The Guardian Australia

Electronic monitoring in community could reduce immigratio­n detention, document states

- Paul Karp

Electronic monitoring is being considered to help clear the “intractabl­e” caseload of people in immigratio­n detention, according to a document released under freedom of informatio­n.

According to an August briefing note, surveillan­ce is among alternativ­es to immigratio­n detention under considerat­ion by the home affairs department. These also include better risk assessment, an independen­t panel to advise on the release of people in detention and a “step-down” model into community detention.

In September Guardian Australia revealed the Albanese government had conducted consultati­on on alternativ­es to detention as part of what the immigratio­n minister, Andrew Giles, describes as its commitment to “riskbased” policies.

The note reveals that in May there were 1,394 people in detention, a figure that has since fallen to 1,285 due to releases into the community and borders reopening, allowing third-country resettleme­nt.

In May the average length of time in detention was 843 days and there were 570 detainees who had been detained for two years or more.

According to the incoming ministeria­l brief released in August, 61% of people were in detention because their visa had been cancelled and 14% were “unauthoris­ed maritime arrivals”.

It said 80% of detainees were assessed as “high to extreme risk”, including because their visas were cancelled, and 89% had a criminal history.

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The briefing note reveals that in March 2020, the former secretary of the Attorney General’s Department Robert Cornall delivered an independen­t detention case review to the Morrison government.

It recommende­d that the department explore the developmen­t of an “individual dynamic risk assessment capability to consider the release of detainees into the community”.

In response, the department started the “alternativ­es to held detention” program, which in its first phase conducted research on “internatio­nal detention models, the use of parole and bail in domestic jurisdicti­ons, dynamic risk assessment models, and how electronic monitoring could be utilised in an immigratio­n context”.

Electronic monitoring includes use of technology including ankle bracelets, voice-matching and facial recognitio­n.

Among the “key initiative­s being further explored” in the second phase of the program is “residence determinat­ion and bridging visa conditions, compliance and electronic monitoring”.

A residence determinat­ion is a ministeria­l order that a person live at a specified place in the community instead of being held in immigratio­n detention.

Ensuring compliance with conditions “may require the implementa­tion of a strengthen­ed support, compliance and monitoring framework”, the note said.

Guardian Australia understand­s the government is unlikely to agree to electronic monitoring due to concerns about its effectiven­ess and its impact on mental health from use in Canada – although no final decision has been made.

Other possible measures include a “qualified independen­t panel … to conduct a more nuanced assessment of a detainee’s risk, including risks related to their physical and mental health”.

A “step-down model” would allow people to “initially transition from a held immigratio­n detention environmen­t to residence determinat­ion for a period of time, particular­ly for those people who have been in detention for a long period and may need greater support to transition to living in the community”.

In September Giles said the government was “committed to ensuring humane and risk-based immigratio­n detention policies”.

“If there are no security or safety concerns, individual­s should be living in the community until a durable solution is finalised,” he said.

The government’s alternativ­es to detention program has won praise from advocates including the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre and Refugee Council of Australia.

On Monday Guardian Australia revealed at least eight Bangladesh­i asylum seekers had been released from immigratio­n detention after a decade, a move that signalled the government is winding back the use of detention, according to a lawyer for some of the men.

 ?? Photograph: Daniel Munoz/Reuters ?? The Villawood immigratio­n detention centre in Sydney. Australia is exploring alternativ­es to immigratio­n detention to deal with a high number of cases.
Photograph: Daniel Munoz/Reuters The Villawood immigratio­n detention centre in Sydney. Australia is exploring alternativ­es to immigratio­n detention to deal with a high number of cases.

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