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Covid Vaccine Mandates Ruled Unlawful by Supreme Court in Australia

by Rebekah Barnett
28 February 2024 11:02 AM

Covid vaccine mandates enforced on Queensland police and ambulance workers were declared “unlawful” in a landmark Supreme Court ruling this week.

In a decision handed down on Tuesday, Justice Glenn Martin of the Queensland Supreme Court found the Queensland Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll’s direction for mandatory Covid vaccination, issued in December 2021, to be unlawful under the Human Rights Act.

A similar Covid vaccination order issued by the Director-General of Queensland Health at the time, John Wakefield, was determined to be “of no effect”, with enforcement of both mandates and any related disciplinary actions to be banned.

Justice Martin held that the Police Commissioner “did not consider the human rights ramifications” before issuing the Covid workplace vaccination directive within the Queensland Police Service (QPS).

While the Covid vaccination directive to Queensland Ambulance Service (QAS) workers was found to be lawful, Justice Martin said that the Director-General had failed to “establish that the direction he made is a term of employment of the applicants”.

Justice Martin chastised the Commissioner and the Director-General for their inflexibility in the implementation of vaccination directives and suggested that their actions were not properly supported by the evidence.

“Neither the Commissioner nor Dr. Wakefield gave close attention to the possible range of solutions. Each was presented with a proposal for mandatory vaccination with little in the way of well-developed critiques of alternative means of reducing illness and infection,” stated Justice Martin in the decision.

Moreover, justifications offered by the Commissioner and the Director-General for the workplace vaccination mandates, were “taken out of context” or “not supported by the evidence”, while modelling relied upon by the Commissioner was in fact “nothing of the sort”, said Justice Martin.

Source: Supreme Court Library Queensland

Tip of the iceberg?

The decision, which resolved three lawsuits brought by law firms Alexander Law and Sibley Lawyers, is the “tip of the iceberg”, said Bond University Associate Law Professor Wendy Bonyton.

Prof. Bonyton told the Australian: “There are other cases, based on similar grounds, similarly challenging the legitimacy of directions given during the pandemic. This one is interesting because it is the first one to go through… There will be more of these cases to come.”

Australian businessman and founder of the United Australia Party, Clive Palmer, who reportedly contributed between $2.5 to $3 million towards funding the lawsuits involving 74 police officers, civilian staff and paramedics, said he is considering further legal action following yesterday’s win.

“We could look at the class action for the ambulance workers and the police workers who have been subjected to harassment by their colleagues at the police department on the direction of the Government to try to drop this case,” he told the press outside the Brisbane Supreme Court after the decision was handed down.

Condemning the Government for its “coercion and bullying”, Palmer paid tribute to the police and healthcare workers for their “extreme courage” in resisting the Covid vaccine workplace directives.

“Unlawful”, but not a breach of human rights

Human rights lawyer Peter Fam, of Sydney law firm Maat’s Method, praised the Supreme Court decision.

“This decision will force future employers and Government officials to properly consider human rights when implementing vaccine directions in future, at least in Queensland where there is a Human Rights Act which obligates them to do so,” he told Dystopian Down Under.

Fam noted that Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory have similar human rights legislation, but other states and territories do not.

However, Fam cautioned that the Court decision has an “ominous” caveat.

“They won because the Commissioner did not appropriately consider the human rights advice she received. However, the court also found that although each of the directions limited the workers’ rights to full, free and informed consent (under Section 17 of the Human Rights Act), the limit was reasonable in all the circumstances.

“So, if the Commissioner could have proved that she had considered the advice she received regarding human rights, her workplace vaccination directives would likely have been considered lawful.”

Fam gave his full assessment of the Supreme Court decision in a video published to his Substack today.

In a Senate hearing on February 1st of this year, Fam testified that a range of human rights were violated by vaccine mandates and other aspects of Australia’s pandemic response, which he said warranted investigation in a Covid Royal Commission.

Queensland Health responds

The Queensland Health Minister, Shannon Fentiman, has responded to the Supreme Court ruling, saying that the Government is still considering its implications.

“The point that I want Queenslanders to know, is that his Honour did find that placing a limit on human rights around mandatory Covid vaccinations was not contrary to human rights, and in fact it was justified given that we were in the middle of a pandemic.”

Fentiman emphasised that the ruling did not find mandatory Covid vaccinations contrary to human rights, but rather that the directions had been issued unlawfully.

Of the QAS Covid vaccination mandate, Fentiman said: “It was lawful, and it was compatible with human rights, but there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate that it was a reasonable direction under the employment contract.”

Fentiman added that Queensland Health staff have “nothing to do with this case”.

Nurses and doctors still subject to mandates and disciplinary action

While the Queensland Police and Ambulance Services are now prohibited from enforcing Covid vaccine mandates or related disciplinary action, a spokesperson for the Nurses’ Professional Association of Queensland (NPAQ) advises that mandates remain in place for some nurses, midwives and doctors.

Even where mandates have been dropped, Queensland Health has come under fire for continuing to discipline and even fire healthcare workers as recently as January 2024 for failing to comply with vaccination directives issued in late 2021.

President of the NPAQ, Kara Thomas, said that the Supreme Court ruling confirms the union’s position that “workers had human rights that needed to be considered”.

“We have nurses and midwives sitting at home during a workforce crisis and the healthcare system’s unlawful decisions are directly to blame,” said Thomas.

“We are currently consulting with our lawyers to determine what these two decisions mean for our Queensland members who were dismissed.”

Vice-President of the Australian Medical Professionals Society (AMPS), Dr. Duncan Syme, called for the reinstatement of doctors who have been pushed out of practice due to “unlawful” vaccine mandates.

“Doctors who were mandated, resigned or retired early should be immediately reinstated, compensated, and any professional misconduct charges related to challenging the mandates must be removed from their registration.”

“It’s high time we prioritise the well-being of patients using ethical evidence-based medicine over political-based directives,” he said.

Decision marks important precedent

The Supreme Court ruling has been touted as an important precedent as it highlights that human rights must be properly considered in the issuing and implementation of workplace directives.

Prior to this ruling, lawsuits challenging vaccine mandates have not been successful in the Australian courts, with judges tending to side with the Government and employers who enforced the mandates on employees.

One well-known case is Kassam V Hazzard (2021), which challenged New South Wales (NSW) Health Minister Brad Hazzard’s vaccine mandates and movement restrictions. The challenge, brought by Tony Nikolic, of Sydney law firm Ashley, Francina, Leonard & Associates, was dismissed, with Justice Beech-Jones ruling that public health orders were legally valid.

Responding to the Supreme Court ruling, Nikolic told Dystopian Down Under: “The Queensland decision is a vindication of human rights and the importance human rights possess in Australian jurisprudence.” 

“It is most unfortunate that the approach taken by the NSW Supreme Court in the case of Kassam v Hazard (2021) assumed a narrow approach on human rights protections under the common law,” said Nikolic, noting that unlike Queensland, NSW, has no bill of rights or Human Rights Act.

“In circumstances where former Health Minister Greg Hunt indicated that this was the world’s largest clinical trial, the Courts should have provided greater protections for human rights. This decision highlights the need for an Australian Human Rights Act or Bill of Rights.”

The historic Supreme Court ruling comes after another landmark decision in the South Australian courts in January, in which the Department of Child Protection was ordered to pay compensation to a youth worker who developed pericarditis after getting a Covid booster under a workplace vaccination directive.

This article was originally published on Dystopian Down Under, Rebekah Barnettt’s Substack newsletter. You can subscribe here.

Tags: AustraliaCOVID-19Human rightsInformed consentVaccineVaccine Mandate

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19 Comments
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huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago

What the judges decision really means for the government of Queensland:

You didn’t pay us enough. If you had given us what we asked for you would have had the decision you wanted.

Next time, pay up.

59
-2
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago

I have no doubt that most “covid” related measures were unlawful, everywhere. Where were the courts at the time, when it counted. Absent, along with almost everyone else, present company excepted.

136
0
FerdIII
FerdIII
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

Indeed, even this decision – as welcome as it is – does not address the fundamental destruction of human rights including the right to own our bodies and health. Fascist mandates and ingestibles foisted on mostly willing or clueless sheep. Many who complied, were injured, or died. That reality might finally be waking some people and institutions up.

52
0
Tyrbiter
Tyrbiter
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

In the UK the problem was that many measures could be brought in under the 35 year old Public Health Act 1984 using its useful “we can do anything we want to” section. The COVID Act 2020 was entirely unnecessary, but was probably brought forward to distract everyone from noticing the provisions of the 1984 legislation.

Ever feel like you’ve been had?

43
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  Tyrbiter

Yup the PHA was a classic enabling act. Sumption thought the way they had used it was unconstitutional as it was way beyond the scope of what it was originally intended for. He said they should have used the Civil Contingencies Act but that requires a vote in Parliament to renew it every 30 days and they obviously wanted to avoid that.

35
0
stewart
stewart
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

There are enough laws, rules, guidance and directives to give bureaucrats all the wiggle room they need to do whatever they want.

After all they come up with the rules, laws, guidance, etc…

The politicians simply sell them to the public.

Elected politicans (i.e. salesmen) selling laws written by bureaucrats to the public is what is known as western democracy.

30
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  stewart

Politicians seem happy with this arrangement

11
0
Smudger
Smudger
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

If it hadn’t been for Dr James, a senior consultant at Kings College Hospital, bravely facing down Savid Javid on TV on the issue of mandatory jabs for all NHS workers who knows what extreme jabbing measures Bunter would have done next. Dr James action was a powerful and most timely wake up call for a government that had become crazed with their own rhetoric.
https://youtu.be/hOlEYcd1nyI?si=UZxCihkdbbUKn5bw

13
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  Smudger

Yes I remember that. A good moment.

5
0
Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
1 year ago

And how many people are going to go to jail for this? None that matter, I bet. Is Scott Morrison going to go to jail? How about Daniel Andrews? No? Why isn’t that surprising?

85
0
FerdIII
FerdIII
1 year ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

Like laughing Horsehead from NZ they will probably be promoted within the globalist cabal as Ministers of Truth and Happiness in some waste of time globalist entity.

53
0
RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  FerdIII

Horses are beautiful and intelligent animals. Jacinda Arden, on the other hand, is … well … “a class of her own”.

31
0
RW
RW
1 year ago

Considering that the covaxxes demonstrably don’t stop people from either getting or transmitting COVID, why was mandatory covaxxination justified to begin with, other than as manufacturer sales strategy? And why is vaccination supposed to be a sensible strategy to counter disease propaganda pandemics initiated by the WHO without compelling reason? I mean, the WHO can obviously drop the requirement that diseases it seeks to employ to turn the world upside down in the name of needleholder captialism must be extraordinarily lethal but why is it justified that elected governments pay attention to that to the degree of authorizing acts of direct violence against their own citizens? If Tedros tomorrow decides that we in the middle of a dangerous pandemic of unclipped finger nails, as he well may, what’s the legal excuse for those following his orders? It’s surely not sufficient to rename the night day to prove that we’re dangerously out of sunlight at the absolutely wrong time for that.

49
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  RW

Depopulation.

29
0
RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

The presumably female Kiwi horror can’t really ascend her soapbox and openly state the she just hates ‘white’ people living in New Zealand and wants to kill as many of them as she can. And neither can some NZ court officially declare that such a policy wouldn’t violate anyone’s human rights.

And that’s the point I was trying to make: The WHO dropped the extraordinary lethal requirement for pandemics so that COVID could be declared a pandemic, ie, there was never a real reason for the Keep calm and run away screaming! reaction which followed, and if there had been, the Covaxxes wouldn’t have helped. So, what was the justification for mandatory covaxxing? Considering that the career of universal booster covaxxing was rather short-lived, it’s meanwhile known that loads of people with nothing effective except their immune systems protecting them being exposed to Sars-CoV2 doesn’t cause health system collapse or – for that matter – anything more noteworthy than perfectly run-of-the-mill seasonal peaks of usually mild respiratory disease.

Last edited 1 year ago by RW
15
0
Dinger64
Dinger64
1 year ago

Now sue the pants off the lot of them!
And if the law was broken, put the commissioner on trial

24
0
CircusSpot
CircusSpot
1 year ago

One day the truth will be revealed as to who got the deadly batches and who got the placebos. Until then I feel sad for all those who were forced to take the jabs and the uncertain future they will face as more information of their harm is revealed.

33
0
CGW
CGW
1 year ago

And still nobody is questioning whether there actually was a respiratory pandemic in the middle of Australia’s summer in 2020. Maybe that comes later?

14
0
RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  CGW

According to the revised definition of the WHO, there was. The question which needs to be asked is Does an event according to this revised definition justify the measures taken because of it? Especially in hindsight, as neiter collapse of the health system nor an end of this pandemic due to safe and effective vaccines occurred? Corona’s witnesses were planning to keep everything in place forever with the happy needle-me-harder added on top of it and the only thing which stopped them was that they did eventually run out of other people’s money.

That’s the rational discussion we need to have instead of quarreling about definitions or speculating about hidden motivations, both of which just serve as distraction while the forces behind this prepare to restart the pandemic circus as soon as public finances have recovered to a sufficient degree to make that again possible.

Last edited 1 year ago by RW
4
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