Communication No. 930/2000
Submitted by:
Mr. Hendrick Winata and Ms. So Lan Li (represented by counsel,
Anne O'Donoghue)
Alleged victims: The authors and their son, Barry Winata
State party: Australia
Date of communication: 11 May 2000 (initial submission)
The Human Rights Committee, established under article 28
of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
Meeting on: 26 July 2001,
Having concluded its consideration of communication No.
930/2000 submitted to the Human Rights Committee by Mr. Hendrick
Winata and Ms. So Lan Li under the Optional Protocol to the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Having taken
into account all written information made available to it
by the author of the communication, and the State party,
Adopts the following:
Views under article 5, paragraph 4, of the Optional Protocol
1. The authors of the communication, dated 4 May 2000, are Hendrik
Winata, born 9 November 1954 and So Lan Li, born 8 December 1957,
both formerly Indonesian nationals but currently stateless, also
writing on behalf of their son Barry Winata, born on 2 June 1988
and an Australian national. The authors complain that the proposed
removal of the parents from Australia to Indonesia would constitute
a violation of articles 17, 23, paragraph 1, and 24, paragraph
1, of the Covenant by the State party. They are represented by
counsel.
The facts
as presented
2.1 On 24 August
1985 and 6 February 1987, Mr. Winata and Ms. Li arrived in Australia
on a visitor's visa and a student visa respectively. In each
case, after expiry of the relevant visas on 9 September 1985
and 30 June 1988 respectively they remained unlawfully in Australia.
In Australia Mr. Winata and Ms. Li met and commenced a de facto
relationship akin to marriage, and have a thirteen year
old son, Barry, born in Australia on 2 June 1988.
2.2 On 2 June 1998,
by virtue of his birth in that country and residing there for
10 years, Barry acquired Australian citizenship. On 3 June 1998,
Mr. Winata and Ms. Li lodged combined applications for a protection
visa with the Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs
(DIMA), based generally upon a claim that they faced persecution
in Indonesia owing to their Chinese ethnicity and Catholic religion.
On 26 June 1998, the Minister's delegate refused to grant a
protection visa.
2.3 On 15 October
1998, (1) Mr. Winata and Ms. Li's representative in Jakarta
lodged an application with the Australian Embassy to migrate
to Australia on the basis of a "subclass 103 Parent Visa".
A requirement for such a visa, of which presently 500 are granted
per year, is that the applicant must be outside Australia when
the visa is granted. According to counsel, it thus could be
expected that Mr. Winata and Ms. Li would face a delay of several
years before they would be able to return to Australia under
parent visas.
2.4 On 25 January
2000, the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) affirmed DIMA's decision
to refuse a protection visa. The RRT, examining the authors'
refugee entitlements under article 1A(2) of the Convention Relating
to the Status of Refugees (as amended) only, found that even
though Mr. Winata and Ms. Li may have lost their Indonesian
citizenship having been absent from that country for such a
long time, there would be little difficulty in re-acquiring
it. (2) Furthermore, on the basis of recent information
from Indonesia, the RRT considered that while the possibility
of being caught up in racial and religious conflict could not
be discounted, the outlook in Indonesia was improving and any
chance of persecution in the particular case was remote. The
RRT specifically found that its task was solely limited to an
examination of a refugee's entitlement to a protection visa,
and could not take into account broader evidence of family life
in Australia.
2.5 On the basis
of legal advice that any application for judicial review of
the RRT's decision had no prospects of success, Mr. Winata and
Ms. Li did not seek review of the decision. With the passing
of the mandatory and non-extendable filing period of 28 days
from the decision having now passed, Mr. Winata and Ms. Li cannot
pursue this avenue.
2.6 On 20 March
2000, (3) Mr. Winata and Ms. Li applied to the Minister
for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, requesting the exercise
in their favour on compelling and compassionate grounds of his
non-enforceable discretion. (4) The application, relying
inter alia on articles 17 and 23 of the Covenant, cited
"strong compassionate circumstances such that failure to
recognize them would result in irreparable harm and continuing
hardship to an Australian family". The application was
accompanied by a two and a half page psychiatric report on the
authors and possible effects of a removal to Indonesia. (5)
On 6 May 2000, the Minister decided against exercising
his discretionary power. (6)
The complaint
3.1 The authors
allege that their removal to Indonesia would violate rights
of all three alleged victims under articles 17, 23, paragraph
1, and 24, paragraph 1.
3.2 As to the protection
of unlawful or arbitrary interference with family life, protected
under article 17, the authors argue that de facto relationships
are recognized under Australian law, including in migration
regulations, and that there should be no doubt that their relationship
would be so recognized by the Australian courts. Their relationship
with Barry would also be recognized as a "family"
by Australia. They contend that it is clear from the psychiatric
report that there is strong and effective family life.
3.3 The authors
contend that a removal which separates parents from a dependent
child, as is claimed could occur in this case if Barry were
to remain in Australia, amounts to an "interference"
with that family unit. While conceding that the removal of Mr.
Winata and Ms. Li is lawful under domestic law by virtue of
the Migration Act, the authors cite the Committee's General
Comment 16 to the effect that any interference must also be
in accordance with the provisions, aims and objectives of the
Covenant and be reasonable in the particular circumstances.
3.4 The authors
claim that if they are to be removed, the only way to avoid
their separation from Barry is for him to leave with them and
relocate to Indonesia. They claim however that Barry is fully
integrated into Australian society, speaks neither Indonesian
nor Chinese, and has no cultural ties to Indonesia since he
has always lived in Australia. Barry is described by the psychologist's
report as "an Inner Western Sydney multicultural Chinese
Australian boy, with all the best characteristics of that culture
and subculture [who] would be completely at sea and at considerable
risk if thrust into Indonesia". Alternatively, the authors
contend it would be unconscionable and very damaging to break
up the family unit and set Barry adrift in Australia them if
he was to be left there while they returned to Indonesia. Either
way, say the authors, the removal would be arbitrary and unreasonable.
3.5 In coming to
this conclusion, the authors refer to the jurisprudence of the
European Court of Human Rights, which in its interpretation
of the analogous article 8 of the European Convention has been
generally restrictive towards those seeking entry into a State
for purposes of "family creation", while adopting
a more liberal approach to existing families already present
in the State. The authors urge that a similar approach be taken
by the Committee, while arguing that the right in article 17
of the Covenant is stronger than article 8 of the European Convention
in that it is not expressed as subject to any conditions, and
that therefore the individual's right to family life will be
paramount rather than balanced against any State right to interfere
with the family.
3.6 As to articles
23 and 24, the authors do not develop any specific argumentation
other than to observe that article 23 is expressed in stronger
terms than article 12 of the European Convention, and that article
24 specifically addresses the protection of the rights of the
child as such or as a member of a family.
The State
party's observations with regard to the admissibility and merits
of the communication
4.1 The State party
argues that the authors' claims are inadmissible for failure
to exhaust domestic remedies, for incompatibility with provisions
of the Covenant, and (in part) for insufficient substantiation.
4.2 As to non-exhaustion
of domestic remedies, the State party submits that three remedies
remain available and effective. Firstly, the authors failed
to seek, as provided for in the Migration Act, judicial review
in the Federal Court (along with subsequent possible appeals)
of the RRT's decision of 25 January 2000. Although the time
has now passed for bringing such an application, the State party
refers to the Committee's decision in N.S. v. Canada
(7) that a failure to exhaust a remedy in time means
that available domestic remedies have not been exhausted. Secondly,
the authors could apply by way of constitutional remedy for
judicial review in the High Court, which could direct the RRT
to reconsider the matter according to law if a relevant error
of law is established. The State party notes the Committee's
jurisprudence that mere doubts as to the effectiveness of a
remedy does not absolve an author from pursuing them. In the
absence of the legal advice provided to the authors that an
application for judicial review would have no prospects of success,
the authors cannot be said to have convincingly demonstrated
that these remedies would not be effective.
4.3 Finally, the
State party notes that the authors have applied for parent visas.
While the authors would have to leave the country to await the
grant of the visa and would be "queued" with other
applicants, they would not have to wait an indefinite period.
Barry could live with the authors in Indonesia until the visas
were granted, or continue his schooling in Australia.
4.4 As to incompatibility
with the provisions of the Covenant, the State party argues
that the authors' allegations do not come within the terms of
any right recognized by the Covenant. The State party argues
that the Covenant recognizes, in articles 12, paragraph 1, and
13, the right of State parties to regulate the entry of aliens
into their territories. If the authors are removed from Australia
it will be due to the fact that they have illegally remained
in Australia after the expiry of their visas. The Covenant does
not guarantee the authors the right to remain in Australia or
to establish a family here after residing in Australia unlawfully
and knowingly.
4.5 As to non-substantiation
of the allegations, the State party contends that in relation
to articles 23, paragraph 1, and 24, paragraph 1, the authors
have provided insufficient evidence to substantiate their claims.
The authors simply allege that the State party would breach
these provisions if it removed them, but they provide no details
in respect of these allegations. The State party states that
both the nature of these particular allegations and the way
in which the evidence provided relates to them is unclear from
the communication. The evidence and argument supplied relates
only to article 17.
4.6 As to the merits
of the claim under article 17, the State party notes at the
outset its understanding of the scope of the right in that article.
Unlike the corresponding provision of the European Convention,
limitations on article 17 are not limited to those "necessary"
to achieve a prescribed set of purposes, but, more flexibly,
must simply be reasonable and not arbitrary in relation to a
legitimate Covenant purpose. The State party refers to the travaux
préparatoires of the Covenant which are clear that the intent
was that States parties should not be unnecessarily restricted
by a list of exceptions to article 17, but should be able to
determine how the principle should be given effect to. (8)
4.7 Turning to the
particular case, the State party, while not objecting to the
classification of the authors as a "family", argues
that the removal of the authors would not constitute "interference"
with that family, and that in any event such a step would not
be arbitrary or unreasonable in the circumstances.
4.8 As to "interference",
the State party argues that if the authors were removed, it
would take no steps to prevent Barry also leaving with them
to live in Indonesia, where the family could continue to live
together. There is no evidence that they would be unable to
live as a family, and the RRT found no danger of persecution
for them. While acknowledging a disruption to Barry's education
in this event, the State party contends this does not amount
to "interference with family". (9) It points
out that it is common for children of all ages to relocate with
parents to new countries for various reasons.
4.9 The State party
observes that Barry has no relatives in Australia other than
his parents, whereas there are a significant number of close
relatives in Indonesia, with whom the authors stay in contact
with and who would if anything enhance Barry's family life.
The State party submits therefore that, like the European Convention,
the Covenant should be construed not so as to guarantee family
life in a particular country, but simply to effective family
life, wherever that may be.
4.10 Alternatively,
if Barry were to remain in Australia, the family would be able
to visit him and in any case maintain contact with him. This
is the same situation as many children face at boarding schools,
and such physical separation cannot mean that the family unit
does not exist. In any event, the decision as to which of these
options the parents elect is purely theirs and not the result
of the State party's actions, and therefore does not amount
to "interference". Moreover, whatever the decision,
the State party will do nothing to prevent the family's relations
from continuing and developing.
4.11 Even if the
removal can be considered an interference, the State party submits,
the action would not be arbitrary. The authors came to Australia
on short-term visas fully aware that they were required to leave
Australia when the visas expired. Their removal will be the
result of the applicants having overstayed their visas which
they were aware only allowed temporary residence, and remaining
unlawfully in Australia for over 10 years. (10) The laws
which require their removal in these circumstances are well-established
and generally applicable. The operation of these laws regulating
removal is neither capricious nor unpredictable, and is a reasonable
and proportionate means of achieving a legitimate purpose under
the Covenant, that is immigration control.
4.12 In the circumstances,
the authors knew when Barry was born that that there was a risk
that they would not be able to remain and raise Barry in Australia.
It has not been shown that there are any significant obstacles
to establishing a family in Indonesia, and they will be re-granted
Indonesian citizenship if they apply for it. Both authors received
their schooling in Indonesia, speak, read and write Indonesian
and have worked in Indonesia. They will be able to raise Barry
in a country whose language and culture they are familiar with,
close to other family members. Barry understands a significant
amount of domestic Indonesian, and hence any language barrier
that Barry would face would be fairly minor and, given his young
age, could be quite easily overcome. Nor would it be unreasonable
if the authors elected for him to remain in Australia, for he
would be able to maintain contact with his parents and have
access to all the forms of support provided to children separated
from their parents.
4.13 Further evidence
of the reasonableness of removal is that the authors' requests
for protection visas were determined on their facts according
to law laying down generally applicable, objective criteria
based on Australia's international obligations, and confirmed
upon appeal. In due course, the authors' applications for parent
visas will be made according to law, and it is reasonable that
the authors' request be considered along with others making
similar claims.
4.14 The State party
refers to the Committee's jurisprudence where it has found no
violation of article 17 (or article 23) in deportation cases
where the authors had existing families in the receiving State.(11)
Furthermore, a factor of particular weight is whether the
persons in question had a legitimate expectation to continuing
family life in the particular State's territory. The cases decided
before the European Court support such a distinction between
cases of families residing in a State lawfully and unlawfully
respectively.
4.15 By way of example,
in Boughanemi v. France (12) the European Court
found the applicants' deportation compatible with article 8
where he had been residing in France illegally, even though
he had an existing family in France. In the circumstances of
Cruz Varas v. Sweden, (13) similarly, the Court
found expulsion of illegal immigrants compatible with article
8. In Bouchelka v. France, (14) where
the applicant had returned to France illegally after
a deportation and built up a family (including having a daughter),
the Court found no violation of article 8 in his renewed deportation.
By contrast, in Berrehab v. The Netherlands, (15)
the Court found a violation in the removal of the father
of a young child from the country where the child lived where
the father had lawfully resided there for a number of
years. (16)
4.16 Accordingly,
the State party argues that the element of unlawful establishment
of a family in a State is a factor weighing heavily in favour
of that State being able to take action which, if the family
had been residing lawfully in the State, might otherwise have
been contrary to article 17. As the European Court has noted,
article 8 of the European Convention does not guarantee the
most suitable place to live, (17) and a couple cannot
choose the place of residence for its family simply by unlawfully
remaining in the State it wishes to raise its family and having
children in that State. It follows that the authors, residing
in Australia unlawfully and fully aware of the risk that they
might not be able to remain and raise a family in Australia,
cannot reasonably expect to remain in Australia, and their removal
is not arbitrary contrary to article 17.
4.17 As to article
23, paragraph 1, the State party refers to the institutional
guarantees afforded by that article. (18) It states that
the family is a fundamental social unit and its importance is
given implicit and explicit recognition, including by allowing
parents to apply for visas so they can live with their children
in Australia (as the authors have done) and providing parents
special privileges compared to other immigrants. Article 23,
like article 17, must be read against Australia's right, under
international law, to take reasonable steps to control the entry,
residence and expulsion of aliens. As the RRT found the authors
are not refugees and do not suffer a real chance of harm in
Indonesia, (19) and as Barry can remain in Australia
attending education or return to Indonesia at the authors' discretion,
the existence of the family would not be threatened or harmed
in the event of a return.
4.18 As to article
24, paragraph 1, the State party refers to a number of legislative
measures and programmes designed specifically to protect children
and to provide assistance for children at risk. (20) The
removal of the authors from Australia is not a measure directed
at Barry, who as an Australian citizen (since June 1998 only)
is entitled to reside in Australia, regardless of where his
parents live. The authors' removal would be a consequence of
them residing in Australia illegally, rather than a failure
to provide adequate measures of protection for children. When
Barry was born, the authors were fully aware of the risk that
they would one day have to return to Indonesia.
4.19 The State party
argues that removal of the authors would neither involve a failure
to adequately protect Barry as a minor or harm him. Both the
delegate of the Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs
and the RRT found that there was no more than a remote risk
that the authors would face persecution in Indonesia, and no
evidence has been presented to suggest that Barry would be at
any greater risk of persecution if he went to Indonesia with
his parents.
4.20 Adopting its
argumentation under article 17 on "interference" with
the family, the State party argues that there are no significant
obstacles to Barry continuing a normal life in Indonesia with
his family. The State party disputes the psychiatric opinion
to the effect that if Barry returned with the authors he would
be "completely at sea and at considerable risk if thrust
into Indonesia". It argues that while the interruption
to Barry's routine may make the move to Indonesia difficult
for him at first, his age, multicultural background (21)
and understanding of Indonesian mean he is likely to adjust
quickly. Barry could continue a good schooling in Indonesia
in the physical and emotional company of the authors (who were
born, raised and lived most of their lives there) and other
close relatives; alternatively, if he chooses, as an Australian
citizen he would also be entitled to complete his high schooling
and tertiary education in Australia. While this would mean separation
from the authors, it is common for children not to live with
their parents during high school and while attending tertiary
education, and it is common for children and young adults from
south-east Asian countries to attend school and university in
Australia. As an Australian citizen, he would be protected to
the full extent possible under Australian law and would receive
the same protection which is given to other Australian children
who are living in Australia without their parents.
Author's comments
on the State party's submissions
5.1 As to the admissibility
of the communication, the author contests the State party's
contentions on exhaustion of local remedies, incompatibility
with the Covenant and insufficient substantiation.
5.2 Regarding the
exhaustion of local remedies, the author argues that the requirement
to exhaust domestic remedies must mean that the particular
complaint is presented to any available State organs before
that complaint is presented to the Committee. The remedies claimed
by the State party still to be available relate to the refugee
process and its evaluations of fear of persecution. Yet the
complaint here is not related to any refugee issues, bur rather
concerns the interference with family life caused by the removal
of the authors. Accordingly, the author submits that there can
be no requirement to pursue a refugee claim when the complaint
relates to family unity.
5.3 As for the joint
parent visa application, the author notes that the authors would
have to leave Australia pending determination of the application
where, even if successful, they would have to remain for several
years before returning to Australia. In any event, Department
of Immigration statistics show that no parent visas at all were
issued by the Australian authorities in Jakarta between 1 September
2000 and 28 February 2001, and the average processing time worldwide
for such visas is almost four years. In view of current political
disputes regarding these visas, these delays will by the State
party's own admission increase. (22) The author regards
such delays as clearly unacceptable and manifestly unreasonable.
5.4 As to the State
party's submissions that the authors' allegations are incompatible
with the provisions of the Covenant, in particular articles
12, paragraph 1, and 13, the authors refers to the Committee's
General Comment 15. That states that while the Covenant does
not recognize a right of aliens to enter or reside in a State
party's territory, an alien may enjoy the protection of the
Covenant even in relation to entry or residence where, inter
alia, issues of respect for family life arise. The authors
consider article 13 not relevant to this context.
5.5 The authors
object to the State party's argument that the claim of violation
of articles 23, paragraph 1, and 24, paragraph 1, have not been
substantiated. The authors state that the facts of the claim
relate to those provisions in addition to article 17, and argue
that a breach of article 17 may also amount to a breach of the
institutional guarantees in articles 23 and 24.
5.6 On the merits,
the authors regard the State party's primary submission to be
that there is no reason why Barry could not return to Indonesia
to live with them if they are removed. The authors contend this
is inconsistent with the available psychological evidence provided
to the Minister and attached to the communication. The authors
also claim, in respect of the suggestion that Barry remain (unsupervised)
in Australia pending the outcome of their application for re-entry,
that this would be clearly impractical and not in Barry's best
interests. The authors do not have access to the funds required
for Barry to study at boarding school, and there is no one available
to take over Barry's care in their absence.
Issues and
proceedings before the Committee
6.1 Before considering
any claim contained in a communication, the Human Rights Committee
must, in accordance with rule 87 of its rules of procedure,
decide whether or not it is admissible under the Optional Protocol
to the Covenant.
6.2 As to the State
party's arguments that available domestic remedies have not
been exhausted, the Committee observes that both proposed appeals
from the RRT decision are further steps in the refugee determination
process. The claim before the Committee, however, does not relate
to the authors' original application for recognition as refugees,
but rather to their separate and distinct claim to be allowed
to remain in Australia on family grounds. The State party has
not provided the Committee with any information on the remedies
available to challenge the Minister's decision not to allow
them to remain in Australia on these grounds. The processing
of the authors' application for a parent visa, which requires
them to leave Australia for an appreciable period of time, cannot
be regarded as an available domestic remedy against the Minister's
decision. The Committee therefore cannot accept the State party's
argument that the communication is inadmissible for failure
to exhaust domestic remedies.
6.3 As to the State
party's contention that the claims are in essence claims to
residence by unlawfully present aliens and accordingly incompatible
with the Covenant, the Committee notes that the authors do not
claim merely that they have a right of residence in Australia,
but that by forcing them to leave the State party would be arbitrarily
interfering with their family life. While aliens may not, as
such, have the right to reside in the territory of a State party,
States parties are obliged to respect and ensure all their rights
under the Covenant. The claim that the State party's actions
would interfere arbitrarily with the authors' family life relates
to an alleged violation of a right which is guaranteed under
the Covenant to all persons. The authors have substantiated
this claim sufficiently for the purposes of admissibility and
it should be examined on the merits.
6.4 As to the State
party's claims that the alleged violations of article 23, paragraph
1, and article 24, paragraph 1, have not been substantiated,
the Committee considers that the facts and arguments presented
raise cross-cutting issues between all three provisions of the
Covenant. The Committee considers it helpful to consider these
overlapping provisions in conjunction with each other at the
merits stage. It finds the complaints under these heads therefore
substantiated for purposes of admissibility.
6.5 Accordingly,
the Committee finds the communication admissible as pleaded
and proceeds without delay to a consideration of its merits.
The Committee has considered the communication in the light
of all the information made available to it by the parties,
as required by article 5, paragraph 1, of the Optional Protocol.
7.1 As to the claim
of violation of article 17, the Committee notes the State party's
arguments that there is no "interference", as the
decision of whether Barry will accompany his parents to Indonesia
or remain in Australia, occasioning in the latter case a physical
separation, is purely an issue for the family and is not compelled
by the State's actions. The Committee notes that there may indeed
be cases in which a State party's refusal to allow one member
of a family to remain in its territory would involve interference
in that person's family life. However, the mere fact that one
member of a family is entitled to remain in the territory
of a State party does not necessarily mean that requiring other
members of the family to leave involves such interference.
7.2 In the present
case, the Committee considers that a decision of the State party
to deport two parents and to compel the family to choose whether
a 13-year old child, who has attained citizenship of the State
party after living there 10 years, either remains alone in the
State party or accompanies his parents is to be considered "interference"
with the family, at least in circumstances where, as here, substantial
changes to long-settled family life would follow in either case.
The issue thus arises whether or not such interference would
be arbitrary and contrary to article 17 of the Covenant.
7.3 It is certainly
unobjectionable under the Covenant that a State party may require,
under its laws, the departure of persons who remain in its territory
beyond limited duration permits. Nor is the fact that a child
is born, or that by operation of law such a child receives citizenship
either at birth or at a later time, sufficient of itself to
make a proposed deportation of one or both parents arbitrary.
Accordingly, there is significant scope for States parties to
enforce their immigration policy and to require departure of
unlawfully present persons. That discretion is, however, not
unlimited and may come to be exercised arbitrarily in certain
circumstances. In the present case, both authors have been in
Australia for over fourteen years. The authors' son has grown
in Australia from his birth 13 years ago, attending Australian
schools as an ordinary child would and developing the social
relationships inherent in that. In view of this duration of
time, it is incumbent on the State party to demonstrate additional
factors justifying the removal of both parents that go beyond
a simple enforcement of its immigration law in order to avoid
a characterisation of arbitrariness. In the particular circumstances,
therefore, the Committee considers that the removal by the State
party of the authors would constitute, if implemented, arbitrary
interference with the family, contrary to article 17, paragraph
1, in conjunction with article 23, of the Covenant in respect
of all of the alleged victims, and, additionally, a violation
of article 24, paragraph 1, in relation to Barry Winata due
to a failure to provide him with the necessary measures of protection
as a minor.
8. The Human Rights
Committee, acting under article 5, paragraph 4, of the Optional
Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, is of the view that the removal by the State party of
the authors would, if implemented, entail a violation of articles
17, 23, paragraph 1, and 24, paragraph 1, of the Covenant.
9. In accordance
with article 2, paragraph 3 (a), of the Covenant, the State
Party is under an obligation to provide the authors with an
effective remedy, including refraining from removing the authors
from Australia before they have had an opportunity to have their
application for parent visas examined with due consideration
given to the protection required by Barry Winata's status as
a minor. The State party is under an obligation to ensure that
violations of the Covenant in similar situations do not occur
in the future.
10. Bearing in mind
that, by becoming a State party to the Optional Protocol, the
State party has recognized the competence of the Committee to
determine whether there has been a violation of the Covenant
or not and that, pursuant to article 2 of the Covenant, the
State party has undertaken to ensure to all individuals within
its territory and subject to its jurisdiction the rights recognized
in the Covenant to provide an effective and enforceable remedy
in case a violation has been established, the Committee wishes
to receive from the State party, within 90 days, information
about the measures taken to give effect to its Views.
Notes
* The following members of the Committee participated in the examination
of the present communication: Mr. Abdelfattah Amor, Mr. Nisuke
Ando, Mr. Prafullachandra Natwarlal Bhagwati, Ms. Christine Chanet,
Mr. Maurice Glèlè Ahanhanzo, Mr. Louis Henkin, Mr. Ahmed Tawfik
Khalil, Mr. Eckart Klein, Mr. David Kretzmer, Mr. Rajsoomer Lallah,
Mr. Rafael Rivas Posada, Sir Nigel Rodley, Mr. Martin Scheinin,
Mr. Hipólito Solari Yrigoyen, Mr. Patrick Vella and Mr. Maxwell
Yalden.
** Under rule 85
of the Committee's rules of procedure, Mr. Ivan Shearer did
not participate in the examination of the case.
*** The text of
a dissenting individual opinion signed by Committee members
Prafullachandra Natwarlal Bhagwati, Ahmed Tawfik Khalil, David
Kretzmer and Max Yalden is appended to the present document.
[Adopted in English, French and Spanish, the English text being
the original version. Subsequently to be issued also in Arabic,
Chinese and Russian as part of the Committee's annual report
to the General Assembly.]
Annex
Individual opinion by Committee members Prafullachandra Natwarlal
Bhagwati,
Tawfik Khalil,
David Kretzmer and Max Yalden (dissenting)
1. The question in this communication is neither whether the case
of the authors and their son arouses sympathy, nor whether Committee
members think it would be a generous gesture on the part of the
State party if it were to allow them to remain in its territory.
It is only whether the State party is legally bound under the
terms of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
to refrain from requiring the authors to leave Australia. We cannot
agree with the Committee's view that the answer to this question
should be in the affirmative.
2. The Committee
bases its Views on three articles of the Covenant: articles
17, paragraph 1, in conjunction with article 23, and article
24. The authors provided no information whatsoever on measures
of protection that the State party would be required to take
in order to comply with its obligations under the latter article.
Many families the world over move from one country to another,
even when their children are of school age and are happily integrated
in school in one country. Are States parties required to take
measures to protect children against such action by their parents?
It seems to us that a vague value judgment that a child might
be better off if some action were avoided does not provide sufficient
grounds to substantiate a claim that a State party has failed
to provide that child with the necessary measures of protection
required under article 24. We would therefore have held that
the authors failed to substantiate, for the purposes of admissibility,
their claim of a violation of article 24, and that this part
of the communication should therefore have been held inadmissible
under article 2 of the Optional Protocol.
3. As far as the
claim of a violation of article 17 is concerned, we have serious
doubts whether the State party's decision requiring the authors
to leave its territory involves interference in their family.
This is not a case in which the decision of the State party
results in the inevitable separation between members of the
family, which may certainly be regarded as interference with
the family.22 Rather the Committee refers to "substantial
changes to long-settled family life." While this term does
appear in the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights,22
the Committee fails to examine whether it is an appropriate
concept in the context of article 17 of the Covenant, which
refers to interference in the family, rather than to respect
for family life mentioned in article 8 of the European Convention.
It is not at all evident that actions of a State party that
result in changes to long-settled family life involve interference
in the family, when there is no obstacle to maintaining the
family's unity. We see no need to express a final opinion on
this question in the present case, however, as even if there
is interference in the authors' family, in our opinion there
is no basis for holding that the State party's decision was
arbitrary.
4. The Committee
provides no support or reasoning for its statement that in order
to avoid characterization of its decision as arbitrary the State
party is duty-bound to provide additional factors besides simple
enforcement of its immigration laws. There may indeed be exceptional
cases in which the interference with the family is so strong
that requiring a family member who is unlawfully in its territory
to leave would be disproportionate to the interest of the State
party in maintaining respect for its immigration laws. In such
cases it may be possible to characterize a decision requiring
the family member to leave as arbitrary. However, we cannot
accept that the mere fact that the persons unlawfully in the
State party's territory have established family life there requires
a State party to "demonstrate additional factors justifying
the removal of both parents that go beyond a simple enforcement
of its immigration law in order to avoid a characterisation
of arbitrariness." The implications of this interpretation,
adopted by the Committee, are that if persons who are unlawfully
in a State party's territory establish a family and manage to
escape detection for a long enough period they in effect acquire
a right to remain there. It seems to us that such an interpretation
ignores prevailing standards of international law, which allow
states to regulate the entry and residence of aliens in their
territory.
5. As stated above,
the State party's decision in no way forces separation among
family members. While it may indeed be true that the authors'
son would experience adjustment difficulties if the authors
were to return with him to Indonesia, these difficulties are
not such as to make the State party's decision to require the
authors to leave its territory disproportionate to its legitimate
interest in enforcing its immigration laws. That decision cannot
be regarded as arbitrary and we therefore cannot concur in the
Committee's view that the State party has violated the rights
of the authors and their son under articles 17 and 23 of the
Covenant.
6. Before concluding
this opinion we wish to add that besides removing any clear
meaning from the terms "interference with family"
and "arbitrary", used in article 17, it seems to us
that the Committee's approach to these terms has unfortunate
implications. In the first place, it penalizes States parties
which do not actively seek out illegal immigrants so as to force
them to leave, but prefer to rely on the responsibility of the
visitors themselves to comply with their laws and the conditions
of their entry permits. It also penalizes States parties, which
do not require all persons to carry identification documents
and to prove their status every time they have any contact with
a state authority, since it is fairly easy for visitors on limited
visas to remain undetected in the territory of such States parties
for long periods of time. In the second place, the Committee's
approach may provide an unfair advantage to persons who ignore
the immigration requirements of a State party and prefer to
remain unlawfully in its territory rather than following the
procedure open to prospective immigrants under the State party's
laws. This advantage may become especially problematical when
the State party adopts a limited immigration policy, based on
a given number of immigrants in any given year, for it allows
potential immigrants to "jump the queue" by remaining
unlawfully in the State party's territory.
[signed] Prafullachandra
Natwarlal Bhagwati
[signed] Ahmed Tawfik
Khalil
[signed] David Kretzmer
[signed] Max Yalden
[Done in English, French and Spanish, the English text being the
original version. Subsequently to be issued also in Arabic, Chinese
and Russian as part of the Committee's annual report to the General
Assembly.]
Notes
1. The State party's chronology provides the date for this event
as 20 October 1998.
2. The authors have
not contested that re-acquisition of Indonesian citizenship
would be unproblematic.
3. The State party's
chronology provides the date for this event as 20 October 1998.
4. Under s.417 of
the Migration Act, the Minister may substitute the decision
of the RRT with a more favourable one if it is considered in
the public interest to do so.
5. The report, on
file with the Secretariat, states in relation to the family's
life in Australia that (i) Barry is having a normal upbringing
and education, has "several fairly close friends",
understands (but apparently does not speak) Indonesian, and
(ii) the family is a strong and close one in the Chinese tradition,
but outgoing and with a variety of multicultural friendships
through work, church and social life. The report also refers
to refugee issues relating to the family history which are not
pursued in the present communication.
6. The authors were
formally advised of the Minister's decision on 17 May 2000,
postdating the dispatch of the communication to the Committee
on 11 May 2000.
7. Communication
26/1978, declared inadmissible on 28 July 1978.
8. Bossuyt, Guide
to the "Travaux Préparatoires" of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1987), at 347.
9. The State party
refers to the decision of the European Commission of Human Rights
in Family X v. the United Kingdom (Decisions and Reports of
the European Commission of Human Rights 30 (1983)), which found
that the fact that expulsion would prevent the son from continuing
his education in the United Kingdom did not constitute an interference
with the right to respect for family life.
10. The 10-year
period does not include the time the authors have been allowed
to remain in Australia while they seek to legalize their status.
11. Stewart v. Canada
(Comm. 538/1993) and Canepa v. Canada (Comm. 558/1993).
12. (1996) 22 EHRR
228.
13. Judgment of
20 March 1991 (Case 46/1990/237/307).
14. Judgment of
27 January 1997.
15. (1988) 11 EHRR
322.
16. The State party
points out that in that case, unlike the present circumstances,
the proposed action would have split the two parents between
two countries.
17. Ahmut v. The
Netherlands (Application No. 21702/93, judgment of 28 November
1996).
18. Nowak, United
Nations Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: CCPR Commentary,
NP Engel (1993) at 460.
19. The refugee
application, so the State party, shows that Mr. Winata was never
arrested, detained, imprisoned, interrogated or mistreated in
Indonesia, nor that his property was damaged.
20. Reference is
made to its Third Periodic Report under the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, at paragraphs 323-332 and 1193.
21. The State party
refers to the psychiatric report's classification of Barry as
a "multicultural Chinese Australian boy".
22. The author supplies
a copy of a media release of 11 October 2000 by the Minister
for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs to this effect.
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