Current:Home > InvestAustralian Parliament rushes through laws that could see detention of freed dangerous migrants -Mastery Money Tools
Australian Parliament rushes through laws that could see detention of freed dangerous migrants
View
Date:2025-04-28 04:17:30
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — The Australian government Wednesday rushed legislation through Parliament that could place behind bars some migrants who were freed after the High Court ruled their indefinite detention was unconstitutional.
The House of Representatives voted 68 to 59 on Wednesday night to create so-called community safety orders. The vote came a day after the Senate passed the same legislation.
Immigration Minister Andrew Giles will now be able to apply to a judge to imprison for up to three years migrants with criminal records for violent or sexual offenses because they pose an unacceptable risk to the public.
“We’ve already begun preparations to ensure that we can do all that we can as quickly as we can,” Giles said before the draft legislation became law.
“The preventative detention regime would allow for the court to detain the worst of the worst offenders,” he added.
Giles declined to say how many of 148 migrants freed starting last month who for various reasons can’t be deported might be detained under community safety orders.
Federal law had previously only allowed preventative detention for extremists convicted of terrorism offenses. But state laws allow certain rapists and violent criminals to be detained after their sentences expire.
Amnesty International refugee rights adviser Graham Thom said earlier Wednesday he was alarmed that the government was rushing through the legislation without appropriate parliamentary scrutiny.
“A sensible conversation is needed when balancing community safety with personal liberty. This is not a time for knee jerk responses,” he said.
Adam Bandt, leader of the Greens party, said the laws created a harsher justice system for people are not Australian citizens.
“Some of them have committed heinous crimes, many of them haven’t,” Bandt said, referring to the freed migrants.
The High Court on Nov. 8 ruled the indefinite detention of a stateless Myanmar Rohingya man who had been convicted of raping a 10-year-old boy was unconstitutional.
Government lawyers say the judges left open the option for such migrants to be detained if they pose a public risk. That decision would be made by a judge rather than a government minister.
The ruling said the government could no longer indefinitely detain foreigners who had been refused Australian visas, but could not be deported to their homelands and no third country would accept them.
Most of the 148 who have been released on the basis of the High Court ruling have been ordered to wear ankle tracking bracelets and to stay home during nightly curfews.
Police announced on Wednesday a fourth recently freed migrant had been arrested. The man had been charged with breaking his curfew and stealing luggage from Melbourne’s airport.
Another migrant with a criminal record for violent sexual assault was charged with the indecent assault of a woman. Another was charged with breaching his reporting obligations as a registered sex offender, and a fourth man was charged with drug possession.
veryGood! (524)
Related
- RFK Jr. closer to getting on New Jersey ballot after judge rules he didn’t violate ‘sore loser’ law
- Attorneys for college taken over by DeSantis allies threaten to sue ‘alternate’ school
- Taylor Swift's next rumored stadium stop hikes up ticket prices for Chiefs-Jets game
- Nobel Prize announcements are getting underway with the unveiling of the medicine prize
- Former Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man
- New York City works to dry out after severe flooding: Outside was like a lake
- Women’s voices and votes loom large as pope opens Vatican meeting on church’s future
- India’s devastating monsoon season is a sign of things to come, as climate and poor planning combine
- Chief beer officer for Yard House: A side gig that comes with a daily swig.
- Kansas police chief suspended in wake of police raid on local newspaper
Ranking
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- At least 13 people were killed at a nightclub fire in Spain’s southeastern city of Murcia
- Climate solutions are necessary. So we're dedicating a week to highlighting them
- Valentino returns to Paris’ Les Beaux-Arts with modern twist; Burton bids farewell at McQueen
- IOC's decision to separate speed climbing from other disciplines paying off
- Powerball draws number for giant $960 million jackpot
- 2 people killed and 2 wounded in Houston shooting, sheriff says
- A European body condemns Turkey’s sentencing of an activist for links to 2013 protests
Recommendation
'Meet me at the gate': Watch as widow scatters husband's ashes, BASE jumps into canyon
28 rescued in 'historic' New York storm, state of emergency to remain: Gov. Hochul
Who is Arthur Engoron? Judge weighing future of Donald Trump empire is Ivy League-educated ex-cabbie
Amber Alert issued for possibly abducted 9-year-old girl last seen at state park
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
Browns' Deshaun Watson out vs. Ravens; rookie Dorian Thompson-Robinson gets first start
Tim Wakefield, longtime Boston Red Sox knuckleball pitcher, dies at 57
Driver arrested when SUV plows into home, New Jersey police station