Denial of procedural fairness if child does not attend AAT hearing?
Federal Circuit Court. Can the potential for a denial of procedural fairness arise in connection with a parent bringing an application on behalf of a child and the child not attending the Tribunal hearing?
Rome Statute & s 5H(2)(a) of Migration Act
Federal Court. Can it be said that "the generally serious consequences of refoulement – but not the particular consequences in an individual case – are taken into account in giving meaning and content to the requirement that there be “serious reasons for considering”" pursuant to s 5H(2)(a) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth)? How to interpret Articles 22(1) and 25(3)(c)-(d) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, entered into force 1 July 2002?
Does s 98 apply for the purpose of s 109 when applicant was a...
Federal Court. Does s 98: "extend to a visa applicant who has relied on a migration agent to complete a visa application form where the agent perpetrates a fraud on the visa applicant and the applicant wishes to establish that the visa application itself was consequently vitiated"; "fix a non-citizen with the consequences of a migration agent filling out a form with incorrect or incomplete information that may result in visa cancellation"?
Coronavirus: advising clients
Practitioners are being asked questions from several clients who are or have been in China recently or who intend to visit that country. Whether they will be allowed to enter Australia and whether their visas will be cancelled depend on the circumstances of those individuals, including their immigration status and where and when they have been in China. We have classified the circumstances of those individuals in 3 main groups, which we summarise in this article. We further discuss the legislative powers used to cancel visas and to prevent non-citizens (and even Australian citizens in some cases) from entering Australia. We also explain why, if the situation deteriorates, even permanent residency (PR) visas could be cancelled. Although PR cancellations seem unlikely at this stage, practitioners should consider warning clients of that risk and how to mitigate it.
Appeal: must finding of psychological condition be founded on expert evidence?
Federal Court (Full Court). The Minister found that the Appellant failed to recognise that he had "psychological sexual issues relating to children". Can it be said that the "term “psychology”, acontextualised, is ambiguous in that it can refer to the scientific study of the human mind or the mental (in contrast to physical) characteristics, properties or attitudes of a person or persons"? If so, was the adjective "psychological" used by the Minister in its unscientific sense?
Unwilling to participate: should FCA order production of documents?
Federal Court: "In light of the appellant’s self-represented status on his appeal, it remains to consider whether the Court should exercise its discretion to order the Minister to produce the country information so as to enable the merits of the appellant’s argument to be determined by reference to it ... Despite the urgings of the Court [the Appellant] has expressed an unwillingness to participate in the hearing of the appeal in a meaningful way". Should the FCA exercise its discretion in favour of the Appellant?
GTE: incentive to remain in Australia? Obiter in MZAPC limited to “ultimate decision”?
Federal Circuit Court. Although cl 9.d of Direction 69 refers only to the negative effect of military obligations in an applicant's home country, does the GTE criterion in cl 500.212(a) also encompass any positive effects of such obligations? Was the obiter dicta in MZACP at [33] and [181] according to which errors in the form legal unreasonableness are material by definition and therefore jurisdictional limited to errors in the "ultimate decision", therefore excluding errors in findings of fact?
XJLR extended?
Federal Court. Could a subsequent s 501(3A) cancellation decision rely on a conviction if that conviction was previously taken into account when deciding to revoke a mandatory cancellation?
Privilege against self-incrimination
Federal Court. Is the privilege against self-incrimination a fundamental common law right or merely a rule of evidence only available in court proceedings? Do the AAT Act or the Migration Act give merits review applicants the privilege against self-incrimination? Is AAT required to warn self-represented applicants about the invocation of the privilege? We summarise that and several other questions.
AAT grants visa; FCA confirms it can issue habeas corpus
Federal Court. AAT set aside delegate's decision to refuse protection visa and granted Respondent a visa. Minister applied to FCA for judicial review, claiming AAT had no jurisdiction to grant the visa. Minister also made interlocutory application for matter to be expedited and kept Respondent in detention despite visa grant. Respondent made interlocutory application for his immediate release, on the basis that he was being unlawfully detained. Should FCA expedite the hearing of the Minister's judicial review application? Did FCA have jurisdiction to entertain the Respondent's interlocutory application for release? Did FCA have the power to issue writ of habeas corpus? Was Respondent unlawfully detained after Tribunal granted him a visa?



















