|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Violent police raids in Sydney and Perth
Bali bombing used to activate repressive laws in Australia
By Mike Head
31 October 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Heavily-armed Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
(ASIO) and Australian Federal Police officers have carried out
violent raids on at least seven homes in Sydney and Perth since
Sunday night, terrorising Islamic working class families in the
name of combatting terrorism. The Howard government and the security
agencies have seized upon the October 12 Bali bomb blasts to create
a climate of anti-Muslim prejudice and activate, for the first
time, far-reaching new anti-terrorist measures.
Security officers have indicated that the raids, whose total
number is unknown, constitute just the first stage in an extensive
and drawn-out campaign. Three were reported in Sydney on Sunday
night, followed by three in Perth and another in Sydney. In a
clear case of political intimidation, the raid in Sydney on Wednesday
was conducted against the father of 30-year-old Jaya Fadly Basri,
who was attending a media conference with his lawyer at the time
to condemn the raid on his own home three days earlier.
On Sunday evening, ten ASIO and police officers, armed with
pistols, shotguns and a sledgehammer, and wearing bullet-proof
vests, suddenly surrounded Jaya Basris apartment block in
the working class suburb of Lakemba, in Sydneys south-west.
Indonesian-born Basri was not dressed, but the officers demanded
he open the door immediately. After looking through the peephole
in his front door and seeing agents with their handguns drawn,
Basri let them in. He offered no resistance and was interrogated,
in front of his 28-year-old wife Zahlri and their two children
aged four and a half, and seven months. Officers turned his apartment
upside down for five hours until 2 am and seized prayer books,
passports, a laptop computer, leaflets and mobile phones.
No arrest was made and no charges were laid. It appears that
ASIO had no evidence whatsoevereither before or after the
raidto justify the operation. The pretext given was that
Basri was a suspected member of Jemaah Islamiah (JI), the alleged
Islamic terrorist organisation that the government and the media
have accused, again without a shred of evidence, of responsibility
for the Bali massacre.
NSW Council for Civil Liberties president Cameron Murphy said
ASIO had conducted at least 35 raids in Australia since last years
September 11 attacks in the United States, but had failed to lay
a single charge for terrorist activities.
Attorney-General Daryl Williams authorised the latest raids
by warrants issued before new regulations were declared banning
JI as a terrorist organisation. The regulations were
signed into law by Governor-General Peter Hollingworth on Sunday
night, but were not formally notified or announced until Monday.
Thus, those raided on Sunday had no notice that JI had even been
proscribed.
Speaking on ABC radio, Jaya Basris lawyer Stephen Hopper
condemned the tactics as heavy-handed: He wasnt
wearing a t-shirt or anything and he said, Ill just
go and get a T-shirt. They said, Open the door now.
He looked through the window and saw people armed with pistols
and a sledgehammer so he opened the door and fully cooperated
with the people who identified themselves as the police.
Basri told journalists the police asked him about visits to
Australia during the 1990s by alleged JI founder Abu Bakar Bashir
and whether he was a member of JI. I did nothing wrong,
I only attended some lectures that he was at, like Ive done
with other Indonesian religious scholars, he said. Im
just as upset about the Bali bombing as everyone. If Mr Bashir
had said anything along those lines [about terrorism], we wouldnt
have had anything to do with him. Basri had downloaded articles
about Bashirs ideas and activities from the internet and
published some of them in a small newsletter for the Indonesian
Islamic community. Nothing in the newsletter supported violence
or terrorism.
Wednesdays raid on the Belmore home of his father, Ali
Basri, started at 8.30 am and ended abruptly just after 1 pm,
when Jaya Basri and his family arrived at the house after their
media conference. Hopper, the family lawyer, questioned ASIO officers,
who then quickly withdrew. They confiscated a number of items,
including bank statements, diaries, computers and other documents.
Jaya Basris brother, aged 31, was taken into custody on
an expired visa and taken to the Villawood immigration detention
centre.
Hopper accused the government of victimizing the Basri family.
Theyve got nothing to do with JI or any terrorist
group. They are a very peaceful and humble family and I believe
they are victims of persecution. Having been wrongfully
detained in their homes for hours, the families are considering
legal action against the government.
In Perth, officers, armed with sub-machine guns and wearing
balaclavas, helmets and bulletproof vests, smashed their way into
David Supartas home before dawn. A neighbour, Helena Joyce,
condemned the manner in which the raid was conducted, describing
it as very frightening, and particularly traumatic
for the familys four children. Supartas teenage daughter
said her father was handcuffed on the floor with guns pointed
at him, while she and her young siblings had guns waved at them.
At another house in the same street, officers bashed through
gates and doors and confiscated family videos and computer equipment.
Indonesian-born Jan Herbert said his family was in shock after
officers held a gun to his head.
Western Australian Islamic Council president Abdur Rahim Ghauri
said both families denied any knowledge of JI. The community
is under depression and feels that we may be acted upon a bit
differently. Islamic Council of Victoria president Yasser
Suliman insisted there was no knowledge of JI or Islamic terrorist
groups raising funds in Australia. Muslims should not be labelled
as terrorists for donating funds they believed were helping orphans
or charities, he said.
The governments attempts to immediately lay the blame
for the Bali explosion on JI, without any results of police investigations,
have served to encourage anti-Muslim violence. More than 40 anti-Islamic
attacks have been reported to police in Sydney alone since October
12. Islamic clerics have been spat on, mosques and schools vandalised
and Muslim women and girls have had their headscarves ripped off.
Wide powers
In announcing the JI ban on Monday, Attorney-General Williams
declared that anyone assisting the organisationeven unwittingly
by donating to an associated charitywould face prosecution.
The listing of Jemaah Islamiah as a terrorist organisation
under Australian law puts anyone who has any association with
it on notice that they are potentially committing a serious crime.
Counter-terrorism laws pushed through parliament last July
can be utilized for outright political repression, not only against
Muslims but against anyone accused of having some link to a banned
organisation, no matter how remote or unintentional. Under the
legislation, a person who supports or provides
funds to an outlawed group faces lengthy imprisonment, even
if no terrorist act actually occurs.
Section 103.1 of the Criminal Code now makes it a serious offence,
punishable by life imprisonment, to provide or collect funds,
if the person is reckless as to whether the funds
will be used to facilitate a terrorist act. Other sections impose
jail terms of 25 years for being a member of, or giving money
to, (whether directly or indirectly) a banned group.
Even if a person does not know the group has been outlawed,
he or she can be jailed for 15 years. The burden of proof is on
the accused to show that they had no knowledge, or no way of suspecting,
that the organisation had been proscribed. Moreover, membership
of an organisation includes informal membership and
taking steps to become a member, unless the person
proves that they took all reasonable steps to cease to be
a member once the group was outlawed.
When the government first unveiled the legislation, in the
wake of the September 11 attacks, it demanded unfettered power
for the Attorney-General to ban alleged terrorist organisations.
After intense public objections, the government was forced to
modify that power. A group can only be outlawed after the UN Security
Council has listed it as terrorist or a court has
ruled it to be terrorist.
Apart from JI and Al Qaeda, which was banned last week, the
government has already outlawed or frozen the funds of 371 entities.
According to ASIOs annual report, released last week, they
include political and nationalist organisations, such as Hamas,
Hizballah, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,
the Mujahedin-E Khalq, the Tamil Tigers (LTTE), the Kurdish Workers
Party (PKK), the Sikh Youth Federation and a number of Irish,
European and South American groups.
These measures open up vast scope for officers or agents of
ASIO, associated intelligence agencies and the federal and state
police to frame-up people, including known political opponents
of the government. ASIO and the other security agencies have a
long, well-documented, record of planting and recruiting agents
inside targeted organisations, in order to report on their activities
and manufacture allegations against their supporters.
This potential is increased by the legislations sweeping
definitions of terrorism and treason, also punishable by life
imprisonment. Terrorism covers any acts or threats that advance
a political, religious or ideological cause in order
to coerce a government or any person. The acts or threats need
not involve personal harmthey can include damage to property
or risk to public health or safety, or interference with an information,
telecommunications, financial, essential services or transport
system.
Under these provisions a wide range of political activity can
be outlawed, such as planning or participating in a protest outside
government offices or facilities (such as refugee detention centres),
where damage allegedly results. Workers who picket a workplace,
or demonstrators who block roads or entrances to financial institutions,
such as the stock exchange, could be charged as terrorists, as
could computer hackers.
ASIO boosted
Government leaders are agitating for even greater ASIO powers.
Speaking after news broke of the raids, Immigration Minister Philip
Ruddock declared that ASIO was unable to detain suspected Al-Qaeda
and JI members because proposed legislation authorizing such measures
was being held up in the Senate.
Ruddock complained that the governments ASIO Bill had
been sent to a parliamentary committee. The Commonwealth
has no power to detain people who are suspected of being terrorists,
he told Channel 7s Sunrise program. We wanted
to give ASIO this power to be able to detain people for up to
seven days.
The ASIO Bill is a key component of the counter-terrorism
laws. If the legislation is passed, the intelligence organisation
will have the power to detain people, including children as young
as 14, for interrogation without charge, merely on the accusation
that they might have information or documents relating to terrorism.
Detainees need not be suspected of any offenceand could
include journalists, political activists, lawyers, a suspects
family members, neighbours or even priests.
Under the proposed bill, detainees can be held for two days
incommunicado, without the knowledge of their families and without
access to legal advice. After 48 hours, they can speak to a lawyer,
but only one who has been handpicked and security-vetted by ASIO,
and only if ASIO monitors their conversations. If they refuse
to answer ASIOs questions or hand over documents, they can
be jailed for five years.
The Labor Party, supported by the Australian Democrats and
Greens, has referred the ASIO Bill to a Senate committee. Opposition
leader Simon Crean has no disagreement with the wide-ranging powers
themselves; he merely wants them conferred on the federal police
rather than ASIO. But as the joint ASIO-Federal Police raids have
illustrated, the two agencies work so closely together that Labors
proposal will in no way address the legislations far-reaching
assault on civil liberties and basic democratic rights.
With Labors backing, the government rushed two bills
through parliament last week, one of which extends Australias
homicide laws to cover killings in other countries. This will
allow the quick extradition of prisoners charged with terrorist
murders. The other bill enabled the government to outlaw JI and
other groups last Sunday, without waiting for its regulations
to be approved by parliament.
At the same time, the government is pouring money into ASIO
to expand its operations. Mays budget boosted the agencys
funding by 25 percent to about $85 million a year. ASIOs
annual report revealed a substantial increase in the security
vetting of immigrants, refugees and public servants. In 2001-02,
it conducted 39,021 visa security checks, up from 17,520 four
years earlier; 2,281 assessments of asylum seekers, up from about
400; and 12,355 personnel checks, up from 10,847.
ASIOs full-time staff numbers rose to 618, from 536,
while its recruitment of intelligence officers has doubled since
September 11 to 30 a year. Interviewed anonymously by the Age
(it is an offence to name an ASIO officer or agent), the agencys
head of recruitment boasted that within two years the organization
would be back to Cold War numbers, or about 700 full-time employees.
Our activities are legitimised, he gloated, welcoming
the impact of the war against terrorism on ASIOs
public image.
During the 1960s and 1970s, ASIO, along with the entire intelligence
network, including military agencies and police special branches,
became justifiably discredited among the general population for
their surveillance, infiltration and dirty tricks operations against
anti-war, trade union, student and socialist organisations. During
the Cold War, the authorities sought to justify these activities
in the name of fighting communism. Today, under the
banner of the Bush administrations war on terrorism,
ASIO is being granted unprecedented powers and resources.
The Labor party has fully defended the ASIO raids, while Crean
has criticised the government from the rightfor its failure
to move fast enough against alleged JI supporters. New South Wales
Premier Bob Carr has gone even further, announcing the formation
of a state counter-terrorism police unit and foreshadowing new
laws to give police additional phone-tapping and eavesdropping
powers.
See Also:
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]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |