User Menu

Your News

Related Items

Put an end to Haneef case, says Law Council Print E-mail
Friday, 24 August 2007

Australia’s Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews

Melbourne: Flaying the use of “broad, unfettered” discretion to expel a person from the country, the Law Council of Australia said the Federal Court’s decision on the Mohammed Haneef case — that the Government cannot cancel someone’s visa on the basis of an innocent association — should be the end of the matter.

“Australians should be concerned that Minister [Kevin] Andrews is so determined to pursue the power to expel a person from Australia, on the basis that they have, without more, merely associated with a suspected criminal,” Law Council President Tim Bugg said.

“This is a character test that is not about character at all,” Mr. Bugg was quoted as saying in The Australian on Thursday.

“Why would the Minister want the discretion to expel a person based on an association that ended ten years ago, or was only fleeting, or only reflected a familial connection or professional relationship?” Mr. Bugg said.

“Broad, unfettered discretions of that kind encourage sloppy research and lazy decision making. That is not the way to protect the Australian community,” he said.

Whether or not Justice Spender’s decision survives appeal, serious flaws will remain in how the criminal law and the Migration Act interact, he said.

Mr. Bugg said Dr. Haneef’s ability to obtain a fair trial was not a matter the Minister was required to consider when cancelling his visa.

“Surely the Migration Act should require the Minister to take fair trial implications into account,” Mr. Bugg said.

“The Minister’s continuing public comments on the alleged merits of the Haneef case, which are so inconsistent with any sense of procedural fairness or the presumption of innocence, provide sufficient cause for his removal,” Mr. Bugg said.

Andrews firm

Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews on Thursday lent his support to the Australian Federal Police which is referring the conduct of Dr. Haneef’s legal team to authorities. The AFP said it had complained to the Queensland Legal Services Commission over the release on Wednesday of the interview between police and the Indian-born doctor on July 13 and 14.

Dr. Haneef’s lawyers said they released the transcript to counter “slander” by federal authorities and to show he had nothing to hide and .

Mr. Andrews said he agreed with the criticism of the disclosure of the transcript. — PTI

Source: The Hindu  

Comments
Add NewSearchRSS
Write comment
Name:
Title:
Security Image

Powered by JoomlaCommentCopyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved.Homepage: http://cavo.co.nr/

 
< Prev   Next >