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Australian government resumes push for detention without trial
By Mike Head
17 June 2003
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Having joined the Bush administrations illegal war on
the Iraqi people, the Australian government is renewing its assault
on democratic rights at home.
Under the guise of presenting yet another compromise
proposal to win support for legislation giving the secret
police the power to detain people without trial, the government
last week outlined new amendments that will vastly strengthen
the powers of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
(ASIO). For the first time in Australian history, the intelligence
agency will be able to jail and interrogate anyone for up to a
week without laying charges against them.
When the ASIO Terrorism Bill was first brought forward in early
2002, it allowed ASIO to hold and question any person, including
a child, incommunicado, effectively indefinitely, without access
to a lawyer. The Bill was part of a draconian legislative package
that included life imprisonment for terrorism offencesloosely
defined to include any threat made for a political, religious
or ideological cause.
Seizing upon the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks in the
United States, Attorney-General Daryl Williams declared the need
to sacrifice civil liberties for the entire duration of the war
on terrorism. The legislation aroused significant public
opposition, however, forcing the government to refer the bills
to three parliamentary committees, resulting in various minor
modifications. With Labors support, the rest of the legislation
passed through parliament last June, but the ASIO Bill proved
more contentious and was withdrawn amid a standoff in the Senate
last December.
Williams current proposals will lift the age limit for
interrogation from 14 to 16 years old, restrict questioning to
twenty four hours over seven days and allow limited access to
a lawyer, who will be subject to ASIO vetting. Under a sunset
clause, the laws will expire after three years, unless re-adopted.
The governments previous version, abandoned last December,
limited initial detention to 48 hours, while allowing extensions
to be obtained via rolling warrants. Under the latest
plan, a supervising judge can allow ASIO three blocks of eight
hours each of continuous questioning, spread over a full week.
The previous plan would have established an ASIO-vetted panel
of lawyers, permitted to advise detainees. Now, detainees will
be nominally free to name a lawyer of their choice, but ASIO will
have the right to veto that choice. In addition, questioning can
commence in the absence of any lawyer. Neither detainees nor their
lawyers will have access to any classified information which means,
in effect, that detainees will not know why they are being interrogated
or whether they have any grounds for objection.
The age limit increase to 16 years of age still flouts the
United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. Detaining
children between the ages of 16 and 18 years for up to 7 days
on suspicion of committing an offence with no right to silence,
limited access to a lawyer and no presumption of innocence is
totally unacceptable and a breach of the human rights of children,
the Victorian Law Institute commented.
The Law Institute, which represents the states legal
profession, condemned the changes as illusory and
a cruel trick. Institute president Bill OShea
said: ASIO can continue to veto or remove the lawyer chosen
by a detained person. Even if ASIO approves the lawyer, he or
she can only provide advice between 8-hour questioning blocks
and not while the questioning is going on.
In addition, ASIO has no obligation to inform the arrested
person of the grounds on which they are being detained, so it
will be very difficult for a lawyer to object to the detention...
the new provisions will allow ASIO to detain those arrested for
up to 7 days, rather than being required to obtain a fresh warrant
every 48 hours under the previous draft. So if ASIO decided to
spread the three 8-hour interrogation periods over a full 7 days,
there is nothing anyone could do about it.
The underlying powers remain the same. Detainees need not be
suspected of a terrorist offence, or any other criminal offence.
ASIO merely has to tell the attorney-general that their interrogation
would substantially assist the collection of intelligence
that is important in relation to a terrorism offence, even
if no act of terrorism has occurred.
Teachers, neighbours and doctors, as well as the children,
friends or relatives of supposed terrorism suspects could still
be detained under this power, not to speak of investigative journalists
and political activists. Any detainee, no matter how innocent,
who refuses to answer ASIOs questions or produce any item
demanded by ASIO faces five years imprisonment.
As a number of media and legal commentators have pointed out,
under the new legislation ASIO will obtain detention and interrogation
powers that exceed those exercised by its American and British
counterparts, the FBI and MI5. The measures have nothing to do
with protecting ordinary people from terrorism; they are about
hounding, framing up and jailing political opponents.
Civil liberties and legal bodies have pointed out that the
new laws are completely unnecessary to combat terrorism, given
that every conceivable terrorist act is already a serious crime.
Fears of handing such powers to the political police have only
intensified as a result of violent ASIO raids on the homes of
Muslim families over the past year.
Nevertheless, even before the Labor Party or any member of
the public had seen the details of the latest amendments, Labor
leader Simon Crean described them as a welcome movement
by the government. Over the past year and a half, Crean has been
just as anxious as his predecessor Kim Beazley to deliver a bipartisan
approach to the strengthening of the state apparatus.
Under Beazley, Labor gave in-principle agreement to the entire
anti-terrorism package as soon as it was mooted in
the wake of the September 11 events. All the Labor state and territory
governments then passed complementary laws giving the Howard government
special constitutional powers to proceed. At the federal level,
Labor has worked to fashion cosmetic amendments in order to appease
widespread popular opposition. In his latest compromise
offer, the attorney-general specifically adopted an earlier Labor
suggestion to permit interrogation to commence in the absence
of a lawyer.
Labors shadow cabinet will formally decide its position
on the revamped proposals this week, but the general thrust of
its response has been to join hands with the government. Accordingly,
Howard and Williams are likely to introduce the revised legislation
in the Senate this week, demanding its swift passage, backed by
the threat of an early double dissolution general election if
the Bill is not adopted.
Far from a sign of political strength, the Howard governments
anxiety to obtain the unprecedented powers indicates it is preparing
for further political dissent and social unrest as its policies
increasingly erode the living standards and basic rights of ordinary
people.
See Also:
Australian Senate
hearings reveal public opposition to terrorism laws
[27 April 2002]
Australian counter-terrorism
laws threaten fundamental democratic rights
[10 April 2002]
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