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Australian government uses Madrid bombings to justify further
police-state powers
By Mike Head
7 April 2004
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Facing disastrous opinion polls only months away from a federal
election, the Australian government is ratcheting up the so-called
war on terror, hoping to foment fresh fears and insecurities
to divert from its mounting political problems. Over the past
two weeks, its national security minister, Attorney-General
Philip Ruddock, has unveiled new legislation that will further
shred long-standing democratic rights.
Just as Prime Minister John Howard seized upon the September
2001 attacks in the United States and the October 2002 Bali bombings
to hand unprecedented powers to the countrys security and
intelligence agencies, so he is justifying the new measures as
his governments response to the recent Madrid train bombings.
The detailed character and extraordinary reach of the new proposals,
however, point to months of preparation, going back at least to
Ruddocks appointment as attorney-general last year.
Some of the most far-reaching measures are contained in the
Anti-terrorism Bill 2004, introduced into parliament last week.
First, it gives the federal and state police the power to arrest
and interrogate anyone for up to 24 hours before bringing them
to court to be charged. This is on top of the power already handed
to the federal police and the Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation (ASIO) last year to detain and question people for
up to a week without charge.
The Bill increases the length of time that police officers
can interrogate someone arrested for a federal terrorist
offence from 4 hours to 24 hours. The police simply need
to find a judge, magistrate or justice of the peace to rubberstamp
the 20-hour extension. For serious offences, the questioning
limit can already be extended to 12 hours, but Ruddock insists
this is insufficient for terrorism charges.
Police can prolong the interrogation period by adding on dead
time lost by conveying the prisoner to jail or allowing
the prisoner to communicate with a lawyer, family member or friend.
Dead time can also be claimed for medical treatment,
identification parades, rest or recuperation (including sleep)
and for officials to obtain information from overseas. In other
words, prisoners can be held, perhaps for several days, until
they have been subjected to 24 hours of questioning.
Police verbalsconfessions extracted from
prisoners under interrogationare notorious in Australia.
The High Court felt compelled in two cases, Williams in
1986 and McKinney in 1991, to limit police questioning
and require judges to warn juries of the dangers of convicting
on the basis of a confession alone. State and federal laws were
then passed to specifically authorise police interrogations, subject
to video-taping. But studies have since shown that video-taping
is no guarantee against the planting of evidence and concoction
of false confessions.
The scope for police abuse is vast because of the wide range
of terrorist offences. They include attempting, inciting
or conspiring to commit terrorist-related acts, as well as membership
of, or support for, groups that have been declared terrorist.
The Bill expands this array by making it a crimepunishable
by 25 years imprisonmentto train with a terrorist organisation,
even if the accused person did not know that the organization
was terrorist. For organisations that the minister has outlawed
by regulation, strict liability applies, reversing the traditional
burden of proof. The government will not need to prove intentioninstead
defendants must prove that they had an honest and reasonable
mistaken belief that the organisation was not terrorist.
Another part of the Bill is designed to jail people like David
Hicks and Mahdouh Habib, whom the Howard government has willingly
allowed the Bush administration to incarcerate at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba for more than two years as alleged enemy combatants.
Neither man has been charged, let alone convicted, but through
the media, the Australian government has accused Hicks of training
with Al Qaeda and the Taliban. Hicks cannot be charged with any
crime under Australian law because Al Qaeda was not outlawed,
and the Taliban were the recognised government of Afghanistan.
To get around such problems in the future, the attorney-general
can proscribe a group by regulation and then issue a ministerial
certificate stating that it is not part of an armed force of a
foreign state. In effect, the Bill creates another set of powers
to outlaw organisations by executive decree, on top of the recently
acquired power to proscribe terrorist organisations
by regulation.
Under the guise of preventing terrorists from profiting by
writing books about their exploits, the Bill contains measures
that can be used for political censorship. Restraining and confiscation
orders can be issued against any author who gained notoriety directly
or indirectly from committing an indictable offence, whether
in Australia or overseas. As publishers and bookshop owners have
pointed out, this means that books by figures such as Nelson Mandela,
Yasser Arafat, Gerry Adams and Xanana Gusmao could be confiscated.
Another measure, the Surveillance Devices Bill, will permit
the AFP and other federal agencies to use a wide range of phone-tapping,
bugging, computer hacking, tracking and optical devices to monitor
and gather information. Police will have to obtain warrants from
a judge or tribunal member for some devices, but senior police
can issue emergency authorisations in urgent circumstances,
including serious risk to property. No warrants will
be needed for other devices, notably remote tracking equipment,
and telescopes, cameras and other optical technology.
These laws also throw a blanket of secrecy over surveillance
operations. They outlaw the unauthorised release of any information
about surveillance activities, as well as any information gathered
in the course of such operations. Breaches are punishable by up
to 10 years jail. Police authorities, however, can publicise any
information they receive if they regard it as necessary to reduce
the risk of violence or property damage.
Thus, anyone placed under surveillance cannot publicly expose
or protest against the spying operation, while police can selectively
leak material to the media, claiming to be protecting the public
from harm.
Yet another law, the Telecommunications (Interception) Amendment
Bill, extends the power of police and other law enforcement agencies
to tap telephones and intercept email. Intercept warrants will
be available for investigations of all terrorist, firearms and
cybercrime offences.
Ruddock has foreshadowed further measures, including new laws
modelled on consorting provisions that give police
the power to arrest and charge people for associating with known
criminals. These provisions were so open to police abuse that
they were abolished in some states. Ruddock has now declared that
measures against terrorist consorting are justified
because we are in a war.
Supporters and informal members of proscribed organisations
already face up to 25 years imprisonment. A much lower burden
of proof in consorting cases would make it even easier
to arrest people for having any contact with a banned organisation.
Anyone who visited, spoke to, or attended a meeting with an alleged
terrorist sympathiser could be targeted.
Civil liberties groups have condemned the measures. Australian
Council for Civil Liberties president Terry OGorman said
the consorting law would fundamentally interfere with freedom
of association and drag innocent people into police investigations.
It will mean that friends and families of someone who could
later be found to be a terrorist could be charged with consorting
with an individual who is simply part of a family group.
Through the Australian Law Reform Commission, Ruddock is also
drafting a National Security Information Procedures Act, which
would allow trials to be held in complete secrecy. Closed courts
would hear charges, censor evidence, allow government witnesses
to testify in disguise via video and even exclude defendants and
their lawyers from trial proceedings.
Endless escalation
Over the past two-and-a-half years, the Howard government has
utilised the September 11, 2001 attacks to steadily erect the
framework for a police state. By Ruddocks own estimates,
the government has introduced more than 100 new legal measures,
spending more than $2 billion on bolstering the security and intelligence
apparatus.
Terrorismdefined so widely that it covers
traditional forms of political action and protest, including strikes,
pickets and street demonstrationshas become a crime punishable
by life imprisonment. The government can swiftly ban political
parties that allegedly support terrorism and jail their supporters.
ASIO has gained previously unthinkable powers, including secret
detention for up to a week without charge or trial.
Targeted individuals can be monitored night and day, have their
homes and computers searched, and be secretly hauled in for interrogation
without any opportunity to notify their families or the media.
Those detained need not be suspected of any terrorist activity
or sympathy. All that the government and its agencies have to
assert is that they may possess information relating to terrorismeven
if no terrorist act has occurred or even been planned.
Detainees can be forced to answer questions on pain of imprisonment
and now, if charged, police will be able to interrogate them for
a further 24 hours before facing court. These are the types of
measures usually associated with military or fascist dictatorships.
At the same time, the government is dramatically boosting the
size of the security and intelligence apparatus. Prime Minister
John Howard has pledged another $400 million to the federal police
and security agencies, declaring that he would give ASIO whatever
resources it requested. This domestic spying agency, infamous
for its monitoring and dirty tricks activities against government
opponents in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, during the Cold War and
the Vietnam war, already boasts a staff of 830larger than
ever before.
Other beneficiaries will include the overseas spy agency, the
Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS)whose budget
has already doubled under the Howard governmentand the Office
of National Assessments (ONA). ONA will be rewarded despite a
recent parliamentary report documenting its responsibility for
making false weapons of mass destruction claims in
the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq.
Last week, acting in concert with the state governments, federal
agencies staged a much-publicised five-day anti-terrorism
exercise across northern Australia, involving 3,000 military and
security personnel. This was the first of a series of exercises
designed to whip up security fears in the lead-up to the federal
election. Foreign Minister Alexander Downer then suddenly announced
a White Paper on terrorism, timed for release before the election,
declaring that it was necessary to combat creeping complacency
on the war on terrorism.
The Labor Party opposition has fallen immediately into line.
Labor leader Mark Latham welcomed the boost to intelligence spending,
while shadow attorney-general Robert McClelland said Labor was
very sympathetic to Ruddocks measures. Labor,
he said, would want to have a full array of powers when it formed
government. New South Wales Labor premier Bob Carr has vowed to
toughen the Terrorism (Police Powers) Act 2002, even though it
has not been used since it was adopted in the wake of the Bali
bombing. In Queensland, Labor premier Peter Beattie is giving
serious consideration to 50 Crime and Misconduct Commission
recommendations, which include allowing police to conduct covert
searches without warrants.
None of these provisions has anything to do with protecting
ordinary people against terrorism. New powers are being brought
forward endlessly, even though no one has been charged with a
terrorist crime under any of the post-September 11 measures.
In any case, no new laws were ever needed to deal with terrorism.
Every conceivable terrorist actincluding murder, hijacking,
kidnapping, bombing and arsonwas already a serious crime.
ASIO required no further powersit could already tap phones,
bug homes, intercept mail, hack into computers and infiltrate
organisations. The real purpose of these escalating powers is
to utilise the war on terror to introduce a far broader
agenda of repressive measures to deal in the coming period with
rising social and political discontent.
See Also:
Australian government gets
"carte blanche" to outlaw organisations
[10 March 2004]
New laws cloak ASIO
detentions in secrecy
[10 December 2003]
Unprecedented police-state
measures passed by Australian parliament
[1 July 2003]
Australian government
resumes push for detention without trial
[17 June 2003]
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