Current:Home > InvestAustralia cannot strip citizenship from man over his terrorism convictions, top court says -Wealth Evolution Experts
Australia cannot strip citizenship from man over his terrorism convictions, top court says
View
Date:2025-04-16 23:56:57
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Australia’s highest court on Wednesday overturned a government decision to strip citizenship from a man convicted of terrorism.
The ruling is a second blow in the High Court to the law introduced almost a decade ago that allows a government minister to strip dual nationals of their Australian citizenship on extremism-related grounds.
The ruling also prevents the government from deporting Algerian-born cleric Abdul Benbrika when he is released from prison, which is expected within weeks.
The High Court judges ruled 6-1 that the law that gave the home affairs minister power to strip citizenship in such instances was unconstitutional. The majority found that the minister was effectively exercising a judicial function of punishing criminal guilt.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his government would examine the ruling in regards to the law passed by the previous government.
Constitutional lawyer George Williams said he was not surprised by the result.
“It’s a fundamental breach of the separation of powers in Australia which says that judging guilty and determining punishment should be by courts and not by people in Parliament,” Williams said.
Williams said he understood that Benbrika was the only person to lose citizenship under a particular clause of the law relating to convictions of terrorism-related offenses that are punished by more than three years in prison. Therefore the precedent did not effect any other person who had lost citizenship rights.
The High Court last year struck down a separate clause of the law that allowed a dual national imprisoned in Syria to lose his citizenship on suspicion that he had been an Islamic State group fighter.
In 2020, Benbrika became the first extremist, proven or alleged, to lose citizenship rights while still in Australia. The government has not disclosed how many there have been.
Benbrika was convicted in 2008 of three terrorism charges related to a plot to cause mass casualties at a public event in Melbourne. No attack took place.
He was sentenced to 15 years in prison and would have been released in 2020. But his sentence was extended by three years under a recent law that allowed the continued detention of prisoners convicted or terrorism offenses who a judge ruled posed an unacceptable risk to the community if released.
In 2021, he lost a High Court challenge to his continued detention in a 5-2 split decision.
He will be subjected to a court-imposed supervision order that can allow close scrutiny of his communications, associates and movements when he is released before the end of the year.
veryGood! (84389)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Top general launches investigation into allegations of alcohol consumption at key commands
- NPR names new podcast chief as network seeks to regain footing
- Historian: You can't study diplomacy in the U.S. without grappling with Henry Kissinger
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Connecticut woman claims she found severed finger in salad at Chopt restaurant
- Rather than play another year, Utah State QB Levi Williams plans for Navy SEAL training
- Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge shows price pressures continuing to cool
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Could advertisers invade our sleep? 'Dream Scenario' dives into fears, science of dreaming
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Eyeing 2024, Michigan Democrats expand voter registration and election safeguards in the swing state
- Lead water pipes still pose a health risk across America. The EPA wants to remove them all
- Eddie Murphy wants ‘Candy Cane Lane’ to put you in the Christmas spirit for years to come
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Meta warns that China is stepping up its online social media influence operations
- After a 2-year delay, deliveries of Tesla's Cybertruck are scheduled to start Thursday
- A deadline for ethnic Serbs to sign up for Kosovo license plates has been postponed by 2 weeks
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Gambian man convicted in Germany for role in killings under Gambia’s former ruler
Former Blackhawks player Corey Perry apologizes for 'inappropriate and wrong' behavior
Members of global chemical weapons watchdog vote to keep Syria from getting poison gas materials
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Country music star to perform at Kentucky governor’s inauguration
Wartime Israel shows little tolerance for Palestinian dissent
Trump will hold a fundraiser instead of appearing at next week’s Republican presidential debate