as was posted here ... Minister Stephen Smith blamed for mother's ordeal | The Australian
LAWYERS for Shyloh Giddins, the Sydney woman detained by Yemeni security officials, have lashed out at the Australian government, saying it was the cancellation of her passport that triggered her arrest.
Abdul Rahman Barman, Ms Giddins's Yemeni lawyer, said he expected his client to be deported from Yemen today.
But, speaking through an interpreter, Mr Barman blamed the Rudd government for her month-long ordeal, saying it was the decision by Foreign Minister Stephen Smith to cancel her passport that brought her to the attention of Yemeni authorities.
Mr Barman said Ms Giddins's interrogators had focused almost exclusively on the reason behind the cancellation rather than her local links or activities.
"The key questions during the investigation were all about her passport cancellation, why they cancelled her passport," he said.
Ms Giddins's passport was cancelled in April by Mr Smith following a request by ASIO, who judged her a threat to security. ASIO cited her "extremist" interpretation of Islam as one reason.
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A month after the cancellation, Ms Giddins was arrested by security officials in Yemen while her children remained under house arrest in the care of her flatmate.
Mr Barman said officials from Yemen's Political Security Organisation shouted at him and an Australian consular official when they attempted to visit the children.
"(They) refused to let us hand over the food and the books for the children to the children," he said.
"They said that it is an order from the head of the PSO not to allow anybody to see the children."
Ms Giddins is a Muslim convert who has lived in Yemen since 2006.
She is due to be flown to Sydney after Mr Smith personally phoned Yemen's Foreign Minister and requested she be repatriated along with her children.
Mr Barman said his client would not have been arrested if Mr Smith had not cancelled her passport.
A spokeswoman for Mr Smith said the government did not comment on operational matters.
Friday, 11 June 2010
Sheikh Mansour Leghaei Deportation Contravention of UN’s Wishes
as was posted here ... Sheikh Mansour Leghaei Deportation Contravention of UN’s Wishes
Sydney, May 22: Immigration Minister Senator Chris Evans’ decision to deport Sheikh Mansour Leghaei is in direct contravention of the UN’s wishes, sent in a formal request to the Australian Government last month.
The United Nations Human Rights Committee in Geneva issued a request on April 21 asking the Australian Government not to deport Dr Leghaei and his accompanying dependants while it is considering his case.
Dr Leghaei’s legal team sent a petition to the UN Committee last month claiming the Government’s treatment of his case contravened the his human rights under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Australia is a party. Under the First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, individuals in Australia may lodge complaints with the UN Committee if all domestic remedies have been exhausted.
Under Rule 92 of the UN Committee’s Rules of Procedure, a complainant may request urgent “interim measures” to prevent deportation where “irreparable harm” would occur if the deportation proceeded. Such measures remain in place until the complaint is finally determined, which usually takes about one year.
“Dr Leghaei was denied his human right to a procedurally fair hearing in the issue of an adverse security assessment by ASIO and in the decision to deport him which relied upon that assessment,” said Associate Professor Ben Saul, Co-Director of Sydney University’s Sydney Centre for International Law and one of the barristers who prepared the petition.
“Like numerous others who have been subject to adverse security assessments by ASIO, Dr Leghaei has never been told the basis of the allegations against him.
“Our strong case will have ramifications for others in Dr Leghaei’s situation both in Australia and internationally, where a person is unable to see or challenge any of the evidence against them.”
Dr Leghaei and his family, who have lived peacefully in Australia for 16 years, have never been granted permanent residency due to adverse security assessments issued against the Sheikh by ASIO several years ago.
In March Dr Leghaei appealed to the Minister to exercise his ministerial powers and allow him to remain in the country. Today, Senator Evans granted visas to Dr Leghaei’s wife and son, but denied a visa to the Sheikh. He has been given six weeks to leave the country.
Australia is being accused of violating Articles 2, 13, 14, 23, 24 and 26 of the ICCPR .
His petition details that:
Dr Leghaei has been denied a fair hearing in ASIO’s issue of an adverse security assessment, in the Department of Immigration’s decision to rely upon that assessment to refuse him a visa, and in all proceedings before the Migration Review Tribunal and Federal Court of Australia;
He has been discriminated against because was denied procedural fairness because he was not an Australian citizen or permanent resident;
The deportation cannot be justified because, in the absence of proof he is a genuine threat to national security, it would split his family and deprive his 14 year old daughter, an Australian citizen, of both her parents.
Media Contact:
Christian Save The Sheikh Coalition Spokesperson
Father Dave Smith
11 Herbert Street Dulwich Hill
NSW Australia 2203
61-2-9569-1255
dave@fatherdave.org
http://www.savethesheikh.com
http://www.fatherdave.org
Helen Signy 61 425 202 654, helensigny@writemedia.com.au
Ben Saul 612 9351 0354, ben.saul@sydney.edu.au
Father Dave 612 9569 1255, dave@fatherdave.org
Sydney, May 22: Immigration Minister Senator Chris Evans’ decision to deport Sheikh Mansour Leghaei is in direct contravention of the UN’s wishes, sent in a formal request to the Australian Government last month.
The United Nations Human Rights Committee in Geneva issued a request on April 21 asking the Australian Government not to deport Dr Leghaei and his accompanying dependants while it is considering his case.
Dr Leghaei’s legal team sent a petition to the UN Committee last month claiming the Government’s treatment of his case contravened the his human rights under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Australia is a party. Under the First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR, individuals in Australia may lodge complaints with the UN Committee if all domestic remedies have been exhausted.
Under Rule 92 of the UN Committee’s Rules of Procedure, a complainant may request urgent “interim measures” to prevent deportation where “irreparable harm” would occur if the deportation proceeded. Such measures remain in place until the complaint is finally determined, which usually takes about one year.
“Dr Leghaei was denied his human right to a procedurally fair hearing in the issue of an adverse security assessment by ASIO and in the decision to deport him which relied upon that assessment,” said Associate Professor Ben Saul, Co-Director of Sydney University’s Sydney Centre for International Law and one of the barristers who prepared the petition.
“Like numerous others who have been subject to adverse security assessments by ASIO, Dr Leghaei has never been told the basis of the allegations against him.
“Our strong case will have ramifications for others in Dr Leghaei’s situation both in Australia and internationally, where a person is unable to see or challenge any of the evidence against them.”
Dr Leghaei and his family, who have lived peacefully in Australia for 16 years, have never been granted permanent residency due to adverse security assessments issued against the Sheikh by ASIO several years ago.
In March Dr Leghaei appealed to the Minister to exercise his ministerial powers and allow him to remain in the country. Today, Senator Evans granted visas to Dr Leghaei’s wife and son, but denied a visa to the Sheikh. He has been given six weeks to leave the country.
Australia is being accused of violating Articles 2, 13, 14, 23, 24 and 26 of the ICCPR .
His petition details that:
Dr Leghaei has been denied a fair hearing in ASIO’s issue of an adverse security assessment, in the Department of Immigration’s decision to rely upon that assessment to refuse him a visa, and in all proceedings before the Migration Review Tribunal and Federal Court of Australia;
He has been discriminated against because was denied procedural fairness because he was not an Australian citizen or permanent resident;
The deportation cannot be justified because, in the absence of proof he is a genuine threat to national security, it would split his family and deprive his 14 year old daughter, an Australian citizen, of both her parents.
Media Contact:
Christian Save The Sheikh Coalition Spokesperson
Father Dave Smith
11 Herbert Street Dulwich Hill
NSW Australia 2203
61-2-9569-1255
dave@fatherdave.org
http://www.savethesheikh.com
http://www.fatherdave.org
Helen Signy 61 425 202 654, helensigny@writemedia.com.au
Ben Saul 612 9351 0354, ben.saul@sydney.edu.au
Father Dave 612 9569 1255, dave@fatherdave.org
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