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Australias first terrorist charges: timed
for Howards election campaign
By Mike Head
4 May 2004
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While Australian Prime Minister John Howard has yet to set
a date for the federal election due later year, his campaign has
already begun. Like the 2001 election, it is centred on diverting
deep popular opposition to the governments economic and
social policies into fears about imminent terror attacks. With
the Iraq invasion unravelling, Howard needs some concrete evidence
of terrorist threats to justify his governments participation
in the US-led war.
Over the past two weeks government ministers have publicly
praised the federal police and intelligence agencies for arresting
two Muslim men under Howards far-reaching anti-terrorism
laws, introduced in 2002. In the first arrests under this legislation,
and in violation of all legal and democratic principlesincluding
the presumption of innocencethe two men have been depicted
as key members of a major Al Qaeda terror cell that
was preparing a serious, yet unspecified, atrocity in Australia.
The timing of the arrests, combined with the flimsy nature
of the accusations, points to the charges being orchestrated for
electoral purposes.
Student depicted as hardened terrorist
The first to be arrested by the Australian Federal Police,
on April 15, was a 21-year-old Sydney medical student Izhar ul-Haque.
He was charged with receiving training from an alleged terrorist
organisation, Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), during a visit to Pakistan,
his country of birth, early last year. If convicted, he could
be jailed for 25 years.
Amid a blaze of publicity, he was immediately consigned to
solitary confinement in a maximum security prison cell. Within
an hour of the arrest, Attorney-General Philip Ruddock called
a media conference to trumpet it as part of a wider investigation
in which the Commonwealth is involved. The clear implication
was that ul-Haque was at the centre of a terrorist network.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer went on national television
to declare that ul-Haque had terrorist linkages, that is
for sure. Downer claimed that because ul-Haque had been
charged, there obviously is information in relation to him.
Ul-Haque was not even accused of preparing any terrorist act,
but Downer added: This is exactly what the Federal Police
should be doing, making absolutely sure that people are properly
protected in this country.
At the time ul-Haque travelled to Pakistan, LeTwhich
is an Islamic group fighting against Indian control of Kashmirwas
not listed as a terrorist group. The Howard government outlawed
the organisation last December, laying the basis for what amounts
to a retrospective prosecution. It did so using new powers to
ban groups by executive fiat, without prior parliamentary scrutiny.
In order to convict the young man, the prosecution will cite the
governments subsequent proscription as evidence that LeT
was terrorist at the time of ul-Haques visit.
Under the governments draconian legislation, it does
not have to prove that ul-Haque had any criminal intent, or even
knew that LeT was a terrorist organisation, let alone that he
intended to commit any terrorist act in Australia, or anywhere
else. He can be convicted simply for being reckless
as to whether LeT was a terrorist organisation. This provision
law overturns the centuries-old principle that serious offences
require a criminal mind (mens rea).
Moreover, the definition of terrorism is so vague
and sweeping that it covers many traditional forms of political
opposition. Any group that seeks to coerce or intimidate
a government for a political, religious or ideological cause,
and endangers public health or safety can be classified
as terrorist. This definition can easily be stretched to include
the LeT, or any national resistance movement.
Ul-Haques family insists that the charge is absolutely
baseless. In a statement to the media, they described ul-Haque
as a compassionate, hard-working and honest student
who had gone to Pakistan to attend his brothers engagement.
After cooperating fully with the AFPs investigations for
months, he was being made a scapegoat, they insisted, to justify
the police efforts, which had hopelessly failed to find
any link between himself and any terrorist activity.
In court this weektwo weeks after his arrestthe
prosecution conceded that ul-Haque was not planning any terrorist
act in Australia. From the few details that the Crown provided,
it seems that the only firm evidence against the young man consists
of entries in his diary describing training in a camp in Pakistan.
Customs officials seized the diary from his luggage on his return
to Australia in February 2003, and handed it to the Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO).
This revelation raises two questions. First, if ul-Haque genuinely
had been training for terrorism, why would he have carried such
details in his luggage? Second, why has he been arrested now,
when the information against him is more than a year old?
Even according to the quotes from his diary produced in court,
the picture emerges of a young man who became disillusioned with
life in Australia, including personal experiences of racism, and
was attracted to LeTs cause in Kashmir. After undertaking
a 20-day course, he decided to return to Australia to continue
his medical studies. I only support the fighting of those
Indian soldiers, he reportedly wrote. If LeT kill
civilians I seriously dont believe in it. I am not that
sort of person.
Ul-Haques supporters described the LeT training course
as more like an introductory school, where prayer and philosophy
were explored. But the media has shown grossly misleading images
of masked men brandishing guns.
Ul-Haque clearly enjoys the respect of a wide range of fellow
students and others who have known him since childhood. During
this weeks two-hour application for bail, the court heard
testimonials from his high school principal, a school careers
adviser and family members. A petition from 130 university students,
including 80 from the University of New South Wales medical faculty,
was tendered. His brother offered surety of $120,000 for his release
and said their mother was prepared to mortgage the familys
home.
Despite the evidence that ul-Haque presented a danger to no
one, the magistrate refused bail. This means that he will remain
in the Supermax jail at Goulburn, 200 kilometres south of Sydney,
for many months until his trial commences.
Ul-Haques counsel, Ian Barker QC, told reporters it was
an absolute scandal that his client was being kept
in solitary confinement, describing it as a federal government
political stunt to say look at us, look how tough we are.
The lawyer called the detention our version of Guantanamo
Bay.
Architect named as terrorist mastermind
A week after ul-Haques arrest, police detained a 34-year-old
Sydney architect, Khalid Lodhi. Like ul-Haque, he had been under
police and ASIO questioning and surveillance for many months,
and the charges against himseven in alldo not appear
to be based on any new information.
The chief allegation is that he attempted to recruit ul-Haque
and others to LeT between March 2001 and April 2003, while being
reckless as to whether LeT was a terrorist organisation.
This charge also dates back to well before LeT was listed as a
terrorist group, and is designed to convict Lodhi without proving
any criminal intent.
Lodhi is further charged with committing an act in preparation
for a terrorist attack and recklessly making documents
to facilitate a terrorist act. Police told the court that Lodhi
planned to bomb a major infrastructure facilitylater
said by Attorney-General Ruddock to be the national electricity
grid. If convicted on this charge, Lodhi faces life imprisonment.
Lodhi is accused of using a false order form, under an assumed
name, to request maps of the grid from the Electricity Suppliers
Association. The police fact sheet also alleges that he dumped
maps of military installations, including the Holsworthy army
base, in a park rubbish bin near his home. He is further accused
of faxing an inquiry to a chemical company about purchasing urea
nitratea fertiliserusing a false company name, and
of using a false name to obtain a mobile phone number. According
to the police, Lodhi told ASIO he meant to send the chemicals
to his familys tanning business in Pakistan.
Sensational headlines such as the Australians
Plot to bomb power grid greeted these charges. However,
a number of experts, including Brad Page, the chief executive
of the Energy Supply Association of Australia, said it would be
impossible to blackout the grid by bombing any part of it. The
grid is a very extensive network of wires and generators, starting
in Cairns and running right down the coast and around to Adelaide,
and so the notion of bombing the grid per se, is a little hard
to believe, Page told Australian Broadcasting Corporation
radio.
Months before his arrest, ASIO secretly installed a tracking
device on Lodhis computer at his workplace, a Sydney architecture
firm. He reportedly accessed a government planning website to
obtain satellite images of city buildings and transport infrastructure.
But this is hardly a crimethe website, called iplan, is
publicly available in order to facilitate the work of urban planners,
architects and others.
Various media outlets, notably the main Fairfax newspapers,
the Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, have labelled
Lodhi the alleged mastermind of a major bombing plot,
which supposedly included French citizen Willie Brigitte, who
was deported from Australia on visa violation charges last October.
By doing so, they have also implicated ul-Haque, Lodhis
supposed recruit, in the alleged conspiracy.
Without any independent corroboration, the newspapers have
quoted supposed admissions by Brigitte, who has been detained
and interrogated in France since he left Australia. French law
has permitted the authorities to imprison Brigitte without trial
on a vaguely-worded catch-all charge of associating with
a group with a view to preparing an act of terrorism.
Brigitte is said to have told a French anti-terrorist judge
last year: The LeT group based in Sydney, and formed around
Abu Hamza [said to be Lodhi], was preparing a large-scale terrorist
act in Australia. The only source for this quote appears
to be the Australian police.
Ruddock has stoked these speculations by insinuating that both
Lodhis and ul-Haques arrests are related to a possible
terrorist ring linked to Brigitte. When Brigitte was identified
and removed from Australia it was very clear that he had been
undertaking some endeavour in Australia [that] was of very real
and substantial concern, he told the Seven television network.
Brigitte and his lawyers have continued to insist upon his
innocence. He never participated in any way in a terrorist
act, not in the preparation for a terrorist act, simply as that,
his French lawyer, Jean-Claude Durimal told the Four Corners program
in February.
When Brigitte was removed from Australia last year, Ruddock
and the media declared that a terror cell had been
smashed, yet the very fact that he was quickly deported on visa
charges without even being detained or questioned by ASIO suggests
that no real evidence existed against him. [see More
sensational terror cell claims: but where is the evidence?,
4 November 2003]
Lodhis lawyer, Stephen Hopper, stated that the biased
media coverage could jeopardise his clients right to a fair
trial. Hopper said it would be difficult to find jurors who did
not already believe that Lodhi was a terrorist. No jury
can be empanelled who hasnt been exposed to all sorts of
deliberation about allegations, he told the Sydney Morning
Herald.
A political witchhunt
By traditional legal standards, both the media and the government
are guilty of subjudice, or contempt of court. In other words,
they have improperly prejudiced any trial of Lodhi, and the same
applies to ul-Haque. Moreover, since the trials are unlikely to
be convened before the federal election, the government clearly
hopes it will escape any political fallout from aborted trials,
or acquittals.
A similarly cynical exercise was carried out last month in
Britain. Amid blazing media headlines, the Blair government orchestrated
mass arrests of Islamic men across northern England, on the pretext
of investigating terrorism. Weeks later, the detainees were quietly
released without charges, without any accompanying media hype.
The governments political purpose had already been achieved:
to whip up fears of terrorism in order to justify the war on Iraq
and continuing attacks on democratic rights at home.
In Australia, Howard has yet another motive: to stem the eruption
of opposition from within the security and military agencies to
his governments repeated manipulation of intelligence material
for political purposes. One of many revelations in recent weeks
was a Rand Corporation report accusing ASIO of withholding information
from the AFP. Ruddocks official web site currently features
a radio interview in which the attorney-general boasted that Lodhis
arrest had put this claim clearly to bed.
As usual, the Labor Party opposition has unconditionally backed
the Howard governments witchhunt. Shadow attorney-general
Robert McClelland welcomed ul-Haques arrest as the first
use of the new counter-terrorism laws, which Labor helped enact.
Theres no point having legislation if the law enforcement
authorities arent prepared to apply it, he said.
Without access to the evidence, it is impossible for the World
Socialist Web Site to judge with any certainty the allegations
against ul-Haque and Lodhi. One thing is certain, however. The
Howard government will extract the maximum political mileage out
of the arrests, and more are likely to follow throughout the election
campaign.
Against this backdrop, longstanding legal norms and basic democratic
rights are being overturned. With Labors support, Ruddock
has already outlawed another organisationthe Palestinian
Islamic Jihad. He is introducing new consorting laws
to make it a serious offence to even associate with a terrorist
suspect, and establishing closed-door trials for terrorist offences.
If there is a real danger of terrorist attacks on ordinary
people in Australia, the Howard government is to blame. By participating
in the illegal and brutal war on Iraq, unconditionally aligning
itself with the Bush administrations global militarism and
adopting Bushs pre-emptive strike doctrine to
mount neo-colonial interventions of its own, the government has
fuelled deep disillusionment, resentments and hostilities that
will undoubtedly provide terrorist outfits with new recruits.
See Also:
Australian government uses
Madrid bombings to justify further police-state powers
[7 April 2004]
Australian government gets
carte blanche to outlaw organisations
[10 March 2004]
Arrest of Zak Mallah:
test case for Australias anti-terror laws
[17 December 2003]
Australia: More sensational
terror cell claims: but where is the evidence?
[4 November 2003]
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