The Australian High Court passed a judgement on Friday that dismissed
an Iranian asylum seeker’s plea to be released from immigration
detention and enter the country.
The Iranian asylum seeker, applicant ASF-17, applied to the Federal
Court of Australia for a writ of habeas corpus in 2023 on the basis that
his continuing detention exceeded the constitutional limitation
identified in the orders of NZYQ v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship
and Multicultural Affairs released the week prior.
The applicant has been refusing to cooperate with the process of being
removed from Australia to Iran since 2018, arguing that he would be at
risk of persecution for his sexual orientation and religious beliefs.
The applicant arrived unlawfully in Australia in 2013 and applied for a
Safe Haven Enterprise Visa (SHEV) in 2015. However, his application was
refused and rejected again by a delegate of the Minister for Immigration
and Border Protection in 2017. His final determination by the
Australian Federal Court rejected his application in 2018. This
authorised the Department of Home Affairs to remove the applicant from
Australia under section 198(6) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth).
The applicant was unable to identify any other country where he might be
able to stay in the long term. The Department documented his stance as
“intractable,” in 2022, describing the difficulty and only option was to
deport him to Iran, where he was a citizen.
The court noted that the Department has a policy of not removing anyone
to a country in respect of which they have no right of residency or
long-term stay “the third country removal policy.” Accordingly, the
court also noted the difficulty in Iranian citizens gaining entry into
the country as they cannot enter without a travel document issued by Iranian authorities. However, Iranian authorities
have a longstanding policy of not issuing travel documents to
involuntary returnees.
The High Court ruled that the applicant’s case was different from the
NZYQ case, reasoning that his continued detention was the result of his
own decision not to cooperate in his deportation. For Australia to
permissibly remove a detainee from the country, the court determines
“whether the country has taken practically available steps which can
realistically be predicted to result in the removal of the detainee in
the reasonably foreseeable future.” Practically available steps include
“administrative processes directed to removal which require the
cooperation of the detainee and in which the detainee has the capacity
to cooperate.” The applicant’s refusal to cooperate does not undermine
the practical availability of the steps.
Additionally, it was ruled there was no real threat to his safety. Even
though the applicant was bisexual, the primary judge held that the
applicant’s claim of fear of persecution based on his sexuality was the
consequence of him being caught by his wife in bed with another man, and
rejected his claim accordingly.