Australian High Court overturns law that forced scores of migrants to
wear tracking bracelets
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[November 06, 2024]
By ROD McGUIRK
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australia’s highest court ruled Wednesday
that migrants can’t be forced by law to wear electronic tracking
bracelets or to comply with curfews.
The ruling is a blow to the government, whose lawyers have
unsuccessfully argued that laws imposing curfews and tracking technology
are justified to protect the community.
Five of the seven High Court judges ruled that the tough restrictions
placed on more than 100 migrants, usually because of their criminal
records, were unconstitutional because the conditions amounted to
punishment. The constitution states that punishment must be imposed by
judges, not lawmakers.
The restrictions were part of emergency laws hastily passed in December
in response to another High Court ruling that non-citizens could no
longer be detained indefinitely as an alternative to deportation. That
ruling in the case of a stateless Rohingya man reversed a 28-year-old
High Court precedent that allowed indefinite detention where there were
security concerns.
Wednesday's ruling means the government can no longer electronically
track the more than 200 non-citizens with criminal records who were
released and, for a variety of reasons, couldn’t be deported.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said he would introduce legislation to
Parliament on Thursday that “will allow for an adjusted process for
electronic monitoring devices and curfews to be used.” He did not detail
those adjustments.
“The court’s decision is not the one the government wanted — but it is
one the government has prepared for,” Burke said in a statement.
“The security and safety of the Australian community will always be the
absolute priority for this government,” he added.
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People walk outside the High Court building in Canberra, Australia,
on Nov. 23, 2023. (AP Photo/Rod McGuirk, File)
The latest High Court case was brought by a 36-year-old stateless
man, identified as YBFZ, who was born in Eritrea. His family
initially fled to Ethiopia because they feared persecution in their
homeland as Jehovah’s Witnesses, and they arrived in Australia as
refugees in 2002.
His refugee visa was canceled in 2017 due to convictions including
burglary and recklessly causing injury, part of a criminal record
that extended for more than a decade. He was held in custody until
2023, when the High Court outlawed indefinite detention.
YBFZ’s lawyer, David Manne, described Wednesday’s verdict as a
“major victory” for fundamental freedoms and the rule of law in
Australia.
“This is an important ruling because it underscores the bedrock
principle that for everyone, whether citizen or non-citizen, the
government does not have the power to punish people by stripping
them of their fundamental rights to freedom and dignity,” Manne told
reporters.
Opposition lawmakers described the High Court decision as an
“embarrassing loss” for the government.
“The effect of this decision will be that 215 dangerous non-citizen
offenders including 12 murderers, 66 sex offenders, 97 people
convicted of assault, 15 domestic violence perpetrators and others
will be free in the community without any monitoring or curfews,” an
opposition statement said.
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