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SUBMISSION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION

TO THE

SENATE LEGAL AND CONSTITUTIONAL LEGISLATION COMMITTEE ON THE AUSTRALIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION LEGISLATION BILL 2003

Opening Statement by Prof Alice Tay
President, HREOC

(delivered by Dr William Jonas on behalf of Prof Tay at the Public Hearing held in Sydney on 29 April 2003)


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The Commission appreciates the opportunity to speak about its concerns regarding the Australian Human Rights Commission Legislation Bill 2003.

A similar but not identical Bill was put before the Federal Parliament in April 1998, a week after the commencement of my Presidency. The Commission opposed many of that Bill's provisions and continues to oppose those provisions that exist in the current Bill as well as new ones.

Perhaps the timing of this 2003 Bill is coincidental, as 2003 marks the end of my term as President. If passed, the Bill will hand to the next President an inferior set of responsibilities, a less cohesive management structure and less of a mandate to help protect the human rights of Australians.

The foremost of the Commission's concerns and the one which has the greatest potential to undermine fundamental human rights in Australia is the restrictions the Bill seeks to impose on the Commission's intervention powers.

As you will be aware the Commission can only intervene in cases that raise human rights or discrimination issues with the permission of the Court. It is a power used wisely, judiciously and sparingly. Since the Commission was established in 1986 it has been granted permission to intervene in 35 court cases. It has never had an application to intervene rejected by the Court. .

The right to seek leave to intervene is not a right taken lightly or used recklessly. Decisions are made by the Commission after careful deliberation.

Interventions are used to ensure human rights arguments that might not otherwise find voice in court cases are able to be argued and for the Commission to assist judges by elaborating on points of international and domestic human rights' law. As intervenor, the Commission provides specialist advice and experience and is independent of the parties to the case.

Human rights protection is a broad umbrella. The court cases in which the Commission seeks to involve itself vary greatly in the rights they are seeking to protect. Sometimes, they affect the human rights of a relatively small number of people, but usually the repercussions are far wider.

It is the role of an institution such as ours to weigh carefully whether our involvement is ultimately in the public interest. Section 10A of the Act makes it the duty of the Commission to perform its functions "….efficiently and with the greatest possible benefit to the people of Australia."

We do not seek to advance the cause of one special person or one community alone. Every human rights issue affects the general community.

Yet it is also the role of the Commission to stand alongside those who are weak and vulnerable, whose rights are more likely to be neglected and trampled upon.

The Committee may be familiar with some of the high profile and even controversial cases involving the Commission. It may not be aware that the Commission has also intervened in more specific cases that relate to:

I need not remind the committee that the Commission also intervened in the case of the MV Tampa and the IVF case on the rights of single women to access reproductive technology.

The Commission has spent $200,000 (or 0 .5 % of its budget) on 18 interventions over the past three financial years, averaging $11,000 for each case. Early preparatory work is done in-house by instructing solicitors and senior counsel have worked either pro bono or on reduced rates.

This Bill will require the Commission to seek the Attorney-General's permission to intervene in court cases - cases in which the Attorney himself may be acting as a party.

In deciding whether to grant the Commission approval to intervene, the Attorney-General may - but is not required to - consider:

The Attorney-General becomes the arbiter of the public interest, while holding certain values on behalf of the Government. As "gatekeeper" and a potential party, the Attorney-General is clearly in a position of conflict of interest. His power to grant the right to intervene is not circumscribed, except where the President is a former judge, in which case explicit Ministerial approval is not required.

The Commission believes this amendment:

The Commission believes that it is sufficiently well placed to decide if there are broader implications for the human rights of people not involved in the case and whether or not it is in the public interest for it to seek leave of the Court to intervene; for the unfettered independent functioning of the judicial system it should be for the Court to decide whether or not to grant that leave.

It is certainly not appropriate for one party to a case to decide if another party is entitled to join. Surely, that is a matter for our learned judges. The arguments of the Commission and Government often differ greatly and the judge is in the best position to decide which arguments are to be put before the court.

In fact, in 16 of 18 cases in which both the Commission and the Commonwealth have been parties, the Commonwealth's arguments were contrary to the Commission's.

The Commission has detailed guidelines for interventions. The case must involve significant issues of human rights or discrimination that are not peripheral to proceedings. The Commission will intervene if no other party is making the same arguments or if those arguments are unlikely to be adequately or fully advanced.

The Commission also has serious reservations about the proposal to abolish the positions of specialist Commissioners and replace them with three human rights Commissioners. Specialist Commissioners with specialist expertise have so far been successful in tackling serious human rights issues in Australia and are respected as officers with extensive knowledge and experience in socially complex issues. Changes can only bring confusion over roles and leave disadvantaged groups without an identified advocate.

The Commission is happy to elaborate also on any of the arguments in its submission on the remainder of the Bill.

I think it is appropriate to place some of the Commission's achievements on the public record, in particular its education work.

Education about human rights is at the core of all the Commission's work. It may take the form of structured school education programs (Youth Challenge and online education materials for teachers) or a wide range of publications about anti-discrimination laws, but education about human rights and discrimination is also a major component of the public work carried out by Commissioners, of National Inquiries, complaint handling, major reports and other public awareness programs.

Sometimes the process of carrying out a major Inquiry or preparing a significant report raises people's awareness or understanding of issues of human rights. The Bringing them home report was a watershed in drawing public attention to the removal of Indigenous children from their families.

Some of the major issues tackled by the Commission in recent years include workplace sexual harassment, pregnancy discrimination and maternity leave; disability rights in areas such as access to transport, captioning, access to electronic commerce for older Australians and people with a disability; race discrimination; Indigenous social justice issues such as mandatory sentencing, community capacity-building and native title; and human rights issues such as children in detention, education for rural and remote communities and age discrimination.

The Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission has developed a reputation as a leading national human rights institution earning accolades on the world stage for its strength, independence and structure.

The federal Government funded Asia Pacific Forum, a group of national human rights institutions in the region, was hosted by HREOC for its first few years. It is now a vital linchpin for the sharing of human rights knowledge and expertise throughout the region.

The Australian system has also been lauded in Europe and a delegation of British politicians who visited recently was eager to examine the Australian model for use in the UK. In a letter to the Commission, the delegation emphasised the fact that their report details our structure and management practices in very positive terms.

Cherie Blair, human rights lawyer and wife of the British Prime Minister, had this to say in a recent speech in Perth. "HREOC operates in this country to raise the profile of human rights in a way that, prior to the Human Rights Act, simply did not occur in Britain,' she said.

'By virtue of the HREOC, you are therefore already ahead of the game in this respect.'

The Federal Government often raises the work of the Commission in international fora. Despite its professed desire to see the Commission alter its priorities to give greater emphasis to human rights education, it often singles out the Commission's current education work and praises both its domestic and international effect.

The human rights of Australians will not be better served by limiting the ability of the national human rights body to function independently. Australians will not be better protected because the Commission has been forced by law to add a by-line to its name.

We urge the Committee to reject the proposed amendments and allow the Commission to get on with its job - of promoting and protecting the fundamental values of fairness, equality, tolerance and non-discrimination in the Australian community.

Last updated 29 April 2003.