ZAOUI V THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL And Ors SC SC CIV 13/2004 [9 December 2004]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW ZEALAND
SC CIV 13/2004
BETWEEN AHMED ZAOUI
Appellant
AND THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL
First Respondent
AND THE SUPERINTENDENT, AUCKLAND
CENTRAL REMAND PRISON
Second Respondent
AND HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
Intervener
Court:
Elias CJ, Gault, Keith, Blanchard and Eichelbaum JJ
Counsel:
R E Harrison QC and D Manning for the Appellant
T Arnold QC, Solicitor-General, C R Gwyn and
T M Luey for the Respondents
Hearing: 9 December 2004
Judgment: 9 December 2004
Solicitors:
McLeod & Associates, Auckland for the Appellant
Crown Law Office, Wellington for the Respondents
JUDGMENT (No 2) OF THE COURT
A The appeal is allowed to the extent of the orders made.
B Until the Inspector General of Intelligence and Security makes his decision under s114J of the Immigration Act 1987,
the appellant is granted bail on the following conditions:
i) The appellant is to report to the Auckland Central Police Station between the hours of 10am and 4pm each Tuesday and
Friday
ii) The appellant is to reside at the Dominican Friary at 1 St Benedict Street, Newton, Auckland and is to be present at
that address each day between the hours of 10pm and 6am.
iii) There are to be filed in the High Court at Auckland by 5 pm on Wednesday 15 December 2004 the following
undertakings:
a) An undertaking by the appellant that he will observe the conditions of bail
b) An undertaking by Peter Murnane, Dominican Friar and Catholic Priest, that he will immediately upon becoming aware of
any breach by the respondent of any condition of bail, he will report such breach to the police at Auckland Central
Police Station
C Leave is reserved to the Attorney-General or to Mr Zaoui to apply for variation of the conditions of bail or for
revocation of bail.
D The matter of bail is remitted to the High Court at Auckland. Any applications for variation or revocation of bail are
to be made in that Court.
E Any question of costs on the appeal is reserved. Counsel may file memoranda if necessary.
REASONS
[1] The Court determined by judgment of 25 November 2004 that the High Court has jurisdiction to grant bail to a person
detained under Part 4A of the Immigration Act 1987. We also determined that a District Court, or the High Court on
removal of an application into that Court, may vary a warrant of commitment issued under s114O of the Immigration Act to
direct that detention under such a warrant be in premises other than a penal institution. The only alternative premises
identified as potentially suitable were those contained in the Mangere Refugee Resettlement Centre. Ahmed Zaoui’s
application for bail or variation of the warrant to permit his transfer to the Mangere Centre was adjourned to today to
enable the Crown to put before the Court any further material bearing on the determination and to permit further
argument, the questions of jurisdiction having been resolved.
[2] At the resumed hearing this morning, the respondents no longer maintained their earlier position that the Mangere
Centre is unsuitable for the detention of the appellant. The Solicitor-General acknowledged that the review of the
security risk certificate by the Inspector-General may take a further 6-12 months. In those circumstances, the
respondents do not oppose the transfer of the appellant to the Mangere Centre, where he would continue to be detained,
if appropriate conditions are set. The conditions sought are to enable monitoring and control of the appellant’s
activities so that national security concerns can be met. The respondents oppose the release of the appellant on bail on
the grounds that, unless detained, such monitoring and control will not be possible.
[3] The national security concerns relied upon by the respondents are those indicated by the Director of Security in the
summary provided by the Director on 27 January 2004, in explanation of his security risk certificate under Part 4A of
the Act. The certificate is directed to the risk to national security if Mr Zaoui is permitted to settle in New Zealand.
It is not directly concerned with the risks which might be posed by Mr Zaoui’s presence in the New Zealand community on
bail on conditions while the statutory review of the security risk certificate is completed, as the Solicitor-General
fairly accepted.
[4] The provisions of Part 4 of the Act contemplate prompt determination. That has not proved possible in the case of Mr
Zaoui. He has already been in custody in penal institutions for 2 years and faces further delay before his status is
resolved. It is now accepted by the respondents that some amelioration in the conditions in which he is being held is
appropriate. The question for the Court today is whether the appropriate response is variation of the warrant to enable
Mr Zaoui’s transfer to the Mangere Centre or release on bail with conditions. We are of the view that bail is the
preferable outcome.
[5] Transfer to the Mangere Centre, on the terms proposed by the respondents, would be a continuation of detention.
Given the time the appellant has been in custody and the time now expected before his application for review will be
determined, further detention could only be contemplated if the risk of release on bail justifies it. Release on bail is
not liberty and in the typical case specific conditions may be imposed to meet any particular risks. The usual risks
identified in criminal cases have little application to the present case. The respondents have not suggested that there
is an appreciable risk that the appellant will abscond and there is no question of risk to witnesses or concern about
criminal offending while on bail, which are usual concerns when a court is considering the bail of someone charged with
a criminal offence. The risks identified by the respondent in the present case are risks to national security which may
arise from activities of the appellant. The question for the court is whether those risks can be reasonably contained by
the terms of bail. The term of bail is limited to the period before status is determined. It operates effectively as a
suspension of the warrant of commitment.
[6] Identification of the risks in the temporary release of the appellant pending determination of his status is
therefore key to the choice between continued detention in the Mangere Centre and release on bail. The Solicitor-General
was pressed to identify the risks which might arise. He acknowledged that they did not include concerns about violence
in New Zealand as a result of activities by Mr Zaoui. He identified them rather as the continuation in New Zealand of
the activities and associations of the appellant in Europe reported by the Director of Security in his Summary, based on
publicly known information and classified security information which cannot be divulged. It concludes:
The protection of New Zealand from activities within or relating to New Zealand that –
It is reasonable to suspect that if permitted to settle in New Zealand Mr ZAOUI would in due course undertake,
facilitate, promote or encourage activities like those of which he was convicted in Belgium and France and/or which the
Swiss government decided endangered Switzerland’s domestic and external security. His presence here would attract, both
directly (people who wish to work with him) and indirectly (people encouraged to believe that New Zealand is a safe
haven for people with his sort of record), other people likely to engage in activities of security concern.
Are influenced by any foreign organisation or any foreign person; and
Mr ZAOUI is a foreign person. He has a long record of involvement with foreign persons and foreign organisations,
including leadership. There is good reason to believe that any future activities he may undertake will be influenced by
other foreign persons and/or by foreign organisations.
Are clandestine or deceptive, or threaten the safety of any person; and
The activities of which he was convicted in Belgium and France were clandestine or deceptive or threatened the safety of
persons. The Swiss government believed that his activity in Switzerland “may lead to acts of violence, and even attacks,
in Switzerland”. Activities of this kind in New Zealand, by Mr ZAOUI or by others attracted to New Zealand by his
presence here, could threaten the safety of New Zealanders.
Impact adversely on New Zealand’s international well-being.
As part of the international community it is New Zealand’s responsibility to take its proper part in controlling,
defeating and preventing activities of security concern, such as those of which Mr ZAOUI has been convicted in Belgium
and France and for which he was deported from Switzerland. Consistent with this, it is a government objective to ensure
that New Zealand is neither the victim nor the source of acts of terrorism or other activities of security concern, and
to prevent New Zealand from being or becoming a safe haven for people who have undertaken, or may be intending to
undertake, such activities.
If Mr ZAOUI, with his public record, were allowed to settle here, that would indicate that New Zealand has a lower level
of concern about security than other like-minded countries. That would impact adversely on New Zealand’s reputation with
such countries and thus on New Zealand’s international well-being.
If Mr ZAOUI, or other people attracted to New Zealand by his presence here, were to undertake, facilitate, promote or
encourage activities of security concern, either in New Zealand or elsewhere from within New Zealand, the adverse impact
on New Zealand’s reputation and thus on its international well-being would be compounded.
[7] We consider it appropriate to accept the summary for the purposes of this hearing. But it is directed at risks to
national security should the appellant be permitted to settle in New Zealand, not at the risks he poses if released for
the period during which the review is completed. Nor is there any indication in the material to suggest that the
activities and associations undertaken by the appellant in other jurisdictions, which are relied upon in the summary,
are activities and associations readily available to him in New Zealand. The security risks identified are essentially
those associated with leading and participating in criminal activities in relation to Algerian politics and encouraging
the perception that New Zealand is a safe haven for those intending to undertake similar activities. The concern is with
communicating and associating with others. The Solicitor-General acknowledged that such risks would require monitoring
and control even in the Mangere Centre and that he had not found it possible to identify in advance what communications
and associations are a risk to national security.
[8] Although the difficulty of framing any condition to guard against such risks was put forward as an argument against
granting bail, we consider that similar difficulties arise whether the appellant is in custody in a penal institution or
in the Mangere Centre. The Solicitor-General disavowed any intention to keep Mr Zaoui isolated. He accepted that it
would be wrong to stop him receiving visitors. The problem is not so much one of control but of identification of risk,
an identification the Crown is not able to undertake in advance because it is unable to specify the people or groups
whose associations or contact with Mr Zaoui would give rise to security concerns. We are not convinced that in the time
that bail is likely to continue the control of detention is proportionate to the risk. It seems to us that the more
effective control is to grant leave to apply to vary the terms of bail or to revoke it should such risk eventuate. If it
did, it might involve breaches of the criminal law including the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002.
ENDS