The decision by the Hon Alex Hawke MP, the Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs, to cancel Mr Novak Djokovic’s visa and to deport him has drawn attention to Australia’s dysfunctional visa cancellation and detention regimes and to the troubling use of the Minister’s God-like personal powers.
Liberty Victoria has repeatedly warned about the dangers of such powers.[1]
Background
Mr Djokovic has now been subject to two visa cancellations. The first cancellation, effected at Melbourne Airport in the early hours of the morning on 6 January 2022, occurred before Mr Djokovic was able to contact his lawyers and before the expiry of the period he was initially given by Border Force Officers to respond. The process was plainly unfair. The decision was made on the basis that Mr Djokovic himself presented a medical risk; that “unvaccinated persons create a greater risk of contracting COVID-19 and spreading COVID-19 to others”. Mr Djokovic had the resources to challenge the legality of the decision and did so successfully. The Minister, in conceding the case in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, acknowledged that the decision was unreasonable.
The second cancellation was made by the Minister personally under s 133C of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (‘Migration Act’) on Friday 14 January 2022, after close of business, several days after the Court quashed the first decision. In reaching his decision, the Minister accepted that Mr Djokovic “poses a negligible individual risk of transmitting COVID-19”, but that Mr Djokovic’s presence in Australia “may pose a health risk to the Australian community, in that his presence in Australia may foster anti-vaccination sentiment”, leading to health risks. That reasoning starkly contradicted the first decision.
Today, the Full Federal Court has found the Minister's decision was lawful, which highlights how broad and permissive the Minister's personal powers are, including the lack of an obligation to seek relevant information. Mr Djokovic did not have the opportunity for independent merits review of the decision, and unless he applies to the High Court, the decision will now stand.
The Djokovic decisions highlight Australia’s dysfunctional visa cancellation regime; one that often leads to unlawful decisions and severe and unjust outcomes.
What are the implications?
There have been thousands of visa cancellations since the Migration Act was amended in 2014. The Djokovic case raises serious concerns about Australia’s immigration system for the following reasons, amongst others:
Liberty Victoria calls for fair and just processes and for appropriate oversight of processes and decision-making under the Migration Act. We join the calls by legal experts for an inquiry into Australia’s visa cancellation regime.
Michael Stanton
President, Liberty Victoria
For any further questions, please contact Liberty Victoria at info@libertyvictoria.org.au or on (03) 9670 6422
[1] See, eg, the report of Liberty Victoria’s Rights Advocacy Project: https://www.rightsadvocacyproject.org/playing-god