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Review of the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002 - Submission to Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Select Committee [2005] NZHRCSub 1 (11 April 2005)

Last Updated: 26 March 2015

Human Rights Commission

Submission on the
Review of the

Terrorism Suppression Act 2002

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Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Select Committee


11 April 2005

The Commission wishes to make an oral submission


Contact person:
Diana Pickard
Legal and Policy Analyst




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CONTENTS PAGE



1. INTRODUCTION 3
Scope of this submission 4

  1. WHY THE REVIEW SHOULD ADDRESS HUMAN RIGHTS MATTERS 5



3. THE HUMAN RIGHTS ISSUES ARISING FROM THE TSA 8

  1. Broad impact on human rights: Terrorism related definitions; 8
  2. Recognised standards of proof: Suspicion as a

basis for interim designations; 10

  1. Right to a fair trial and procedural fairness:

Protections for classified security information; 12

- Ways forward with the right to a fair trial and the

use of classified security information? 14

  1. Broad human rights impacts: Procedural fairness:

Process for examining and renewing designations; 15

- Suggested improvements to the UN designation

and review system? 17

  1. Right to freedom from torture: Explicit ban on evidence obtained by torture; 18
  2. Access to justice: Judicial review of designations; 20
  3. Right to freedom from discrimination: Effects of

measures in terms of race, nationality or ethnicity; 21

  1. Human rights scrutiny: The importance of further

review of the TSA. 23


4. SUMMARY OF COMMISSION RECOMMENDATIONS 24

1. INTRODUCTION

1.1 The Human Rights Commission welcomes this opportunity to contribute to the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee’s Review of the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002 (TSA).

1.2 The Commission stands four square behind the 2004 Seoul Declaration by the world’s national human rights institutions that “terrorism has a devastating impact on the full range of human rights, most directly the right to life and personal security”.[1] The Commission is on record that terrorism and any violence against civilians are abhorrent abuses of human rights.

1.3 We affirm the State’s role to protect its citizens and all those within its borders from such violence. In this, the government and this Committee face the challenging task, as do others around the world, of putting in place measures that both protect the security and human rights of the people of New Zealand, and provide processes acknowledging the human rights of those perceived or identified to be a threat to security and to the rights of others. Internationally as well as nationally the development of effective measures and processes against terrorism is a work in progress. While there are no single or simple answers:

Terrorist impulses ferment in poverty, oppression and ignorance. The elimination of these conditions and the active promotion of a universal respect for human rights must become a priority.[2]

It is a significant fact that all the world’s national-security challenges come from regimes which are also human rights violators.[3]


1.4 Speaking with regard to United Kingdom’s anti-terrorism legislation, the House of Lords stated:

The real threat to the life of the nation, in the sense of a people living in accordance with its traditional laws and political values, comes not from terrorism but from laws such as these [which breach human rights]. That is the true measure of what terrorism may achieve. It is for Parliament to decide whether to give the terrorists such a victory.[4]




Scope of this submission

1.5 The Commission’s submission focuses on the human rights issues arising from the Review of the TSA. The issue of designations was the focus of the Commission’s March 2005 submissions, both written and oral, to this Committee on the Terrorism Suppression Amendment (No 2) Bill. That issue, albeit more briefly, is also included in this submission for the sake of completeness with regard to the TSA.

1.6 In the time available to the Commission to develop this submission, and with the resources to hand, we have endeavoured to provide the Committee with either specific recommended amendments to the TSA, or sufficient information and references to enable the Committee (and supporting officials) to identify best practice and thereby the necessary amendments in due course.

1.7 We note that section 70 of the TSA requires the Committee to address the parts of the Act which implement Security Council Resolution 1373, and to consider:


1.8 The Commission is aware that “most of the procedural and substantive provisions of the Terrorism Suppression Act can be seen to play a role in implementing Resolution 1373 in New Zealand law. ...Effectively then, there will be little that is excluded from the ambit of the Select Committee Review.”[5] The Commission has therefore considered the human rights issues arising across the TSA.

1.9 The Commission’s submission covers:

A. Broad impacts on human rights: Terrorism related definitions;

  1. Recognised standards of proof: Suspicions as the basis for interim designations;
  1. Right to a fair trial and procedural fairness: Protections for classified security information;
  1. Broad human rights impacts: Process for examining and renewing designations;
  2. Right to freedom from torture: Explicit ban on evidence obtained by torture;
  3. Access to justice: Judicial review of designations;
  4. Right to freedom from discrimination: Effects of measures in terms of race, nationality or ethnicity;
  5. Human rights scrutiny: The importance of further review of the TSA.




2. WHY THE REVIEW SHOULD ADDRESS HUMAN RIGHTS MATTERS

2.1 The Commission supports the continuing wealth of directives, since the enactment of the TSA in 2002, on the importance of States observing human rights whilst combating terrorism. In August last year the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights stated that over the long term “a commitment to uphold respect for human rights and rule of law will be one of the keys to success in countering terrorism – not an impediment blocking our way”.[6] The Security Council in 2003, in addition to urging States to take action to prevent and suppress support for terrorism,[7] required in Resolution 1456 that:

States must ensure that any measures taken to combat terrorism comply with all their obligations under international law, and should adopt such measures in accordance with international law, in particular international human rights, refugee, and humanitarian law.[8]

2.2 In the same context, the Security Council emphasised “continuing international efforts to enhance dialogue and broaden the understanding among civilizations, in an effort to prevent the indiscriminate targeting of different religions and cultures”.[9]

2.3 The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, in its October 2002 Report on Terrorism and Human Rights stated:

Even in respect of rights that may be the subject of limitation or derogation, states must comply strictly with the conditions regulating the permissibility of such limitations or derogations, which in turn are

based upon the fundamental principles of necessity, proportionality and non-discrimination.[10]


2.4 The Advisory Council of Jurists (ACJ) - to the Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions - in its Final Report on the Reference on the Rule of Law in Combating Terrorism stated that:

International human rights standards should not simply be ‘kept in view’ in enacting, implementing and administering anti-terrorist legislation, but they must be guaranteed and incorporated into national laws and practices. [11]

2.5 In relation to New Zealand, the ACJ cautioned that:

Incorporating into the general law provisions that give the Police and other agencies wider powers, which were introduced and designed to deal with terrorism, can have the effect of eroding the rights of those who are not terrorists. [12]

2.6 Importantly, significant resources have been developed from 2002 onwards to assist and guide States in finding a proportionate balance between countering terrorism and protecting human rights. For example:


2.7 These international frameworks provide invaluable assistance and guidance for States seeking to observe human rights and counter terrorism. They are particularly useful to New Zealand in relation to the TSA, since to date New Zealand courts have not considered this legislation. No prosecutions have been brought under the Act, and no legal challenges made to any terrorist designations. Consequently, it is logical that experience from other jurisdictions and at the international level forms a significant part of this Review.

2.8 However the international framework does not provide a guarantee of domestic human rights observance in counter terrorism measures. The OHCHR has stated that:

[T]he human rights treaty bodies examine somewhat over 100 reports per year. Cumulatively, the relevant special procedures consider up to some 60 country situations per year. In both instances, the attention of the treaty bodies and the special procedures ranges over a number of issues, leaving only partial space for an in-depth examination of the compatibility of national counter-terrorism measures with international human rights obligations.[15]

Overall there are significant gaps in the consideration of national counter-terrorism measures by the United Nations human rights system.[16]

2.9 Therefore continued State monitoring for domestic human rights compliance, for example as part of this Review, is vital.

Every time we advance the protection of human rights, we deal a blow to the evil designs of terrorists, and we remove a sense of injustice which can cause the oppressed to channel their frustration into illegitimate violence. If we compromise on human rights in seeking to fight terrorism, we hand terrorists a victory they cannot achieve on their own. If we build on these fundamentals, I believe we can develop a new vision of global security: a vision that respects human rights while confronting the threats of our age – including the threat of terrorism.[17]


Recommendation I: The Commission recommends that the Committee’s report to the House on the TSA includes specific reference to the manner in which human rights were taken into account in this Review.


3. THE HUMAN RIGHTS ISSUES ARISING FROM THE TSA

3.1 The following are human rights issues arising from the operation of the TSA since 2002, and in light of the fast paced developments with international jurisprudence in the context of ‘human rights and anti-terrorism’ since that time. The following material should not necessarily be considered exhaustive of human rights issues arising.

3.2 Although some of these human rights issues were considered when the (then) Terrorism (Bombing and Financing) Bill was before Select Committee in 2001, given the fast paced jurisprudential developments in this area in the intervening years, it is prudent to view these human rights issues afresh.


A. Broad impact on human rights: Terrorism related definitions

3.3 For individuals or groups whose actions fall within any terrorism related definition, there will be serious human rights ramifications. They may then receive designations, and be charged with offences. For individuals this can mean interference with the peaceful enjoyment of possessions, as assets are frozen, and may lead to deprivation of liberty and thereby loss of freedom of movement. For organisations that are legal entities, it may mean interference with rights of freedom of association, assembly and expression and the peaceful enjoyment of possessions.

3.4 These ramifications may be entirely appropriate for terrorist entities. However, it does mean that the precise nature of the terrorism related definitions is crucial. OHCHR noted in 2003 that “twelve international conventions related to terrorism have been adopted within the UN context. One gap in these conventions is the lack of a clear and commonly agreed definition of terrorism.”[18]

3.5 The Special Rapporteur on Terrorism and Human Rights stated that:

One of the major reasons for the failure to come to a generally accepted definition of ‘terrorism’ is that different users of a definition concentrate almost entirely on behavioural descriptions (i.e. on certain conduct or behaviour and its effects) and do not spell out clearly who can use terrorism. ... The same type of conduct or behaviour will or will not be viewed as terrorism by a particular observer according to the moral meaning or justification ascribed to it.[19]

3.6 This problem is, of course, one person’s terrorist being another person’s freedom fighter.[20] In May 2004 the ACJ, in its Final Report on the Reference on the Rule of Law in Combating Terrorism[21] recorded that:


3.7 The Commission notes that, with regard to terrorism related definitions, in December 2004 the UN High-level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change stated that:

Nevertheless, we believe there is particular value in achieving a consensus definition within the General Assembly, given its unique legitimacy in normative terms, and that it should rapidly complete negotiations on a comprehensive convention on terrorism. That definition of terrorism should include the following elements:

(a) Recognition, in the preamble, that State use of force against civilians is regulated by the Geneva Conventions and other instruments, and, if of sufficient scale, constitutes a war crime by the persons concerned or a crime against humanity;

(b) Restatement that acts under the 12 preceding anti-terrorism conventions are terrorism, and a declaration that they are a crime under international law; and restatement that terrorism in time of armed conflict is prohibited by the Geneva Conventions and Protocols;

(c) Reference to the definitions contained in the 1999 International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism and Security Council resolution 1566 (2004);

(d) Description of terrorism as “any action, in addition to actions already specified by the existing conventions on aspects of terrorism, the Geneva Conventions and Security Council resolution 1566 (2004), that is intended to cause death or serious bodily harm to civilians or non-combatants, when the purpose of such an act, by its nature or context, is to intimidate a population, or to compel a Government or an international organization to do or to abstain from doing any act”.[23]

3.8 The Commission is aware that the definitions in the TSA were scrutinised in 2001, and positive changes made to address widespread concerns. However, in light of subsequent developments, the definitions in the TSA (such as those in sections 4 and 5) warrant current, 2005, review.


Recommendation II: The Commission recommends that the current terrorism-related definitions in the TSA are reviewed by the Committee, in particular in light of developments with the United Nation’s Draft Terrorism Convention.


B. Recognised standards of proof: Suspicion as a basis for interim designations

3.9 Section 20 of the TSA requires that before the Prime Minster makes a 30-day interim designation of a group as a terrorist entity, the PM has “good cause to suspect” the entity (knowingly) carried out terrorist acts.

3.10 The Commission raised concerns about decisions based on suspicion, as opposed to recognised standards of proof (such as ‘a reasonable cause to believe’ or ‘on the balance of probabilities’), in its November 2001 submission on the (then) Terrorism (Bombing and Financing) Bill. The House of Lords has recently stated that:

[S]uspicion of being a supporter is one thing and proof of wrongdoing is another. Someone who has never committed any offence and has no intention of doing anything wrong may be reasonably suspected of being a supporter on the basis of some heated remarks overheard in a pub.[24]

Suspicion is an even lower hurdle than belief: belief involves thinking that something is true; suspicion involves thinking that something may be true.[25]

3.11 Given the potential human rights impacts as a result of the ‘suspicions’ held by authorities under the TSA, the issue of whether a different standard of proof is appropriate and possible in relevant sections of the TSA warrants review. It may be of assistance to examine the information used in current practice under the TSA when an interim designation is made (based on ‘a good cause to suspect’) compared to when a final designation is made (under section 22 and based on ‘a belief on reasonable grounds’).

3.12 Overseas jurisprudence may also be instructive. For example, the Commission notes that the Canadian Federal Court has considered appropriate standards of evidence in relation to the detention of a suspected terrorist / threat to national security, a Mr Charkaoui. The Court stated that:

[N]ational security is such an important interest that its protection warrants the use of standards other than the preponderance of evidence standard.[26] Having said this, we will see that the “reasonableness” and “reasonable grounds to believe” standards [used in the relevant Canadian legislation] comport requirements that come close to the preponderance of evidence standard.[27]


3.13 This Court also notes that the "reasonable grounds" standard is similar to the balance of probabilities.[28]



Recommendation III: The Commission recommends the Committee consider, as part of this Review, whether a different, higher standard of proof is appropriate and possible in section 20 of the TSA.



C. Right to a fair trial and procedural fairness: Protections for classified security information

3.14 Section 32 of the TSA defines ‘classified security information’. Sections 38 to 40 include provisions to protect such information in a court. These potentially include the absence in the court of the designated entity, its lawyers, and the public.

3.15 The Commission raised concerns about access to a fair trial, if an accused is not provided with all (classified security) information held about them, in its November 2001 submission on the (then) Terrorism (Bombing and Financing) Bill. The right to fair trial is of significant importance, and the right to know - in full - the allegations against you is a strong and abiding element of the right to a fair trial.[29]

3.16 There is no easy balance to be struck between the need to protect classified security information (in case, as claimed, divulging this information damages its provision and/or source), and the need to protect the right to a fair trial. This issue has received considerable attention since the enactment of the TSA. As recently as October 2004, a study by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights noted:

The new procedures for use in the ... prosecution of terrorism-related cases ... include, for example, measures ... based on information, including non-evidentiary information, withheld from the accused (so-called ‘secret evidence’). ... However, the question of the compatibility of many of these procedures with international human rights obligations has not yet been fully addressed by the special procedures and treaty monitoring bodies.[30]

3.17 The ACJ in its 2004 Final Report stated that key safeguards in the right to a fair trial include the right to be informed of the nature and cause of the charge.[31] The ACJ went on to state that it:

[R]ecognises that there may be particular concerns in terrorism trials with issues of witness protection and the use of classified information. In these circumstances it is important that any measures to protect witnesses or classified information be consistent to the greatest extent possible with the rights set out above, that they be authorised by the judicial authority trying the case and that they be imposed only to the extent strictly necessary.[32]
3.18 Difficulties of obtaining fair processes when an accused does not know the full information held against them are acknowledged in a recent House of Lords landmark decision in the counter-terrorism context:

If the finger of suspicion has pointed and the suspect is detained, his detention must be reviewed by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission. They can decide that there were no reasonable grounds for the Home Secretary’s suspicion. But the suspect is not entitled to be told the grounds upon which he has been suspected. So he may not find it easy to explain that the suspicion is groundless.[33]

3.19 In cases involving terrorist suspects and classified security information, the United Kingdom has adopted a process using special advocates. However, the UK Joint Committee on Human Rights has described this procedure as one of “questionable fairness”.[34] The House of Lords identifies the ‘fair process’ problems as follows:

Their cases must be reviewed by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (SIAC). SIAC can see all the material which was available to the Home Secretary. But much of this is ‘closed’ so that the detainee and his lawyers cannot see it. Instead there are ‘special advocates’ who can see it, cross-examine witnesses, and make representation to SIAC about it, and may even persuade SIAC that some of the material should be disclosed to the detainee.

But they cannot discuss it with or take instructions from the detainee, so they do not know whether he might have an answer to it. The detainee does not know a good deal of the case against him. He is not even interviewed by the authorities so that he can attempt to give some account of himself, (although that might be rather limited if they cannot tell him what they have against him). SIAC does know the case against him, but all it can do is decide whether the Home Secretary’s belief and suspicion were in the circumstances reasonable. SIAC does not decide whether the detainee actually is an international terrorist as defined in the Act, merely whether the Home Secretary reasonably suspects that he is.[35]

3.20 To date, the New Zealand courts have not examined the processes under the TSA relating to disclosure of classified security information and the right of an accused to a fair trial. However under similar provisions in the Immigration Act 1987, a Mr Ahmed Zaoui (a refugee, and suspected of being a threat to national security) was denied full information being held about him as it was classified security information. Instead, Mr Zaoui was provided with a summary of the information. However the question of whether such summaries are of any practical use is highly contentious.


Ways forward with the right to a fair trial and the use of classified security information?

3.21 A leading United Kingdom human rights lawyer, Rabinder Singh QC, on a recent visit to New Zealand[36], raised developments with public interest immunity[37] in the European Court of Human Rights as an example of a potential way forward. In that instance, while classified security information does not have to be made available to the accused or their lawyer, if it is not made available then the prosecution cannot rely on it when making their case in court. The judge is able to consider the security information, and decide whether the information should be made available to the accused. This provides a due process check. If the judge decides the information should be made available to the accused, then the prosecution has the choice of either providing it, or withdrawing it from the case. These developments may warrant further investigation by the Committee (and supporting officials) as part of the Review of the TSA.

3.22 There have also been produced, since the enactment of the TSA, several comprehensive reports on overseas jurisprudence and legislative practice in relation to this issue, for example:


3.23 These reports contain numerous recommendations on the handling of classified security information in court.


Recommendation IV: The Commission recommends the Committee review the TSA treatment of classified security information in the court, in light of developing best practice in this difficult area, using the references provided by the Commission, in order to improve the protection of the right to a fair trial under the provisions of the TSA.


D. Broad human rights impacts: Procedural fairness: Process for examining and renewing designations

3.24 Sections 35 to 38 of the TSA provide for designations of terrorist entities to expire after 3 years, and set out the process by which the High Court examines and can renew those designations.

3.25 The Commission notes that the 2001 Select Committee scrutiny of the (then) Terrorism (Bombing and Financing) Bill resulted in substantial and positive revision of the process for designating terrorist entities - to include both a knowledge component and, importantly, an earlier expiration date, down from 5 to 3 years. The Commission’s submission from November 2001 specifically recommended the latter amendment.

3.26 It is therefore of considerable concern to the Commission that the Terrorism Suppression Amendment (No 2) Bill, currently before this Committee, extends the expiry of current designations until “2 years after the date on which... the select committee .. reports to the House”.[40] In effect that will make the duration of designations some 5 to 6 years before review is possible. Given the human rights impacts of designations, the concerns expressed in 2001 resurface. The safeguards provided in 2001 are negated.

3.27 As the Committee will be aware, the Commission has made separate written and oral submissions on this issue in the Bill.[41] For the substantive reasons set out in those submissions, the Commission specifically recommended that the extension of the expiry date for designations in the Bill be limited to one year, until October 2006. It is not our intention to restate in full that argument here.

3.28 However, other recommendations made in that submission are highly relevant to this Review. They arise from problems the Commission cited with the UN and domestic processes of designating individuals and groups as terrorist entities. A particular problem is the lack of reliable and sustainable processes to review those designations, to de-list entities.

3.29 There is also the question of who should be held responsible for designations made on an incorrect basis – designations, with human rights impacts, which might then be renewed without review. The Monitoring Group, established by the Security Council to monitor compliance with its counter-terrorism resolutions, stated in June 2003 that “around 15%” of states submitting compliance updates face judicial challenges by designated individuals.[42]

3.30 The February 2005 Report of the UN’s Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team states that:

The many legal challenges to the measures, in particular in Europe and the United States, and the threat of more, pose a serious impediment to the success of the sanctions regime, not least by discouraging States to add names to the List. Based on Member State reports pursuant to resolution 1455 (2003) and further enquiry by the Monitoring Team, it appears that individuals and entities have filed at least 13 lawsuits around the world directly related to the sanctions. Litigants generally did not challenge the United Nations directly, but instead asserted that the State or regional body implementing the sanctions failed to abide by, among other principles, fundamental norms of due process, right to property and freedom of association.

At least five cases challenging the implementation of the United Nations sanctions are pending before the Court of First Instance of the European Court of Justice. The Team has been informed that there are other cases filed before the European Court of Human Rights and the courts of individual States such as Italy, Pakistan, Turkey and the United States.[43]


Consequently, the Commission recommends:

  1. Carry out an analysis of the UN procedure used for listing and de-listing individuals and groups as designated terrorist entities;
  2. Note the strengths and shortcoming identified in those procedures, particularly with regard to the observance of procedural rights; and
  3. Report to the Committee on their findings before the conclusion of the Committee’s Review of the TSA, in order that the Committee is able to determine the importance of domestic High Court review of designations.




Suggested improvements to the UN designation and review system?

3.31 With regard to the last, above recommendation, the Commission is aware of various suggestions for improvement that warrant further examination by the Committee (and supporting officials), for example:



E. Right to freedom from torture: Explicit ban on evidence obtained by torture

3.32 Since the enactment of the TSA, there has been intense overseas debate on the use of evidence which has, or may have been, obtained by torture. The debate in relation to practices employed in USA detention facilities in both Iraq and Cuba has been well canvassed in the media.

3.33 The UK Joint Committee on Human Rights has comprehensively addressed this issue several times. The issue is well stated in its March 2005 Report on the Prevention of Terrorism Bill, as follows:

Torture evidence

18. In our Report on the Review of Counter-terrorism powers, we expressed our concern about the Government’s position that, where national security is at stake, it is the Government’s duty to take all information into account, regardless of whether it was obtained by torture. Since then, the Court of Appeal has ruled that such material can be relied upon by the Government, including to justify detention, provided the Government was not complicit in the torture used to obtain it.[47] It is a matter of public record that the UK authorities are working closely with foreign intelligence and police agencies, including particularly the US. The extent of the alleged abuse of prisoners at certain US facilities, including in particular Bagram and Guantanamo, is now well known.

19. The UN Committee Against Torture, in its recent Concluding Observations, expressed its concern that UK law had been interpreted to exclude the use of evidence extracted by torture only where its officials were complicit, and recommended that the Government should give some formal effect to its expressed intention not to rely on or present in any proceeding evidence where there is knowledge or belief that it has been obtained by torture.

20. We asked the Home Secretary if he could confirm that none of the material which is relied upon in relation to the current detainees has been obtained from other sources abroad, including the United States, where there have been serious allegations of torture and prisoner abuse.[48] The Home Secretary said that the Government did consider whether it believed that torture had been used in any particular case, and that it did not believe that torture had been used in the cases of the current detainees, but “we are in a serious difficulty here in that proving a negative in this case is a difficult thing to do.” When pressed on how precisely the Government establish that torture has not been used, the Home Secretary repeated that proving a negative is a difficult thing to do.[49] When asked for an assurance that he will apply an absolute rule that if there is any question that evidence has been obtained by torture it must not be used, the Home Secretary said “I would need to be convinced that it had been used which ... I am not in this case.”

21. We remain concerned about the possible use of torture evidence by UK authorities. Our concerns have not been allayed by the evidence of the Home Secretary. Indeed, we now have concerns about whether the Government has any system in place for ascertaining whether intelligence which reaches it in relation to people allegedly involved in terrorism-related activity has been obtained by torture. The Bill is silent on this question, despite the obvious concern that the material relied on by the Government to obtain control orders may well include material which has been obtained by torture. We recommend that the Government takes the opportunity presented by this Bill to implement the UNCAT recommendation that it give some formal effect to its expressed intention not to rely on or present in any proceedings evidence which it knows or believes to have been obtained by torture.[50]

3.34 It is entirely plausible that in New Zealand’s efforts to counter terrorism it has relied, and will again, on security information obtained from the USA or the UK. Consequently the issue of the use of evidence obtained through torture is a live issue for New Zealand as well.


Recommendation X: The Commission recommends that the Committee use this opportunity, while reviewing the TSA, to add a provision clarifying that no actor under the Act will rely on or present in any proceedings evidence which they know or believe to have been obtained by torture.


F. Access to justice: Judicial review of designations

3.35 The reinstatement in the (then) Terrorism (Bombing and Finance) Bill of access to judicial review for designation decisions remains as a positive amendment. This provision now forms section 33 of the TSA.

3.36 However, this safeguard may be problematic on two fronts. First, any group or individual suspected of being a terrorist entity will have likely had their access to funds and financial institutions frozen. Therefore a valid question exists about how they might fund any action for judicial review. This is, of course, in the period prior to the expiry of a designation.

3.37 This first concern is exacerbated by the second, namely, the emerging and persuasive evidence that the 2001 increases in court fees limit access to the courts, and thereby limit access to justice. This is an issue also noted by the Commission in its 2004 report Human Rights in New Zealand Today. In February 2005 the Regulations Review Committee concluded that:

[I]f court fees are set at a level that may discourage potential litigants, and mechanisms such as legal aid, concession rates and fee waivers are not available to a large section of court users to ensure access to the courts, there will be an undue trespass on personal rights and liberties.[51]

3.38 The Commission also notes, for the sake of completeness, that any method to challenge designations (prior to expiry) which involved a reverse onus would likely run contrary to human rights. Such reverse onuses, where the accused is required to prove innocence instead of that burden of proof resting on the prosecution, breach the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to the law. This presumption of innocence is often described as the ‘golden thread’ running through the law.


Recommendation XI: The Commission recommends that the Committee examine, as part the Review, whether judicial review in the High Court is an accessible safeguard for those receiving designations under the TSA, and whether other safeguards may be necessary (prior to the expiry of designations).


G. Right to freedom from discrimination: Effects of measures in terms of race, nationality or ethnicity

3.39 Counter terrorism measures have been noted as having indirect, detrimental effects on persons because of their race, and/or national or ethnic origins. This includes asylum seekers.

The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and the Human Rights Committee have both expressed concern over cases of widespread harassment of persons of particular backgrounds, as well as the use of racial profiling.[52]

3.40 The Human Rights Committee’s concluding observations on New Zealand, from 7 August 2002, state that:

The Committee recognizes that the security requirements relating to the events of 11 September 2001 have given rise to efforts by New Zealand to take legislative and other measures to implement Security Council resolution 1373 (2001). The Committee, however, expresses its concern that the impact of such measures or changes in policy on New Zealand's obligations under the Covenant may not have been fully considered.

The Committee is concerned about possible negative effects of the new legislation and practices on asylum-seekers, including by "removing the immigration risk offshore" and in the absence of monitoring mechanisms with regard to the expulsion of those suspected of terrorism to their countries of origin which, despite assurances that their human rights would be respected, could pose risks to the personal safety and lives of the persons expelled.

The State party is under an obligation to ensure that measures taken to implement Security Council resolution 1373 (2001) are in full conformity with the Covenant. The State party is requested to ensure that the definition of terrorism does not lead to abuse and is in conformity with the Covenant. In addition, the State party should maintain its practice of strictly observing the principle of non-refoulement.

3.41 The House of Lords decision in R v Immigration Officer at Prague Airport and another ex parte European Roma Rights Centre and others[53] is instructive. The Law Lords considered whether actions of British immigration officers were discriminatory in refusing six Roma individuals at Prague Airport leave to enter the UK. Baroness Hale, speaking for the Law Lords on this issue, stated that:

A quite separate issue is whether the operation at Prague Airport was carried out in an unlawfully discriminatory manner, in that would-be travellers of Roma origin were treated less favourably than non-Roma were. In particular, it is alleged that they were subjected to longer and more intrusive questioning, they were required to provide proof of matters which were taken on trust from non-Roma, and far more of them were refused leave to enter than were non-Roma. The appellants seek a declaration to that effect.
...

The person may be acting on belief or assumptions about members of the sex or racial group involved which are often true and which if true would provide a good reason for the less favourable treatment in question. But ‘what may be true of a group may not be true of a significant number of individuals within that group’ (see Hartmann J in Equal Opportunities Commission v Director of Education [2001] 2 HKLRD 690, para 86, High Court of Hong Kong). The object of the legislation is to ensure that each person is treated as an individual and not assumed to be like other members of the group.
...

It is worth remembering that good equal opportunities practice may not come naturally. Many will think it contrary to common sense to approach all applicants with an equally open mind, irrespective of the very good reasons there may be to suspect some of them more than others. But that is what is required by a law which tries to ensure that individuals are not disadvantaged by the general characteristics of the group to which they belong. In 2001, when the operation with which we are concerned began, the race relations legislation had only just been extended to cover the activities of the immigration service. It would scarcely be surprising if officers acting under considerable pressure of time found it difficult to conform in all respects to procedures and expectations which employers have been struggling to get right for more than quarter of a century.
...

All the evidence before us, other than that of the intentions of those in charge of the operation, which intentions were not conveyed to the officers on the ground, supports the inference that Roma were, simply because they were Roma, routinely treated with more suspicion and subjected to more intensive and intrusive questioning than non-Roma. There is nothing surprising about this. Indeed, the Court of Appeal considered it ‘wholly inevitable’. This may be going too far. But setting up an operation like this, prompted by an influx of asylum seekers who are overwhelmingly from one comparatively easily identifiable racial or ethnic group, requires enormous care if it is to be done without discrimination. That did not happen. The inevitable conclusion is that the operation was inherently and systemically discriminatory and unlawful.

In this respect it was not only unlawful in domestic law but also contrary to our obligations under customary international law and under international treaties to which the United Kingdom is a party.[54]

3.42 Baroness Hale made the declaration to this effect.


Recommendation XII: The Commission recommends the Committee seeks data on operational policies and practices established under the TSA (and other related counter-terrorism measures). Specifically, the Committee might seek data which indicates whether any patterns are emerging that give cause for concern in relation to race, nationality or ethnicity.


H. Human rights scrutiny: The importance of further review of TSA

3.43 The Commission, in its November 2001 submission on the (then) Terrorism (Bombing and Financing) Bill, recommended the inclusion of this review process in the legislation. In the future, the TSA will remain important in New Zealand’s fight against terrorism. The TSA will also continue to have significant implications for the human rights of persons or groups who fall within the TSA’s designation provisions. And, as this Committee rightly noted in 2001, provisions of this legislation will require review in order to “continue to meet the requirements of the constantly changing international environment”.[55]

3.44 Developments continue at a fast pace. New human rights issues and resolutions in the counter terrorism context may be identified and gain support in the future in ways not currently envisaged.


Recommendation XIII: Given these factors, the Commission recommends that section 70 of the TSA be amended to provide for a further review of the TSA by Select Committee, reporting to the House of Representatives before 1 December 2009.

3.45 The Commission notes the important and essentially complex human rights matters arising in the TSA. This suggests that further future review of the human rights impacts of the TSA is prudent.


Recommendation XIV: The Commission therefore recommends that section 70 of the TSA be further amended, as set out below, to make explicit reference to monitoring compliance with New Zealand’s obligations under Security Council Resolution 1456:

70 Review of operation of certain provisions of this Act

(1) This section applies to the provisions of this Act that are to implement New Zealand's obligations under the Anti-terrorism Resolution (the ``provisions'') and to implement New Zealand’s obligations under Resolution 1456 (2003) of the Security Council of the United Nations.



4. SUMMARY OF COMMISSION RECOMMENDATIONS

4.1 The Commission recommends:

  1. Carry out an analysis of the UN procedure used for listing and de-listing individuals and groups as designated terrorist entities;
  2. Note the strengths and shortcoming identified in those procedures, particularly with regard to the observance of procedural rights; and
  3. Report to the Committee on their findings before the conclusion of the Committee’s Review of the Terrorism Suppression Act, in order that the Committee is able to determine the importance of domestic High Court review of designations.


70 Review of operation of certain provisions of this Act

(1) This section applies to the provisions of this Act that are to implement New Zealand's obligations under the Anti-terrorism Resolution (the ``provisions'') [and to implement New Zealand’s obligations under Resolution 1456 (2003) of the Security Council of the United Nations.]






Human Rights Commission
April 2005


[1] Seventh International Conference for National Institutions for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, Seoul, Republic of Korea, 14 to 17 September 2004, The Seoul Declaration, at paragraph 1.
[2] Statement by Robin Theurkauf, a lecturer in international law at Yale University, who lost her husband Tom in the Twin Towers terrorist attack, cited in The New Rulers of the World (Verso, 2002) Introduction, at page 12.
[3] Michael Ignatieff “Hard choices on human rights” The Economist, ‘The World in 2004’, 2004.
[4] A & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department; X & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHL 56, 16 December 2004, Lord Hoffmann, at paragraph 97.
[5] Letter from the Ministries of Justice and Foreign Affairs and Trade, to the Human Rights Commission, 4 February 2005.
[6] Louise Arbour, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, “Security Under the Rule of Law” Address to the Biennial Conference of the International Commission of Jurists, Berlin, 27 August 2004.
[7] Security Council Resolution 1456 (2003), adopted on 20 January 2003, at paragraph 1.
[8] Security Council Resolution 1456 (2003), adopted on 20 January 2003, at paragraph 6.
[9] Security Council Resolution 1456 (2003), adopted on 20 January 2003, at paragraph 10.
[10] Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Report on Terrorism and Human Rights October 2002, at paragraph 350.
[11] Advisory Council of Jurists, Asia Pacific Forum of National Human rights Institutions Final Report on the Reference on the Rule of Law in Combating Terrorism, May 2004, at page 20.
[12] Advisory Council of Jurists, Asia Pacific Forum of National Human rights Institutions Final Report on the Reference on the Rule of Law in Combating Terrorism, May 2004, at page 118.
[13] See also the report by the European Union Network of Independent Experts in Fundamental Rights The Balance Between Freedom and Security in the Response By the European Union and Its Member States to the Terrorist Threats, 31 March 2003.
[14] The OHCHR Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights is to establish a working group to develop detailed principles and guidelines, based on this draft from the Special Rapporteur, during its fifty-seventh session 25 July to 12 August 2005. In addition, non-governmental organisations have also been active. See, for example, Human Rights Watch’s Briefing Paper Hear No Evil, See No Evil: The U.N. Security Council’s Approach to Human rights Violations in the Global Counter-Terrorism Effort, August 2004; the Anti-Terrorism Legislation in the United Kingdom by Liberty, 2002; and Anti-terrorism Measures, Security and Human Rights Report by the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights, April 2003.
[15] Report of the Secretary-General Protecting human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism Commission on Human Rights, Sixtieth session, 12 March 2004, E.CN.4/2004/91, at paragraph 25.
[16] Study of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism A/59/428, 8 October 2004, at page 17.
[17] Kofi Annan, UN Secretary-General, Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism: Report of the Secretary-General A/58/266, 8 August 2003, at paragraph 56.
[18] Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Digest of jurisprudence of the UN and regional organisations on the protection of human rights while countering terrorism (UN OHCHR, New York & Geneva, 2003), at page 1.
[19] Progress Report of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Terrorism and Human Rights, Ms Kalliopi K. Koufa, E/CN.4/Sub.2/2001/31, 27 June 2001; cited in Peter J. van Krieken (Ed) Terrorism and the International Legal Order (TMC Asser Press, The Hague, 2002) at pages 180 and 186.
[20] For example, Nobel Peace Prize winners Nelson Mandela and Yassir Arafat were once listed on the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation’s website list of terrorists (as cited in “Terror Meets Tyranny? The Interface Between Counter Terrorism and Human Rights” by Alex Conte, October 2002, at page 2).
[21] This report can be found at: http://www.asiapacificforum.net/jurists/terrorism/intro.htm
[22] Advisory Council of Jurists, Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions Final Report on the Reference on the Rule of Law in Combating Terrorism, May 2004, Summary of Answers to Questions Posed by the Reference, at page 13.
[23] Report of the High-level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change A more secure world: Our shared responsibility (Introduced by the Secretary-General) A/59/565, 2 December 2004, at paragraphs 163 and 164.
[24] A & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department; X & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHL 56, 16 December 2004, Lord Hoffman, at paragraph 87.
[25] A & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department; X & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHL 56, 16 December 2004, Baroness Hale, at paragraph 223.
[26] The ‘preponderance of the evidence’ standard is defined as: the greater weight of the evidence required in a civil lawsuit for the judge or jury to decide in favour of one side or the other. This preponderance is based on the more convincing evidence and its probable truth or accuracy, and not on the amount of evidence. Thus, one clearly knowledgeable witness may provide a preponderance of evidence over a dozen witnesses with hazy testimony. Preponderance of the evidence is required in a civil case, is akin to a ‘balance of probabilities’ and can be contrasted with "beyond a reasonable doubt," which is the more severe test of evidence required to convict in a criminal trial.
[27] Charkaoui (Re) (F.C.) [2003] FC 1419, at paragraph 126. NB: The case of Mr Charkaoui is further discussed below under ‘C. The right to a fair trial and procedural fairness: Access of accused to classified security information’.
[28] Charkaoui (Re) (F.C.) [2005] FC 248, at paragraph 31. The Commission also notes that in this 2005 review of Mr Charkaoui’s detention, the Court (at paragraph 75) states that “[t]he danger to national security and the safety of any person has decreased with the passage of time and the interaction of the group of circumstances mentioned above. I would even say that at the time of this assessment, the danger has been neutralized” and released Mr Charkaoui on bail.
[29] As provided by Article 14(1) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and sections 25 and 27(1) of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990.
[30] Study of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism A/59/428, 8 October 2004, at page 14.
[31] Advisory Council of Jurists, Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions Final Report on the Reference on the Rule of Law in Combating Terrorism, May 2004, Summary of Answers to Questions Posed by the Reference, at page 16.
[32] Advisory Council of Jurists, Asia Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions Final Report on the Reference on the Rule of Law in Combating Terrorism, May 2004, Summary of Answers to Questions Posed by the Reference, at page 16.
[33] A & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department; X & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHL 56, 16 December 2004, Lord Hoffman, at paragraph 87.
[34] Joint Committee on Human Rights Fifth report: Continuance in Force of Sections 21 to 23 of the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 26 February 2003, at paragraph 44.
[35] A & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department; X & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHL 56, 16 December 2004, Baroness Hale, at paragraph 223.
[36] Rabinder Singh QC, Matrix Chambers, London, meeting with the Human Rights Commission, Wellington, 18 February 2005.
[37] Public interest immunity throughout its development, has always had a single purpose which is to allow the courts to reconcile any potential conflict between the following two public interests:

  1. the public interest in the administration of justice which demands that relevant material is available to the parties to litigation; and
  2. the public interest in maintaining the confidentiality of certain

documents whose disclosure would be damaging.
In pursuit of the first interest, there are rules governing the admissibility of evidence and the disclosure of material in legal proceedings. These vary according to the type of proceedings in question; but in all cases they impose on at least one party to litigation a duty to disclose certain documents and information to the other side. The second interest is served by attaching a conditional immunity from disclosure, known as "public interest immunity", to certain documents or information whose disclosure or use in evidence might be damaging to the public interest, These documents can be government material. Public interest immunity is only an immunity from the general rules requiring disclosure; it does not mean that the documents cannot or must not be disclosed. In place of automatic disclosure, the law imposes special rules to ensure that the question of disclosure or use is addressed only after proper consideration of both of the two interests described above, by the court. Extract from UK Treasury Solicitor’s Office Paper on Public Interest Immunity 1996, at paragraphs 1.3 to 1.6.
[38] The report can be found at: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/alrc/publications/reports/98/
[39] The report can be found at: http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/jt200304/jtselect/jtrights/jtrights.htm
[40] Clause 6(1) of the Terrorism Suppression Amendment (No 2) Bill refers.
[41] The Commission’s full submission on the Terrorism Suppression Amendment (No 2) Bill can be found at: http://www.hrc.co.nz/index.php?p=13682&wd0
[42] Report of the Monitoring Group established pursuant to Security Council resolution 1363 (2001) and extended by resolutions 1390 (2002) and 145 (2003) S/2003/669, 16 June 2003, at paragraph 146.
[43] Second Report of the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team appointed pursuant to resolution 1526 (2004) concerning Al-Qaida and the Taliban and associated individuals and entities S/2005/83, 15 February 2005, at paragraphs 50 and 51.
[44] Peter Gutherie “Security Council Sanctions and the Protection of Individual Rights” 60 N.Y.U. Annual Survey of American Law 491 (2005), at pages 525 to 540. The article can be found at:
http://www.nyu.edu/pubs/annualsurvey/html/issue.php Peter Gutherie also suggests, at footnote 147 on page 525, the possibility of strengthening existing international judicial bodies such as the International Court of Justice and regional human rights bodies to play a role in review.
[45] Human Rights Watch Briefing Paper Hear No Evil, See No Evil: The U.N. Security Council’s Approach to Human Rights Violations in the Global Counter-Terrorism Effort 10 August 2004, at page 17. Security Council Resolution 1456 is outlined at paragraph 2.1 of this Commission submission.
[46] Second Report of the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team appointed pursuant to resolution 1526 (2004) concerning Al-Qaida and the Taliban and associated individuals and entities S/2005/83, 15 February 2005, at paragraphs 33 to 40 (Changes to the List) and at paragraphs 53 to 60 (De-listing).
[47] A v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWCA 1123.
[48] Q 46.
[49] Q 47.
[50] Joint Committee on Human Rights Tenth Report: Prevention of Terrorism Bill 4 March 2005, at paragraphs 18 to 21.
[51] Report of the Regulations Review Committee Investigation and complaint about civil court fees regulations 2004 February 2005, at page 35. The Committee recommends to the Government that it undertake a review of the regulations that set civil court fees, taking into account the concerns expressed in the Report.
[52] Kofi Annan, UN Secretary-General, Report Protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism A/58/266, 8 August 2003, at paragraph 47.
[53] R v Immigration Officer at Prague Airport and another ex parte European Roma Rights Centre and others [2004] UKHL 55, 9 December 2004.
[54] R v Immigration Officer at Prague Airport and another ex parte European Roma Rights Centre and others [2004] UKHL 55, 9 December 2004, Baroness Hale, at paragraphs 72, 82, 90, 97 and 98.
[55] Terrorism Suppression Bill: As reported from the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee, Clause 24A.


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