Title F.J. et al. v. Australia
Publisher UN Human Rights Committee (HRC)
Publication Date 2 May 2016
Country Afghanistan | Australia | Islamic Republic of Iran | Sri Lanka
Topics Arbitrary arrest and detention | Freedom from torture, inhuman and degrading treatment | Immigration Detention
Citation / Document Symbol No. 2233/2013
Cite as F.J. et al. v. Australia, No. 2233/2013, UN Human Rights Committee (HRC), 2 May 2016, available at: https://www.refworld.org/cases,HRC,5a7b11694.html [accessed 27 October 2019]
Comments asylum seekers’ detention is arbitrary and contrary to their right to liberty if the State fails to demonstrate on an individual basis that their continuous indefinite detention is justified, and that other, less intrusive, measures could not achieve the same end of compliance with the State’s need to respond to security concerns. In addition, the HRC considers that the combination of the arbitrary character and indefinite nature of the authors’ protracted detention, the absence of procedural guarantees to challenge the detention and the difficult conditions of detention, cumulatively inflict serious psychological harm that amount to “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment” under the ICCPR.