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| Parliamentary Debates (Dáil and
Seanad) 2000 The Web site contains the text of the Parliamentary Debates - unrevised as published on daily basis in 2000. Please note that the full text of the Parliamentary Debates - revised (including questions) for 1919 --- is now available on-line at: historical-debates.oireachtas.ie. The text of the current parliamentary debates 2004 --- is available at debates.oireachtas.ie. The main Oireachtas site is www.oireachtas.ie. See also Houses' Web Sites. |
| National
Drugs Strategy. 25. Mr. Broughan asked the Minister for Tourism, Sport and Recreation the progress made to date in the review of the operation of the national drugs strategy; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [15908/00] Mr. E. Ryan: The review of the national drugs strategy as provided for in the Programme for Prosperity and Fairness has commenced. The object of the review is to identify gaps or deficiencies in the existing strategy, develop revised strategies and, if necessary, new arrangements through which to deliver them. The review will identify the latest available data on the extent and nature of problem drug use in the country as a whole, emerging trends in drug use and the areas with the greatest level of problem drug use. It will also examine international trends, developments and best practice models. Advertisements inviting submissions from individuals and groups were placed in national Sunday and daily newspapers and in local papers in the major urban areas in mid-April. Responses were requested by 26 May. However, on foot of special requests from various groups, I agreed to extend the closing date for receipt of submission to 6 June of this year. In addition, I have arranged for eight public consultative fora to be held during June, in Dublin, where there will be two, Athlone, Cork, Limerick, Galway, Sligo and Kilkenny. These fora were also advertised in the national and local press. The first of these fora will be held in Cork on Friday of this week. The review will also have available to it an evaluation of the drugs initiative by independent consultants including the results of individual evaluations of local drugs task force projects currently underway. These evaluations, together with other local, national and international materials will be reviewed and findings incorporated in the final report. Mr. O'Shea: When does the Minister expect the review process to conclude and recommendations to be made? When are those recommendations likely to be implemented? Mr. E. Ryan: The review and the public fora will be completed by the end of this month. At that stage all the written submissions and the findings of the various groups which have met throughout the country will have been received. I hope the final report will be ready by October. Written Answers follow Adjournment Debate. |
| The
Taoiseach: I refer the Deputy to the statement made
in 1998 on this matter. If he has any questions to raise,
he should raise them with the Minister. The guarantees
given at that stage in that statement will answer his
question. Mr. R. Bruton: The Taoiseach is mistaken. On a point of clarification, the Education Act explicitly prevented parents of children with special needs from raising an appeal on the services with which they are provided. The out-going Minister, Deputy Micheál Martin, promised on 21 January that such an appeal mechanism would be introduced. It does not appear on the legislation programme. There needs to be legislation for this matter. Perhaps the Taoiseach's colleague, who is beside him, will clarify that legislation is in preparation and that it will in future appear on the Government programme. The Taoiseach: I am sure if the then Minister for Education and Science said that the matter was being examined in his Department, it is. Mr. R. Bruton: Why is it not then on the legislative programme? The Taoiseach: If the Deputy puts down a question to the Minister, I am sure he will answer him. An Leas-Cheann Comhairle: We cannot have a debate on it, Deputy Bruton. Gas (Amendment) Bill, 2000: Second Stage (Resumed). An Leas-Cheann Comhairle: On No. 36, Gas (Amendment) Bill, 2000 - Second Stage, I must deal with a postponed division. On 1 June 2000, on the question, "That the Bill be now read a second time", a division was claimed and, in accordance with the order of the House of that day, that division must take place now. Question put. The Dáil divided: Tá, 65; Níl, 54. Tá Ahern, Bertie. Ahern, Michael. Ahern, Noel. Andrews, David. Aylward, Liam. Blaney, Harry. Brady, Johnny. Brady, Martin. Brennan, Matt. Brennan, Séamus. Browne, John (Wexford). Byrne, Hugh. Callely, Ivor. Carey, Pat. Collins, Michael. Cooper-Flynn, Beverley. Coughlan, Mary. Cowen, Brian. Daly, Brendan. Davern, Noel. de Valera, Síle. Dempsey, Noel. Dennehy, John. Doherty, Seán. Ellis, John. Fleming, Seán. Flood, Chris. Fox, Mildred. Gildea, Thomas. Hanafin, Mary. Haughey, Seán. Healy-Rae, Jackie. Jacob, Joe. Keaveney, Cecilia. Kelleher, Billy. Kenneally, Brendan. Killeen, Tony. Kirk, Séamus. Kitt, Michael. Lenihan, Brian. Lenihan, Conor. McCreevy, Charlie. McDaid, James. McGennis, Marian. McGuinness, John. Moffatt, Thomas. Molloy, Robert. Moloney, John. Moynihan, Donal. Moynihan, Michael. O'Dea, Willie. O'Donnell, Liz. O'Flynn, Noel. O'Keeffe, Batt. O'Kennedy, Michael. Roche, Dick. Ryan, Eoin. Smith, Michael. Treacy, Noel. Wade, Eddie. Wallace, Dan. Wallace, Mary. Walsh, Joe. Woods, Michael. Wright, G. V. Níl Allen, Bernard. Barrett, Seán. Belton, Louis. Boylan, Andrew. Bradford, Paul. Browne, John (Carlow-Kilkenny). Bruton, John. Bruton, Richard. Burke, Ulick. Carey, Donal. Clune, Deirdre. Connaughton, Paul. Cosgrave, Michael. Crawford, Seymour. Currie, Austin. D'Arcy, Michael. Deenihan, Jimmy. Dukes, Alan. Durkan, Bernard. Enright, Thomas. Farrelly, John. Finucane, Michael. Flanagan, Charles. Gilmore, Éamon. Gormley, John. Hayes, Brian. Higgins, Jim. Higgins, Joe. Howlin, Brendan. Kenny, Enda. McDowell, Derek. McGrath, Paul. McManus, Liz. Naughten, Denis. Neville, Dan. Noonan, Michael. O'Keeffe, Jim. O'Shea, Brian. Owen, Nora. Penrose, William. Perry, John. Quinn, Ruairí. Rabbitte, Pat. Reynolds, Gerard. Ring, Michael. Ryan, Seán. Sargent, Trevor. Shatter, Alan. Sheehan, Patrick. Spring, Dick. Stagg, Emmet. Stanton, David. Timmins, Billy. Yates, Ivan. Tellers: Tá, Deputies S. Brennan and Roche; Níl, Deputies Barrett and Stagg. Question declared carried. |
| Caoimhghín
Ó Caoláin: I record my opposition to amendment No.
25 in the name of the Minister and to the way this
legislation has been handled. Amendments to the
Immigration Act, 1999, were brought in at the last minute
and grafted on to this Bill in violation of fair
procedure. Even those Deputies and parties whose
resources are greater than mine had difficulty coping
with them. During last week's debate the Minister challenged another Deputy to enumerate the rights of unsuccessful asylum seekers. I do not know what was behind that question but I know the answer - they have human rights. The commentary of the Minister and others shows a harsh and dismissive attitude to unsuccessful applicants, which is dangerous. There is a false suggestion that unsuccessful applicants are criminals. The Minister and others have repeatedly referred to unsuccessful applicants or to those not entitled to asylum under present rules as "abusing the asylum system". This is also a dangerous fallacy. If a person is entitled to apply, how can they be justly accused of abusing the system? Such descriptions of people who come to this country do nothing to inform the ignorant and the prejudiced. On the contrary, they feed prejudice. The Minister, through his amendments, is scrupulous in ensuring the deportation process is as swift as possible. There is a need for powers of deportation. However, the Irish Refugee Council has stated that the Minister's proposed changes to the Immigration Act, 1999, represent "a stringent tightening of the rights of unsuccessful asylum seekers to access legal remedies in the Irish courts". When I place these Government amendments in the context of the other legislation introduced by the Minister, I can only repeat what I said on Second Stage in December. Instead of coherent policy and practice on the separate but closely related issues of asylum and immigration, we have a patchwork of reactive legislation. It is scandalous that the Government has welcomed police from the repressive regime in Nigeria to become involved in the asylum process. This turns the notion of asylum on its head. It is like inviting the Gestapo to assist in identifying Jews or the British army to identify republicans. Yet in this context, we are asked to further tighten the deportation procedure. I cannot support that. I reject the Government's approach as embodied in amendment No. 25 and call again for fair asylum procedure, for the right to work and study for asylum seekers and for proper immigration legislation which will allow economic migrants, in numbers to be determined, to work in our country and to help meet the labour needs of our economy. Minister of State at the Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform (Miss M. Wallace): Deputy Jim Higgins stated that Amnesty International claimed that the Minister's proposals on detention under the deportation process are not compatible with international human rights law. The Minister pointed out that Article 5.1.f of the European Convention on Human Rights specifically contemplates the detention of those in relation to whom deportation is in process. There are already in section 5 of the Immigration Act specific provisions relating to the non-detention of minors and the power of the courts to release a person where the validity of a deportation order is challenged. The Minister has developed his proposals in close consultation with the Attorney General's office. That office has advised that these proposals are fully in line with our international obligations and do not offend any principles of international law. Deputy Jim Higgins also claimed there is no normal immigration channel for those seeking to make their living in the State. That is patently untrue because it is obvious that a number of Indian, Pakistani, Chinese, Malaysian, American, Canadians and other non-nationals have been living, working and running businesses here for many years. He also claimed that because of that theory people are forced to apply for asylum. No one is being forced to make false claims that they have been prosecuted in their own country. Anyone who makes such false claims is not only not deserving of the protection of this State but is deliberately and deceitfully, for his or her own selfish interests, damaging the position of those in need of the protection of the State. However, they cannot get it because of the number of claims which must be dealt with. The powers of arrest and detention in the amendment are not unqualified nor are they without notice. They cannot be exercised except where the garda or the immigration officer with reasonable cause suspects that the deportee, who no longer has a right to be in the State, is in one of the categories specified at paragraphs (a) to (d) of the proposed section 5(1), the appeals process has already been undergone and they have failed. As regards amendment No. 4 in the name of Deputy Howlin, the State owes it to its fellow member states to ensure that where it has determined that a person should be returned to his or her own country of origin, where it is a failed asylum seeker or a convicted drug dealer who is being deported, that the deportee should not be allowed to abuse the hospitality of yet another member state. That is why the Deputy's amendment is opposed. Deputy Howlin asked if he would be arrested while getting back on the boat. The answer is yes. Otherwise he would go back to England or France and return on the next boat. We would be presiding over a merry-go-round of illegal immigration. Mr. Howlin: We have a merry-go-round already. I invite the Minister of State to Rosslare to look at it. Miss M. Wallace: That is why the person would be arrested going back on the boat. Mr. Howlin: If a few applications were processed ----- Miss M. Wallace: We cannot have it both ways. We cannot complain during Question Time that the figures are very high and that not enough is being done and then complain that the measures we are introducing are too tough. With regard to people returning on the boat and being arrested, they will be sent back to Nigeria, Romania or wherever they came from and will not be allowed get on the merry-go-round. Mr. Howlin: It will take them longer to get back. Miss M. Wallace: They will be arrested and sent back. I know the Deputy is concerned about that but he should not be as it is right to do that. Deputies Howlin and Higgins were concerned about where people would be detained and so on. As is clear from the Act and the amendment, detention is for the purpose of ensuring the deportation of the person from the State. It is not the intention that they will lie in prison for weeks or months but, for the most part, for no longer than it takes to provide for their transport out of the State. In some cases it will be only for a few hours while transport is being arranged. In such cases this can be quite properly carried out by holding the person in a Garda station. In other longer term cases, people may have to be detained in prison or other places of detention but, in the majority of cases, if it is a question of arranging the next boat from Rosslare or flight from Dublin that should not take longer than a few hours and there should not be any need to send a person on from the Garda station to a place of detention. Many of the points raised today were also raised with the Minister who replied to them. I hope those points of clarification deal with Deputy Higgins' concern on the international front and in regard to detention. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): The Minister of State did not mention Nigeria. Mr. Howlin: I regret the Minister did not give a more comprehensive response to the arguments. It is obvious that the attitude is one of continuing on from where we left off on the last occasion, not an inch. We have progressed somewhat in that the Minister of State has admitted that prison is a possible place of detention. She referred to the non-detention of minors in the immigration Act. Is it the intention to separate children from their families? If people are detained in a Garda station or a prison are the adults to be held in custody and the children put in the care of the health board? How is it to be dealt with? The argument put forward by the Minister of State that false claims add to the burden of genuine asylum seekers having their rights vindicated is analogous to saying that it is the fault of the sick that there are long waiting lists for treatment, that if there were fewer people seeking treatment those who were most meritorious would be prioritised. It is a false claim and one that does not stand up. I have experience of talking to a great number of asylum seekers because of the position in my constituency. I do not know if that is shared by the Minister of State. No immigrant is here because of the craic or because it is exciting or for the hell of it. Nobody uproots themselves and, in some cases their children, from their homeland, in many instances travelling across more than one continent stowed away in vehicles, in some instances sealed in, in dangerous conditions and enduring sea-crossings without a very real reason. If at the end of the day that reason does not measure up to the legal criteria laid down by this Administration, it does not mean the people are criminals or clogging up the system and somehow meritorious of scorn or condemnation. I reject that view that underscores much of the Minister's argument. I am not sure if there is much point in labouring this issue any further as we had a long argument about it. I hoped the arrival of the Minister of State might have meant a change in attitude. Perhaps we should now let the House decide the matter. On a procedural point, we are dealing with an amendment to the Long Title. Is the consequence of the defeat of the Title that amendment No. 25 cannot be made? Acting Chairman (Ms Coughlan): It could. Mr. Howlin: I am asking because I presume the content of the Bill must be confined to the Title. Acting Chairman: Amendment No. 25 is a substantive one. Mr. Howlin: If amendment No. 1were defeated what would the consequence of that be to the broadening of the scope of the Bill envisaged in amendment No. 25? I apologise for raising this procedural point without notice to the Chair. Acting Chairman: Amendment No. 25 stands. Mr. Howlin: Regardless of the Title? Acting Chairman: If amendment No. 1 is put ----- Mr. Howlin: If amendment No. 1 is defeated and the Short Title is unamended, is it still possible to broaden the scope of the Bill notwithstanding that it is not encompassed in the Long Title? Acting Chairman: Amendment No. 1 is consequential on amendment No. 25. If amendment No. 1 is defeated, amendment No. 25 still stands until we discuss that again. Mr. Howlin: Will amendment No. 1 be put first? Acting Chairman: Yes. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): The Minister did not respond to an important point I raised. If the Government brings in legislation to fast-track out of the country people to whom it has not given refuge, it will be responsibile for what happens to them. Deputy O'Malley stated here a year or so ago that he had no doubt that people who sought asylum at Shannon Airport and were bundled back onto airplanes probably met their death in the country from which they were trying to flee. I want the Minister of State to say what responsibility this Government will take for the safety of people whom her Government will deport to countries many of which do not respect human rights and where the safety, security and freedom of those people will be at risk. If the Minister of State is asking the Dáil to give her greater powers to enable her to send people back to such countries she must state that. What is the nature of the agreement either entered into or being sought by this Government with the Government of Nigeria? We know about Romania. With what other Governments in Eastern Europe, Africa or wherever is the Government seeking to enter into agreements regarding the deportation of nationals from those countries? The Minister of State must give that information. It will be an important factor in helping Deputies to decide how to vote on this matter. Mr. Higgins (Mayo): The Minister of State said I queried the legality of detention. Deputy Howlin and I have both accepted that in certain instances, deportation has to be an option. Amnesty International stated, "Detention should only be imposed where it is absolutely necessary, for a minimal period, and should be subject to close judicial supervision.". That is what we are saying. We agree wholeheartedly with the view of Amnesty International. This is where doubts arise - how will detention be operated? If the Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform is right in his assertion that 90% of asylum seekers are bogus, and if the figure is 12,000, we are talking about mass deportations. If procedures are speeded up we are on the brink of mass deportations, with between 10,000 and 12,000 people to be deported. It is also obvious that it is the intention of the Government to deport people within the shortest period possible. If the clear intention of the Government is to deport anyone who is not entitled to refugee status at the earliest opportunity, mass detention will be required. Mass deportation will mean keeping people in State custody of some form until such time as they are deported, for the period within which the deportation order is issued. We are entitled to a clear answer to this question. What kind of provision has been put in place? The Government did not walk into this blindly, we are talking about deporting 10,000 people. The clear intention is that the vast majority of these people will be detained until such time as the deportation orders can be effected and executed. What kind of accommodation will there be? Are we talking about accommodation in secure prisons such as Mountjoy, Limerick, Cork or Portlaoise? Are we talking about Cloverhill or Wheatfield? Are we talking about accommodation in more open regimes such as Castlerea, which is still secure but has a different ethos? Are we talking about open accommodation such as Shelton Abbey? I presume not, because there will be a fear that these people will escape from custody and again seek to dishonour the terms of their deportation order. These are serious questions because, if the Minister is serious about the Bill, the intention is to deport and detain until deportation can take place. Will we detain these people in Garda stations? That would not be very practical. Doing this might seem popular now, but public opinion will swing in the opposite direction when people are being dragged across the tarmac and forcibly deported. Public opinion has not been properly tested on this issue - we are listening to the vocal minority. As soon as this happens, there will be a public outcry because the vast majority of people will not tolerate it. Miss M. Wallace: If it is not practical to deport people, there is no point in providing for it in legislation. The practical improvements allow for realistic deportation. Mr. Howlin: This was supposed to be sorted out by the perfect legislation the Government introduced last year. Miss M. Wallace: On Question Time last week we talked about the huge numbers coming into the State. Mr. Howlin: The Government's great Bill was meant to deal with that. Miss M. Wallace: The situation changes all the time. As the debate goes on I get the impression that we are becoming like the refugees - we are on a merry-go-round. We debated this last week and all of the questions were answered. Mr. Howlin: It is called Parliament. |
| Miss M.
Wallace: I answered a question a few moments ago and
now I am being asked to answer it again. The Minister,
Deputy O'Donoghue, answered it last week. I will again
say clearly to Deputy Jim Higgins that people will be
detained in Garda stations. In many cases it will be for
no more than a few hours while----- Mr. Howlin: The plane for Nigeria is readied. Miss M. Wallace:-----the ticket out of Rosslare is being prepared. Mr. Howlin: It will not be possible to send people out of Rosslare to Nigeria or Romania. Miss M. Wallace: The Deputy should be careful he does not grossly exaggerate during the debate. When we start talking about mass detentions and mass deportations, there is a feeling that the Opposition is exaggerating the situation. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): The Minister of State herself said that 90% of asylum applications were not well founded. Miss M. Wallace: I did not say that. You can now withdraw that remark. I did not say that. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): The Minister of State said that 90% of applications were unfounded. Acting Chairman: The Deputy is out of order and the Minister should address her remarks through the Chair. Miss M. Wallace: The Deputy will have to withdraw that remark because I did not say that in this Dáil. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): We will find chapter and verse of what she said. Miss M. Wallace: The Deputy can do that. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): The Minister of State said----- Acting Chairman: The Minister of State is on her feet, it is her response, and the Deputy has had ample opportunity to speak. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): The Minister of State said that international experience will show that 90% of applications are not well founded. That means 10,000 deportations. Acting Chairman: The Deputy will have ample opportunity to clarify matters at a later stage. Miss M. Wallace: Deputy Joe Higgins must withdraw such remarks because it is that kind of exaggeration that has us where we are in this debate. People talk about refugees being on a merry-go-round; Members opposite are on a merry go round and are not being at all realistic when they carry on like that. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): Can I make an interjection, as is provided for in Standing Orders? Did not the Minister of State say in this Dáil----- Acting Chairman: The Deputy will have an opportunity at a later stage to seek clarification. The Minister of State should address her remarks to the matters being raised in the debate. Miss M. Wallace: Instead of turning this debate into Question Time, the Deputy should be man enough to withdraw the remark he made and sort himself out in terms of where he got his information. Deputy Howlin made an analogy that people were making the situation worse by making false claims and compared that to the situation in casualty departments. He has drawn the wrong analogy; the correct analogy would be if all of the people in the State who were not sick joined the queues in casualty. Mr. Howlin: So people go to casualty for fun? The Minister of State has lost it. Miss M. Wallace: That is the genuine analogy with the Deputy's point. His point is daft. He said the refugee situation was comparable to the situation casualty departments. Mr. Howlin: I did not mention casualty departments, I mentioned waiting lists. Acting Chairman: Will the Deputy control himself until the Minister has had an opportunity to respond? Miss M. Wallace: With regard to the waiting list analogy, or whatever analogy Deputy Howlin made, the point is still the same. We are talking about people seeking asylum who are not genuine asylum seekers. The analogy is with people who are not genuinely sick joining the waiting lists. The Deputy will have to check what he said. He is becoming like Deputy Joe Higgins. Mr. Howlin: We are all wrong except the Minister of State, God love her. Miss M. Wallace: That is the problem, this has been debated ad infinitum, the same questions are being asked again and the Deputies are on a merry go round. That is what is wrong, they cannot remember what they said. The same goes for the points made about Nigeria, Poland and the re-admission agreements. All of these points were answered by the Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform. Perhaps the Deputies are getting us mixed up but all of the questions were answered last week. I will try to be helpful by referring them to section 5(1) of the Refugee Act, 1996 which states:
That might be of assistance in allaying the concerns of Deputy Joe Higgins. With regard to Deputy Howlin's concerns about children, I refer him to section 5(4)(c) of the Immigration Act, 1999, which states:
Mr. Howlin: The Minister of State's Department is intent on separating families. That is wonderful. Miss M. Wallace: I am doing my best to try to answer the questions which have been raised and which were answered previously. However, we have reached the stage where Deputies are raising points which have already been well aired during the debate. We have debated amendment No. 1 for a total of six hours and we have reached the point where the questions raised by Members have all been answered. Mr. Howlin: I do not intend to delay proceedings much longer. However, it was important that the Minister of State answered my question. Under the Bill, people who are detained will be separated from the families. Children will be taken into care because their parents will be placed in custody, either in prison or in a Garda station, as determined by the Minister. Miss M. Wallace: Not under this legislation. They will be detained under the Immigration Act. Mr. Howlin: Yes, but the Bill amends that legislation. I understand that the Minister of State is experiencing difficulty in keeping abreast of the debate. Amendment No. 25, although it is being tabled in respect of this Bill, is designed to amend the Immigration Act, 1999, and it is that Act we are discussing in respect of this group of amendments. The Immigration Act is bad legislation and the Government dealt with the debate on it in the same way as it is dealing with this debate. I refer here to the introduction of late amendments. I thought the Government would have learned that this is a bad way to make law. The amendments under discussion will, if accepted, cause difficulties for the Garda Síochána. They will hamper the administration of the system and there will be a public outcry when they are implemented. The Minister of State appears to be confused. In the first instance she informed me that a person who is the subject of a deportation order and who wants to board a boat leaving Rosslare will be arrested. However, she then stated that they would only be detained for a matter of hours because they would be put aboard the next boat leaving Rosslare. Vessels leaving Rosslare only sail to EU countries, they do not sail to Romania, Nigeria, Poland or Russia. Deporting people will not simply be a matter of bundling them on to the nearest boat, it will be a matter of putting them on an aeroplane. There are no direct flights to Nigeria from this country and there is only one weekly flight to Romania. The Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform has stated that, under our corpus of law, a large proportion of the 12,000 asylum seekers and refugees will not qualify to remain here. Therefore, a large number of planes will be required to transport them elsewhere. Unless the Minister intends to charter those planes, people will be placed in detention for protracted periods. I am alerting the House to that because I believe such behaviour will be resisted by the Irish people. Mr. Higgins (Dublin West): Or they will protest to the Minister. Amendment put. The Dáil divided: Tá, 64; Níl, 53. Tá Ahern, Michael. Ahern, Noel. Andrews, David. Aylward, Liam. Blaney, Harry. Brady, Johnny. Brady, Martin. Brennan, Matt. Brennan, Séamus. Browne, John (Wexford). Byrne, Hugh. Callely, Ivor. Carey, Pat. Collins, Michael. Cooper-Flynn, Beverley. Coughlan, Mary. Cowen, Brian. Daly, Brendan. Davern, Noel. de Valera, Síle. Dempsey, Noel. Dennehy, John. Doherty, Seán. Ellis, John. Fahey, Frank. Fleming, Seán. Flood, Chris. Gildea, Thomas. Haughey, Seán. Healy-Rae, Jackie. Jacob, Joe. Keaveney, Cecilia. Kelleher, Billy. Kenneally, Brendan. Killeen, Tony. Kirk, Séamus. Kitt, Michael. Lenihan, Brian. Lenihan, Conor. Martin, Micheál. McCreevy, Charlie. McDaid, James. McGennis, Marian. McGuinness, John. Moffatt, Thomas. Molloy, Robert. Moloney, John. Moynihan, Donal. Moynihan, Michael. O'Dea, Willie. O'Donnell, Liz. O'Flynn, Noel. O'Keeffe, Batt. O'Kennedy, Michael. Roche, Dick. Ryan, Eoin. Smith, Michael. Treacy, Noel. Wade, Eddie. Wallace, Dan. Wallace, Mary. Walsh, Joe. Woods, Michael. Wright, G. V. Níl Barrett, Seán. Belton, Louis. Boylan, Andrew. Bradford, Paul. Browne, John (Carlow-Kilkenny). Bruton, Richard. Burke, Ulick. Carey, Donal. Clune, Deirdre. Connaughton, Paul. Cosgrave, Michael. Crawford, Seymour. Currie, Austin. D'Arcy, Michael. Deenihan, Jimmy. Dukes, Alan. Durkan, Bernard. Enright, Thomas. Farrelly, John. Finucane, Michael. Flanagan, Charles. Gilmore, Éamon. Gormley, John. Hayes, Brian. Higgins, Jim. Higgins, Joe. Howlin, Brendan. Kenny, Enda. McCormack, Pádraic. McDowell, Derek. McGinley, Dinny. McGrath, Paul. Naughten, Denis. Neville, Dan. Noonan, Michael. Ó Caoláin, Caoimhghín. O'Keeffe, Jim. O'Shea, Brian. Owen, Nora. Penrose, William. Perry, John. Quinn, Ruairí. Rabbitte, Pat. Reynolds, Gerard. Ring, Michael. Sargent, Trevor. Shatter, Alan. Sheehan, Patrick. Shortall, Róisín. Stagg, Emmet. Stanton, David. Timmins, Billy. Yates, Ivan. Tellers: Tá, Deputies S.Brennan and Roche; Níl, Deputies Barrett and Stagg. Amendment declared carried. Amendment reported. Mr. Howlin: On a procedural point, now that we have concluded on amendment No. 1, am I in order to table immediately an amendment to delete it on Report Stage? Acting Chairman (Ms Coughlan): No. We are proceeding to amendment No. 2. Mr. Howlin: Will we deal with this issue again on Report Stage? Acting Chairman: No. Mr. Howlin: Therefore, is there no Report Stage----- Acting Chairman: On amendment No. 1, but we are now proceeding to----- Mr. Howlin: -----on the recommitted amendments? Acting Chairman: No, on some of them. We have already discussed Amendment No. 22, and the Deputy is referring to amendments Nos. 22 and 25. Mr. Howlin: On the procedure, because it is unusual to recommit amendments to Committee Stage which were introduced in advance of Report Stage, does it mean Report Stage will not deal with those issues again? Am I at liberty to seek to amend on Report Stage issues which have been dealt with in the referral to Committee? Acting Chairman: The Deputy is not in regard amendment No. 1. The other amendments only can be decided on. Mr. Howlin: There will be no further debate on them because we exhausted the debate on them, but will there be an opportunity to comment on them on Report Stage? Acting Chairman: No, there will not. Mr. Howlin: Is the debate on those matters finished now? Acting Chairman: Yes. It is just a matter of a division at a later stage----- Mr. Howlin: Should a division be called? Acting Chairman: -----if the Deputy so desires. Mr. Howlin: On a procedural point, this is a flawed way of dealing with the matter. We have sight of amendments----- Acting Chairman: That is a long-standing practice. Mr. Howlin: It may be a long-standing practice----- Acting Chairman: The Deputy could raise the matter at the Committee on Procedure and Privileges. Mr. Howlin: It is an established practice to enable a Government to introduce an amendment which is absolutely required at a very late stage. It should not be done to deal with legislation of this nature, and I think it is a shame. Acting Chairman: That matter has been noted. We will proceed to amendment No. 2. Amendment No. 4 in the name of Deputy Howlin is related. Therefore, amendments Nos. 2 and 4 may be discussed together. Mr. Higgins (Mayo): I move amendment No. 2:
This relates to the various definitions on interpretation in the section. Section 1 states that an illegal immigrant "means a non-national who enters or seeks to enter or has entered the State unlawfully" and my amendment seeks to introduce an internationally accepted term to that section. I seek to amend the Bill by inserting, after "non-national", the words "other than a presumptive refugee". In other words, an illegal immigrant would mean a non-national other than a presumptive refugee who enters or seeks to enter or has entered the State unlawfully. The term "presumptive refugee" is an internationally accepted term and not one coined by me. It is a suggestion which has come from Amnesty International and it figures in the legislation of other countries. It is based on the fact that if a person makes an application here for asylum status, in other words, to be classified as a refugee, once he or she makes the application there are three possibilities. It can be accepted if it comes within the terms of the Geneva Convention, 1951, and domestic legislation which gives effect to that, it can be rejected on the basis that it is not properly founded and therefore does not come within the terms of the Geneva Convention or domestic legislation, or the Minister can decide on compassionate grounds to give a person permission to remain. We are seeking to amend the Bill so that the person will be a "presumptive refugee" until such time as that decision is made. If a person applies here, not only should he or she be entitled to have his or her application duly heard and go through the different processes of the initial application - to have it vetted, to have it heard subsequently at appeal stage and to have a judicial review even though the Bill severely curtails the right to judicial review in terms of the time allowed for same - but according to the amendment the person should be classified as a "presumptive refugee" without in any way prejudicing the right of the Department to make its decision to either accept or reject the application. Once the person makes the application, he or she is entitled to have the application processed. In addition, the person is entitled to the protection of non-refoulement, that he or she cannot be sent back to the country from whence he or she came as long as there is even a possibility that the person might be subjected to torture in its various guises. I, therefore, table the same amendment I tabled on Committee Stage. I ask the Minister of State, Deputy Mary Wallace, in the light of what Deputy Howlin unsuccessfully implored her to do regarding the previous amendments on Committee Stage, to use her discretion on this occasion and to show the same degree of tolerance, good sense and flexibility as she showed when she came in to bat for the Minister, Deputy O'Donoghue, on the Committee and Report Stages of the Immigration Bill, 1999. Mr. Howlin: I regard this as an extremely important issue and I hope the Minister of State, Deputy Mary Wallace, will reflect genuinely on what is intended here. This new section inserted by the Minister on Committee State makes it an offence for an individual to assist a person to do something which is lawful. I do not know of any precedent in law which says that someone who assists another to do something which is lawful can be guilty of an offence which carries a huge penalty of up to ten years in prison. The section says a person who "organises or knowlingly facilitates the entry into the State of a person whom he or she knows, or has reasonable grounds to believe, to be an illegal immigrant or a person who intends to seek asylum shall be guilty of an offence". If one knowlingly helps a person into the State who intends to seek asylum one will be guilty of an offence. That is wrong, simpliciter. The amendment I propose would insert after "asylum" the words "otherwise than in a lawful and bona fide manner". The object of the amendment is to ensure that if someone is a genuine asylum seeker and turns out to be a genuine refugee and is given that status, the people who assisted him into the State would not be guilty of an offence. It would be unprecedented to make it unlawful - with a serious criminal penalty - to assist someone in doing something which is itself lawful. The Minister rejected this amendment on Committee Stage and that rejection casts doubt on the Bill as a whole if it is to be what it is stated to be - a mechanism to stop the trafficking in people and in human misery. The Minister's logic, such as it was, on Committee Stage was that the Bill would be abused if this amendment were allowed and could be circumvented by someone claiming to be an asylum seeker. Nobody would be caught because everyone would apply for asylum. The converse is also true. People who are genuine asylum seekers - and there are such people who are fleeing death or persecution - must be facilitated to enter the State. The inclusion of those words, "otherwise than in a lawful and bona fide manner" defines that clearly enough. The Bill should have a defence. The person who assists someone into the State should have a defence if that person is granted refugee status or is a genuine asylum seeker. I know this is difficult and that the Minister is trying to frame a law that is not meaningless. If genuine asylum seekers are to be facilitated and assisted into the country, to which no one objects, provision must be made for that. This blanket provision which says that anybody who knowingly facilitates the entry into the State of somebody who intends to seek asylum should be guilty of an offence, is too stark, broad and over-arching. We need some tempering of this measure to provide for the genuine person who is genuinely assisting a genuine asylum seeker. I need the reassurance of the Minister of State as to how that is to be achieved. Miss M. Wallace: The purpose of the amendment is to provide that trafficking in asylum seekers does not come within the scope of the Bill. The matter was discussed extensively on Committee Stage and the Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform explained that he could not possibly accept these amendments because to do so would mean that criminal organised groups who traffick in asylum seekers to this country would commit no offence. These traffickers can make large profits by exploiting loopholes in our law and by exploiting the vulnerability of asylum seekers. To accept these amendments would be explicitly to condone such behaviour and the whole purpose of the Bill, which is to criminalise the activities of such people, would be undermined. Because of the concerns raised on Second Stage that genuine assistance given to asylum seekers should not come within the scope of the Bill, the Minister brought forward an amendment which was agreed on Committee Stage and which ensures that it is broad enough to take in the activities of profiteers who traffick in human beings while at the same time qualifies the offence so that the activities of bona fide people who give assistance to non-nationals to come here do not come within the scope of the Bill. The Minister's amendment on Committee Stage did w |