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Eye-witness describes violent police raid in Australia
"There is no excuse for terrorising women and children"
By Mike Head
2 November 2002
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In an unprecedented wave of police raids across Australia,
intelligence and federal police officerssome carrying sub-machine
guns and wearing military-style combat gearhave forced their
way into the homes of dozens of Indonesian-born Muslims since
Sunday night, on the pretext of investigating terrorism. The only
accusation levelled against those raided was that they attended
religious lectures given by Indonesian cleric Abu Bakar Bashir,
during Australian visits in the 1990s. Bashir is reputed to be
the leader of the alleged Islamic organisation, Jemaah Islamiah
(JI), which the government and the media have accused of responsibility
for the October 12 Bali bombings.
Families in at least three major cities, Sydney, Melbourne
and Perth, have been subjected to the joint raids by the Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and the Australian Federal
Police, conducted under warrants personally authorised by Attorney-General
Daryl Williams. According to one media report, at least 20 homes
have been raided, but other reports indicate that the number may
be significantly higher.
Not a single arrest has been reported, but civil liberties
representatives and lawyers have been unable to obtain any information
on the full extent of the operation, the precise reasons for the
search warrants and whether arrests have been made or charges
laid. The government launched the raids immediately after formally
banning JI last Sunday night.
Under counter-terrorism legislation passed this
year with the Labor Partys backing, anyone belonging to
JI or any other proscribed group, or found guilty of supporting,
training, funding or recruiting members faces up to 25 years in
jail. No evidence has yet been produced to show that JI even exists
as a distinct organisation, let alone that it carried out the
bombings.
Prime Minister John Howard and other senior ministers have
defended the raids and vowed to continue them, despite mounting
criticism at home and abroad, particularly in Indonesia. Howard
declared that he backed the raids 100 percent and
added: I find it amazing that people could seriously question
the national need for this to happen. Speaking from London,
where he held talks with the Blair government on the impending
war on Iraq, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer insisted that the
government was justified in being a little ruthless
and tough in cracking down on terrorist suspects.
Without offering the slightest proof, Howard and other ministers
have repeated the unsubstantiated claims of ASIO director general
Dennis Richardson, who made a rare public appearance this week.
Richardson told a Canberra conference on Homeland Security
that Al Qaeda was most likely responsible for the Bali bombings
and had sleeper cells in Australia. His only evidence
was statements attributed to Al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden
warning of new terrorist attacks. We may never know if those
statements foreshadowed Bali on the 12 October, but we can be
confident that the hand of Al Qaeda is somewhere in that atrocity,
Richardson said.
The next day, Howard declared that the raids were conducted
because of a generic concern that there could be sleepers
and officers needed to be armed because they could meet
resistance. By referring to sleepers ASIO and
the government are claiming the right to conduct such raids anywhere,
at any time. Sleepers are, by definition, people who
have not undertaken any unlawful activity. Lacking any evidence
linking the raids to the Bali atrocity, Federal Police commissioner
Mick Keelty stated on Friday that the operation was not part of
the Bali investigation.
In Indonesia, newspapers, television and radio coverage has
featured accounts of Indonesian Muslims describing the invasion
of their homes by heavily armed police and ASIO officers, provoking
at least one street demonstration against Australian tourists.
Indonesias Department of Foreign Affairs called Australias
charge daffaires, David Ritchie, to protest the treatment
of its citizens and the lack of advance warning from Australian
authorities. International conventions require notice prior
to investigations, prior to taking any legal steps towards foreign
nationals, and in this case we were never informed by the authorities
concerned, a statement said.
Indonesian spokesman Marty Natalegawa said his government had
expressed our deepest concern about the reports we received
concerning ill-treatment and treatment which in essence is unacceptable
since it tends to ignore our nationals basic rights.
The Howard government has proceeded with the total backing
of the Labor Party. Labor leader Simon Crean has endorsed the
raids, while New South Wales Labor Premier Bob Carr declared he
found the ASIO operation reassuring. Carr has announced
the formation of a state police anti-terrorist unit to join in
future operations, and, along with former Labor leader Kim Beazley,
was a keynote speaker at a Homeland Security conference
in Canberra on Thursday, where they reiterated Labors election
promise last November to create a US-style Ministry of Homeland
Security, permitting military units to work closely with police
and intelligence agencies.
Perth
In Perth, the West Australian capital, officers wearing balaclavas,
flak jackets and night goggles raided several homes, including
those of the Suparta and Herbert families in south-east suburban
Thornlie, before dawn on Wednesday. Police smashed their way into
some houses soon after 5am, breaking windows and splintering doors.
Men, women and children were threatened by gun-wielding commandos
and ordered to lie on the floor.
Helena was an eyewitness to the raid on her neighbours, the
Suparta family. She told WSWS she was woken at 5.15 am by the
sounds of loud bashing and crashing next door. I was terrified,
and I was only next door! There were four-wheel drive vehicles
in the neighbours front yard, all with their doors flung
open, and guys in full battle gear around the house. They had
flak jackets, helmets, and balaclavas. Others wore suits or casual
clothes.
I heard a whoop, whoop, whoop
sound, like a war cry. But I could not be sure. It might have
been the officers yelling at the neighbours, telling them to lie
down on the floor. There were six to eight men in uniform and
another six to eight in civilian clothes, including some big burly
guys and two women.
They smashed the windows of the parents bedroom,
as well as the bedroom of their 17-year-old daughter, and some
doors, including a playroom. They didnt even identify themselves.
I woke my husband and he called out to the men, Is
everything OK? They refused to answer. There was no response
at all. They obviously did not want to say a word. We were upset
and nervous. We couldnt go back to sleep. We just stood
by the kitchen window and watched.
At one point, the police had the husband on the floor,
on his stomach, handcuffed, and an officer put his boot on his
ear. Guns were waved at the children. Later we saw the sub-machine
guns. We didnt know who to call, because they seemed to
be police but they werent dressed like normal police. Finally,
we called the media at about 7.30.
When the media arrived, two men came out and tried to
warn them off. They yelled out not to take photos of them, or
show their faces. The cameramen were astounded and insisted that
they would keep filming. On the news that night, the faces of
the officers were blurred out.
The whole operation lasted nearly seven hours. We went
next door to comfort the family later in the afternoon, to give
them moral support. They were a total mess. The wife, who does
not speak good English, could not speak at all. I gave her a hug
and all she could do was cry. One of the four children, a two-year-old,
had a stomach virus and was vomiting.
They were frightened by the police, who advised them
not to speak to the media. The husband was very nervous, even
though he has been in Australia for 14 years and can speak well.
He is a registered gun owner, and he told us he thought it was
a home invasion by a criminal gang. He ran through the house,
saying wheres my gun? Luckily, he did not find
it, or he could have been shot dead.
The 17-year-old daughter said she couldnt come
to terms with what had happened. She could not sleep and the children
have not been back to school, because they are afraid of being
called names or picked on.
We have known the family since we moved here three years
ago, and they are always friendly and nice. They are not at all
strangeyou can tell with people. They are not bigoted. In
fact, the husband was originally a Christian and became a Muslim
in order to marry his wife.
I can understand how people who suffered in the Bali
bombing might want to have those responsible caught, but we have
to get the right people! ASIO must have every conceivable technological
device on the planet for surveillance and phone tapping. They
must know everything about this family. There is no excuse for
going in boots and all like this. They have terrorised children
and wives who cannot possibly have anything to do with terrorism.
An intelligent person would obtain information differently.
This was done without a whiff of suspicion. As the daughter said
to me, all my father did was attend a lecture.
I would like to say that I am very disappointed in the
Labor Party. They are supporting these raids. It is a bit like
choosing between the Cybermen and the Daleks (characters from
the BBC television series, Doctor Who)both parties are ruthless,
cold-blooded bastards. Labor is more right-wing than the right-wingers.
Thats why people are not voting for them. If anyone opposes
the government, they will not vote Labor. Whoever gets in, we
will have a right-wing government.
Sydney
Stephen Hopper, the lawyer representing several families raided
in Sydney, where the operation was first launched on Sunday night,
said the ASIO and police officers had not been as violent as in
Perth, but had drawn guns at the home of Jaya Basri and had physically
detained and interrogated family members for hours on end at each
house.
There were up to 15 officers involved in each of the
three raids on different members of the Basri family. Apart from
the first raid, they had guns but did not draw them. They demanded
immediate entry and then ran through the homes, securing the premises,
and ordering the families not to move.
During the second raid, I arrived while it was still
proceeding. The ASIO officers packed up quickly, but they were
probably finished anyway.
It was like McCarthyism revisited. Then it was communism,
now it is Islam. People were asked if they had ever been to a
particular mosque, or if they belong to JI. No one in Indonesia
knows what JI is. The name simply means Islamic community.
So, if you ask people, they are likely to say they are members.
Jaya Basri was interrogated for about an hour. He was
not told that he had the right to remain silent and he was given
no warning that any comments could be used against him. Some of
the questioning was recorded, yet there is nothing in the ASIO
Act that permits forced detention and questioning. Indonesians
do not understand the right to silence and, in any case, they
are polite people, so they answer questions.
The search warrants said nothing specific. They just
rehashed the wording of the ASIO Act, referring to reasons to
believe that information could be gathered relevant to intelligence.
ASIO rifled through documents and took away all the usual thingsbirth
and marriage certificates, diaries, computers, and even a copy
of the Daily Telegraph but no charges have been laid.
The families are in trauma and stressed, but they are
holding up well. They feel that if they stand up and go to the
media, it shows that they have nothing to hide. It might also
expose ASIO by putting a spotlight on its methods.
I represent a number of families who were raided last
year immediately following the September 11 attacks. No charges
have been laid against them. In fact, the only illegalities uncovered
by those raids were those committed by ASIO. My clients cant
wait to see the outcome of the Bali investigations because there
might be some interesting findings about who was actually responsible.
Melbourne
Less information is available on the operation in Melbourne,
where the media and local Islamic leaders have reported Rambo-style
raids on homes in numerous suburbs, including Preston, Brunswick,
Bundoora, Noble Park, Burwood and Broadmeadows.
The Indonesian vice-consul to Melbourne, Kama Pradipta, has
confirmed that ASIO officials executed search warrants on the
homes of five Indonesians in the citytwo female university
students, who are Indonesian nationals, and three Indonesian men,
who are permanent residents of Australia. One man was held
for five hours and has had his computer, laptop, books, records
and holy Koran taken, he said.
The only victim who has spoken out publicly so far is Nismah
Nukmal, an honours student at La Trobe University, who was two
months away from finishing her thesis in the field of insect biology.
Men identifying themselves as ASIO officers raided her home on
Wednesday morning, taking all of her work. She has pleaded for
the return of her computer, which holds her nearly completed thesis.
I need it, I need it, please help methis is my thesis,
she told ABC radio.
Lawyer Greg Connellan, a spokesman for Liberty Victoria, the
states civil liberties council, told WSWS that those raided
may have felt too intimidated to seek media attention or legal
advice. The extent of the raids in Melbourne is just not
known. If people were arrested, lawyers would only be able to
find out through the media.
If guns have been pointed at children, thats totally
inexcusable. That can never be justified. There ought to be a
parliamentary inquiry. Intelligence can be gathered without smashing
down doors.
Connellan went on to point out that, in any event, the raids
would give a clear warning shot across the bows of any terrorists,
allowing them to lie low. On the surface, the raids appear to
be counter-productive, even totally pointless. If the authorities
were seeking intelligence, they would do it differently.
It is becoming increasingly obvious that the raids have nothing
to do with any genuine investigation of the Bali bombing or any
other alleged terrorist activity. They are entirely political
and directed consciously against some of the most vulnerable layers
of society. Their purpose is to intimidate the general public
and test out repressive measures for wider use against government
opponents.
See Also:
Violent police raids in
Sydeny and Perth
Bali bombing used to activate repressive laws in Australia
[31 October 2002]
Australian government uses
Bali atrocity to demand new repressive powers
[19 October 2002]
Anger mounts over Australian
government's failure to give Bali warning
[17 October 2002]
Washington seizes on Bali
terror bombing to demand crackdown in Indonesia
[14 October 2002]
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