|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
New Zealand government introduces secretive new immigration
and security laws
By John Braddock
23 August 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The New Zealand government announced on August 8 that it will
introduce into parliament the most sweeping overhaul of immigration
laws in 20 years. The legal rewrite of the 1987 Act, running into
hundreds of pages, represents another major step in a series of
attacks by the Labour-led government on basic democratic rights
and civil liberties.
Immigration Minister David Cunliffe said the changes would
streamline the process to remove illegal immigrants, while making
it easier for desirable migrants to enter New Zealand.
Cunliffe said changes in the bill would also clarify and
strengthen border security, tighten the law against those who
pose a risk to New Zealands well-being and facilitate the
entry of those migrants we want.
In reality, the central aim of the new bill is to do away with
what are now regarded as cumbersome and unworkable security provisionsin
particular, those that have been challenged by a former Algerian
MP and asylum seeker, Ahmed Zaoui, in his four-year fight to remain
in the country. Immigration officials will be given new powers
to remove alleged terrorists, including expanded rights to the
unchallenged use of secret information.
When Zaoui arrived in New Zealand in December 2002 seeking
refugee status he was detained, despite being declared a genuine
refugee by the Refugee Status Appeal Authority (RSAA). New Zealands
Security Intelligence Service (SIS) issued a security risk certificate
against him and subsequently used it to try and deport him.
Zaoui has fought the deportation order on the grounds that
he would be tortured or killed if he went back to Algeria. He
spent almost two years in prison awaiting a decision on his case
after he sought a formal review of the security risk certificate.
In December 2004 he was released on bail into the supervision
of an Auckland religious order. A review of the certificate is
now underway behind closed doors, with Zaoui still not entitled
to know the exact nature of the secret allegations against him.
Throughout the Zaoui affair, the Labour government has relied
on a series of laws to incarcerate and victimise the asylum seeker,
roll back basic democratic rights and defend the activities of
the SIS and security agencies overseas. Last month, Prime Minister
Helen Clark expressed frustration at the lengthy legal proceedings
that had stymied her efforts to railroad Zaoui, and declared that
once the case was out of the way, there would certainly
be a review of the law. The media has prepared the way with
persistent editorials about the unwelcome affair so far costing
the taxpayer more than a million dollars and demanding
no repeat.
The new rules extend the type and sources of classified information
that can be used against anyone entering the country. In addition
to the SIS, the police and other government agencies will be entitled
to pass on classified information about overseas arrivals, which
can then be used to order their immediate removal. An applicant
will not be allowed to see the information, though a non-classified
summary will be providedwhere possible.
Deportation procedures allowing multiple appeals to different
bodies will be dispensed with. Four independent immigration and
refugee appeal bodiesthe Residence Review Board, the RSAA,
the Removal Review Authority and the Deportation Review Tribunal
will be replaced by a single body called the Immigration and Protection
Tribunal. This is a clear move to circumvent and do away with
the RSAA, which had declared Zaoui to be a genuine refugee and
made a number of stinging attacks on the methods and level of
professionalismincluding honestyof the SIS.
Other planned changes include a new biometric regime, under
which all New Zealand citizens re-entering the country will be
photographed, while foreigners will be subjected to fingerprinting,
iris scans and photographs. The bill also extends the time a person
can be detained at the border and subjected to searches without
a warrant to 96 hours.
Clark claimed that the new measures would provide a balanced
approach to immigration. In fact, they will make it much easier
for the government to act in secret while depriving refugees and
immigrants of basic rights. The changes dovetail with a succession
of previous moves by Labour to use the war on terror
to beef up security laws and police powers.
In October 2003, the government passed its so-called Counter-Terrorism
Bill, giving police extensive new powers of search and seizure.
Any person inside or outside the country could be designated a
terrorist or associated person solely
on the word of the director of the SIS, with no right of judicial
review. Anyone who participated in, recruited members for, or
funded, directly or indirectly, any identified terrorist
group could be imprisoned for up to 14 years. The definition of
a terrorist act was made so broad that even the trade
union bureaucracy felt obliged to point out that routine protests
and union activities could be branded as terrorism.
At the same time, the Clark government has pressed into action
formerly little known or unused laws. In 2004 Paul Hopkinson,
a 37-year-old school teacher, was prosecuted for burning the New
Zealand flag during a protest against the war in Iraq. This was
the first time since its enactment 22 years ago that the lawthe
Flags and Emblems Acthad been used. In July 2006, a 32 year-old
man involved in an axe attack on Clarks electorate office
was sentenced to two months jail for committing an act of seditionthe
first time in 64 years that a sedition charge had been brought.
Both prosecutions would have been authorised at the highest political
level.
Warnings have already been aired that the new immigration law
is only a half-way house to more extreme police-state methods.
The New Zealand Herald editorialised that the British government
was proposing to double to 56 days the period police can hold
terror suspects without charge. The paper concluded that the New
Zealand law hardly seems excessive when compared with
the security measures introduced or contemplated elsewhere, even
if such countries participation in the war in Iraq provides
greater cause for concern about terrorism.
Conservative opposition National Party immigration spokesman
Lockwood Smith said the law needed to be updated and that his
party would support it in the parliament. Moves that will
strengthen our border security and give immigration officials
greater powers to access information are all improvements on the
current system, he said. Foreign minister and leader of
the right-wing populist NZ First party in the coalition government,
Winston Peterswho has long called for Zaoui to be detained
and summarily deportedsaid that while he supported the legislation,
it did not go far enough.
See Also:
New Zealand: asylum seeker
faces secret "security risk" hearing
[19 July 2007]
New Zealand government
challenges court ruling over detained asylum seeker
[6 February 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |