Plaintiff M70/2011 v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship

Plaintiff M70/2011
Court High Court of Australia
Keywords
Judicial review, asylum seekers

Plaintiff M70/2011 & Plaintiff M106 of 2011 by his Litigation Guardian v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship was a 6-1 decision, of the High Court of Australia,[1] regarding the movement of asylum seekers to Malaysia under an Australian government policy known colloquially as the Malaysian Solution.

Judgment

The High Court found that Malaysia was not legally bound to protect the asylum seekers under the "Migration Act 1958", which therefore made the policy invalid. "Malaysia is not a party to the Refugees Convention or its protocol," the High Court said in a statement.[2]

Most significantly the Court held that, the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship cannot validly deport asylum seekers to a third country unless that country is legally bound by international law or its own domestic law to:

The Court also decided that an unaccompanied asylum seeker who is under 18 years of age may not lawfully be taken from Australia without the Minister's written consent.[3] The Court granted an injunction restraining the removal of the second plaintiff, an Afghan citizen aged 16, from Australia without that consent.

Significance

The ruling was criticised as a 'missed opportunity' by the Government of Prime Minister Julia Gillard and resulted in the Australian Government having to reconsider its response to highly politicised issue of Asylum seekers.[4]

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/3/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.