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WSWS : News
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Jury throws out charges in first Australian terrorist
trial
By Mike Head
25 April 2005
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In the first real test of the Howard governments barrage
of anti-terrorism laws, a Sydney jury this month threw out charges
laid against a young unemployed worker, Zeky Zak Mallah.
After a 13-day trial, Mallah, 21, was found not guilty of preparing
to storm government offices and shoot dead intelligence or foreign
affairs officers in a supposed suicide mission.
The New South Wales Supreme Court jury accepted the young mans
testimony, and the argument of his lawyers, that he had made false
threats of violence in a bid to gain media publicity. His aim,
Mallah told the court, had been to highlight his harassment and
denial of basic rights by the federal government and the Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO).
During the trial, Mallahs barrister, Phillip Boulten
SC, pointed out that his clients bizarre plan
could never have worked. Mallah had carried out no reconnaissance
of the buildings he had threatened to blow up, and the rifle he
had bought was unsuitable, due to its length.
The jurys decision is another setback for the Howard
government, which orchestrated the highly dubious prosecution
in the lead-up to the October 2004 federal election. Last July,
just three months before the election, Mallah became the first
person to be committed for trial under the counter-terrorism
legislation adopted in 2002. Nine months later, he was the first
to be acquitted.
The outcome also constitutes an indictment of the many media
outlets that assisted the government by providing sensational
and uncritical coverage of the police case. Rupert Murdochs
Daily Telegraph last year, for example, described Mallahs
activities as a chilling plot.
Mallahs acquittal also exposes the frame-up methods employed
by the New South Wales police, which conducted a dirty undercover
operation against the young man. The police were acting on behalf
of the state Labor government, which has repeatedly sought to
outdo the federal government in stoking fears of terrorism.
Together with ASIO, the state police conducted a classic entrapment
campaign. A detective posed as a journalist to lure Mallah into
making violent threats by offering $3,000 for his story. The jury
rejected the charge that Mallah had prepared to commit a
terrorist act by attempting to sell a videotape, a three-page
statement and photographs to the police spy. In the material,
Mallah denounced ASIO and the Foreign Affairs Department for seizing
his passport in 2002 and vowed to seek revenge.
The jury also dismissed a second charge of preparing a terrorist
act, simply on the grounds that Mallah had bought a .22 calibre
rifle and 97 rounds of ammunition. Mallah testified that he bought
the rifle for protection after his home was broken into.
If Mallah had been found guilty of either charge, he could
have faced life imprisonment. Under section 101.6 of the Criminal
Codeone of the vague anti-terrorism measures
introduced by the Howard government with bipartisan support from
the opposition Labor Partyanyone can be jailed for life
for doing any act in preparation for, or planning a terrorist
act, even if no terrorist act actually occurs. Section 100.1
of the Code also defines terrorist act to include
making a threat of action.
Even though the jury concluded that Mallahs threats to
maim officials were not serious, the presiding judge, Justice
James Wood, last week sentenced Mallah to 30 months imprisonment,
after Mallah pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of making a threat
against a Commonwealth officer. His lawyers originally offered
the Director of Public Prosecutions a deal, whereby Mallah would
plead guilty to this offence, in return for the dropping of what
was initially a single terrorism charge. But the prosecuting authorities
were so determined to proceed with a terrorism trial
that they not only rejected the offer, but added the threat
charge, and the second count of preparing for terrorism.
Justice Wood imposed the heavy sentence, despite acknowledging
that Mallah had been led on by the media. Wood said it was regrettable
that the Daily Telegraph and another Murdoch paper, the
Australian, together with the Nine television network and
radio networks had given Mallah an entirely undeserved and
unnecessary exposure, encouraging his imagination to run
wild. The attention also risked heightening public concerns about
terrorist activity and inflaming divisive and discriminatory views,
the judge said.
With parole, Mallah may be released in September this year
on a two-year good behaviour bond. He has already spent 16 months
in jail, mostly in solitary confinement. For much of the time
he has been locked in a cell for 23 hours a day, denied contact
visits and brought to court hearings in shackles.
A protracted government-police operation
Mallah, an orphaned child from an Islamic background, was only
18 when the police-ASIO operation against him began in early 2002.
First, he was interrogated by ASIO without any legal representation.
Next, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer cancelled his passport
because he might prejudice the security of Australia or
of a foreign country.
Then, the government refused to give any reasons for stripping
him of his basic democratic right to travel, which prevented him
from travelling to Lebanon to meet relatives and his intended
bride. Finally, when Mallah challenged the passport decision in
the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, the hearing was held behind
closed doors. Mallah and his lawyer were even denied access to
key government evidence.
Mallah set about protesting this injustice by conducting a
series of media interviews, against the advice of his lawyer.
The undercover detective was not the only media representative
that Mallah approached. In November 2003, for instance, the Weekend
Australian quoted from a letter by Mallah, declaring a vague
personal jihad against ASIO. Mallahs publicity-seeking
was hardly the conduct of a terrorist. If he were genuinely preparing
a violent assault, he would not have sought to advertise it in
advance.
When Mallah took the stand in his own defence he spoke of political
motives. The government, ASIO and the police have ruined
my life, he told the court. I set myself up on terrorism
charges on purpose. I would get publicity to get my point of view
across.
Notwithstanding the governments failure to gain a terrorism
conviction, several dangerous precedents have been set in the
Mallah case. During the pre-trial proceedings earlier this year,
Justice Wood rejected a defence application to disallow the evidence
gathered illegally and improperly by the undercover detective.
Australian criminal law does not prohibit the use of incriminating
material gathered through entrapment. But the Evidence Act gives
judges a discretion to exclude it. Wood, however, ruled that the
so-called public interest in securing a conviction
outweighed Mallahs unlawful and unfair treatment.
The judge also granted non-publication orders to bar the media
from reporting aspects of the case relating to the undercover
police officer, although the jury was not told of these orders.
Thus, there was a partial suppression of public information about
the methods used against Mallah. The prosecution did not, however,
apply to utilise the Howard governments legislation passed
late last year, again with Labors backing, to permit secret
sessions in terrorist trials.
As soon as Mallah was acquitted, Attorney-General Philip Ruddocks
spokesman said he would consider making legal changes. Even before
the verdict was known, senior police and ASIO officials, including
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty, began agitating
for measures to ensure future convictions. One proposal was the
introduction of special terrorist courts. These would be based
on the French model, which allows judges to detain and interrogate
suspects for up to two years. Such courts would violate the Australian
Constitution, which requires jury trials for serious offences.
In an attempt to whip up new terrorist hysteria,
ASIO director-general Dennis Richardson claimed that only 10 percent
of those involved with Al Qaeda, Jemaah Islamiah and other terrorist
groups in Australia would ever face court because of the difficulties
in obtaining convictions. It was often impossible for Australian
authorities to obtain sufficient evidence to meet proper
legal standards, he claimed.
Richardson declared that his agency would use its vast powers
of surveillance, bugging and secret detentions and interrogations
against anyone it considered a valid target, even if they had
committed no offence. Through the ASIO Act, the Australian
parliament has recognised that it is possible for someone to pose
a threat to security without necessarily being in breach of the
law, he told an international law conference.
Richardson offered no evidence for his alarmist scenario of
large numbers of terrorists remaining free. Only six
peopleall Muslim menhave been charged under the terrorism
laws, and so far just one has been convicted. Jack Roche last
year pleaded guilty to plotting to bomb the Israeli embassy and
was imprisoned for nine years. Roche revealed that he had cooperated
with ASIO for a considerable period before being prosecuted.
Four other individuals still face trial. Two of themSydney
student Izhar ul-Haque and Melbourne worker Jack Thomashave
been released on bail, in the face of strenuous prosecution objections,
because the presiding judges ruled they posed no actual threat
to the community.
Regardless of these embarrassing setbacks, the Howard government,
its Labor counterparts and the security agencies, along with their
accomplices in the media, are intent on pursuing the war
on terrorism as a means of eroding and overturning long-held
legal and democratic rights.
See Also:
Arrest of Zak Mallah:
test case for Australia's anti-terror laws
[17 December 2003]
Australian secret
police withhold young worker's passport
[1 July 2002]
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