WHY THE LATEST HIGH COURT CHALLENGE IN NEW ZEALAND SUCCEEDED WHERE SO MANY OTHERS HAVE FAILED

New Zealand’s High Court recently upheld the challenge of a group of police and defence force workers, facing termination if not fully vaccinated by 1 March 2022.

Justice Cooke was tasked with finding whether the limitation on the workers’ fundamental rights was “reasonable” and “justified in a free and democratic society”, in accordance with s5 of the NZ Bill of Rights.

Ultimately, the Judge upheld the  challenge on the basis that the Order was an ‘unreasonable’ and ‘unjustified’ infringement on the group’s right to refuse a medical treatment under s 11, and the right to manifest religious beliefs under s 15.

Many people have questioned why this particular case succeeded where so many others have failed.

Justice Cooke, after all, had previously dismissed similar claims from Customs and Aviation workers who had also challenged the mandates’ ‘reasonableness’.

Having now read the Judge’s ‘Summation’, I think the deciding factor that won it for these workers, was the expert evidence presented by Dr Nikolai Petrovsky showing the vaccines’ limited “effectiveness” when it came to the new Omicron variant.

The Judge also devoted a considerable amount of time to some of the workers’  objections to receiving a vaccine that was developed and tested using cells derived from an aborted human foetus.

The Judge’s reasoning on the religious freedom issue was, therefore, very narrow.

The Order, he said, “limits the right to …manifest religious beliefs under s 15 for those who decline to be vaccinated because the vaccine has been tested on cells derived from a human foetus which is contrary to their religious beliefs”.

“I do not see any other rights as being relevant.”

The Judge said he accepted that this very specific objection was grounded on a core principle of religious belief, particularly for Christians – one which amounted to a “primacy of conscience”.

“The fact that others, even those within the same religion, may not agree with the objection or stance”, he said, “DOES NOT MEAN THAT THE OBJECTION DOES NOT INVOLVE THE OBSERVANCE OF A RELIGIOUS BELIEF”.

In considering whether the limitation on fundamental rights was “justified in a free and democratic society”, Justice Cooke referred to the expert testimony given by Dr Petrovsky, in finding that it was not.

While Omicron did pose a threat to the “continuity of workforce”, the Judge said,  the threat was clearly the case for “BOTH THE VACCINATED AND THE UNVACCINATED”.

Ultimately Justice Cooke said:

“It is clear from the evidence that vaccination does not prevent persons contracting and spreading COVID-19, particularly with the Omicron variant”.

The Order was accordingly found to be unlawful and set aside.

TIME TO END ‘EMERGENCY POWERS’ IN QUEENSLAND – “WE CAN’T GO ON LIVING THIS WAY”

The Health Minister, Yvette D’Ath, tabled a new Bill last week that seeks to extend the Queensland’s Emergency laws a further six months.

Under the Public Health and Other Legislation (Extension of Expiring Provisions) Amendment Bill 2022, Queensland’s ‘state of emergency’ laws will be extended from 30 April 2022 to 31 October 2022.

By that date, Queenslanders will have been living under a ‘state of emergency’ for nearly three years.

We were the first State to declare an emergency on 29 January 2020.

The Premier said at the time: “Queensland acted early and strengthened the laws because public safety is paramount”.

Since then, we have seen our economy smashed, small businesses decimated, hundreds of thousands of jobs lost and people’s lives turned upside down.

All sacrificed on the altar of “public safety” – along with free speech, the right to peaceful assembly, the right to work, freedom of conscience, bodily autonomy, government transparency and public trust in our institutions.

Even worse, has been the fundamental change in our relations with each other, a change clouded by suspicion and distrust.

This new Bill seeks to prolong all this.

It is also important to note that the Government’s transitional regulation-making powers under Part 9 of the original Emergency Response Act 2020, will remain in place for a FURTHER TWO YEARS AFTER the “expiry date”.

That means until near the end of 2024.

Presuming of course, that the government doesn’t extend the date again for a fifth time!

When the Minister said in her speech last Tuesday, that Queensland must move from “an elimination strategy to a suppression strategy and eventually into learning to live with Covid-19”, her words had an ominous ring.

I suspect she didn’t mean it the way you or I might hope.

In fact, this new mantra of “learning to live with Covid-19” is starting to sound a lot like “learning to live with the New Normal”.

Either way, we can’t afford to let this charade to go on one day longer.

Click here to watch the Minister’s Speech

HAVE YOUR SAY

Submissions are now open for the inquiry into the Public Health and Other Legislation (Extension of Expiring Provisions) Amendment Bill 2022

Have your say by Friday 4 March!

Public Health and Other Legislation (Extension of Expiring Provisions) Amendment Bill 2022

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

The committee invites submissions addressing any aspect of the Bill, from all interested parties.  Guidelines for making a submission to a parliamentary committee are available here: Guide to making a submission. Please ensure your submission meets these requirements.

The closing date for written submissions 12:00pm on Friday, 4 March 2022.

Submissions should be sent to:

Emailcssc@parliament.qld.gov.au    

Committee Secretary
Community Support and Services Committee
Parliament House
George Street
Brisbane Qld 4000

Submissions should include:

  • the author’s name and signature
  • if the submission is made on behalf of an organisation, the level of approval (e.g. a local branch, executive committee or national organisation)
  • mailing address (and email if available), and
  • daytime telephone number.

Please ensure your submission includes the above or it may not be considered by the committee.

PUBLIC HEARINGS

Further details will be published on this webpage in due course.

COMMITTEE’S REPORT

The committee is due to table its report on 25 March 2022. The report will be published to this webpage.

Once the committee’s report has been tabled, the Government has three months to respond to the report’s recommendations (if any). At that time, the Government Response will be published here.

TIMELINE

Submissions close: 12:00pm on Friday, 4 March 2022
Public briefing: 4 March 2022 – Time TBC
Public hearing(s): TBC
Report due date: 25 March 2022