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Australia: Families face collective punishment after gang
rape sentences
By Richard Phillips
3 October 2002
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The unprecedented 55-year jail sentence of 21-year-old Bilal
Skaf for a series of gang rapes in August 2000 in the Australian
state of New South Wales, has been followed by cruel punitive
measures against his parents and the relatives of other youth
involved in the crime.
Skaf, who was referred to as X during his trial, is now serving
the longest jail term in Australian legal history for a non-murder
case. [See: 20-year-old jailed
for 55 years on gang rape charges]
Over the past three weeks the state Labor government, backed
by the local media, has followed the harsh sentences with a series
of measures against the Skaf family and close relatives of Mahmoud
Sanoussi, 17, and Mohammed Sanoussi, 18, two brothers convicted
for their involvement in the rapes.
Seizing on minor incidents at the jails where the young men
are being held, the NSW Department of Corrective Services has
barred Baria Skaf, Bilals mother, from seeing her son for
two years while Mustafa, his father, has been banned for at least
a month, pending an investigation into bribery allegations. A
brother and cousin of Mahmoud and Mohammed Sanoussi have been
forbidden from visiting their relatives for three months. Appeals
against these decisions can only be made to the State Ombudsman
and it may take months before they are heard.
The persecution of the Skaf family began a few days after Judge
Michael Finnane sentenced Bilal in August. The youth, who was
being held in Sydneys Long Bay Jail, was suddenly moved
to a non-association cell at the High Risk Management
Unit or Super Max prison in Goulburn, more than 200
kilometres away. According to department officials, the move was
taken because three prisoners were planning to attack Skaf and
inject him with HIV-infected blood.
The high security Goulburn facility is the most repressive
jail in Australia, with every area under constant video surveillance.
Those wanting to visit inmates have to complete a detailed security
application, which takes up to two weeks to be approved.
The decision to relocate Skaf, however, was not relayed to
his family. They had no idea about the whereabouts of their son
until his mother arrived at Long Bay on the weekend after the
sentencing. Corrective Service officials refused to explain where
he was, but simply told her that Bilal was no longer at Long Bay.
Skafs relocation to Goulburn meant that he was not able
to see his parents, or any other visitor, until September 7, three
weeks after the 55-year sentence was handed down. During the visit
he asked his mother to take two handwritten notes to his fiancée.
The notes were love letters and included a sketch of his cell
and the courtyard where he is allowed to exercise. Prison cameras
recorded him handing the notes to his mother. On leaving the facility,
corrective services officers asked her to hand over the letters,
which she did immediately and apologised, explaining that she
did not know that they were illegal.
A few days later she received written notification from the
Department of Corrective Services declaring she was banned from
visiting her son for two years and would have to apply in writing,
at the end of that period, for permission to see him again.
Journalists besieged the Skaf family over the next days, demanding
they comment on the ruling. Mustafa Skaf told the World Socialist
Web Site that a Sixty Minutes producer spent from 9.30am
to 6pm on one day inside their family house attempting to pressure
Baria into appearing on the program.
Baria Skaf is now in a distressed state. She is afraid to appear
anywhere in public, constantly breaks down in tears and is being
treated for serious depression. Mustafa Skaf, a railway worker,
has been forced to take long service leave from his job because
he is afraid of leaving his wife alone at home.
But the two-year ban on Baria Skaf was followed by additional
punishment.
On September 20, six days after Bilal turned 21, Mustafa Skaf
was contacted by Corrective Services and told that his visiting
rights had been withdrawn for at least a month. Officials claimed
that he rang the prison a few days earlier and offered a $100
bribe to a prison officer to allow him to speak to Bilal on the
phone.
These unsubstantiated allegations, which rest entirely on the
word of a prison official, are being investigated by Corrective
Services. In the meantime, Mustafa Skaf cannot visit his son until
the inquiry is completed. No indication has been given to the
family as to how long the investigation will take, or what it
involves.
Similar measures have been imposed on members of the Sanoussi
family. On September 7, a brother and cousin of Mahmoud and Mohammed
Sanoussi were banned for three months from visiting their teenage
relatives, currently imprisoned at Kariong Juvenile Justice Centre
on NSWs Central Coast.
Prison officers stopped the boys giving the Sanoussi brothers
newspaper reports on the jail sentences. When the boys objected,
officers physically removed them and said they could not visit
for three months. Juvenile Justice Minister Carmel Tebbutt followed
this ruling by threatening to move the Sanoussi brothers to an
adult prison if there were any other so-called disciplinary breaches.
Role of the media
The local media, which played a despicable role throughout
the rape trial, has sensationalised and justified these punitive
measures.
The Fairfax-owned Sunday Sun-Herald, which occasionally
postures as a liberal alternative to the Daily Telegraph
and other Murdoch publications, has played a particularly foul
role, with provocative editorials and comments scapegoating Lebanese
immigrants and the Muslim community over the crimes.
On September 15, the newspaper broke news of the two-year ban
on Baria Skaf in an exclusive story by Alex Mitchell,
its state political editor. Most of the newspapers front
page was occupied by a large internal Corrective Services photograph
of Baria, Mustafa and Bilal Skaf in Goulburn prison, emblazoned
with the words Caught Out. Another headline declared
that prison officers had foiled Bilal Skafs
bid to smuggle maps from the jail.
The double-page article inside the newspaper was accompanied
by four more exclusive pictures and large headlines,
Rape leaders mum banned from prison and A
deliberate and calculated attempt to smuggle out sons
letter and a map.
The article implied that prison officers had foiled a major
violation of security procedures and quoted NSW Corrective Services
Commissioner Ron Woodham, who said the measures taken against
the Skaf family and Sanoussi relatives highlighted the departments
intention to crackdown on smuggling to and from the states
jails.
Any suggestion that Bilals decision to give letters to
his mother constituted a serious security breach is ludicrous.
Even if the notes revealed Bilals cell, the new $22 million
facility is the most heavily guarded prison in Australia. Inmates,
who are not allowed to wear shoes, are held in seven by eight
square metre isolation cells most of the day, with only limited
access to a small exercise yard. Equipped with all the latest
high-tech equipment and housing a maximum of 75 prisoners, the
jail is virtually escape-proof.
Mitchell, who did not dispute or challenge Corrective Services
claims, would be aware that the Sun-Herald published a
feature article on the prison more than a year ago, on May 27,
2001. The story included a detailed map pinpointing the location
of cells, exercise yards and other facilities. No suggestion was
made then, or since, by Corrective Services that the newspaper
had breached the prisons security or was aiding escape attempts
by publishing the map.
Drug smuggling in NSW prisons is an ongoing security problem,
but the Carr Labor government, up to this point, has never provided
the media with internal security images of those involved. Nor
have their names been published in the press.
The release of the pictures and their publication in the Sun-Herald
could well breach privacy conventions. They clearly show Baria
Skafs face, and one of the images shows the familys
two young children, who are four and five years old. The newspaper
has not explained why it decided to publish photographs of two
completely innocent children.
The Skaf family has lodged an appeal with Corrective Services
over the bans and the NSW Privacy Commission is currently investigating.
But treatment of these working class families, who have not been
provided counselling or any other assistance by state welfare
agencies, is at odds with the more enlightened, tolerant approach
adopted towards wealthy families whose children have been found
guilty of criminal offenses, including violent sexual assaults.
Last year, for example, several teenage boys from Trinity Grammar
School, one of Sydneys most prestigious private schools,
were arrested for a series of violent sexual assaults on two boys
in the schools dormitory. The Carr government made no comment
on the crime and it was similarly downplayed in the local media.
When the case came before the courts in early 2001, 12 charges
were dropped after the youth pleaded guilty on lesser charges
of aggravated indecent assault and were given six-month good behaviour
bonds. No names were released and the issue was hushed up.
By contrast, Carr and the media have treated the Skaf and Sanoussi
families, who have limited English language skills and little
chance of defending themselves, as easy targets for collective
punishment.
Within hours of the media publishing stories on the two-year
ban on Baria Skaf, Carr issued a statement supporting the decision
and praising prison officers in Goulburn jail. Theyve
got to make hard decisions from time to time, but frankly, I back
their use of their authority, Carr said.
Journalist David Penberthy writing for the Daily Telegraph
took this arrogant bullying a step further in an op-ed comment
on September 20 that attempted to justify the newspapers
support for harsher law-and-order measures.
In a rambling glorification of backwardness, which included
denunciations of the NSW Council of Civil Liberties and academics
who have objected to Carrs harsher sentencing regime, Penberthy
all but called for a homosexual prison rape of 21-year-old Bilal
Skaf.
[P]ersonally, he declared, I am pretty happy
with the prospect of Bilal Skaf spending the next five and a half
decades being chased around Long Bay by a big bloke who insists
on being called Rosie.
See Also:
Australia: 20-year-old jailed
for 55 years on gang rape charges
[6 September 2002]
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