Secret
court case: 'Anathema to...fairness'
2
February, 2018
Opinion
- A High Court hearing was this
week shut off to everyone, including media - something even the judge
calls 'anathema to the fundamental concepts of fairness'.
Photo: RNZ
/ Rebekah Parsons-King
Something
quite strange is happening at the High Court in Wellington this week.
Journalists doing their regular rounds of that place's pathos,
bathos, high drama and human frailty came across a closed courtroom,
with nothing to say what was going on inside its doors, heightened
security outside of them and strange "men in dark suits"
lurking in the nearby halls.
Upon
asking what was up - journalists are pesky like that - they were told
they weren't allowed to know before quickly being ushered away by
court security officers.
Which,
of course, simply makes everyone that much more curious about what on
earth could be going on. Because completely closing a courtroom to
everyone, including the media, is pretty much unheard of in New
Zealand.
Sometimes
a judge clears the public from the courtroom for part of a hearing,
for instance where a complainant gives evidence in cases of a sexual
nature. But even in such cases, members of the media have a right to
stay and listen, although they may not then be allowed to report
publicly on the details.
There's
a pretty obvious reason for this approach. Open justice: trials that
are able to be viewed by the public or their media representatives -
are the best way of ensuring that justice is truly done. It not only
makes sure the court processes do, in fact, work properly but
reassures everyone that this is happening.
So, a trial where no public or media are allowed in at all? That's a big deal. What could it involve?
The
suspicions of at least some of us were confirmed when Justice
Venning, the Chief High Court Judge, released a statement confirming
the subject of the case. It involves an appeal by a Melbourne-based
New Zealand woman against a decision to cancel her passport on the
grounds that she represents a national security threat to some other,
unspecified country. By removing her passport, the New Zealand
government says it can neutralise that threat by stopping her from
being able to travel there.
How
do we know this? Because her case already has been before the High
Court last year, when she sought to challenge the government's claim
that not only did her appeal have to be held in secret, but that
neither she nor her lawyer were allowed to know the reasons why her
passport had been cancelled.
Those
reasons, said the government, constituted "classified security
information". And under the Passports Act 2002, it's not just
the public and press who can't be in the courtroom to hear the
content of such information. Neither can the person whose passport is
cancelled, nor that person's lawyer.
Justice
Dobson, who heard that earlier case and is hearing the current one as
well, was not entirely happy about this situation. As he noted in a
judgment that somewhat reluctantly concluded that the legislation had
to be read in this manner:
"The
whole of our common law tradition, as bolstered by the rights and
protections recognised by New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, render
the procedure under [the Passports Act] an anathema to the
fundamental concepts of fairness. However, the reality is that
Parliament has recognised the justification for the use of that
procedure in defined circumstances."
So,
here's what is happening in the High Court in Wellington. A woman is
asking to get her passport back after the government took it off her.
She is doing so without knowing the evidence the government has for
deciding she represents a security risk, without being able to be in
the court to watch the case being argued, and without being able to
have her own lawyer present to argue for her (although some unnamed
"advocates" have been appointed to "assist with issues
that have to be dealt with" in her absence).
And
none of us can go in and watch the case. Nor can the media go in to
watch it on our behalf.
It's
just a good thing we live in a country where we can be sure the
government gets things right, the security agencies never overreact
to perceived threats and the courts always follow proper procedures.
Because if we didn't, well ... you'd almost think there was a reason
to be worried.
*
Andrew Geddis is a professor of law at the University of Otago
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