Hypocrisy and Human Rights
By Julian Burnside
The Origins of Human Rights
It is not difficult to articulate the core elements of any human rights framework: we should acknowledge as inalienable rights those conditions which are generally regarded as indispensable for a decent human existence.
Human rights do not depend on, or arise from, membership of a particular society.
They arise from the fact of being human.
The distinction is clearer when regard is had to the legal treatment of other creatures.
We acknowledge the existence of other species, and the law protects them to some extent.
But we recognise a difference of kind between human beings on the one hand and the rest of the sentient world.
To give some simple examples, the laws of all civilized nations recognise a qualitative difference between killing a human and killing an animal; they recognise a qualitative difference between stealing property, however valuable, and kidnapping a person.
It is the quality of humanness, then, which carries with it a set of unique considerations; these considerations are ultimately formulated as rights.
The origin of recognisable human rights discourse can be found in the second half of the 18th Century.
Tom Paine published ‘The Rights of Man’ (and was prosecuted for sedition); the American colonies declared their independence from Britain; the French rose up against the aristocracy.
In 1776 the American colonists signed the Declaration of Independence.
Its opening words are as memorable as they are noble:
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
The French Revolution proclaimed the ideals of ‘Liberty, Equality and Fraternity.
However the record of human rights is stained with hypocrisy.
High ideals are voiced and approved, but they are frequently not matched by performance.
The ideals of the French Revolution were not evident in the Terror which settled in blood the accounts of ages.
One hundred years later, Captain Dreyfus was prosecuted for alleged espionage, but the prosecution was a monstrous fraud, driven by the deeply ingrained anti-Semitism in the Army and the Church.
And 100 years after the Declaration of Independence, the US Supreme Court had to interpret the words of the preamble, in a suit brought by Dred Scott.
He was a slave, but he had lived 13 years in a non-slave state.
Relying on English precedents, he sued for a declaration that he was a free citizen of the United States.
The Court held, by a 7:2 majority, that the words “all men are created equal” did not refer to African Americans.
The language of the judgment is shocking to modern ears:
“The question before us is whether (African American slaves) compose a portion of this people, and are constituent members of this sovereignty? We think they are not, and that they are not included, and were not intended to be included, under the word "citizens" in the Constitution, and can therefore claim none of the rights and privileges which that instrument provides for … citizens of the United States.
“On the contrary, they were at that time considered as a subordinate and inferior class of beings who had been subjugated by the dominant race, and, whether emancipated or not, yet remained subject to their authority … They had for more than a century before been regarded as beings of an inferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race either in social or political relations, and so far inferior that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect … (they were) bought and sold, and treated as an ordinary article of merchandise and traffic whenever a profit could be made by it.” (emphasis added)
The 20th Century
In 1945 the allied forces mounted the world’s first prosecution of war criminals.
Europe lay shattered and the world held its breath in horror as the first films of Belsen concentration camp were made public.
In his closing address at the first Nuremberg trial, Robert Jackson, chief prosecutor for the US, said:
“It is common to think of our own time as standing at the apex of civilization, from which the deficiencies of preceding ages may patronizingly be viewed in the light of what is assumed to be "progress".
The reality is that in the long perspective of history the present century will not hold an admirable position, unless its second half is to redeem its first.
"In the aftermath of World War 2, it looked as though the second half of the 20th Century might, indeed, redeem the first.
In 1948, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights set the style for human rights thinking.
Its prefatory words set the tone:
"Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world,
Whereas disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind, and the advent of a world in which human beings shall enjoy freedom of speech and belief and freedom from fear and want has been proclaimed as the highest aspiration of the common people,
Whereas it is essential, if man is not to be compelled to have recourse, as a last resort, to rebellion against tyranny and oppression, that human rights should be protected by the rule of law …"
The Declaration articulated, in high prose, the essential values of a dignified humanity.
Subsequently the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights embodied as binding commitments most of the ideals of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
It makes great promises.
Its signatories – almost every country in the world – promise each other to secure for their citizens the essentials of a decent human existence.
But the rhetoric did not prevent the genocide in Rwanda, the terrible ethnic cleansing in former Yugoslavia.
It was powerless to prevent the stain of Apartheid in South Africa, the widespread disappearances and torture in Chile arranged by General Pinochet or the killing fields of Pol Pot’s Cambodia.
And while the resounding phrases of the Universal Declaration were being crafted and polished, America was making a secret deal with Japanese war criminals.
These men, scientists, had run the notorious Unit 731 in Harbin.
There they performed medical experiments on untold thousands of Chinese civilians.
These experiments, including vivisection of pregnant women, were as bad as anything done by Mengele in Auschwitz but they are less well known: the Americans granted the scientists privacy and immunity in exchange for their research results.
Australia’s core values
In Australia, we pride ourselves for our human rights record.
Here is a prominent Australian speaking in November 2000:
“I want to talk about the centrality of human rights to our foreign policy objectives, and our decision to make effectiveness the guiding principle of our actions.
… The second reason for our distinctive approach to human rights has more to do with an Australian way of doing things.
Our approach is pragmatic but it is also firmly rooted in an ideological commitment to liberal democratic ideals.
I believe this blend of the practical and the idealistic very much reflects the character of Australia.
A separate public forum could no doubt be dedicated to discussing what core Australian values are - or if they even exist - in the year 2000.
Personally, I have no qualms in saying that one of our abiding values is that of a fair go for all.
Australians care about human rights because they believe strongly in a fair go, they support the underdog and they take particular exception to abuses of power.
They see justice and human dignity as the self-evident right of all people.
They also prefer to cut through the rhetoric and do something useful…."
A fair go for all is probably as close as we, in Australia, get to a shared core value.
Let us consider the legal rights of refugees against that core value.
First, a couple of important facts: It is not an offence to come to Australia and seek refugee status.
We have an obligation under the Refugees Convention to consider all claims to refugee status.
If a person establishes their refugee status, we have a legal obligation to protect them.
Shortly stated, a refugee is a person who does not wish to return to their country of origin owing to a well-founded fear of persecution on racial, religious or political grounds.
Incidentally, the prominent Australian who uttered those fine words about a fair go was the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Alexander Downer.
Refugees Let me turn to the way we treat people who seek asylum in Australia.
The Howard government has introduced two policies which are an affront to decency.
One a policy of deflection, and the other a policy of detention.
We try to stop them from getting here, by taking them from the high seas and locking them up in Nauru, or on Manus Island.
If they get here, we lock them up in the Australian desert.
Alexander Downer, in the speech I just referred to, went on to say this:
"… human rights are central to the maintenance of a peaceful world and our nation’s security….
It follows that it is very much in Australia’s interests for government to work out how best to deliver an effective human rights policy.
It is also, of course, in the interests of the ordinary people of the world who just want to live their lives free from the fear of poverty, war and tyranny.
But I want to emphasise the word effective because this is the litmus test for everything this government does in the human rights field….
This audience will be well acquainted with my view that you do not measure a government’s interest in human rights by the decibel reading of its public criticism of others.
You measure it by what it actually does…"
What Australia actually does involves gross violations of human rights: a fact which has drawn criticism from every significant human rights body in the world.
What Australia does in fact is deny refugees a fair go.
So why is it, I wonder, that refugees are so unpopular; and why is it that a majority of decent Australians are prepared to see refugees’ human rights ignored? I suspect that it is a result of a couple of things.
Principally it comes from ignorance of the most important facts.
So, I want to start by dealing with the facts of the refugee situation.
The government's recent hard-line stance on the refugee issue is officially justified in the name of our sovereignty.
To guard our sovereignty, the government calls boat people “illegals”, and it locks them up.
It is the great lie on which government policy rests.
People who come here informally are not illegal.
They commit no offence by arriving without papers, without an invitation, seeking protection.
They may be locked up for months or years, but our moral conscience is lulled to sleep because we are told they are "illegals".
The government likes to call it a crisis.
It is not a crisis at all.
The refugees we are talking about are the 4000 or so who – until the Pacific Solution – arrived informally in the country each year.
4000 is to be compared with the orthodox migration stream of about 100,000 per year.
On any view of things an additional 4000 in a year does not constitute a crisis.
One of the reasons we don’t have a crisis in terms of numbers is that our geography insulates us from most of the world’s refugee problems.
It is quite difficult to get here in a small leaking boat.
By contrast, countries adjacent to the trouble spots in the world have millions of refugees coming across their borders.
For us to complain about 4000 is seen as somewhat petty when you consider that Africa has a total of five and a half million refugees; Asia has about eight and a half million.
By any measure, we have a small number of people who come here seeking help and protection because of a legitimate fear of persecution, torture or death in the place from whence they have fled.
Our reaction to them in the last few years has been little short of astonishing.
The second fact, which is not only overlooked but is misrepresented by the government, is that immigration policy and refugee policy are entirely different things.
Immigration policy is a reflection of demographic, social and economic considerations which cause a country to determine how many people it will admit as permanent migrants, and to decide what skills and ethnic origins will be favoured.
It is reasonable, when referring to immigration policy, to say “we will decide who comes to this country and the circumstances in which they come”.
As an expression of immigration policy, that is unexceptionable.
You may disagree with the policy settings, but the principle is perfectly good as a statement of immigration policy.
Refugees have a quite different claim on our hospitality.
Refugees are fleeing persecution, torture or death; they seek our protection.
If they manage to get to Australia, we have an obligation under international conventions to offer them the protection they are seeking.
It is self-evidently wrong to decide on demographic grounds whether to save this or that person from torture or death.
Imagine if the same thinking were evident in civil rescues! Imagine the outcry if the emergency services decided to help this crash victim but not another, based on the relative social utility of the 2 victims.
Refugee policy stands apart from orthodox migration policy: by deliberately ignoring the distinction, the Howard government betrayed our ordinary human decency and stole away our reputation as a decent and generous people.
The Pacific Solution
The Pacific Solution was introduced in the course of the Tampa case.
It was on the second day of the Tampa case, on the Sunday morning, that the Commonwealth Solicitor General announced the formation of an agreement with Nauru to take the refugees on board the Tampa.
The Pacific Solution debauches the Constitution of Nauru.
That Constitution, being a modern instrument, contains in it a guarantee that you will not be detained except after a proper trial.
In other words you can’t be imprisoned except by being found guilty of an offence.
There are some limited exceptions to that principle.
The only one presently relevant is that a person can be detained without trial if they have entered the country unlawfully and are being held either for deportation or for extradition.
Now that exception simply can’t operate in the case of the people who are intercepted on the high seas and are dumped on Nauru.
Take the Tampa people for instance.
I have seen their visa application form.
It’s a fairly slack piece of work: it is a bulk application – an application for visas for the “people on the attached sheet”.
438 names are listed on the attached sheet.
It is signed by a member of Nauru’s own Immigration Department.
So, far from being unlawful entrants, they were entered on the request of their own Immigration Department pursuant to an agreement with our government: an agreement under which Nauru get stupendous amounts of money.
But it cannot be said they were entering the country unlawfully.
The website of Australia’s Immigration Department for some time boasted proudly of how many people were being “detained on Nauru”.
Then someone pointed out this minor embarrassment that the Constitution of Nauru forbids detention without trial.
The website was quickly changed.
Now Mr Ruddock says that in fact they are not detained, they are held pursuant to the conditions of their visa.
And their visa, as it turns out, requires them to stay within Topside Camp or Statehouse Camp.
In other words, the visa condition requires them to be detained.
It’s obvious nonsense, because you cannot validly force a person to remain in detention merely by imposing detention as a condition on their visa, and especially where the person did not seek to enter Nauru in the first place.
In any event, it is quite apparent that none of them knew what sort of visa was being applied for on their behalf and in addition, none of them would be allowed to leave the country even if they asked to.
So there they are: on a visa which requires them to stay locked up, but if they don’t like the visa conditions they can’t leave the country anyway.
Complete nonsense.
There is another vice in the Pacific Solution.
Article 5 of the Nauruan Constitution provides:
“A person who is arrested or detained shall be informed promptly of the reasons for the arrest or detention and shall be permitted to consult in the place in which he is detained a legal representative of his own choice.”
The refugees on Nauru have repeatedly asked for access to lawyers.
Those requests have been ignored by Nauru, Australia and the IOM.
When a group of Australian lawyers tried to go to Nauru to help the refugees, they were refused visas.
When they asked the Chief Justice of Nauru, who lives in Melbourne, to hold a sitting of the Court in Melbourne, he refused.
The legal rights of the refugees on Nauru have been completely ignored, and all the evidence suggests that it is Australia’s Department of Immigration which is calling the shots.
These facts alone are deplorable.
Unfortunately, the matter does not rest there.
Early in 2002 the parliament passed further amendments to the Migration Act which empower the Department to remove refugees from Nauru, by force if necessary, and bring them to Australia for “temporary purposes”.
A refugee brought to Australia in this way is not allowed to apply for a visa, and may not challenge the fact or circumstances or their detention, removal or treatment.
Sections 198B and 494AB provide:
198B Power to bring transitory persons to Australia
(1) An officer may, for a temporary purpose, bring a transitory person to Australia from a country or place outside Australia.
(2) The power under subsection (1) includes the power to do any of the following things within or outside Australia:
(a) place the person on a vehicle or vessel;
(b) restrain the person on a vehicle or vessel;
(c) remove the person from a vehicle or vessel;
(d)use such force as is necessary and reasonable.
(3) In this section, officer means an officer within the meaning of section 5, and includes a member of the Australian Defence Force.
494AB Bar on certain legal proceedings relating to transitory persons
(1) The following proceedings against the Commonwealth may not be instituted or continued in any court:
(a) proceedings relating to the exercise of powers under section 198B;
(b) proceedings relating to the status of a transitory person as an unlawful non?citizen during any part of the ineligibility period;
(c) proceedings relating to the detention of a transitory person who is brought to Australia under section 198B, being a detention based on the status of the person as an unlawful non?citizen;
(d) proceedings relating to the removal of a transitory person from Australia under this Act.
These provisions were used in early September 2002 to bring 6 Afghans to Australia from Nauru.
They had been rescued by the Tampa.
The Commonwealth wanted them to give evidence against the people smugglers who had brought them on their ill-fated journey.
Despite the efforts of lawyers in Australia, they were forced to give evidence on 19 and 20 September, and on 21 September they were taken back to Nauru.
Once back in Nauru, they had just 11 days in which to make an agonizing decision: should they accept the government’s “repatriation” package of $2,000 and return to Afghanistan, or stay on Nauru and face the possibility of life imprisonment without trial.
They know that they if they return to Afghanistan, they will be hunted down by the smugglers’ mafia for having given evidence.
But they fear for the safety of their families in Afghanistan, about whose fate they know nothing at all.
By the government’s own act, these people now have a new basis for claiming refugee status; but the legislation prevents them from lodging a valid visa application, either in Australia or on Nauru.
As they left the Perth detention centre on 21 September, they were weeping with fear and anguish, convinced that their lives were ,at last, irretrievably blighted.
No person should be placed in such a position; no government should treat human beings this way.
The misery of these people is our government’s way of protecting our sovereignty.
Meanwhile, the people smugglers are in Perth, with full access to the Australian legal system and the protections it offers.
I won’t deal separately with Manus Island, because exactly the same arguments apply.
Its Constitution enshrines a similar guarantee against arbitrary detention.
This is the Cargo Cult theory of constitutional reform.
Australia has suborned 2 of its poverty stricken neighbours into doing whatever suits Australia’s policy.
To protect our national Sovereignty we have compromised theirs.
In the process, we have destroyed lives of pathetic, vulnerable, powerless people.
That the government got an electoral advantage out of this shabby arrangement makes it even more disgraceful.
John Winston Howard showed his superb political skill in crafting the Pacific Solution, and for that he deserves our undying contempt.
In the speech I mentioned earlier, Mr Downer said:
"Bit by bit, leaders of governments that suppress human rights are being made to feel uncomfortable, however much they bluster and hide behind sovereignty arguments…."
Perhaps Mr Howard should listen to his Foreign Minister's speeches.
Processing claims for asylum When a person arrives in Australia and seeks asylum, they tell their story to an officer of the Department.
The officer decides whether to believe the story and, if so, whether the story makes out a valid claim for refugee status.
If the applicant is knocked back, they can go to the Refugee Review Tribunal.
The quality of "justice" dispensed by the RRT is quite distinctive.
The RRT members do not have to be lawyers.
They are appointed for a short term but can be re-appointed.
If their decisions please the government, their chances of re-appointment appear to improve.
Applicants are not entitled to be legally represented at RRT hearings.
The decisions of the RRT are often a matter of life and death, literally, and yet the decisions of the Tribunal are almost completely immune to correction by a Court.
Until late 2001, the Migration Act contained a provision to the effect that a decision of the RRT could not be overturned by a court merely because it contained an error of law, or because it was so unreasonable that no reasonable person could have made it.
Reflect on that for a moment: the decision maker is not a lawyer; his or her re-appointment depends on the government’s good opinion; the applicant probably speaks little English and cannot be represented by a lawyer; the decision will determine whether that person is sent back to the threat of torture or death: but if the decision is wrong in law or so unreasonable that no reasonable person could reach it, then there is no legal remedy.
So much for a fair go.
In October 2001, the government decided the scope for judicial review of RRT decisions should be reduced.
And in June 2002 it reduced the scope even further: the Migration Act now provides specifically that the RRT does not have to afford natural justice to applicants.