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Ex-watchdog hits out at bid to detain freed migrants

December 3, 2023

03 December 2023
Angus Thompson
The Age


 Australia's former watchdog for national security laws has savaged the  Albanese government and the opposition over their plans to put former  immigration detainees back behind bars, accusing them of whipping up fear and  pursuing an unworkable regime.
 
 Grant Donaldson, SC, who finished his statutory role as the Independent  National Security Legislation Monitor last Sunday, said he struggled to  understand how the government could develop a preventative detention scheme  that the courts could impose on people whose prison sentences had long  expired.
 
 "I think it's a disgrace and shames both sides. The government and the  opposition should be ashamed of themselves," said Donaldson, who was the  solicitor-general for Western Australia between 2012 and 2016.
 
 "They have created fear and hysteria in the community when that was  totally unwarranted. The perception that they've created is you've got hoards  of Attila the Hun released from immigration detention, and they're going  around raping and pillaging people in the community."
 
 Last month, the High Court overturned a 20-year precedent by ruling that  holding people in immigration detention indefinitely was unlawful, triggering  the release of 145 detainees and prompting the government and Coalition to  rush through laws requiring ankle bracelet monitors and strict curfews.
 
 Last week, the High Court published its reasons for the landmark ruling,  which left the door open for some of the cohort who include people convicted  of murder and child sex offences to be re-detained if they could be  practically deported or if they were considered an unacceptable risk to the  community.
 
 Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil has committed to enacting the  "toughest possible preventative detention regime" before parliament  rises for the Continued Page 10
 
 From Page 1 summer break at the end of this week, as Labor and the Coalition  try to outgun each other with muscular rhetoric on border protection in  response to the ruling.
 
 Labor is still yet to outline how broadly the scheme will apply, but O'Neil  signalled last week that child sex offenders at a minimum were in the  government's sights, noting the court had singled them out as one cohort for  whom preventative detention might be lawful.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson has already indicated the  Coalition will support the laws but will also push for the regime to  "capture as many people as possible", claiming the court's reasons  "endorsed the opposition's plan to deal with these very high-risk  offenders, including sex offenders, murderers, child sex abusers, the whole  lot".
 
 O'Neil declined to comment on Donaldson's remarks. Dutton's office did not  respond directly to his criticisms when approached for comment, and instead  repeated the opposition's call for the government to urgently bring on the  legislation.
 
 In March, the AttorneyGeneral's Department published a report by Donaldson  calling for the abolition of preventative detention powers for terrorists.
 
 "These laws have made us a coarser and harsher society. I doubt that  anyone Former watchdog knows Grant Donaldson whether they have made us  safer," he wrote at the time.
 
 Donaldson said the counterterrorism laws required the subjects of those  restrictions to have convictions, and were applied following lengthy risk  assessments to people currently in prison to
 
 prevent them from being released at the end of their sentence.
 
 He said the government would be asking courts to apply the same scheme to  people whose prison sentences had, in many cases, finished years earlier.
 
 "That can't happen here because none of those processes have been  followed with any of these. Even those who might've been dangerous in the  past, if you've got someone who's been in immigration detention for five  years, you'd have to start that assessment now," he said.
 
 He also said that given most people had been convicted of state offences such  as sexual assault, a national regime would require states to change their  existing preventative detention legislation.
 
 "It is really a catastrophic consequence," he said.
 
 Constitutional expert George Williams, who is among lawyers to have raised  serious doubts about the validity of preventative detention, previously told  The Sunday Age that the government must explain how it planned to redetain  people who did not have convictions in Australia.
 
 One such person is Sirul Azhar Umar, who fled to Australia after executing a  pregnant model and translator in a corruption cover-up but has been released  from immigration detention into the ACT, which doesn't have a preventative  detention regime. He faces the death penalty in Malaysia.
 
 "The states' schemes don't apply to him none of them because he hasn't  committed a criminal offence in Australia," Donaldson said, adding that  he couldn't see a court imposing orders on anyone unless it had overwhelming  evidence of an unacceptable risk of a person committing a crime if not  detained.
 
 "It's a pretty extraordinary thing to keep someone in prison after their  term, but to put someone in prison because of risk they might commit an  offence in the future, that's never happened, and hopefully never will,"  he said.

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