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Anger mounts over Australias anti-terror laws
By Richard Phillips
10 November 2005
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The tabling of the Howard governments draconian Anti-Terrorism
Bill 2005 in federal parliament last week and the passage of a
special amendment providing additional sweeping police powers,
followed early this week by dawn raids and the arrest of 17 Islamists,
has produced a wave of popular opposition throughout Australia.
Thousands of ordinary people are rightly concerned about the
deeply anti-democratic character of these measures. Under conditions
where the Labor Party has backed the laws and the Australian Democrats
and Greens have joined with the Laborites in the Senate to pass
the governments emergency anti-terror amendments, one of
the few outlets for this popular concern has been in the letter
pages of the daily media.
The past two weeks have seen an avalanche of letters bitterly
attacking the governments anti-terror laws and Labors
support for them. Writers from across the countryrural areas
and urban middle and working class suburbs alikehave poured
scorn on the Howard government and correctly warned that the new
laws have nothing to do with stopping terrorism, but are aimed
at establishing the basis for a police state.
One writer to Melbournes Herald Sun, for example,
warned on October 22 that Australia stood at the cusp of
a dire new phase in its history and called on people to
resist a new regime of tyranny.
I do not want to live in a police state and that is exactly
what we will become if police are able to jail, tag with electronic
bracelets and restrict the activities of people all without laying
a single charge.
Many writers pointed out that the anti-terror laws would
have little or no effect against terrorism and be used to
illegalise genuine anti-government opposition and make Australia
a one-party state. A Sydney Morning Herald
letter writer declared: The new sedition laws dont
prevent terrorism; they prevent free speechthe right to
beg to differ and think for oneself (qualities that only tyrants
fear). To approve of such laws is to hate democracy.
An Oakleigh South writer to the Melbourne Age warned
that the secrecy provisions in the anti-terror laws were extremely
dangerous.
Only a government afraid of revealing mistakes made in
the operation of these laws, or one seeing possible value in their
misuse, would insist that the detentions they provide for be kept
secret.... As those who lived under South Africas apartheid
regime have pointed out, the laws that the Howard Government is
proposing pave the way for a police state.
The indefinite and secret detention of individuals who have
incurred the suspicion of ASIO or the police, another writer to
the Age explained, would allow intelligence organisations
to remove permanentlyto disappear in the Chilean
or Argentinean senseanyone they dislike. Nor is it unlikely
that this would happen here. Pinochet had many vocal supporters
among members of the parliamentary Liberal Party.
In the Melbourne Herald Sun letters page John Fraser
said that, preventive detention was the most
frightening law ever suggested by an Australian government.
The first question we must ask, he continued, is
why? What reason could any government agency have
for imprisoning people in secret without even their families knowing?
There is only one answer that comes to my mind. Once
a person is locked up in secret, the Government can do anything
it likes to that person. They can coerce that person into agreeing
to, or confessing to, anything they want. Once accountability
is removed from law enforcement, people can be, and will be, abused.
We must all act quickly to stop these proposals from becoming
law.
Many writers referred to military dictatorships in Chile and
Argentina or South Africa under apartheid. Other comparisons were
made with the Reichstag fire in Berlin, which was used by Hitler
as a pretext for the Nazis to establish their dictatorship.
In an October 26 letter to the Sydney Morning Herald
Andrew Partos wrote: No sooner did Hitlers army invade
Hungary in March 1944 than my father, as part of the democratic
intelligentsia, was arrested by the SS. But we were still allowed
to tell one and all what happened to us. With the planned laws,
if ASIO arrests me due to my anti-Howard views my family will
not be allowed to tell anyone. Goodbye free speech.
A former South African citizen noted: In my childhood,
I couldnt follow politics because the newspapers were censored.
I have the vaguest of memories of adults talking in hushed tones
about 90 days and 180 days when, with one simple amendment, the
statutory period of detention was increased. I have never been
back to South Africa. And now, whether I want to or not, John
Howard is taking me there.
Numerous letter writers denounced the legislations shoot
to kill policy and referred to the cold-blooded murder of
Jean Charles de Menezes, the Brazilian worker executed by London
police in the aftermath of the July 7 terror bombings.
A Sydney Morning Herald letter remarked: As this
arrogant Federal Government is only too aware, a fearful population
is easier to rule than a defiant one.... I am not as fearful of
terrorist attacks as I am of this Governments lies, deception,
scare tactics and ill-conceived policies.
Another letter stated: John Howard is right. Terrorism
surrounds us: the terror of the growing inequality between Aboriginal
and white society; the terror of poverty, and prejudice against
minority groups; of the displaced, of the alienated, homeless,
and the indefinitely detained; of the elements; of the deterioration
in public utilities and essential services; of the decline in
the quality of leadership; of government mismanagement; of the
Governments proposed workplace changes. Last, but not least,
we face the terror of government by stealth, deception and self-
interest.
Numerous letters made clear that the danger of terror attacks
was created by Australias participation in the US-led invasion
of Iraq. One angrily described Howard as a snake oil salesman.
He begins by poking a stick in a nearby hornets nest.
Then, when the hornets are buzzing around, he does his best to
kill the hornets with smoke bombs. Naturally, this makes them
even madder.
Once the local populace is terrified of the hornets,
he kindly offers to sell the locals an insurance policy which
necessitates the populace staying indoors, well-protected by screen
doors and metal shutters.
Terror threat claims
As opposition grew against the new laws last week, Howard claimed
that he had received intelligence of a possible terrorist attack
and, with backing from Labor, the Australian Democrats and the
Greens, had amendments to the existing legislation rushed through
an emergency Senate sitting. The alleged attack was clearly designed
to create fear and panic and silence opponents of the anti-terror
laws (see Unanswered questions
about Australias terrorist alert).
Oppositional letters, however, become even more scathing, with
writers pointing out the governments record of lies, subterfuge
and scare mongering on a range of issues. One described the intelligence
warning as a con-job and that the government could
not be trusted on any issue, another bluntly condemned it as a
farcical addition to a litany of lies. Others openly suggested
that the government would probably be involved orchestrating any
future attack.
As one letter writer to the Sydney Morning Herald commented
on November 4: Im quite positive there will be a terrorist
attack in Australia. The sad thing is now, after all the recent
coincidences, one of my first thoughts will be: Did
the Government have a hand in this?
I hate to say it, but Ive reached the stage where
if a politician were to say the sky is blue, I would
go out and check it before I even thought of believing it was
true.
Howard was described in one letter as the most untrustworthy
prime minister of recent history and leading the country
into the hysteria of a security state. A one-sentence
letter to the Sydney Morning Herald stated: I have
two positives to say about the latest terrorist threatyeah,
right.
Dave Bridges in a letter to the Sydney Morning Herald
said: Wednesdays convenient warning by the intelligence
service of a specific terrorist threat provides an insight into
the way the service operates. When it suits the Prime Minister
they tell him what he wants to know. Iraqs weapons of mass
destruction is another example. When knowledge might be embarrassing,
such as children not thrown overboard, Mr Howard is kept in the
dark. No wonder the Prime Minister has confidence in Australias
intelligence services.
In fact, such is the level of distrust of the government that
one listener phoned a Sydney radio station last week to report
that she was in a supermarket checkout line when Howards
announcement of an impending terror attack was broadcast. Store
patrons and staff simply laughed at the warnings, convinced that
it was another political stunt by the government.
On November 8, hundreds of heavily-armed state and federal
police were mobilised to arrest 17 Islamic fundamentaliststhe
biggest police operation in Australian historyclaiming to
have thwarted a planned terror attack.
While the majority of letters published in the press supported
the government the next day, no doubt confused by the 24-hour
government and media hysteria that accompanied the raids, a substantial
number continued to raise serious doubts over the so-called anti-terror
operation.
One letter to the Sydney Morning Herald uncompromisingly
declared: I have no doubt at all that the police raids in
Melbourne and Sydney are politically motivated and a disgrace.
John Howard has proved time and again that he will stoop to any
means to get what he wants and this is no exception. Of course
he is trying to divert attention from the diabolical industrial
relations proposals and he will continue to do so. I await the
next bombshell from his stockpile of dirty tricks.
Felix Dance from North Melbourne wrote to the Age: Terrorists
and conservative governments are mutually dependent. Terrorists
need conservative governments to wage war on them, creating martyrs
and more recruits, while conservative governments need terrorists
to scare the electorate into re-electing them and giving them
more draconian powers.
No confidence in Labor
The most politically significant letters have been those voicing
their rage against the Labor Party and concluding that it has
formed a virtual coalition with the ruling Liberal-National parties.
Labor leader Beazley has been angrily denounced as a
big ball of fluff and the state Labor premiers variously
described as, hypocrites spineless, snivelling
lackeys and urged to join the Liberal Party.
A Western Australian letter writer to the Sydney Morning
Herald remarked: I have rarely been as upset as I am
reading the article Beazley locks divided ALP into terror
laws. In my opinion, those members of the front bench of
the Opposition should get up, cross the floor and sit with the
Liberal Party, where they really belong. There is no Opposition
in Australia today.
Other letters declared: Breaking newsKim Beazley
appointed as Deputy Prime Minister. John Howard welcomes him aboard
as a man who shares his views ... Another remarked: The
day will come when Mr Beazley writes his memoirs and finally admits
that he was a sleeper for the Liberal Party all along. Why doesnt
he come clean now instead, and officially join the party he clearly
believes has the vision for the Australia he wants to live in
on every significant issue being publicly debated?
A November 8 letter from a Queensland reader to the Sydney
Morning Herald sarcastically stated: The Germans have
an instrument so sensitive that it can detect an object moving
one-million-billionth of a millimetre. Would such an instrument
(an interferometer) be useful in measuring policy differences
between Mr Beazley and the Government?
Judy Banberger wrote to the Daily Telegraph on November
2 stating: Labor appears to have adopted a we too
policy towards anti-terrorism legislation. We too
can lock you up, detain you, control you, search you, seize your
possessions based on suspicion alone. We too can go
even further than the Liberals: securing entire neighbourhoods
and searching any person/place therein; banning books and media
based on a flimsy description of objectionable content.
Obviously Labor doesnt give a stuff about protecting
our civil liberties any more than the Liberals. No, they are leading
us towards becoming a third-world nation of thought police and
mind control.
Notwithstanding illusions in many of the letters that Labor
might be different if Beazley or the state premiers were removed,
the level of distrust and alienation with the Labor Party is unprecedented.
It further demonstrates the vast chasm that separates Australias
ruling establishmentthe government, opposition
parties and the corporate mediafrom millions of ordinary
people.
The palpable political outrage expressed in these letters is
yet another indication that masses of people are being politicised
by the governments so-called war on terror and
its attacks on basic democratic rights.
All those who oppose the government, and Labors slavish
support for it, must recognise, however, that no amount of popular
pressure or protest will force them to change course.
The defence of democratic rights can only be advanced through
the development of an independent political movement of the working
class that directly challenges the profit system itself.
See Also:
Howard's terrorist "alert"
leads to
Politically manipulated police raids in Australia
[9 November 2005]
Within days of Howard's terror "alert"
Australian government seeks expanded powers to call out troops
[8 November 2005]
Unanimous backing for Howard's emergency
anti-terror laws
A revealing line-up in the Australian Senate
[7 November 2005]
Australian legal experts condemn Anti-Terrorism
Bill
[4 November 2005]
Australia's "Anti-Terrorism"
Bill: the framework for a police state
[3 November 2005]
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