Fardsavar, M. v Minister for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs
[1986] FCA 147
•25 Mar 1986
NOT INTENDED FOR GENERAL DISTRIBUTION
| Admlnistratlve law - application by prohibited non-cltizen | for |
| release from custody pendlnu renew of deportation order | - policy |
of Miuratlon Act - applicant detamed in maximum securlty prison - effect upon medical condltlon of applicant - whether exceptlonal clrcumstances - risk to appllcant's estranued wife and her family
If applicant released
| Aainistratlve Declsions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 | ss 5.13 |
| Misration Act 1958 s.27 |
| MAJID FARDSAVAR v. MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION | A D EI'HNIC AFFAIRS |
| No. WA G18 of 1986 | |
| TOOHEY J. | |
| PERTH | |
| 25 MARCH 1986 |
| IN THE FEDERAL | COURT | J |
| OF | AUSTFALIA | ) |
| WESTERN | AUSTRALIA | I | No. WA G18 of 1986 |
| DISTRICT | REGISTRY | ) |
| GENERAL | DIVISION | l |
| B E T W E E N ; MAJID FARDSAVAR |
Applxant
and
MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND
ETHNIC AFFAIRS
Respondent
C m : TOOHEY J.
25 March 1986
EX TEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
There is only one matter before the court today and that
is whether Mr. Fardsavar should be released from custody pending
the hearing of his application to review the minister's decision
that he be deported as a prohibited non-citizen.
He became a prohibited non-citizen when his temporary
| entry permit expired. He | is deemed by reason of | s . 2 7 | of the |
| Miqration | Act | 1958 | to | be | uullty | of an offence and, | as | a |
consequence, he is liable to arrest and detention.
| In two decisions to whlch both counsel have referred | - |
| Piroulu v. | Minister for Immiuration and Ethnic Affairs | (1981) 4 |
| A.L.R. | 323 and Unluqenc | v. Minister for Immiqratlon and Ethnic |
Affalrs (1982) 43 A.L.R. 569 - the court has made clear the policy
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| of the Miaratlon Act. That pol~cy | is that prohlblted non-citlzens |
| should not | remaln at ldrcre In the communlty pendma deportatlon. |
| except | In | exceptlonal | clrcumstances. | The situatlon is not |
| analouous to that | of a | person who | 1 s faclnu a charge In the |
| courts, who has | a presumption of lnnocence and therefore comes |
| before the court with some | entitlement to bail. |
| Now. Mr. Stokes, counsel | for | the | applicant. | has |
| suggested that | both | those decisions have been overtaken by the |
| recent decision of the High Court in | - | K | v. | Minister for |
| Immiuratlon and Ethnic Affairs | (1985) 62 A.L.R. 321. | In my view |
| that is not | so on the matters with which this application is |
| presently | concerned. | I accept | that | there | are | some | factual |
differences between the two earlier cases and this one. But the
expression of the policy of the Miuration Act and the need to show
exceptional circumstances, or the like, before someone can be
released from custody pendinu deportation, are still apposite.
| Mr. Fardsavar has been in custody since | 21 February this |
| pear and | he was transferred from the deportation centre to |
Fremantle prison on 24 February. The officer in charge of the detention centre, Mr. Puuh, uave reasons for his decision to
| transfer | the | appllcant, | and | those | reasons | have | not | been |
| challenued. | The cholce now is said to be between | Mr. Fardsavar’s |
| continued detention in Fremantle and | his release on conditions. |
| The justification offered by his counsel for | hls release |
| rests, I think, malnly on | Mr. Fardsavar’s state of health | - a |
condltion whlch I understand to be laruely, If not entirely,
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| psycholoulcal. | Mr. | Fardsavar has complalned of the condltlons In |
| whlch he | 1 s presentlp held; of difflcultles In | uettlnu suitable |
| food; and | of anxleties produced bp the actlons of other prisoners. | |
|
| no problem wlth his detention | m Fremantle orison. Indeed, in |
this respect he is better off wlth ready access to medlcal advice
than if he were released.
| Having reaard to the evidence of Dr. Bockman | I am not |
| persuaded that | an appropriate diet cannot be provided in | prlson. |
| The position. auain as I understand It from the evldence. | is that |
| it is advisable for Mr. Fardsavar to avoid certain foods | . | It is |
| not a situation In which he requires special foods. |
| While I | am not persuaded that there | has been a serious |
| threat auainst his life while In prison, | I accept that | he is |
| concerned at the situation In whlch | he is placed and that the |
| situation 1 s causinu | him | to | be | depressed. | Dr. Toussaint, a |
| psychiatrist called on behalf of the applicant, | was of the opinion |
| that he should be transferred from prison to | a hospital to |
| continue | treatment | until | the | matter | of | his | deportation | 1 s |
finalized. Unfortunately. that is not a practicable step. The matter has been put to the court as a cholce between prison and
| release, thouah | it seems to me that Mr. Fardsavar's return to the |
| detentlon centre is | an option to whlch further consideration miyht |
| be qiven. | As to the preparation of | his case for the hearinu of |
| the substantive application, | I | am not persuaded that proper |
attention cannot be uiven to that matter while he is in prison,
4.
| partlcularlv when | the alternatlve sucrqested to | the court is that |
| he be releasea to enable hlm | to uo to Melbourne. |
| Now, aqalnst that concern | for Mr. | Fardsavar’s welfare |
there are several considerations that must be taken Into account.
| The circumstances of | his | marriaue to | Vida Fadsavar need not be |
| explored | here. | Certainly, | there | are | unusual | aspects | of | the |
| marriaae, | even | in | terms | of | the | ethnic | backaround | of those |
| involved. But what is | a matter for concern are the threats made |
| bp Mr. | Fardsavar against his wife and her family. Whatever the |
precise circumstances in whlch Mrs. Fardsavar had an abortion. I
| am satisfied that | Mr. Fardsavar made threats aqainst her at the |
| time and that he dld | so thereafter. |
| No challenue was made to the evidence of | Mr. | Behjat. |
| Mrs. Fardsavar’s father, of threats | to kill made in | a telephone |
| call by the applicant from the detention centre. | I do not think |
| that Mrs. Fardsavar and her family should be put | at risk. |
| I appreciate | that | he | conditions | upon | which | Mr. |
| Fardsavar’s release is sought include no contact with his wife | or |
| her family; his residence in Melbourne until the hearing; and reporting conditions, touether with sureties. But these are not |
| matters that can be completely controlled and | I am satisfied that |
there are risks involved to which Mrs. Fardsavar and her family
ouaht not to be exposed.
The startina polnt in this matter is the need for the
| applicant | to | justify | his release | from | custody. | Now, whether |
| I | . . |
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| clrcumstances must be excewtlonal | - as some of the cases have sald |
| - or | whether the standard 1 s somewhat lower, I am satlsfled that |
in all the circumstances no adequate case has been made out for
Mr. Fardsavar’s release from custody.
Criticisms have been made of hls conduct In relatlon to
the Department of Immiuration. but on the evidence presently
| available I do not reuard that, of itself, | as a stumblinu block to |
| his | release. | Equally, | thouuh | I have | some | doubts | about | his |
| truthfulness In regard to what | he told officers of the department, |
| it may be that | with adequate sureties and stringent reporting |
| conditions there is | a reasonable prospect that | he would appear on |
the hearina of the application.
| But the fact is that he | must make good his | case for a |
| release and. in my view, | he has not done | so. | In particular, I |
| consider that his release is likely to auuravate | an | already |
| volatile situation between him and hls wife and her family. | I |
propose. therefore, that the appllcation for release be dismissed.
| I would only add this. | First, it seems to me that the |
| authorlties | should | ive | further | consideration | the | t |
practicability of his returninu to the detention centre pending
| the hearing of | his application. | I appreciate that there are |
problems. but there are also problems personal to him while he is
| in Fremantle prison. And I | have no doubt that | the preparation of |
| his case would be better asslsted by | his being in the deportation |
| centre as against Fremantle prison. | I can do no | more than draw |
that matter to the attention of the relevant authorities.
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| The second matter | 1 s this. | The court wlll asslst in |
| providinu an earlv hearinu date for | the substantlve application. |
| If counsel wish me to ulve dlrections with | a | view to brinuinu on |
| the hearinq, I | am prepared to do so, elther forthwith or at some |
time counsel may think appropriate.
| But | he | formal | order | of the | court | is | that | he |
| application for release | from custody is dismissed. |
I certify that this and the preceding
| five pages are | a true copy of the |
ex tempore reasons for judgment herein
| of his Honour | Mr. Justice Toohey. |
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