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Puafisi and Minister for Immigration and Citizenship [2009] AATA 689 (10 September 2009)
Last Updated: 10 September 2009
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
DECISION AND REASONS FOR DECISION [2009] AATA 689
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL )
) No 2009/3048
GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION )
Re Tapukesolova PUAFISI
Applicant
And Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
Respondent
DECISION
Tribunal Mr R P Handley, Deputy President
Date 10 September 2009
Place Sydney
Decision The decision under review is set aside.
..................[sgd]........................
Mr R P
Handley
Deputy President
CATCHWORDS
IMMIGRATION – Visa cancellation - character test - substantial
criminal record - whether Tribunal should exercise discretion
to cancel
applicant's visa pursuant to s 501(2) of the Migration Act 1958 -
Minister’s direction issued under s 499(1) of the Migration Act 1958 -
Direction No 41 applied – primary considerations - protection of the
Australian community - not open to the Tribunal to engage
in any enquiry which
would impugn the sentence – risk of recidivism - offences committed in
context of alcohol abuse - evidence
of rehabilitation - length of time that a
person has been ordinarily resident in Australia – best interests of the
child -
other considerations - family ties and the nature and extent of any
relationship with the Australian community - decision under review
set
aside
...
RELEVANT ACT
Migration Act 1958 (Cth):
ss 501
...
CITATIONS
Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs v SRT (1999) 91 FCR 234; (1999) 56 ALD 349; [1999] FCA
1197
Re Heyward and Minister
for Immigration and Citizenship [2009] AATA 536
...
OTHER AUTHORITIES
Direction No 21 [superseded 15 June
2009 by Direction No 41]
Direction No 41
...
REASONS FOR DECISION
|
|
Mr R P Handley, Deputy President
|
|
|
- Mr
Puafisi applied to the Tribunal for the review of a decision of a delegate of
the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship to cancel
Mr Puafisi’s visa
on the ground that he did not pass the ‘character
test’.
BACKGROUND
- Mr
Puafisi was born in Tonga and is aged 55. He arrived in Australian on
24 January 1985, aged 30, on a three-month visitor
visa, following his
father who had come to Australia three months earlier. He attained permanent
residency in 1994.
- Mr
Puafisi has no criminal history in Tonga but, between 1990 and 2007, he was
convicted of a number of offences in Australia after,
it appears, he developed a
drinking problem:
- (a) 30/03/1990,
malicious damage – fined and ordered to pay compensation;
- (b) 14/04/1994,
assault occasioning actual bodily harm (ABH) – good behaviour bond;
- (c) 17/06/1994,
common assault and breach of domestic violence order – fined and sentenced
to three months’ periodic detention;
- (d) 01/08/1996,
malicious damage - good behaviour bond and ordered to pay compensation;
- (e) 11/02/1998,
ABH and contravene apprehended violence order (AVO) – good behaviour
bond;
- (f) 12/02/1998,
common assault;
- (g) 04/05/1999,
indecent language – fined;
- (h) 20/10/2000,
common assault – good behaviour bond, fined;
- (i) 17/12/2001,
contravene AVO, resist officer in the execution of his duty – fined;
- (j) 15/05/2003,
aggravated indecent assault (victim under authority) – 12 months'
imprisonment (eight months non-parole);
- (k) 01/04/2004,
failure to quit premises, destroy or damage property – fined, good
behaviour bond;
- (l) 22/07/2005,
ABH, common assault, destroy or damage property – six months'
imprisonment, commencing 22/07/2005;
- (m) 22/08/2005,
common assault, use of offensive weapon with intent to commit indictable offence
– eight months' imprisonment,
commencing 22/10/2005 (six months
non-parole); and
- (n) 08/05/2007,
goods in personal custody suspected of being stolen – fined, good
behaviour bond.
- After
Mr Puafisi’s 2003 conviction, cancellation of his visa was considered but,
on 15 February 2005, a delegate of the Minister
decided not to cancel his visa
but to issue instead a formal warning that conviction of any further offences
would result in the
cancellation of his visa being reconsidered.
- On
13 February 2007, the Department notified Mr Puafisi of its intention to cancel
his visa and a delegate of the Minister subsequently
cancelled his visa on
30 June 2007. Mr Puafisi applied to the Tribunal for a review and, on 3
October 2007, the Tribunal affirmed
the decision. Mr Puafisi’s appeal to
the Full Federal Court was dismissed on 27 February 2008.
- On
17 July 2008, the Full Federal Court made a decision in an unrelated matter
finding that s 501 of the
Migration Act 1958 (Cth) (the Act)
could not be used to cancel a transitional (permanent) visa. As a result, the
Department took the view that the
decision in Mr Puafisi’s case contained
a jurisdictional error and, on 21 July 2008, Mr Puafisi was released from
immigration
detention. On 19 September 2008, the Act was amended by the
insertion of s 501HA, thereby enabling the cancellation of a visa of the
same class as that held by Mr Puafisi under s 501.
- By
letter dated 21 October 2008, the Department again notified Mr Puafisi of its
intention to cancel his visa and, on 30 June 2007,
a delegate of the Minister
cancelled his visa and Mr Puafisi was taken into immigration detention at
Villawood. On 3 July 2009,
Mr Puafisi applied to the Tribunal for a review of
this decision.
RELEVANT LAW AND POLICY
- Section
501(2) of the Act provides that the Minister may cancel a visa if “the
Minister reasonably suspects that the person does not pass
the character
test”. Section 501(6) provides that a person does not pass the character
test if the person has a ‘substantial criminal record’.
‘Substantial
criminal record’ is defined in s 501(7) as, among
other things, having been sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 12 months
or more, or to two or more terms of imprisonment
where the total of those terms
is two years or more.
- On
15 May 2003, Mr Puafisi was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of
12 months. On 22 July 2005, he was sentenced to further
terms of six and
eight months. There is no dispute that he does not pass the character
test.
- It
was therefore open to the Minister to cancel Mr Puafisi’s visa. In
exercising this discretion, the decision-maker must apply
Ministerial
Direction No 41 on Visa Refusal and Cancellation
under section 501 of the Act (Direction No 41). This superseded
Direction No 21 and came into effect on 15 June 2009.
Direction No 41 contains a number of primary considerations and other
considerations to which the decision-maker must have regard when considering
whether to exercise the discretion to refuse or cancel a visa.
- The
primary considerations in Direction No 41 are set out in paragraph
10(1):
...
- The
primary considerations
- (1) In
deciding whether to refuse to grant a person a visa or cancel a person’s
visa, the following (the primary considerations) are to be
considered:
- (a) the
protection of the Australian community from serious criminal or other harmful
conduct, particularly crimes involving violence;
- (b) whether
the person was a minor when they began living in Australia;
- (c) the
length of time that the person has been ordinarily resident in Australia prior
to engaging in criminal activity or other relevant
conduct; and
- (d) relevant
international obligations, including but not limited to:
- (i) the best
interests of the child, as described in the Convention on the Rights of the
Child (CROC); and
- (ii) the
non-refoulement obligations contained in the Convention and the Protocol
Relating to the Status of Refugees (the Refugees
Convention), the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention Against
Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
(CAT).
...
- These
considerations are elaborated on by a range of factors to which regard must be
had. There are also a number of other considerations that, where
relevant, must be taken into account but, generally, in accordance with
Direction No 41 paragraph 11(1), they should
be given less weight than the
primary considerations. Those other considerations
are discussed below.
PRIMARY CONSIDERATIONS
- The
relevant primary considerations in Mr Puafisi’s case are the
protection of the Australian community, the length of time he has been
ordinarily resident in
Australia, and the best interests of his
children.
THE PROTECTION OF THE AUSTRALIAN COMMUNITY
- Direction
No 41 identifies two factors relevant to this consideration: the seriousness and
nature of the relevant conduct and the
risk that the conduct may be
repeated.
- With
regard to the seriousness of Mr Puafisi’s conduct, I note that paragraph
10.1.1(1) states that “[c]rimes involving
violence or the threat of
violence are of special concern to the welfare and safety of the Australian
community”. Sexually-based
offences and assault are specifically
mentioned as examples of offences and conduct that are considered serious
(paragraph 10.1.1(2)(c)
and (d)).
- As
stated above, Mr Puafisi has a number of convictions for assault and his most
serious offence is that of aggravated indecent assault,
the victim being his
17-year-old step-daughter, in respect of which he was sentenced to 12 months'
imprisonment. While Mr Puafisi
has contended that he did not commit the
offences for which he was convicted, the Tribunal cannot go behind the
convictions, nor
make findings inconsistent with the essential facts underlying
the convictions: Minister for Immigration
and Multicultural Affairs v SRT (1999) 91 FCR 234; (1999) 56 ALD 349; [1999]
FCA 1197.
- Mr
Puafisi’s convictions range over a period of 17 years, from 1990 to 2007.
I find they occurred in the course of what appears
to have been a sometimes
tempestuous de facto relationship with Mabel Henry and were fuelled by alcohol,
which was abused by both
Ms Henry and Mr Puafisi.
- The
Tribunal must also consider the risk that the conduct may be repeated. A recent
history of convictions is considered to indicate
an increased risk of
re-offending. Evidence of any rehabilitation or prospect of rehabilitation and
evidence that the person has
breached judicial orders must be
considered.
Mr Puafisi’s Evidence
- Mr
Puafisi gave evidence that he stayed with Mabel Henry because of their children:
she drank all the time and was liable to go out
and leave them. Latterly, he
was particularly concerned for his younger daughter Tallara, who was born in
1995 and is now aged 14.
His older daughter Lelaine, who was born in 1991 and
is now aged 18, had for many years lived with Mr Puafisi’s niece Theresa
Taufa and her family, Ms Henry having driven through a red light when drunk with
Lelaine, then aged three months, in the car. His
niece took Lelaine to live
with her. The Department of Community Services (DoCS) were not involved.
- Mr
Puafisi said Ms Henry sometimes started drinking – beer or wine – in
the morning and only stopped when she went to
bed at night. He sometimes drank
with her when he got home from work because, if he did not do so, she was liable
to go out and
drink with other people, some of whom he did not know, and she
might not come home for a day or two. Mr Puafisi said the offences
for which he
was convicted were committed when he was drunk. There were often problems when
he drank with Ms Henry. He should
have taken Tallara away earlier. He
finally split up with Ms Henry in 2005 because of the drinking and fighting
and his being
arrested by the police and ending up in prison.
- Mr
Puafisi acknowledged that he was convicted of another offence in 2007 after he
left Ms Henry. He had met up with his first cousin,
Vakameilalo, whom he had
not seen for some time, and they went to have a drink. Mr Puafisi was on his
way home, crossing a park
to collect some food, when some aborigines gave him a
bag with four bottles of wine in it. While he was waiting to collect the food,
he was stopped and searched by the police who found some sort of licence or
“IT” in the bag, of which he had not been
aware.
- Mr
Puafisi said he was already friends with Ms Merle Byrne at the time, but he was
living separately in Housing Commission accommodation
although they each spent
time at the other’s house. He did not move in with Ms Byrne until he was
released from Villawood
Immigration Detention Centre on 21 July 2008, by which
time he had lost his Housing Commission accommodation. Mr Puafisi said when
he
moved in with Ms Byrne his life “changed a lot” and he was very
happy. He did not have the problems he had before
and did not worry about
drinking. They would rarely drink at home and would go out about once a week to
the Sports Club at Riverwood
where he would have four or five schooners of
beer.
- In
cross-examination, Ms Quinn asked Mr Puafisi about a number of the offences of
which he was convicted. He confirmed oral evidence
he gave at the previous
Tribunal proceedings in September 2007:
- (a) conviction
of 14/04/1994 – he was accused of assaulting Ms Henry’s son, Justin.
Mr Puafisi said Justin had punched
his mother and when Mr Puafisi told him
he should not do this, Justin came at him with a piece of wood and Mr Puafisi
hit him
in self-defence;
- (b) conviction
of 01/08/1996 – it was Ms Henry’s son who threw a stone and broke
the window which was the subject of the
malicious damage charge;
- (c) conviction
of 11/02/1998 – Mr Puafisi was convicted of assaulting Ms Henry at a
Kings Cross club. Mr Puafisi said
he could not remember what happened;
- (d) conviction
of 20/10/2000 – the police alleged that when walking down Marrickville
Road in the early hours of the morning,
Mr Puafisi punched Ms Henry,
knocking her to the ground, where he kicked her. Mr Puafisi again denied this
and said that the
only incident he recalls of this kind was when Ms Henry
scratched his face and he pushed her way;
- (e) conviction
of 15/05/2003 – for aggravated indecent assault in relation to an incident
in July 2002. Mr Puafisi repeated
that he had not touched Ms Henry’s
17-year-old daughter Roxanne. He and Ms Henry were in bed and when he woke, he
found Roxanne lying on the other side of Ms Henry, next
to the wall. He pleaded
guilty to this offence to secure his release from prison;
- (f) conviction
of 01/04/2004 – in respect of an incident at an hotel before the July 2002
incident. Mr Puafisi said he was
told to leave the premises after the
police arrived, and denied he harassed a female hotel patron as was
alleged;
- (g) conviction
of 22/07/2005 – Mr Puafisi repeated his previously given oral evidence.
He said he lifted Vicki Chand to stop
her going into the room occupied by his
daughter. When the police arrived, Ms Henry said Ms Chand was having a
fit; and
- (h) conviction
of 22/08/2005 – Mr Puafisi said the victim started the fight.
Mr Puafisi pleaded guilty because the matter
was adjourned so many
times.
- The
Tribunal asked Mr Puafisi how he felt about his offences. He said that he feels
sad. He feels regret and sorrow because, if
he had not been drinking, the
problems would not have occurred. He apologises to anyone who has been affected
by his behaviour in
the past. He now wants to reduce his alcohol intake and not
re-offend. He is very happy living with Ms Byrne and does not want
any
repetition of what happened before.
W John Taylor’s
Evidence
- Mr
Taylor prepared a psychological report on Mr Puafisi dated 22 February 2009, and
gave oral evidence at the hearing. Mr Taylor
is a forensic psychologist who has
extensive experience in undertaking psychological assessments in
criminal-related matters.
- Mr
Taylor assessed Mr Puafisi as having “an above average predisposition to
engage in alcohol abuse”. If Mr Puafisi is
around alcohol or those who
are drinking alcohol, this is potentially a trigger. People with such a
predisposition are not usually
given to drink by themselves if there is no
pattern of the person doing so. Mr Taylor said if Mr Puafisi has engaged in
alcohol
abuse, “he would have inadequate control over drive and
impulse”. Tests administered also indicate that Mr Puafisi has
“mild anger pathology” so that “if he is intoxicated his
controls would be debilitated and he would then express
his anger in rather an
impulsive manner”. Mr Taylor said that if Mr Puafisi drinks alcohol, he
has less control. Further,
he has “an above average tolerance for legal
violations”, meaning that he does not consider minor criminal matters to
be overly significant.
- Mr
Taylor said, in his opinion, Mr Puafisi has “a generally moderate risk of
recidivism”, which he equated to an approximately
20 percent chance of
again committing an offence. In making this assessment, Mr Taylor did not take
into account other facts such
as age and circumstances, which may also affect
the risk of recidivism. If a person’s criminal conduct is not related to
a
pattern of anti-social behaviour when young, especially in the teenage years,
then there is a greater likelihood of the person not
re-offending as he/she gets
older. Research indicates that “there is likely to be more stability in
functioning in people
as they grow older, particularly from the
4th decade of life onwards”. Further, the fact
that a person is in a stable relationship, is in a crime-free environment and
with
stable employment, tends to substantially reduce the likelihood of a person
re-offending.
Submissions and Discussion
- Mr
Karp, for Mr Puafisi, noted that Mr Puafisi had no convictions in the first 36
years of his life and his problems only started
when he commenced a relationship
with Ms Henry, who appears to have often been regularly intoxicated. All the
offences for which
Mr Puafisi has convictions occurred during this period except
for that in 2007, Mr Puafisi having finally separated from Ms Henry
in 2005.
Moreover, all the offences took place when Mr Puafisi was intoxicated.
- Mr
Karp said that since forming a relationship with Ms Byrne in 2007,
Mr Puafisi has lived a quiet, industrious life, as her
evidence and that of
an undated letter of a friend of Ms Byrne’s, Diane Jones, indicates.
There is also the evidence of Bob
Hansberry, the Managing Director of ABC
Castings Pty Ltd, Mr Puafisi’s former employer, that he “would have
no hesitation
in re-employing” Mr Puafisi if there was work for him. Mr
Puafisi has no criminal convictions since he commenced living with
Ms
Byrne.
- Ms
Byrne gave evidence of how happy she is when with Mr Puafisi and that they enjoy
one another’s company. She said they go
out once a week to the local club
at Riverwood when the meat raffle is on. She does not count how many drinks Mr
Puafisi has –
maybe five. She has never seen him out of control and
trusts him to control his drinking when she is not around. Ms Byrne described
Mr Puafisi as “a kind and gentle man who would do anything for you”
and whom she has never seen to be aggressive.
- Ms
Quinn, for the Minister, noted Mr Karp had conceded that some of the offences
committed by Mr Puafisi are objectively serious.
The offences occurred while Mr
Puafisi was intoxicated, many of them in a family context, and the level of
violence involved appears
to have increased through the 1990s. There was a
persistent pattern of behaviour over a long period and it should be noted that
the behaviour leading to the last conviction in 2007 occurred after Mr
Puafisi’s relationship with Ms Henry had ended.
- Ms
Quinn submitted that there is a significant risk of Mr Puafisi re-offending. Mr
Puafisi’s evidence in these proceedings
about the offences of which he was
convicted, confirming his evidence in the 2007 Tribunal proceedings, indicates
that he has not
taken responsibility for his actions and seeks to minimise his
culpability. So, for example, Mr Puafisi said of his 1994 conviction
for
assault on Justin Henry that he (Mr Puafisi) was acting in self-defence, and of
his 1996 conviction for malicious damage that
it was Ms Henry’s youngest
son who broke the windows in question. In relation to his conviction for
assault on 20 October
2000, Mr Puafisi denied assaulting Ms Henry and in
relation to his conviction for indecent assault on his step-daughter on 15 May
2003, he denied the incident took place. Ms Quinn said these denials should be
taken into account in determining the weight that
should be attributed to Mr
Taylor’s psychological report.
- Ms
Quinn said it is not the first time Mr Puafisi has expressed remorse about his
conduct and, in particular, about the problems caused
by his drinking. The
pre-sentence report prepared for the Downing Centre Local Court dated 8 May 2007
states:
...
Once in a crisis situation, like being arrested, Mr Puafisi appears to be
able to control his alcohol intake either by complete abstinence
or controlled
drinking, however once the crises are over he returns to his usual drinking
patterns and alcohol abuse.
...
- Ms
Quinn submitted that it was not credible to think that Ms Byrne can totally
control Mr Puafisi’s drinking. There is a real
risk of Mr Puafisi again
becoming intoxicated and re-offending, and the protection of the Australian
community should weigh heavily
in favour of the cancellation of Mr
Puafisi’s visa.
- In
my view, there is no question about the serious nature of a number of the
offences for which Mr Puafisi has been convicted. However,
it is clear that
with the exception of the 2007 conviction, all took place in the context of Mr
Puafisi’s sometimes tempestuous
relationship with Ms Henry. Moreover, in
the case of all the offences, Mr Puafisi was intoxicated.
- After
Mr Puafisi’s release from Villawood on 21 July 2008, he moved in with Ms
Byrne with whom he had previously formed a strong
friendship. The evidence
indicates they have a close, happy relationship and that Ms Byrne has had a
strong stabilising influence
on Mr Puafisi. He has significantly cut down on
his drinking and the likelihood of his again abusing alcohol appears to be
minimal.
Moreover, Mr Taylor’s psychological assessment, in which he
states his opinion that Mr Puafisi has “a generally
low-moderate risk of
recidivism”, did not take account of factors such as age and the stability
of the person’s situation.
Where these factors are relevant
considerations, the likelihood of a person re-offending is substantially
reduced.
- On
the evidence before me, my conclusion is that the overall risk of Mr Puafisi
re-offending is low, and that Mr Puafisi poses a minimal
risk in terms of the
protection of the Australian community.
LENGTH OF TIME ORDINARILY
RESIDENT
- Mr
Puafisi has been an Australian resident since January 1985. Paragraph 10.3(1)
of Direction No 41 states that “more favourable
consideration is to be
given the longer the person has been ordinarily resident in Australia prior to
engaging in criminal activity
or activity that bears negatively on their
character”. In this instance, there was a period of five years before Mr
Puafisi
engaged in the criminal conduct in respect of which he was convicted on
30 March 1990.
- Ms
Quinn notes that this marked the beginning of a 17-year period of offending, and
the relatively short period of non-offending when
compared with the much longer
period of offending should weigh against Mr Puafisi. Mr Karp submitted that a
shorter period of non-offending
residence should be regarded as a neutral factor
and should not weigh against a person. The clause only states that more
favourable
consideration is to be given to a longer period of
non-offending.
- I
note Deputy President Walker’s decision in
Re Heyward and Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship [2009] AATA 536, when, at [307], he said, that
“It is not the total period of ordinary residence that is relevant under
Direction No 41, however,
but the length of time before engaging in criminal
activity or activity that bears negatively on the applicant’s
character”.
In that case, DP Walker found that while five years was a
significant period, it was insufficient to merit great weight under this
consideration, especially as Mr Heyward had spent over a quarter of his time in
Australia in prison.
- In
my view, Mr Karp’s submission is consistent with DP Walker’s
decision – it is a matter of not treating this as a consideration
favourable to Mr Puafisi, rather than treating it as a negative
consideration.
THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILD
- Direction
No 41, paragraph 10.4.1(4) states: “Under Australian law, it is generally
presumed that a child’s best interests
will be served if the child remains
with its parents”.
- The
Direction sets out a number of factors to be considered in ascertaining the best
interest of the child. These include, relevantly,
the nature of the
relationship between the child and the person; the duration of the relationship
including the number and length
of any separations and the reasons for those
separations; the extent to which the person is likely to play a full parental
role in
relation to the child; the child’s age, citizenship and
relationships with others in a parental role; the likely effect that
any
separation from the person would have on the child; the impact of the
person’s prior conduct on the child; any known wishes
expressed by the
child; and the circumstances of the probable country of future residence and any
language and cultural barriers
there for the child.
- Mr
Puafisi has one child in Australia – Tallara, who is aged 14. He has one
other child in Australia – Lelaine, who is
aged 18, whose interests may,
therefore, only be considered as part of the other considerations.
Tallara gave evidence by conference telephone at the hearing, and also provided
a statement dated 24 August 2009. She is currently
living with her half-sister
in Brisbane. Tallara was removed from the care of her mother, Ms Henry, in
early December 2008 by DoCS,
relying on a report by a child protection
caseworker detailing a long history of reports concerning Ms Henry, and
referring in particular
to her alcohol abuse. The caseworker expressed the
opinion that Tallara was “at immediate risk of serious harm at the time
of
removal” and in need of care and protection.
- Tallara
was initially placed with her father’s niece, Theresa Taufa and her
family, with whom Tallara’s sister, Lelaine,
lives. Tallara said that in
about April 2009, she moved to Brisbane to live with her half-sister and her
family, where she wants
to remain.
- Tallara
said she is angry that her father is having to deal with these immigration
issues again and it is causing considerable stress
to her family. She is very
sad that her father is in detention and she does not want him to be sent back to
Tonga. She said her
father has always been there for her when she needed him.
When she was in primary school and he was living with her mother, he used
to
take her to school in the mornings and collect her from school in the
afternoons, and help with her homework. When her mother
was in hospital, which
was “a lot of times”, he looked after her, including doing the
cooking. He also provided her
mother with financial support.
- After
Mr Puafisi was released from Villawood in July 2008, he used to visit her at
Theresa's house. Tallara said that for the past
three or four months, he has
phoned her daily and asked her about her day, how she went at school and what
she is doing. Although
she wants to remain living with her half-sister, Tallara
wants to see her father as much as possible and maintain their regular phone
contact. She said she hardly ever sees her mother but she misses her.
- Tallara
said she has been to Tonga once and it was “alright”. She cannot
speak Tongan and she does not want to live there.
- Mr
Karp said Tallara obviously has a close relationship with her father, and
removing him from the country would be very detrimental
for her. Ms Quinn
submitted that Tallara’s best interests would not be affected
significantly by her father being returned
to Tonga because it is likely that
Tallara will remain living in Queensland with her half-sister and, if Mr Puafisi
were to be living
in Sydney, this would still be a long distance relationship,
albeit that communications with Tonga are likely to be more difficult.
- In
my view, Tallara’s evidence indicates that she would be very distressed by
her father being removed from Australia. It is
clear she has a close
relationship with Mr Puafisi and, of her two parents, it is her ongoing contact
and communication with him
that is most important. Noting that Tallara was
removed from her mother’s care and the reasons for that removal, it seems
likely that the removal of her father from Australia would have a significant
adverse effect on Tallara. I am therefore satisfied
that it is in
Tallara’s best interests for Mr Puafisi to remain in
Australia.
OTHER CONSIDERATIONS
- As
noted above, Direction No 41 states that other considerations, where
relevant, must be taken into account but, generally, should be given less weight
than primary considerations. Relevant considerations in Mr
Puafisi’s case are his family ties and the nature and extent of his
relationships with those
in the Australian community, his age, his links with
Tonga, and whether he has been formally warned in the past that his visa might
be cancelled because of his criminal conduct.
- Mr
Puafisi was born in Tonga where he lived until 1985 when he came to Australia at
the age of 31. He is now aged 55 and has never
returned to Tonga.
Mr Puafisi’s evidence is that his last contact with his family in
Tonga was with his youngest son
in 2007. Mr Puafisi has three children in Tonga
but appears to have virtually no contact with them. He said he does not know
where
any of them are or what they do. Two of his brothers are in Australia
with their families, his sister moved to America, and one
of his brothers in
Tonga passed away two years ago. Mr Puafisi’s mother died when he was
aged about five and he was brought
up by his father, whom Mr Puafisi followed to
Australia in 1985. His father died in Australia in 2000.
- Mr
Puafisi said that if he had to return to Tonga he would have nowhere to live or
grow food, and he does not have any money to support
himself. The family home
now belongs to one of his older brothers or the brother’s son.
- With
regard to Mr Puafisi’s family and relationships in Australia, of
significance are his relationships with his older daughter
Lelaine and his
partner Merle Byrne. Lelaine is now aged 18. She was removed from her
mother’s care at a very young age and
lives in Sydney with Mr
Puafisi’s niece Theresa Taufa and her family. Mr Puafisi said he has
a good relationship with
Lelaine. He sees her at family gatherings, for example
at his brother’s place, and they go out together on Father’s
Day.
Since being again detained in Villawood, he has not seen Lelaine but has tried
to phone her four or five times a week, although
has not been able to get
through.
- Lelaine
gave oral evidence at the hearing. She is studying a Tertiary Preparation
Course in order to undertake an Information Technology
course at university.
She said she cares for and loves her father and does not want him to leave
Australia. Her father means a
lot to her and she would be
“devastated” if he was sent back to Tonga because he would be so far
away. Lelaine has been
to Tonga a few times but would not want to stay there
long because Australia is better.
- Lelaine
said she has almost no contact with her mother, whom she last saw last year some
time, when they talked for about 10 minutes.
- Lelaine
said that after Mr Puafisi was released from Villawood in July 2008, he came to
visit her about three times at Theresa's house,
and would spend the day with
her. She said she enjoys being with him. She would also speak to him regularly
on the phone –
he would phone her once or twice a week. She thought
Mr Puafisi had not been able to phone her lately from Villawood because
she
has her phone switched off most of the time. Lelaine said she gets on with Ms
Byrne and is comfortable about visiting Mr Puafisi
at her house.
- Ms
Byrne provided a statement dated 24 August 2009 and gave evidence at the
hearing. She is aged 66, has three adult children and
five grandchildren, and
lives in Riverwood. Ms Byrne said her husband died in 2003 of prostate cancer,
after she had nursed him
for four years at home. She was very depressed after
he died, it took her a long while to recover, and she never thought she would
meet another man who she would care for and who would care for her. Ms Byrne
first met Mr Puafisi at the Riverwood Sports Club
in November 2006.
Thereafter, they began seeing each other regularly and visiting each other at
their houses. When Mr Puafisi was
released from Villawood in July 2008, his
having lost his Housing Commission accommodation, he moved in with her.
- Ms
Byrne said she is very happy when she is with Mr Puafisi. They enjoy one
another’s company. He is a very kind and gentle
man who would do anything
for you. He does all her home maintenance jobs and takes this load from her
shoulders. Ms Byrne knows
everything about Mr Puafisi’s criminal record
and is happy to have him as her partner. She does not see her children very
often, but Mr Puafisi has met her son with whom he gets on well. Ms Byrne said
she does not interfere with Mr Puafisi’s
family, noting that he loves
his children dearly.
- Ms
Byrne said they lead a quiet life together, including going to the Riverwood
Sports Club once a week. She has never seen Mr Puafisi
drunk. If he is allowed
to remain in Australia, their future “will be happy and wonderful”.
She would be “sad,
lost, alone and devastated if he is not allowed to
stay” in Australia.
- Mr
Karp said Lelaine’s evidence indicates that she has a primary bond with
her father and would be emotionally affected if her
father were sent back to
Tonga. Mr Karp also pointed to letters, provided in support of Mr Puafisi, from
Mr Puafisi’s older
brother in Australia, Pahulu Puafisi, and his daughters
Keasi Pongi and Anaeimi Puafisi. Mr Karp said a major consideration is the
effect that removing Mr Puafisi from Australia would have on Ms Byrne, who
has “stuck by him” through two periods
of detention in Villawood,
including writing letters of support for him to Government Ministers and
officials. Her evidence indicates
she has a deep emotional attachment to Mr
Puafisi and would be devastated if he was sent back to Tonga, condemning her to
a “lonely
and desolate old age”.
- Mr
Karp said sending Mr Puafisi back to Tonga would be sending him back to a place
he left 24 years ago, where he has no home or means
of support, and where he
last had contact with family members in 2007.
- Ms
Quinn noted that although Lelaine might be emotionally devastated by her
father’s being returned to Tonga, it would not otherwise
change her
circumstances. Ms Quinn acknowledged that Mr Puafisi's removal from Australia
might cause significant hardship to Ms
Byrne. With regard to Mr Puafisi,
although his family connections in Tonga appear to be tenuous, he lived there
until the age of
30, he speaks Tongan and could re-establish his connections.
He may suffer hardship, but not as great as that which might arise
in different
circumstances. Ms Quinn submitted that these other considerations do not
outweigh the primary consideration of the protection of the Australian
community.
- In
my view, the effect of Mr Puafisi’s removal on Lelaine and Ms Byrne are
significant other considerations. I also accept that his being
sent back to Tonga would cause significant hardship to Mr Puafisi by separating
him from his family
in Australia, including Ms
Byrne.
CONCLUSION
- Weighing
up first the primary considerations, to which I am required to give
greater weight, as I have said above, in my view Mr Puafisi poses a minimal risk
in terms of the
protection of the Australian community. The length of time he
has ordinarily been resident in Australia is a neutral factor, while
the best
interests of his child, Tallara, favour Mr Puafisi remaining in Australia. In
terms of the relevant other considerations, to which I am required to
give less weight, in my view, his family ties, in particular the interests of
Lelaine and Ms Byrne, also
favour Mr Puafisi remaining in Australia, as do his
age and the hardship that he would suffer if he is returned to Tonga. However,
I note that on 15 February 2005, Mr Puafisi received a formal warning that
cancellation of his visa would be reconsidered if he re-offended.
- Having
weighed up these considerations, I am satisfied that the discretion in
s 501(2) of the Act not to cancel Mr Puafisi’s visa should be
exercised in his favour.
DECISION
- The
decision under review is set aside.
I certify that the 67 preceding
paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for the decision herein of Mr RP
Handley, Deputy President
Signed: ...........[sgd]
A Veness, Associate
Dates of Hearing: 1 and 2 September 2009
Date of Decision: 10 September 2009
Applicant representative: Ms A Toliopoulos, NSW Legal Aid Commission
Applicant counsel: Mr L Karp
Respondent representative: Ms T Quinn, DLA Phillips Fox
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