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New wave of police anti-terror raids in Australia
By Mike Head
30 June 2005
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Over the past week, Australian intelligence and police agencies
have conducted a highly-publicised series of raids on at least
10 homes and interrogated a dozen people in Melbourne and Sydney
on the pretext of combatting terrorism. Details have been deliberately
leaked to the Murdoch media, and splashed all over its front pages,
complete with pictures of one of the family homes.
The raids, the first major wave to be publicised since October
2003, appear to be a bid by the federal Howard government, together
with its state Labor counterparts in Victoria and New South Wales,
to revive the flagging war on terrorism and condition
public opinion to more frequent security operations in working
class suburbs.
Scores of heavily-armed Australian Federal Police and state
police officers took part in the operation, together with Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) agents. While they claimed
to have search and seizure warrants, they reportedly remained
in some homes for many hours, questioning the occupants without
any warrant to do so.
No charges have been laid, and unnamed police sources have
admitted to journalists that they have no evidence of terrorist
activity. Yet, the victims of the raids have been publicly identified
as Muslims, depicted as having unspecified extremist views
and accused of talking like mercenaries looking for a war.
One family of five was described as Lebanese, another individual
was said to be Algerian and others were simply labelled Middle
Eastern.
Encouraged by the leaks handed to them, media reporters besieged
one house, filmed and photographed people entering and leaving
it, attempted to interview them and questioned their neighbours.
Speaking to Murdochs Australian, a senior
federal source described the raids as rattling the
cages. In other words, their purpose was to terrify the
occupants of the houses, as well as other Muslims. No doubt the
aim was to rattle the wider public as well.
From the vague and flimsy allegations thrown around by anonymous
officials, it seems that the targets were people who worshipped
in certain mosques, expressed support for Islamic fundamentalist
activities overseas, went on camping trips and took photographs
of prominent buildings in Melbourne and Sydney.
These are not crimes. Freedom of religion, communication, association
and travel are basic democratic rights. But in the war on
terror, anyone can be characterised by the government and
the mainstream media as holding extremist views, including
socialists, antiwar activists and trade unionists.
While the sources of these accusations were not
named, they could only have come from the highest levels of the
federal and state security agencies and governments. Significantly,
Attorney-General Philip Ruddock, Prime Minister John Howard and
NSW Premier Bob Carr publicly defended the raids and joined in
the vilification of the targets.
Facing criticism from lawyers, civil liberties groups and Islamic
leaders, Ruddock denied that he was responsible for the leaks.
But he insisted that the raids, which he authorised personally,
concerned activities of the utmost seriousness. ASIO
and the police dont have time or resources to be playing
silly games in these matters, he told the media. Howard
said: Australians must understand, and I am sure they do,
that the government is very vigilant indeed about potential threats.
Carr was even more explicit. It is very, very important
that federal and state authorities work together to send a powerful
message that if you are mucking around with terrorists, or youve
got any reason to be suspected, you can anticipate being raided,
he said. As he has done repeatedly since 2001, Carr insinuated
that anyone under ASIO surveillance could be planning a terrorist
attack in Australia. We dont want a September 11 here,
he declared.
Like the previous major raids, in October 2002 and October
2003, the timing is not accidental. Whenever the Howard government
has faced political difficulties over the past four years, it
has cranked up the war on terror.
The October 2002 raids, carried out in the immediate aftermath
of the Bali bombings, were designed to utilise those outrages
to activate and overcome opposition to the sweeping counter-terrorism
laws introduced earlier that year. The October 2003 raids sought
to excite fears that Al Qaeda and Jemaah Islamiah terror
cells had been planted in Australias major cities,
justify ASIOs new detention powers, and lay the basis for
further legislation, which erected a wall of secrecy around ASIOs
activities.
As far as is known from the public record, none of these raids
has produced evidence leading to prosecutions, let alone convictions,
under the counter-terrorism legislation. The only prosecution
under the new laws that has gone to trialthat of Zeky Zak
Mallahwas thrown out by a jury three months ago. The lack
of success has made the Howard government and its state Labor
partners anxious to justify their measures.
The latest raids have occurred at the same time as a parliamentary
committee reviews the 2002 and 2003 counter-terrorism legislation,
which contains sunset clauses that will terminate
a number of measures unless parliament renews them by July 2006.
Many submissions to the committee have called for the repeal of
the powers.
Far from acceding to these demands, the government has three
further security bills before parliament to expand the powers
to carry out electronic eavesdropping and intercept telecommunications.
Noticeably, the sources that briefed the media on
the latest raids emphasised that they had been triggered by information
obtained via bugging and telephone intercepts.
Now that the government has the numbers in the Senate, it intends
to quickly push through the new laws, some of which have been
delayed since late last year. The Labor opposition is doing its
best to assist. Just before the raids, Ruddock welcomed the passage
of another far-reaching bill, noting that Labor had made a positive
contribution by proposing a useful amendment.
This particular legislation extends recently-introduced provisions
for secret evidence and closed-door court hearings, applying them
to civil actions as well as terrorist criminal trials.
It means that if anyone attempts to sue the government or ASIO
for exceeding or abusing their powers under the anti-terrorism
laws, Attorney-General Ruddock can apply to have vital evidence
withheld from the public or, in some circumstances, from the applicant.
As the latest raids demonstrate, the counter-terrorism laws
give ASIO and the police sweeping powers to storm into houses,
seize property and interrogate. Their targets do not have to be
suspected of any offence, just of having information
relevant to terrorism.
Those questioned or detained have no right to silence, and
must prove they do not have the information ASIO is looking for,
or face possible imprisonment for up to five years. Given that
terrorism is defined widely enough to cover many traditional forms
of political protest, this opens up a vast scope for official
victimisation and harassment.
Ruddock said the raids had been conducted under ASIO search
and seizure powers that have existed since 1979, not under the
questioning and detention provisions introduced in 2003. According
to the official statistics, ASIOs new questioning powers
have been used just eight times, and no-one has been detained.
But as the raids also illustrate, ASIO and police officers can
readily use the threat of these powers, and the blaze of media
publicity, to pressure people into agreeing to be questioned for
hours on end.
Whether the new powers are formally invoked or not, anyone
subjected to ASIOs attentions is prohibited from disclosing
any of the agencys operational information.
In effect, this gags them from making any public reply to the
allegations being thrown around in the media.
Raids condemned
Prominent lawyers, civil libertarians and Islamic groups expressed
outrage at the raids, charging the government with using totalitarian
measures. Liberty Victoria president Brian Walters, SC, called
for an investigation into whether Ruddock authorised the release
of information.
If so, who has he authorised and for what purpose and
on what terms, and why is any such disclosure not understood as
a gross abuse of office? he asked. If he hasnt
done that, are criminal charges to be laid for the disclosure
of this information, and if so, against whom?
I think demonising people who cant defend themselves
is the cowardly tactic of the totalitarian state, and quite contrary
to all our traditions of democracy. If there is any integrity
and genuineness to this investigation it would be kept confidential
or someone would be charged. In the absence of that, this is just
a McCarthyist witch-hunt.
Walters said the anti-terror laws were an assault on democracy.
Im concerned that under these laws, people who are
not suspected of any offence can be dragged into questioning for
up to 168 hours, gagged from telling others what theyve
undergone, their lawyers are similarly gagged and yet ASIO and
the (federal police) feel absolutely at liberty to publicly attack
them when they cant respond, he said. The laws
had not improved security one iota and should
be immediately repealed.
Islamic Council of Australia spokesman Waleed Aly said he was
dismayed that a senior federal source had said ASIO was using
the raids to rattle the cages of suspects when
they did not have enough evidence to lay charges. Its
very concerning to me that these draconian powers could be used
simply to rattle cages, he said.
An Islamic cleric, Sheik Mohammed Omran, rejected the suggestion
that his inner suburban mosque was being used to recruit terrorists.
He said the raids were politically-motivated and aimed at boosting
support for the anti-terrorist laws. Former Liberal Prime Minister
Malcolm Fraser called for the repeal of the laws that gag suspects
from disclosing that they have been questioned and those that
permit the detention of people simply because ASIO thinks they
have terrorism-related information. He said the Howard government
had frightened the Australian community about the prospect
of terrorist attacks and therefore anyone who opposes those measures
is seen to be soft on terrorism.
Fraser went on to condemn Labor for supporting the powers.
They werent prepared to stand up and so you had the
major parties all in support and that, to me, makes it all the
more a disgrace.
See Also:
Jury throws out charges in
first Australian terrorist trial
[25 April 2005]
Australia: more sensational
terror cell claims: but where is the evidence?
[4 November 2003]
Violent police
raids in Sydney and Perth
Bali bombing used to activate repressive laws in Australia
[31 October 2002]
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