“But this … is the way Australia's offshore detention regime is being undone, not by some dramatic policy shift, but one by one, refugee by refugee.”Footnote 1
A. Introduction
Australia's offshore detention regime has been the subject of numerous attempts to seek accountability for harm caused to detainees using legal and other avenues in Australia. These have ranged from legal actions seeking compensation for human rights abuses framed in tort; actions claiming specific injunctive relief; constitutional challenges; coronial enquiries into deaths in detention; criminal investigations; and parliamentary inquiries. However, attempts to effect systemic change to Australia's refugee and asylum policies through legal avenues have had limited success. This is in part due to the Australian government's agility in responding to such claims. The government has acted to legislate to anticipate the outcome of litigation challenging the legal basis for offshore detention,Footnote 2 has limited avenues for judicial review,Footnote 3 and has restricted the jurisdiction of Australian courts to hear claims concerning offshore detention.Footnote 4 Further, Australia has displayed a notable level of indifference to criticism that it is breaching its obligations under international law.Footnote 5
This makes Australia a particularly challenging legal environment in which to litigate, both to challenge the underlying legal framework supporting Australia's policies towards refugees and asylum seekers, and also to seek redress for harms done to detainees while in immigration detention. Strategic litigationFootnote 6 has played an important role in pursuing accountability for wrongs arising from Australia's offshore detention regime. However, the limited range of remedies available and the political context place clear constraints on the such litigation's potential to provide effective remedy and drive policy change.
There is no direct cause of action for violations of human rights standards under Australian law. However, it is possible for Australian courts to accept jurisdiction over claims concerning extraterritorial human rights violations framed as civil suits. While they have had varying degrees of success, Australian courts have shown themselves to be receptive to tort claims with an extraterritorial dimension, making it an underexplored but potentially attractive jurisdiction in which to bring such claims.
While these actions have vindicated the rights of those in offshore detention in specific ways, and in some instances facilitated compensation for harms caused to detainees while in detention, none have proved capable of challenging the underlying basis of the offshore detention regime, nor of providing a foreseeable end to the detention of detainees, whether by facilitating a credible prospect for resettlement, or by other means.
Nonetheless, litigation cannot be discounted as a means of defining and enforcing the rights of offshore detainees in certain circumstances. This Article examines recent strategic litigation actions against the Australian government and the corporate contractors engaged in offshore detention, including: Kamasaee v. Commonwealth,Footnote 7 which was brought against Australia and service providers including TransfieldFootnote 8 and security contractor G4S; AUB19 v. Commonwealth,Footnote 9 which expressly alleged that the conditions in offshore immigration detention constituted international crimes; and actions seeking injunctions requiring the Australia government to airlift individual detainees in offshore detention to Australia for medical treatment (Medevac cases), which have been more successful than claims which have attempted to effect more systemic change.
This Article provides an account of the achievements and limitations of these claims, noting that the complex political and legal environment in which they are brought requires particular care in framing such claims in order to avoid unintended consequences. The Article notes that a number of claims have resulted in problematic outcomes. This includes the effect of past settlements on litigating future actions, such as the settlement in the Kamasaee case. It also notes that the government responses to some of these legal challenges has on occasion led to the introduction of more draconian policies, meaning that a great degree of care must be taken when taking a decision to pursue strategic litigation in the current political and legal environment. The Article concludes that although certain features of the Australian jurisdiction make it possible to pursue transnational claims, and thus potentially provide an effective remedy for those who have suffered wrongs while detained in Australia's offshore detention regime, such claims need to be pursued with the utmost care and with careful consideration of the complexities of the Australian political and legal environment.
B. Australia's Offshore Detention Regime—History and Politics
Boats carrying asylum seekers have arrived in Australian territorial waters on and off since the 1970s. While policies towards these boat arrivals have evolved with a succession of governments, modern Australian asylum policy took shape following the interception of the MV Tampa by Australian defense forces in 2001.Footnote 10 The Tampa was a Norwegian freighter vessel which had responded to a distress signal from a fishing boat carrying mostly Afghan Hazara asylum seekers en route from Indonesia to Australia. When the Tampa approached Christmas Island, off the north-west coast of Australia, Australian troops seized control of the ship. John Howard, the Australian Prime Minister at the time, directed that the asylum seekers be refused permission to disembark. An early legal challenge in response to the refusal to let the detainees disembark from the Tampa succeeded in obtaining a writ of habeas corpus, but was subsequently overturned on appeal.Footnote 11 During the standoff, the Australian House of Representatives passed the Border Protection Bill 2001 (Cth), which would have empowered the Government to remove any foreign vessel from Australian territorial waters. The Bill did not pass the Senate, but a matter of days later, the Government had made arrangements with Nauru, a small island nation in Micronesia, for it to act as a Regional Processing Centre (RPC). Although this initial attempted legislative intervention was unsuccessful, following the Tampa incident, the Government passed a series of laws which laid down the legal framework for a shift in asylum policy known as the “Pacific Solution,” which enabled the so-called “offshore processing”Footnote 12 of asylum seekers. This included the Migration Amendment (Unauthorised Maritime Arrivals and Other Measures) Act 2013 Footnote 13 that purported to excise the Australian mainland from the “migration zone.”Footnote 14
The legal regime that enables Australia's offshore detention regime cannot be considered separately from the politics surrounding refugees and asylum seekers. Shortly after the Tampa incident in October 2001, Ministers in the Howard government made a series of allegations that asylum seekers in distressed vessel off the coast of Christmas Island had thrown their children overboard, prompting outrage in Australia. Although a Senate inquiryFootnote 15 subsequently found that there was no evidence to support the allegations that children were thrown overboard, the incident created a climate of antipathy towards asylum seekers.Footnote 16 In a speech given in November 2001, then Prime Minister John Howard stated, “we will decide who comes to this country and the manner in which they come.”Footnote 17 Deterrence policies that linked the arrival of asylum seekers by boat with the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York on September 11, 2001, became the centerpiece of Howard's successful reelection campaignFootnote 18 and saw a shift in Australia's political culture that is still felt today.Footnote 19 Offshore detention, legislative intervention and alarmist rhetoric would become features of Australian asylum policy in the years to come.Footnote 20
Australia is one of a handful of states to have practiced extraterritorial detention of asylum seekers. Offshore processing, though originally intended to detain asylum seekers for a short time while their applications for asylum or refugee status were processed, became the basis for Australia's regime of mandatory indefinite offshore detention.
Offshore detention is one aspect of a strict set of policies designed to deter asylum seekers from attempting to enter Australian territory irregularly by boat. The backbone of the current policy regime is “Operation Sovereign Borders,” a military operation with a mandate to stop “Suspected Illegal Entry Vessels” (SIEVs) from entering Australian territory, introduced in September 2013. Under Operation Sovereign Borders, asylum seekers travelling on SIEVs are prevented from landing in Australia. An SIEV attempting to enter Australian waters is either turned back by Australian defense forces and returned to international waters, or asylum seekers on board are detained before they are transferred to offshore processing centres or returned to their country of origin.Footnote 21 From the introduction of Operation Sovereign Borders onwards, all asylum seekers arriving by boat without appropriate authorization have been sent offshore for processing and resettlement. Pursuant to the policy, persons who attempt to travel to Australia by boat will never be resettled in Australia, regardless of whether they are determined to be a refugee. Those found not to be refugees are returned to their home country or are subject to indefinite detention in an offshore detention facility.Footnote 22 Following the closure of the Manus Island Regional Processing Centre (Manus RPC) in Papua New Guinea,Footnote 23 the Australian Government currently utilizes two offshore detention facilities: one on Nauru and one on Christmas Island.Footnote 24
Provision of services to the RPCs is contracted out to a variety of service and security providers. Over the life of the RPCs, these have included Broadspectrum (formerly Transfield), International Health Management Services (IHMS), G4S, Wilson Security, Canstruct, and Paladin. The Australian government also funds the work of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Indonesia, where it undertakes a variety of migration controls aimed at preventing the arrival of asylum seekers in Australia.Footnote 25
This system of mandatory, indefinite extraterritorial detention of asylum seekers arriving by boat is unique to Australia,Footnote 26 although there are parallels with the use of Guantanamo Bay as an asylum processing centre by the US in response to the mass exodus of Haitian asylum seekers in the 1990s.Footnote 27 Although there have been a number of constitutional claims brought against the Australian Government challenging the legality of the regime of indefinite offshore processing and detention,Footnote 28 none have been successful. This is in part due to interventions by the Australian government. During one such High Court challenge, which challenged the legality of offshore closed detention on Nauru, the Australian government took the extraordinary step of passing legislation to amend the provisions of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) and the Migration Amendment (Regional Processing Arrangements) Act 2015 (Cth) that were the subject of the constitutional challenge while the proceedings were on foot, and took steps to change the detention arrangements on Nauru to make it an “open centre arrangement,” effectively preempting the outcome of the case.Footnote 29
C. Harms Caused in Detention
The poor living conditions in Australia's offshore detention centres are well documented, including by UN bodiesFootnote 30 and by NGOsFootnote 31 and grassroots groups,Footnote 32 the Australian Human Rights Commission,Footnote 33 Australian Senate Committee reports,Footnote 34 and independent reports.Footnote 35 Australia's policy of mandatory detention has also been consistently found to violate the prohibition on arbitrary detention by the UN Human Rights Committee.Footnote 36 However, the operation of the RPCs has been shrouded in secrecy and there is a limited amount of information about the conditions in the RPCs that can be obtained through official channels. A provision of the Australian Border Force Act 2015 makes disclosure of facts or information observed by employees or subcontractors working at the RPCs a criminal offense punishable by harsh penalties, which is a powerful disincentive for those who have worked in the RPCs to disclose what they have seen.Footnote 37 In addition, detainees are largely cut off from the outside world, with restrictions placed on telephone and internet access.Footnote 38 This level of secrecy has hampered efforts to learn of harms suffered by detainees in offshore detention, and to pursue accountability for the wrongs that caused those harms. Nonetheless, information concerning the detention conditions at the RPCs has come to light through reports from detainees using smuggled mobile phones,Footnote 39 whistleblowers, and document leaks.
In 2016, a cache of over 2,000 documents containing incident reports from the Nauru Regional Processing Centre (Nauru RPC) was leaked to the press. The incident reports concern allegations of assault, sexual abuse, self-harm, child abuse, and unsanitary an inadequate living conditions. Around half of the incident reports concerned children who were held in detention.Footnote 40 Documents originating from two of the corporate contractors, Broadspectrum and Wilson Security, who ran the operations and security at the Manus RPC, revealed that conduct of the RPCs and the poor conditions in which detainees were housed were, in part, directed at coercing detainees with recognized refugee status into resettling in PNG and encouraging asylum seekers to abandon their claims for refugee status and return to their home countries.Footnote 41
Given the limited avenues for accessing information, the discovery process in litigation can be a powerful tool to obtain information about the conduct of the RPCs, the conditions under which detainees are detained and harms suffered by detainees. Witnesses who were to give evidence in the Kamasaee litigation discussed further below, including doctors, security workers and social workers, had been previously prohibited from making disclosures of information concerning the RPCs pursuant to the provisions of the Australian Border Force Act referenced above. However, these witnesses were provided with exemptions to those provisions in order to enable them to provide evidence in the litigation.Footnote 42
Evidence disclosed through these different avenues reveals that, between 2000 and 2018, 17 people have died in offshore detention.Footnote 43 These deaths have been the result of a range of causes including suicide, inadequate medical care, and fatal assault. For example:
In February 2014, the Manus RPC was raided by “police, guards and local people.”Footnote 44 During the raid, many of the detainees were injured and a 23-year-old Iranian man, Reza Barati, died after a group of up to 15 men attacked him with a nail-studded plank of wood and hit his head with a rock.Footnote 45 The raid was precipitated by mounting animosity towards the detainees in the local community.Footnote 46 Testimony before the Australian Senate Committee investigating the incident indicated that the violence was foreseeable, including testimony by a former guard at the Manus RPC who stated that “we knew this was going to end in violence.”Footnote 47
In September 2014, 24-year-old Hamid Kehazaei died of septicemia from a minor shin injury because the Manus RPC's medical facility had no supplies of the antibiotics required to treat the injury, and bureaucratic delays prevented Mr. Kehazaei from being airlifted to Australia for treatment.Footnote 48 A coronial enquiry conducted by the Queensland Coroner found that the death of Mr. Kehazaei was preventable and the result of “compounding errors” in health care provided under Australia's offshore detention regime.Footnote 49
In April 2016, Omid Masoumali, a detainee in the Nauru RPC, self-immolated in front of visiting UN representatives. Mr. Masoumali suffered extensive burns across his body and eventually succumbed to his injuries. He was taken to a local medical centre on Nauru but was not airlifted to Australia for treatment until 30 hours after sustaining the injuries. An inquest conducted by the Queensland coroner was told that Masoumali would have had a 90–95% chance of survival had he been treated in a timely fashion in an Australian hospital.Footnote 50
Some of these incidents have been the subject of tort litigation in Australia alleging that Australia breached its duty of care owed to asylum seekers in offshore detention described in Part E below, made possible by the enabling environment of substantive and procedural rules outlined in Part D below.
D. Australia as a Forum for Transnational Human Rights Litigation
Australia has an established body of jurisprudence prescribing when an Australian court may exercise jurisdiction over tort actions that concern extraterritorial activities, rules to ascertain the applicable law, and procedural tools such as the availability of class action suits. The combined effect of these rules makes Australia an unusually permissive jurisdiction for transnational human rights litigation framed in tort, albeit one that is largely untested.Footnote 51
Unlike most common law jurisdictions, the Australian rule on forum non conveniens prescribes that cases will only be stayed on forum non conveniens grounds if Australia is a “clearly inappropriate forum.”Footnote 52 This test was made even more favorable to transnational litigation following the decision in Régie Nationale des Usines Renault SA v. Zhang,Footnote 53 in which the High Court held that a stay on forum non conveniens grounds would only be successful where to allow the trial to continue in Australia “would be productive of injustice, … oppressive in the sense of seriously and unfairly burdensome, prejudicial or damaging, or vexatious, in the sense of productive of serious and unjustified trouble and harassment.”Footnote 54
Australian courts have the authority to hear cases involving damage suffered partly within the jurisdiction in respect of a tort, wheresoever occurring, and permit service out of the jurisdiction in compliance with their respective court rules. The nexus requirements are interpreted leniently.Footnote 55 Australian courts have taken a particularly permissive approach to establishing presence in the jurisdiction,Footnote 56 and in practice it is not a significantly high threshold to overcome.
Although Australian courts will apply the lex loci delicti principle strictly when determining the applicable law with no scope for a flexible exception,Footnote 57 there is a deal of flexibility around the test for determining where the relevant wrong has occurred.Footnote 58 While it will depend on the precise factual matrix, this flexibility gives scope to advantageously frame a claim through the characterization process to advance a credible case for Australian law to apply. Even where foreign law is the applicable law, Australian courts have shown themselves to be comfortable applying foreign law where it is pleaded and proved as a matter of fact, often by relying on expert evidence.Footnote 59 Where foreign law is not pleaded and proved, it will be assumed to be the same as the law of the forum.Footnote 60
A further advantage is the availability of class action suits, which have been a part of Australia's legal landscape since their introduction in 1992,Footnote 61 although the number of class action suits has been relatively modest.Footnote 62 This mechanism utilizes an “opt out” model pursuant to which all potential plaintiffs within a defined class become members of the claimant class upon filing a claim brought by a representative claimant. “Opt out” models are generally more advantageous to prospective plaintiffs than “opt in” models used in other jurisdictions,Footnote 63 as they omit the need for individual claimants within the class to be identified at the outset of proceedings.
Despite the features of the Australian jurisdiction outlined above that make it a favorable jurisdiction in which to pursue transnational human rights claims, there have been only a handful of any such cases brought in Australian courts,Footnote 64 none of which have proceeded to trial.Footnote 65 The most significant barriers concern matters of funding and costs. Litigation that involves complex fact patterns with an extraterritorial component, novel legal issues, the possibility of having to plead and prove foreign law and a plaintiff group and relevant witnesses who may be in another jurisdiction is necessarily expensive. Further, Australian costs rules usually require an unsuccessful party to pay the successful party's costs. In a “loser pays” environment, such claims can generally only be brought by plaintiff law firms who have the financial resources to assume a degree of financial risk.Footnote 66 However, there are moves to address the barriers to access to justice associated with funding issues by the establishment of litigation funds for public interest litigation.Footnote 67 Further, there has been considerable growth in the third party litigation funding to fund class actionsFootnote 68 following the judicial approval of such mechanisms,Footnote 69 which may provide a solution where a claim is particularly attractive to a funder.Footnote 70
In addition to these costs barriers, claims concerning Australia's immigration detention policies face a number of additional barriers, including with respect to available remedy. These are detailed in the following part.
E. Strategic Litigation and Offshore Detention
There is no direct cause of action for violations of human rights standards under Australian law, in contrast to some other jurisdictions.Footnote 71 Given the efforts of the Australian government to restrict avenues to legal challenge of the underlying legal framework which underpins its policies on offshore detention, seeking to dismantle the system through litigation has been of extremely limited success. However, private causes of action based on human rights violations may form the basis of a tort claim, whether framed as negligence, trespass, assault and battery, or wrongful imprisonment claims. In this environment, tort claims constitute one of the few remaining avenues for redress to challenge the conditions in detention, if not the system of detention itself.
Whether and how strategic litigation, and in particular strategic tort claims seeking monetary compensation, can change state behavior is a difficult question. A monetary award can have a punitive effect capable of changing behavior. However, literature on behavioral economics has noted that in certain circumstances, attaching a “price” to a violation can lead wrongdoers to perceive that they have “paid off” their wrongdoing, thereby negating the normative power of the social disapproval that would normally be associated with a violation.Footnote 72 Further, some of the legal challenges have led to more draconian state policies that have adapted the legal landscape and have made it less susceptible to challenge.Footnote 73
Nonetheless, although strategic litigation efforts need to be carefully calibrated to take into account the political environment in which they are brought, they remain a key vehicle to define and preserve the rights of those in detention.Footnote 74 One crucial element in tort actions seeking to enforce the rights of those in immigration detention is the duty of care owed by Australia and its service contractors to detainees. This duty has been the subject of a number of cases, and there is a developed body of jurisprudence applicable to determining its scope and nature.
Under Australian law, there are a number of categories of cases where a duty to take reasonable care under the law of negligence is non-delegable.Footnote 75 These categories of case are characterized by a “central element of control” that gives rise to a special responsibility because of the supervision or control of the person or property of another.Footnote 76 The relationship of proximity giving rise to the non-delegable duty of care in such cases is marked by special dependence or vulnerability on the part of the person to whom the duty is owed.Footnote 77 Where a finding has been made that Australia has a non-delegable duty to ensure that reasonable care is taken of detainees, that duty cannot be discharged by the employment of qualified and ostensibly competent independent contractors.Footnote 78
S v. Secretary, Department of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs Footnote 79 provided an important precedent concerning the content of the duty of care owed by the Australian Government to detainees in onshore detention, even where the provision of services to detainees is contracted out to service providers. The court held that Australia had breached its duty of care in failing to ensure that adequate mental health care was provided to two Iranian detainees. In that case, the contractual arrangements between the Commonwealth and its service contractors expressly acknowledged a duty of care “underpinned by the availability of timely, comprehensive and accurate information”Footnote 80 provided by the services provider to enable oversight to assess whether the duty is being discharged. In subsequent cases, the Commonwealth has argued that it is indemnified from liability because its service providers were contractually obliged to provide “best-practice” care,Footnote 81 but the precedent in S remains binding.
Although it is well established that the Australian government owes a non-delegable duty of care to those held in onshore detention, the question of what duty is owed to those held in offshore detention is less clear. In Plaintiff M68/2015 v. Minister for Immigration and Border Protection,Footnote 82 which concerned a Bangladeshi refugee detained on Nauru, a majority of the High Court found that although Australia's involvement was “materially supportive, if not a necessary condition, of Nauru's physical capacity to detain the plaintiff,”Footnote 83 it was Nauru, rather than Australia who was detaining the detainees housed in the Centre under Nauruan law. This finding was based in part on a finding that the Australian government could not have compelled or authorized Nauru to make or enforce the laws that required the plaintiff to be detained, absent Nauru doing so itself.Footnote 84
Subsequent cases sought to clarify the content of the duty of care, if any, owed by Australia to those in immigration detention. Plaintiff S99/2016 v. Minister for Immigration Footnote 85 concerned a young refugee detained on Nauru who had been raped during an apparent epileptic fit and who fell pregnant and sought a termination. Contrary to the recommendation of doctors, the Australian Minister for Immigration directed that she be brought to Papua New Guinea rather than Australia for the termination. An injunction was sought in the Federal Court preventing the Minister from procuring a termination in Papua New Guinea, where abortions are illegal. In granting the injunction, the court found that the Minister had a duty to ensure that medical treatment was provided safely and legally. This was the first case in which an Australian court found that the Australian government owed a duty of care to detainees in offshore detention.Footnote 86
The Memoranda of Understanding between Australia and Papua New Guinea and Nauru, which enable the Manus and Nauru RPCs respectively, do not contain an express acknowledgement of a duty of care owed by Australia to detainees. However, they do contain a requirement to communicate concerning the day to day operations of the RPCs, and establish a Joint Committee with responsibility for oversight, constituted by representatives from Australia and Papua New Guinea and Nauru respectively.Footnote 87 The high degree of practical control of the Australian government over the detainees held in offshore detention has been detailed in various reports and submissions to Parliamentary inquiries,Footnote 88 and has formed the basis of tortious compensation claims detailed below.
In SBEG v. Commonwealth of Australia Footnote 89 the Federal Court found that the obligation to exercise reasonable care for the safety of a person in immigration detention is an obligation to avoid harm to a detainee, whether that harm is inflicted by a third person or the detainee themselves. However, in spite of expert evidence led by the Commonwealth that the plaintiff was at a high risk of committing suicide if he were continued to be detained in immigration detention, the Court was unable to compel the issuing of a visa to the applicant, or making a residence determination.Footnote 90 While the Commonwealth has a duty of care to detainees while they are in detention, this duty does not extend to an obligation to release an unlawful non-citizen, even where it is clear that continuing to detain that person is likely to cause them further psychological harm. As all available forms of immigration detention “suffered from the same inherent problem of being immigration detention,”Footnote 91 there was no practical remedy that the Court was able to give.
SBEG is clear precedent that Australian courts are unable to compel release of detainees who are detained under the powers given by the Migration Act 1958 (Cth). This case reveals the inherent limitations of strategic litigation claims seeking accountability for those who have suffered wrongs in immigration detention. The restricted remedies available to prospective plaintiffs make it difficult to secure orders to release detainees from detention, and although compensation through damages awards is possible, this is clearly not an adequate remedy for those who will remain in detention following the award.
Nonetheless, NGOs such as the National Justice Project have focused their efforts on building on the precedent in Plaintiff S99/2016 with a series of claims seeking injunctions requiring the Australian government to provide detainees with urgent medical care.Footnote 92 Claimant law firms have also brought representative class actions alleging that Australia owes a duty to those in offshore detention and seeking compensation for harms suffered as a result of the breach of that duty.Footnote 93 These two broad categories of strategic claims are discussed in the following sections.
I. Tort-Based Compensation Claims
In February 2017, the Stanford Human Rights Clinic and the Global Legal Action Network supported by a group of prominent international law academics sent a communiqué calling upon the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate the situation in the RPCs on Manus Island and Nauru.Footnote 94 The communiqué argued that there was a reasonable basis for the Prosecutor to find that Australian agents and personnel of their corporate partners had perpetrated crimes against humanity including unlawful imprisonment, torture, deportation, persecution, and other inhumane acts. On February 12, 2020, the Office of the Prosecutor of the ICC responded to this communiqué and another earlier referral from Andrew Wilkie, an independent member of the Australian Parliament, that made similar allegations, declining to further investigate on the basis that the acts referred did not fall within the jurisdiction of the ICC, but noting that the conditions of detention “appear to have constituted cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment … and the gravity of the alleged conduct thus appears to have been such that it was in violation of the fundamental rules of international law.”Footnote 95 Two recent class actions have attempted to translate these alleged international crimes into negligence claims: Kamasaee v. Commonwealth of Australia Footnote 96 and AUB19 v. Commonwealth.Footnote 97
The “problem of translation,” by which the violation of a human rights norms may be translated into a civil cause of action, has been the subject of much discussion in the literature.Footnote 98 Framing human rights abuses as tort claims is a necessarily imperfect process, and will never mirror precisely the wrong done to an affected party as a result of a violation of their international human rights. However, in the absence of other effective routes to rights protection, transnational human rights litigation, framed in tort, remains a means of providing at least partial redress for such wrongs through the provision of compensation.Footnote 99
In addition to providing damages for wrongs, class action claims have the potential to drive broader policy change.Footnote 100 However, to date this potential remains unrealized in the Australian context. As will be discussed further below, the two most high profile recent class actions, Kamasaee v. Commonwealth Footnote 101 and AUB19 v. Commonwealth,Footnote 102 have failed to have a significant effect on Australia's asylum policies.
1. Kamasaee v. CommonwealthFootnote 103
In 2014, Majeed Kamasaee became the lead plaintiff in a class action suit filed in the Supreme Court of Victoria against Australia and two corporate contractors engaged by the Australian Government to operate the Manus RPC, G4S and Transfield. Wilson Security, who preceded G4S as a security contractor, was joined as a third party.Footnote 104
Mr. Kamasaee is an Iranian national who attempted to travel to Australia from Indonesia for the purpose of seeking asylum. The boat on which Mr. Kamasaee was travelling was intercepted by an Australian Naval vessel and he was taken into Australian custody. After being briefly detained in Australia, he was sent to Manus and detained in the Centre for approximately 11 months.Footnote 105 The crux of the claim was that Australia, G4S, and Transfield each owed a duty of care to Mr. Kamasaee and the plaintiff group based on their practical control over:
the Centre premises;
the location of detainees within those premises; and
the provision of services to the detainees including the provision of food, water, shelter and accommodation, medical and health care, and physical security, whether directly or through subcontractors or agents.Footnote 106
The standard of care to be provided was alleged to be equivalent to that required in respect of persons held in immigration detention in Australia,Footnote 107 and included a duty to take reasonable care to avoid foreseeable harm to the detainees.Footnote 108 The existence of this duty was denied by AustraliaFootnote 109 and admitted by G4S and Transfield, but only to the extent that such a duty applied to the discharge of their contractual obligations.Footnote 110 The case was ultimately settled for AUD70 million plus costs, considered to be the largest human rights class action settlement in Australian history.Footnote 111 In proceedings on March 27, 2018, it was reported that about AUD67 million of the AUD70 million had been distributed to all but 73 of the 1,695 claimants.Footnote 112 The size of the settlement is undoubtedly substantial, however, it was agreed without admission of liability, and many of the detainees who comprise the plaintiff group continue to live in a state of limbo, as their resettlement prospects remain uncertain following the closure of the Centre on October 31, 2017.Footnote 113
The Kamasaee case was an opportunity to shed light on the detention conditions in the Manus RPC and Australia's offshore detention regime more generally. However, a successful outcome was by no means assured. There were a number of significant obstacles in bringing the case, including that of the cost of the litigation, easily the most significant barrier to accessing transnational human rights litigation under Australia's judicial system, which the plaintiff group were able to successfully navigate. However, the Kamasaee claim faced a number of specific issues that are likely to have made settlement an attractive option for the plaintiff group, in particular, the application of the act of state doctrine.
In certain circumstances, Australian courts will decline jurisdiction to determine the legality of certain government acts under the “act of state” doctrine. The doctrine cannot be pleaded with respect to any act done within Australian territory.Footnote 114 However, it may be pleaded as a bar to jurisdiction by “any person who acted outside Australia under the orders of the Crown or whose action was authorized by it or subsequently ratified by it.”Footnote 115 Not every governmental act qualifies as an “act of state,” and the justiciability of a claim with respect to acts done by a government entity, or by non-governmental entities acting at the behest of a government, will depend on the nature of the act done.Footnote 116 The corporate contractors in the Kamasaee case were acting in furtherance of Australian government policy outside of Australian territory. Accordingly, there is a real question as to whether the plaintiff group's claims would have been barred by the operation of this doctrine.
Nonetheless, the Kamasaee case shows that transnational tort litigation can act as a partial deterrent for corporate actors when deployed alongside broader campaigning initiatives. Although Australia's policies of mandatory detention currently enjoy bipartisan support and a strong level of public approval, in recent years there has been activism in Australia directed toward companies who profit from the conduct of Australia's privatized offshore detention centres. The #GameOver movement led by soccer star Craig Foster has raised the profile of the plight of asylum seekers in offshore detention, and grassroots activist and civil society groups have applied pressure to corporate contractors who facilitate the detention infrastructure through boycotts.Footnote 117 Activist organizations such as Get Up and No Business in Abuse have focused on divestment campaigns targeting investors in Transfield, one of the corporate service providers on Manus. These campaigns have had some successes, contributing to decisions by Hesta and other leading superannuation funds to divest their shares in the company.Footnote 118 The campaign also targeted Transfield for alleged failure to disclose its contribution to human rights abuses in Manus and Nauru.Footnote 119
All corporate contractors engaged to manage the Centre during the period the subject of the Kamasaee litigation have made public commitments to ending their involvement with Australia's offshore detention regime. Ferrovial, which acquired Broadspectrum in 2016, stated its desire to end its involvement with the regime in 2016 amid warnings that it could be liable to prosecution under international criminal law.Footnote 120 In spite of this commitment, the Australian government unilaterally renewed Broadspectrum's contract, which obliged it to continue the provision of services up to October 2017.Footnote 121 Similarly, Wilson Security, engaged by Broadspectrum to provide security services to the Manus RPC, announced that it would not provide further detention services to the Australian Government following the expiry of their contract in October 2017.Footnote 122
As a result of these campaigns, the Australian government has found it difficult to secure reputable service providers to continue the provision of services to the RPCs following Broadspectrum's exit. Paladin, who was awarded the AUD423 million services contract after Broadspectrum, has been the subject of media investigation which has discovered significant irregularities in the award of the contract. An investigation by the Australian Financial Review Footnote 123 revealed that it had been awarded to Paladin through a closed tender process. It was further revealed that Paladin had little experience in providing garrison and security services and at the time of the award listed its Australian head office as a beach shack on Kangaroo Island, a relatively remote part of Australia. Asylum seekers detained on Manus have stated that Paladin is doing very little on the ground in exchange for the lucrative contract.Footnote 124
During a Senate estimates hearing in February 2019, the head of the Department of Home Affairs, which currently oversees immigration detention, was forced to deny allegations that department bureaucrats awarded the contract to Paladin because they were “desperate,” although they conceded that the award took place against an “urgent” set of circumstances.Footnote 125 It was conceded during this hearing that Paladin had been approached because major companies were not interested in tendering to provide services because there was “too much noise around regional processing.”Footnote 126
A review by the Australian Auditor-General found that the Department of Home Affairs, which now oversees the immigration portfolio, had fallen short of effective contract management and raised questions around the award of the contracts. After initial resistance, the investigations prompted the Department to engage internal auditors to examine service contracts awarded to Paladin for operating and providing security services to the Manus RPC. The investigation by the Auditor-General was subsequently expanded to all contracts in relation to the provision of services to the offshore detention facilities.Footnote 127
Although the features of the Australian legal system referred to above in Part D made claims against G4S and Transfield possible and created the risk of legal liability, the Australian Government has acted to protect its policy of offshore detention and shield its corporate contractors from liability by taking steps to pre-empt the outcomes of legal challenges, including through legislative interventions referred to in Part B. The matters that formed the subject of Kamasaee were primarily the product of Australian Government policy, and the settlement of the claim means that clarity regarding the legal limits on Australia's offshore detention regime, the duties owed to detainees in offshore detention, and what corporate contractors may do to facilitate the policy has again been eluded.Footnote 128 Many legal commentators view the settlement as a missed opportunity to clarify the law on liability for extraterritorial human rights abuses and to shine light on the conduct of the RPCs.Footnote 129
As this claim was not ultimately resolved by a court, the contractors who provide services to the RPCs still exist under a cloud of potential legal liability under the Australian legal system. Although analysis of the parties’ pleadings and the legal issues they raise may provide a road map for future plaintiffs and the quantum of the settlement sum may encourage future litigation, the terms of the settlement place a bar on pursuing future actions concerning the Manus RPC, discussed further at Section E.III. below. At the same time, the claim raises real questions about the viability of litigation and financial compensation to provide adequate remedy for detainees in the offshore detention regime.
Although the law firm who acted for Mr. Kamasaee, Slater and Gordon, claimed victory following the settlement, in truth the quantum of the settlement is modest when considered against the gravity of the allegations, and particularly when considered against the overall costs of the offshore detention program. Costing prepared on behalf of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, Save the Children, and GetUp in December 2019 has estimated that the costs of continuing the program of offshore detention for the next three years would be in the amount of AUD1.2 billion, on top of the estimated AUD18.6 billion in costs which had been incurred since the introduction of Operation Sovereign Borders in the period 2013 to 2020.Footnote 130 The existence of a potentially fatal flaw in the claim arising from the operation of act of state doctrine which is likely to have facilitated such a modest settlement has clearly limited the impact of the action in effecting policy change. If any further litigation concerning Australia's offshore detention regime is going to be capable of realizing the potential of class actions to effect policy change, extreme care needs to be taken with how they are conceptualized and pleaded. These difficulties are borne out in a class action that followed Kamasaee, AUB19 v. Commonwealth.
2. AUB19 v. CommonwealthFootnote 131
The connection between international crimes and tort was made more explicit in two subsequent actions brought against the Australian government. In December 2018, two class actions were filed that argued that the Australian Government owed a duty of care to the remaining detainees in offshore detention, one in respect of detainees on Manus and one in respect of detainees on Nauru, at the time of filing around 1,300 people.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs gave numerous interviews when the claims were filed citing the importance of the case, its innovative approach, and strategic nature. The filing of the claims received considerable media coverage in the AustralianFootnote 132 and international press,Footnote 133 which reported that the Australian government was being sued for having failed to prevent crimes against humanity.
A duty of care was alleged to be based on obligations arising from 2013 Memoranda of Understanding and subsequent administrative arrangements with the Nauran and Papua New Guinean governments. The statements of claim alleged that Australia's duty of care extends to taking reasonable steps to prevent crimes against humanity. It was alleged that Australia breached this duty by treating class members in a manner that rose to the level of crimes against humanity, as defined the International Criminal Court and adopted by Australia under Section 268 of the Criminal Code Act 1995,Footnote 134 specifically: imprisonment or other severe deprivation of physical liberty;Footnote 135 torture;Footnote 136 persecution;Footnote 137 and other inhumane acts.Footnote 138 The claim also alleged that the Australian government had breached the duty by engaging in conduct contrary to the prohibition on torture under s274 of the Criminal Code Act 1995, which incorporates obligations under the 1984 UN Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, ratified by Australia in 1986.Footnote 139 Both actions sought compensation and injunctions against a continuation of Australia's tort of negligence. In addition to compensatory damages, if successful, the claims would have had the effect of requiring the transfer of refugees and people seeking asylum from Nauru and Papua New Guinea to safety.Footnote 140
For jurisdictional reasons, the actions were filed in the High Court, but were subsequently remitted to the Federal Court.Footnote 141 The claims were ultimately discontinued but, unlike the claims in Kamasaee, were not the subject of any settlement between the parties. The discontinuance was without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiffs, leaving open the possibility that further claims could follow.Footnote 142 While the precise reasons for the discontinuance have not been made public, affidavit evidence filed by the respondents detailed a number of objections to the way that the claims were framed in the pleadings. The objections included the definition of the class, which lawyers for the plaintiffs conceded would be required.Footnote 143 In sum, the objections to the pleadings were described by as “substantial and substantive” by Justice Mortimer in her judgment approving the discontinuance.Footnote 144
As is noted below, it is likely that the terms of the Kamasaee settlement created difficulties for the aspects of the claim that concerned the Manus RPC. The AUB19 claim was discontinued quietly, in stark contrast to the attention it received when it was filed. Accordingly, the value of what was a potentially promising piece of litigation and a valuable opportunity to shine light on the conduct of the RPCs, gain media attention, and apply political pressure with a view to effecting a change in policy was ultimately extremely limited. The outcome in this claim is an indication of the complexity of the legal landscape concerning offshore detention, the effect that past claims have had on the future prospects for strategic litigation, and the care required in framing future strategic litigation against that landscape.
II. The Medevac Cases
Building on the precedent in S99/2016, which established that a duty of care is owed to detainees in the RPCs, a number of further claims were brought in the course of 2018 seeking urgent mandatory interlocutory injunctions to compel the Australian Government to provide adequate medical care to those in offshore detention.Footnote 145 These claims have resulted in the evacuation of hundreds of people from Nauru and Papua New Guinea to Australia for medical treatment or the treatment of their family members.Footnote 146
FRM17 v. Minister for Home Affairs Footnote 147 is one such claim, in which the Australian government was found to owe a duty of care to provide adequate mental health treatment to those in offshore detention and was ordered to remove two refugee children from Nauru to Australia for mental health treatment. The government has sought to appeal this decision to the High Court, arguing that the Federal Court has no jurisdiction to hear cases brought on behalf of those detained in offshore detention seeking medical transfers.Footnote 148
These cases generated significant media attention in Australia, communicating the scale of the mental and broader health crises that were occurring among detainees in the RPCs, as well as the inadequate state of medical care available in the RPCs. Prominent civil society actors and professional groups such as the Australian Medical Association began to lend their support to a reform of the system for the provision of medical care to detainees in offshore detention. In response, independent Member of Parliament, Dr. Kerryn Phelps, introduced the Home Affairs Legislation Amendment (Miscellaneous Measures) Bill 2018 (the Medevac Bill) to streamline the system for medical evacuations to Australia which placed responsibility for determining whether an evacuation should occur in the hands of treating doctors, rather than government bureaucrats in an effort to avoid preventable deaths and injuries, such as that of Hamid Khezai detailed above at Part C.Footnote 149 The bill was passed into law in March 2019 against the wishes of the government.Footnote 150 Following the federal election on May 18, 2019, the Government regained a majority and engaged in a campaign to repeal the legislation. It ultimately succeeded in doing so on December 4, 2019.
This category of case clearly shows the interplay between interventions by the court and the political and legislative responses by the government in respect of offshore immigration detention. There are 52 asylum seekers who lodged claims in the Federal Court before the Medevac bill became law, seeking compensation for delays in the provision of medical care and orders that they be transferred to Australia for medical treatment.Footnote 151 The prospects for these claims is dependent on the outcome of the appeal in FRM17. In the absence of the Medevac Law, the precedents which have established an obligation on the Australian government to provide adequate medical care and medical evacuations where necessary are the only means for those in offshore detention to ensure that adequate medical care is given.
III. Settlements and Future Claims
While Kamasaee and the AUB19 claims are the most recent and high profile of the recent tort actions seeking accountability for wrongs committed in offshore detention, they are by no means the only attempts to do so.
Previous claims have been settled out of court, including a 2014 claim brought against the Commonwealth and security contractor G4S by a detainee who lost an eye as a result of severe facial injuries sustained during a riot at the Manus RPC.Footnote 152 The claim settled in December 2015 for an undisclosed amount.Footnote 153
A further claim in respect of the death of Omid Masoumali by self-immolation described above has been brought by Mr. Masoumali's partner against the Australian government and its contractor, International Health and Medical Services (IHMS), in the Supreme Court of Victoria. The claim alleges that the Australian government owed Mr. Masoumali a duty of care because it was responsible for the detention, maintenance, and care of asylum seekers on Nauru and had engaged IHMS to provide medical and evacuation services to detainees.Footnote 154
While the Australian government has not disclosed the quantum of settlements concerning like claims, material obtained by the Australian Lawyers Alliance from the Australian Department of Finance show that more than AUD22 million was paid out in claims to immigration detainees in the period 1999–2014.Footnote 155
These past settlements in proceedings concerning the offshore detention regime will have an effect on future claims. The most significant of these is the Kamasaee settlement that was approved by the Supreme Court of Victoria on September 6, 2017,Footnote 156 and that binds all members of the class. The effect of the settlement is that no class member will be able to take any further step in the class action and will not be able to take any further action in relation to the claims made in the class action, or bring any future claims against the defendants, third party, or their related partiesFootnote 157 relating to the subject matter of the class action.Footnote 158
Under Australia's opt-out class action system, class members who do not opt out are bound by the terms of the settlement, even where they do not receive the benefit of financial compensation.Footnote 159 The terms of the settlement accordingly present some difficulties in pursuing future claims and in defining the members of the class group whose claims are not res judicata, at least in respect of facts and matters concerning the Manus RPC. This is likely to have posed difficulties for the claimants in the AUB19 class actions.
Particularly in light of this feature of the opt-out regime, when framing strategic claims that are designed to have an effect on the policy environment, the utmost care needs to be taken to ensure that they are robust and have adequately taken into account the substantive and procedural law applicable to the claim, as well as the environment that has been created by previous settlements.
Indeed, particular care needs to be taken given the political environment into which these strategic claims are received. The dominant political narrative around claims of this nature paints the plaintiffs as agents who are trying to secure an advantage by manipulating the Australian legal system. This was certainly the case following the settlement in Kamasaee, where the then Minister for Immigration and Border Protection went to lengths to emphasize the government's non-admission of liability and former Prime Minister Tony Abbott decried it as a “windfall for people who unfairly took advantage of our nation's generosity.”Footnote 160
Given the apparent value that the Kamasaee proceedings would have had to increase transparency and potentially secure a larger quantum of compensation, the fact that the matter settled for a relatively modest sum given the size of the plaintiff group and the magnitude of the allegations came as a surprise to some. As an editorial the Sydney Morning Herald described it, “[s]ecrecy is the only winner in the Manus Island court settlement,” viewing the failure to take the matter to hearing as a missed opportunity.Footnote 161
F. Conclusion
Strategic litigation remains a useful tool to address impunity in relation to harms caused in offshore detention, but it cannot do so in isolation. While a range of constitutional challenges, tort claims and claims for injunctive relief have been brought in Australian courts in relation to the offshore detention regime, none have proved capable of providing systemic solutions.
The survey of recent cases in this Article demonstrates the limitations of legal challenges to provide protection to asylum seekers. While cases have resulted in financial compensation, none have successfully challenged the authority of the Australian government to detain unauthorized maritime arrivals indefinitely under the Migration Act, and none have posed a serious challenge to Australian government policy. The release of detainees detained in Australia's RPCs has occurred on an ad hoc basis, rather than being the result of any systematic dismantling of the system of offshore detention, and the modest successes in driving policy change that have been achieved have been piecemeal.
It is clear that litigation in isolation is not capable of achieving policy change. As detailed above, the relatively modest successes in deterring corporate contractors from taking on services contracts in offshore detention have been achieved by grassroots movements, divestment campaigns and media attention, with litigation at best constituting one contributing factor among many. Even then, the deterrent effect of the offshore services contracts becoming unpalatable has only led to them being awarded to questionable contractors through irregular processes. It cannot be said that the detainees have benefitted from this development. Similarly, the introduction of the Medevac legislation, though in part prompted by the litigation strategies of the National Justice Project, could not have come about without significant media attention and the public position taken by the Australian Medical Association. However, once again, the media attention focused on the Medevac law also made it a priority issue for the government who immediately moved to repeal it following the May 2019 election.
The political tension around the issue of asylum seekers in Australia impedes both fulfilment of Australia's duty to protect and facilitation of access to effective remedy harms caused in offshore detention. Financial settlements are welcome in providing compensation and have potential deterrence value, and the prosecution of civil claims against the Australian Government and its private contractors remains a useful tool to remedy human rights abuses. However, such settlements deny the opportunity to create valuable precedents that may be used to force the government to act. The ongoing humanitarian situation in offshore detention and the lack of certainty around resettlement prospects reveals the crucial importance of the role of state policy in creating the conditions for appropriate remedy to be obtained. The power to ensure that the human rights of those in offshore detention are not breached further lies almost exclusively with policy decisions of the Australian government and the popular will of Australian voters.