [2009] 6 CLJ 490 demonstrate that refugees and asylum-seekers can be charged in our Courts for entering and remaining in Malaysia, contrary to Section 6(1)(c) of the Immigration Act, and can be punished by imprisonment and whipping. Hundreds of such prosecutions must take place annually; hardly, any are reported or publicized. They all tell a sad tale. According to international surveys, Malaysia has between 90,000 and 170,000 refugees. They cannot be in a “legal black hole” reminiscent of the hundreds of alleged Taliban foot soldiers held by the Americans at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba so that they are put beyond the rule of law, beyond the protection of law and courts, and absolutely at the mercy of their captors: see the critical expose of the US treatment of detainees in Guantanamo Bay by Lord Steyn, a retired judge of the House of Lords, in a 2003 lecture. Hence refugees suffer the burden of having to comply with our laws by their sheer physical presence here, but do not enjoy the protection of such laws. So, for instance, can a refugee or an asylum-seeker detained unlawfully in Malaysia be entitled to habeas corpus? Surely, the answer must be in the affirmative. But what is totally lacking, and must be immediately addressed by our Executive and Legislature, is the enactment of a statute by Parliament governing their rights:
Because the entire process of re-settlement to a safe and acceptable third country may take years, the refugees and asylum-seekers must be treated fairly and humanely while in Malaysia. It must always be remembered that they are fleeing murder, persecution, disappearance, torture and other terrible injustices in their home countries. Malaysia has a duty under international law and common decency, to house them in a civilized fashion, while they are temporarily on our shores, pending departure to safe havens elsewhere. An important signal has been given by the Australian decision to the people of Kuantan and Pekan who are unhappy with the proposed installation of the Lynas plant in their neighbourhood. They should file proceedings in Australia, if possible, by an action that goes directly to their High Court, as in the refugee case. An argument that any export by Australia of toxin or other dangerous matter that would endanger the environment of another country (Malaysia), and harm its people would contravene the laws of Australia and public international law would probably be accepted by the courts of Australia. At least, there would be confidence by all that such a dispute would be taken seriously by the courts of Australia and dealt with properly and according to the law, regardless of who the litigants are. Let me conclude with an observation on the commendable speed of the proceedings in the High Court of Australia, culminating in the issuance of the grounds of judgement. The matter was filed in its original jurisdiction on 7th August 2011. An interlocutory injunction was granted on 8th August 2011. The hearing took place on 17th August, when judgment was reserved. On 31st August 2011, judgment was delivered. Four separate judgments were released, totaling 96 pages. The three majority judgments were 32 pages, 27 pages and 19 pages long respectively. The dissent was contained in 16 pages. Apart from its length, the reasoning was impeccable (although I have difficulty in understanding the minority judgment of Heydon J), the language polished and the treatment of principles was first rate. I pay tribute to the masterly performance of the judges of the High Court of Australia. A proud day indeed, for the common law world. Set as favourite Share Email This Comments (0)
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