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Australia: Refugee detained for two years on false intelligence
By Mike Head
25 November 2004
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It was reported this month that the Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation (ASIO) was belatedly forced to pay about $200,000
compensation to a refugee it falsely classified a national security
risk, causing him to be detained without trial for nearly two
years. Nearly five years after being finally set free in late
1999, the traumatised Kuwaiti man obtained the paymenthardly
sufficient to make up for his wrongful imprisonmentonly
through the strenuous efforts of lawyers.
The entire saga is another indictment of the police state-style
powers that the Howard government has given its security and intelligence
agencies, including ASIO. The asylum seekers ordeal illustrates
how these agencies operate in complete secrecy and with total
legal impunity. It also highlights the draconian character of
Australias refugee detention regime, which not only automatically
locks up all asylum seekers for many months but also hands the
government extraordinary powers to selectively incarcerate political
refugees on the flimsiest pretexts.
Not surprisingly, the person directly responsible was former
immigration minister Philip Ruddock. He denied the manwho
now wishes to be identified only as Mohammeda protection
visa on ASIOs advice. Ruddock is currently Attorney-General,
in charge of implementing the even greater powers afforded to
ASIO and other agencies since 2001 in the name of fighting terrorism.
Mohammeds story finally came to light in the Melbourne
Age on November 10. He arrived in Australia seeking asylum
in early 1997, and was initially found eligible for refugee status
by Ruddocks immigration department, subject to an ASIO security
check. He had been living in Kuwait when Iraq invaded it in August
1990. In May 1991, he was arrested by the Kuwaiti monarchys
police and later deported to Iraq. Eventually he fled to Australia
via Jordan and Syria.
However he remained in Melbournes Maribyrnong detention
centre for two years because ASIO classified him as directly
a risk to Australian national security. He was released
and granted a protection visa only after ASIO admitted that its
security assessment was based solely on unverified information
provided by the secret police who persecuted him. An ASIO internal
review found that the country involved has been assessed
as having a poor human rights record.
Anonymous intelligence sources told the Age that the
information came from the Kuwaiti intelligence, but a report on
the case by a Brisbane law firm said the Iraqi secret police of
Saddam Husseins Baathist regime were responsible. Whichever
version is true, it is clear that through ASIO, Canberra has maintained
intimate working relations with repressive governments that are,
or were, regarded as allies.
For two years, ASIO blocked Mohammeds efforts to appeal
against its security assessment in Australian tribunals and courts,
insisting that to reveal the source and nature of the information
to his lawyers would jeopardise its relationship with a foreign
intelligence agency.
In August 1998, after four months of hearings and procedural
manoeuvres in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, ASIO appealed
to the Federal Court against the tribunals ruling that part
of its security assessment be released to Mohammed. The tribunal
directed that two key paragraphs of the assessment be amended
or kept confidential in order to keep secret the source of the
information. But ASIO objected to anything being released that
could indicate the thrust of the allegations.
Mohammed filed a cross-appeal, arguing that he had been denied
procedural fairness by not being given access to the evidence
and a proper hearing necessary to challenge the security assessment.
He also said the tribunal had failed to adequately consider the
public interest issues at stake.
When the case got to the Federal Court in December 1998, lawyers
for the Director-General of Security told Justice Ross Sundberg
that ASIO had received a written response from the overseas
agency refusing to agree to the disclosure of the material.
Ruddock, as immigration minister, joined the case on ASIOs
side.
In an extraordinary judgment, Sundberg accepted ASIOs
contention that the tribunal had no jurisdiction to review a visa
decision based on an adverse security assessment by the
competent Australian authorities, that is, ASIO. As long
as the immigration minister was satisfied that an
adverse security assessment existed, the tribunal could not review
that assessment.
In effect, the judge ruled that ASIO was above the lawthat
its security reports could not be questioned by the tribunal that
hears appeals against the denial of visas on bad character
grounds.
Not only that, the judge ordered that Mohammeds application
to the tribunal be dismissed as frivolous or vexatious
and ordered Mohammed to pay the legal costs of ASIO and the minister,
which would have amounted to many thousands of dollars.
Sundbergs ruling, while particularly blatant, was in
line with the approach consistently taken by the Australian High
Court. While denying that ASIO is beyond judicial scrutiny, it
has refused to call into question ASIOs assessment of what
constitutes a threat to security. In the best known example, in
1982 the court rejected an attempt by the Church of Scientology
to challenge ASIOs assessment that the church presented
a possible threat to security.
Official inquiries
As a last resort, Mohammeds lawyer complained to the
Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security, a small agency
in the prime ministers department that is meant to scrutinise
the operations of ASIO and the rest of the spy network. By this
stage, it seems that the lawyer had become aware of the dubious
source of the allegations against Mohammed. If the identity of
the foreign police involvedwhether Iraqi or Kuwaitihad
become known publicly, it would have proven highly embarrassing
for ASIO and Ruddock.
Once Inspector-General Bill Blick decided to launch an investigation,
ASIO quickly withdrew its claim that Mohammed was a security risk.
An internal ASIO review, later quoted by Blick in his 1999-2000
annual report, discovered substantive defects in the assessment
process.
According to the internal review, the advice received from
the overseas agency had been internally inconsistent
and ASIO had taken no action to corroborate its allegations. Furthermore,
ASIO had no reasonable grounds to disbelieve Mohammed, and had
failed to give him any opportunity to refute the allegations.
Blick found that ASIO had breached its guidelines by accepting
the foreign services version of events without corroboration
or serious question. As a result, Mohammed had been denied
a protection visa for about 18 months after the date on which
he would probably have been granted one. Blick therefore recommended
that Mohammed be compensated.
Despite these damning reports, listing extremely serious breaches
of basic rights, ASIO stalled the compensation until earlier this
year. And it is continuing to do everything possible to cover-up
its abuses. Mohammeds case was not mentioned in ASIOs
annual report, released this month. When an Age reporter
asked for an explanation, a spokeswoman for ASIO Director-General
Dennis Richardson replied: The director-general does not
wish to comment on your questions.
Refugee advocates have made the obvious point that by relying
on information supplied by foreign agencies, ASIO can only assist
the regimes from which asylum seekers are fleeing. Independent
Council for Refugee Advocacy president Marion Le observed: Many
people are fleeing torture and political oppression in their own
country. It stands to reason that the governments will then provide
information to assist the Australians handing them over if they
want them back for any reason.
Ruddock, however, has defended ASIO. He insisted that its systems
were not flawed and claimed that the complaints procedure was
functioning as it should. Only one defective security assessment
had been identified among tens of thousands, he argued.
The reason we have the Inspector-General of Intelligence
and Security is to enable people who have complaints to be able
to bring them forward and have them investigated, he said.
It apparently matters little that Mohammed and his lawyers
fought unsuccessfully against ASIO and Ruddock himself for two
years in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and the Federal Court.
Nor that it took a further five years for Mohammed to be partially
compensated for his unlawful incarceration. According to the Age,
Mohammed has been left severely distressed and concerned for his
security.
Moreover, Mohammeds ordeal is almost certainly the tip
of a large iceberg. As Ruddock stated, ASIO conducts thousands
of security assessments every year. They cover not only asylum
seekers but all migration visa applicants, as well as public service
appointees and people seeking various government licences. Acting
on ASIOs advice, the foreign minister can strip citizens
of their passportsa power that has been used against a number
of Muslim men in the past year.
Selective victimisation of refugees by ASIO and its predecessor
agencies has a long history in Australia. In his 1989 book Sanctuary!
Nazi Fugitives in Australia, Mark Aarons documented how Australian
authorities had allowed between 150 and 200 Nazi collaborators
into the country in the late 1940s and 1950s and that a number
had occupied influential posts in displaced persons camps and
migrant centres. Their work consisted of helping other ex-Nazis
to enter Australia, while ensuring that left-wing migrants were
deported.
These powers, like every other aspect of ASIOs activities,
have been extended relentlessly over the past three years as part
of the war on terrorism. Now that ASIO has the right
to detain and interrogate anyone without charge or trial, simply
because they might have information relevant to terrorism, it
can even object to detainees lawyers on security grounds.
Far from curtailing ASIOs powers in the light of Mohammeds
treatment, Ruddock has moved swiftly since the governments
election victory to expand their scope. As soon as parliament
resumed this month, he introduced National Security Information
Bills that will allow courts, on request from ASIO and the government,
to conduct terrorism, espionage, treason and other national
security trials behind closed doors.
The bills will allow ASIO to deny security clearances to lawyers,
excluding them from secret sessions, and possibly forcing accused
people to appear unrepresented.
On the same day, Ruddock produced another bill to amend the
ASIO Act to widen the agencys ability to undertake security
assessments as part of a new national licensing regime for regulating
access to explosive and hazardous materials.
Since its establishment in 1949, ASIO has been used by successive
governments, Labor and conservative alike, to monitor, disrupt
and harass a wide range of political opponents, including Labor
Party members, trade unionists, anti-war activists, students and
socialists.1
Under the banner of the war on terrorism these
operations are being legitimised and deepened. As is often the
case, the most vulnerable members of societysuch as asylum
seekershave been selected as the initial targets for measures
that are designed to be used more broadly against those expressing
political dissent. The reprehensible detention of Mohammed, and
the contemptuous response of Ruddock and ASIO to its exposure,
is another warning of the methods being prepared for future use.
See Also:
Australian government uses
Madrid bombings to justify further police-state powers
[7 April 2004]
ASIO Terrorism
Act
Unprecedented police-state measures passed by Australian parliament
[1 July 2003]
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