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What does the AHRC have to say about COVID-19 restrictions?

Updated: May 3, 2021

What is the Australian Human Rights Commission’s (AHRC) view on limiting human rights during COVID-19?

  • Our starting point should always be that everyone’s rights are precious and should only be restricted where there is no other alternative.

  • Protecting public health and protecting human rights are not mutually exclusive choices. Measures to protect public health can protect human rights, like the right to life. And restrictions on human rights can sometimes be justified if they are necessary to protect public health.

  • International human rights law allows governments to restrict many rights and freedoms during a pandemic for the safety of everyone in the community.

  • However, the restrictions that are allowed are very narrow:

  1. They must be prescribed by law.

  2. They must be necessary and proportionate to the evaluated risk.

  3. Governments must be transparent about the reasons why they consider restricting human rights is necessary.

  4. Any limitations on human rights should be the minimum necessary to address the emergency and in place for the shortest time needed to deal with the emergency.

  5. The measures must be consistent with international law and must not discriminate against people on the grounds of race, sex, age, disability or sexual preference.

  • The need for the restrictions must be regularly assessed and the moment they are no longer necessary, they must cease.

  • It is important to ensure independent monitoring of the measures is in place to keep human rights front of mind.

  • Particular attention must be paid to upholding the rights and dignity of those who may be disproportionately at-risk to adverse impacts from the crisis

  • We also need to be mindful of the “creeping authoritarianism” and erosion of rights and freedoms we have seen happen elsewhere in the world during COVID-19 and make sure we do not accept greater restrictions on our rights and freedoms than are needed to keep us safe.

  • We must make sure that any restrictions are temporary and do not erode our freedoms longer term, such as by increasing surveillance or authorising intrusions on our privacy.

The COVID-19 pandemic is a global challenge that has required extraordinary measures to protect public health. Governments across Australia have acted swiftly to protect everyone’s rights to life, health and to an adequate standard of living, while also focusing efforts on groups who are particularly vulnerable at this time. To protect against the spread of the virus, difficult decisions have had to be made about restricting some basic human rights – such as freedom of movement and association.
Governments are working hard to protect people, but their actions can sometimes result in limitations or breaches of human rights. This can especially be the case when significant decisions have necessarily been made quickly, and previously untested policy solutions are implemented.
During the pandemic many decisions have been made at the National Cabinet – not in Parliament - and the responsibility for implementing those decisions has been split between federal, state and territory governments. This complicates the ability to ensure proper human rights scrutiny of the measures. For example, the Australian Human Rights Commission is limited by statute to providing human rights scrutiny of decisions implemented at a federal level – but many of the measures were not implemented at a federal level, even though they relate to federal responsibilities like the border control of Australia.
The Commission has offered our assistance to State and Territory human rights bodies during this time. Some of the decisions were put into legislation, others were introduced in other ways – which means they cannot be easily reviewed, and they don’t automatically require independent human rights scrutiny at the time of the decision. This means any human rights scrutiny happens after the measure is already put in place and affecting people. The Commission is concerned at the lack of transparency in explaining the continued justification for some emergency measures, and even for identifying which level of government is responsible for some measures. The checks and balances that ordinarily exist are important to our democracy. Australians have been, and continue to be, exposed to potentially unnecessary restrictions of their rights and freedoms because of the lack of transparency and accountability

What does this mean for Australians?

  1. Australians have no say about the restrictions being implemented until they start affecting us

  2. Australians have no one scrutinizing state governments to ensure our human rights are upheld

  3. Australians dont know who to complain to in order to seek the repeal of emergency Directions being put in place.

  4. Australians have neither Federal or state governments taking responsibility for the impact on or violation to human rights. Both State and Federal governments are shifting thr blame back and forth and niether is taking responsibility

  5. Australians have no one overseeing the extensions of the pandemic to ensure they are ceased as early as possible and are not being extended longer than necessary

  6. Australians have no one ensuring that the restrictions being put in place are relevant to the current declared emergency


 

United Nations related treaties


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