A Security Risk Certificate is part of a New Zealand legal process whereby a person suspected of being a security risk can be incarcerated prior to expulsion from the country. The Security Risk Certificate is based on unchallengeable “classified security information” (Immigration Act 1987 s 114B(1)). This is information that, in the opinion of the Director of the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service “cannot be divulged to the individual in question or to other persons” (s 114B(1)) for various reasons, including those listed below.
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Disclosure may, for example:
The sole avenue for appeal against the Certificate is the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security (Immigration Act 1987 s 114I(3)). It is the role of the Inspector-General to determine whether the certificate was properly issued. This is not, properly speaking, an appeal or rehearing. In doing so, he or she has privileged access to classified security information, significant powers, and wide discretion as to how to use them (They are acting, however, in a quasi-judicial capacity; Zaoui v Attorney-General, unreported, High Court, Auckland, 19 December 2003, Williams J, CIV-2003-404-5872, para 28). The position of the Inspector-General was created in conjunction with the 1996 amendment to the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service Act.
The Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security, a retired High Court judge (Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security Act 1996, s 5(3)), is required to review the Security Risk Certificate, as provided under the Immigration Act (s 114D)
Although the Immigration Act allows both the Inspector-General and the Minister to consider information other than the classified information signified by the Security Risk Certificate, it does not explicitly provide for the fair and transparent procedures required by international human rights standards.
There is a right of appeal to the Court of Appeal against a decision of the Inspector-General which confirms the certificate, on the ground that the decision is “erroneous in point of law” (Immigration Act 1987 s 114P(1)).
Most famously Algerian refugee Ahmed Zaoui was incarcerated in a maximum security prison in solitary confinement on the strength of a report produced by the threat assessment unit of the Police.
On 20 March 2003 a 'Security Risk Certificate was issued by the Director of Security under Part 4A of the Immigration Act (Zaoui v Attorney-General, unreported, McGrath, Hammond and O’Regan JJ, Court of Appeal, 17 September 2004, CA166/04, paragraph 5) that allows for “persons .... who pose a security risk … where necessary [to] be effectively and quickly detained and removed or deported from New Zealand” (s 114A(f)) on the basis of classified security information provided by the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service.
A comparable procedure to the current system for review of a 'Security Risk Certificate is that provided for the designation of an entity as a terrorist entity or an associated entity of a terrorist by the Prime Minister under the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002 (ss 20, 22). Under s 38 a marked departure occurs from New Zealand's open justice and adversarial process in procedures relating to such applications to challenge or to appeal such designation.
The Chief Justice or nominee, on request by the Attorney-General, if satisfied that it is desirable to do so for the protection of the classified information received or hear the classified security information in the absence of the designated entity, and all barristers and solicitors representing that entity, and all members of the public (s 38(3)(b)). A summary of the information, excluding any summary of information that will itself likely to prejudice the interests set out in s 32(3), is then approved by the Court (s 38(4)(a)). A copy of that would then be given to the entity concerned (s 38(4)(b)).
Section 32(3) is denied if the disclosure would be likely:
While the specific offences of terrorist bombing and financing of terrorism offences do not rely on the designation of entities, the other prohibition offences do, unless the prosecution can rely upon knowledge/recklessness of the group carrying out a terrorist act. The other offence (relating to dealings with terrorists) is also affected by extraterritorial jurisdiction either as to the Actus reus or to some aspect of connection with the offence or offenders.
The procedures for dealing with classified information with respect to the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002 is slightly more open than that which governs Security Risk Certificates under the Immigration Act 1987, in that there is a presumption that a summary of information will be made available to the applicant. The counsel are ordinary defence counsel, and lack access to the classified material.