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Howards terrorist alert leads to
Politically manipulated police raids in Australia
By Mike Head
9 November 2005
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In the largest such operation yet seen in Australiareportedly
involving 850 federal and state police and intelligence personnelheavily-armed
officers burst into at least 23 homes in Sydney and Melbourne
in the pre-dawn hours of yesterday morning and arrested 17 Islamic
men on vague and unspecified terrorism charges. Today, raids are
still continuing in Sydney, amid angry protests by family members.
One arrested man, Omar Baladjam, a former television actor,
was critically wounded. He was shot in the neck by police in the
outer Sydney suburb of Green Valley, in conditions eerily reminscent
of the July 22 London police killing of innocent Brazilian-born
electrician Jean Charles de Menezes. Police claimed that Baladjam
pulled a gun and fired on them. Baladjam was wearing a backpack
that police tested for explosive materials before admitting that
none were found.
Seven other men were seized in Sydneys south-western
suburbs, while nine men were arrested across Melbournes
northern suburbs, both working class areas with high immigrant
populations.
All the circumstances surrounding the massive raids point to
them being politically manipulated to justify last weeks
terrorist alert declared by Prime Minister John Howard
and the unprecedented police-state measures being pushed through
federal and state parliaments on the pretext of combatting terrorism.
Police and the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
(ASIO) had been closely monitoring the men for nearly 18 months,
using phone taps, physical surveillance and previous house raids,
but suddenly brought forward the arrests just five days after
Howards declaration.
So intense was the surveillance that one senior officer told
journalists: We had been watching these guys, listening
to them and following them for 18 months. They were right under
our noses and they knew it too. This raises the obvious
question: what was the urgent need to arrest the group?
From Howards viewpoint, the timing could not have been
better. The decision to move against them came amid mounting public
sceptism and media questioning about why his claim of a terrorist
emergency had not produced arrests.
Just a day before the raids, the Murdoch media had reported
that his Newspoll opinion ratings had slumped to their poorest
levels since 2001. His personal satisfaction had fallen to 41
percentalmost as low as US President George W. Bush. This
reflected the growing public hostility to Howards far-reaching
industrial relations legislation and emerging unease over the
draconian Anti-Terrorism Bill 2005, as well as underlying opposition
to the Iraq war.
In 2001, Howard responded to disastrous poll ratings by sending
naval gunships to turn back refugee boats, accompanied by a lying
demonisation campaign against refugees, and by exploiting the
September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States to join the
invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. There is every indication that
once again, assisted by the Labor Party, he is resorting to similar
methods.
Within hours of the police-ASIO swoops, before charges were
even laid, let alone evidence produced in court, Howard, the state
Labor premiers and the mainstream media proclaimed that the arrests
vindicated the urgent terrorism laws amendments rushed
through a specially recalled Senate last Thursday. These changes
were the first component of the Anti-Terrorism Bill, which Howard
and the Labor leaders want to have enacted by next month.
Throughout yesterday, Howard, the Labor leaders and police
chiefs carried out a wall-to-wall media blitz, competing with
each other to claim credit for the operation and to paint the
arrested mens supposed plans in the most alarming possible
light. New South Wales Police Commissioner Ken Moroney and his
Police Minister Carl Scully, for example, claimed to have disrupted
a large-scale operation which, had it been allowed to go through
to fruition, we certainly believe would have been catastrophic.
Some media outlets had been given details of the raids in advance
and were on the spot with camera crews and reporters to publicise
the dramatic use of police bullet-proof vests, helicopters and
dogs. The Murdoch media did its best to poison the atmosphere
by running inflammatory headlines. The Sydney Daily Telegraph
proclaimed: Holy war on Australia17 arrested as
terror network smashed.
These unsubstantiated allegations entirely overturn the presumption
of innocence and directly prejudice the trials of the accused
men. In fact, the comments are so brazen that they could amount
to contempt of court, prompting defence lawyers to call for copies
of media transcripts.
Like ordinary members of the public, the WSWS has no means
to independently test the police accusations. But judging by the
lack of specific charges laid against the men, and by what police
and intelligence officers said about the evidence against them,
the allegations are flimsy and full of apparent contradictions.
Asked if she agreed with her NSW counterpart Ken Moroney that
the suspects were in the final stage of a large scale terrorist
attack Victorian Police Commissioner Christine Nixon revealed
that we werent exactly sure when, nor more importantly,
what they planned to damage or do harm to. She said the
group to which the men belonged doesnt have a name
and had no specific target in mind.
In other words, despite lurid Murdoch media claims of plots
to blow up the Sydney Harbour Bridge and other landmarks, the
police had no concrete evidence of any terrorist plan.
This is reflected in the charges laid against the nine Melbourne
men. They have been charged with being members of a terrorist
organisation, which has no name and seemingly consists only of
themselves. For this they face 10 to 25 years jail. Because of
the amendments to the terrorist laws passed by the Senate last
week, the police and the prosecution can allege that an organisation
is terrorist without evidence of preparation for any specific
terrorist act.
Defence lawyer Rob Stary said none of his clients had been
charged in relation to the planning of any attack, nor did any
of the material taken from their homes relate to an attack.
The alleged leader of the conspiracy, Abdul Nacer Benbrika
(also known as Abu Bakr), has hardly been secretive about his
Islamic fundamentalist beliefs, giving television interviews in
his home last August. Last year, he also told ABC radio that ASIO
had tried to recruit him as an informer on some of his religious
students. This further points to longstanding ASIO monitoring
and attempted entrapment of Benbrika and his followers.
In Sydney, no details have even been released about the charges,
and the prisoners have not yet appeared in court. According to
some media reports, they have been charged with a conspiracy,
dated May 1, to prepare and plan a terrorist act, namely to manufacture
explosives, an offence that carries a life sentence. If this is
so, it suggests that the security agencies have abruptly acted
on information they have possessed for at least six months.
Whatever the facts turn out to be, conspiracy is a notoriously
vague and open-ended charge, the breadth of which has been further
expanded by last weeks amendments. In what may be a move
to cover up weaknesses and inconsistencies in the official story,
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty said the Commonwealth
Director of Prosecutions would apply to suppress the details of
the allegations because of the ongoing nature of the investigations.
Defence lawyer Adam Houda described the charges as scandalous.
He said: Theres no evidence that terrorism was contemplated
or being planned by any particular person at any particular time
or in any particular place. He also questioned the timing
of the arrests. These prosecutions are political and a great
shame on this country.
In the current climate, all the prisoners are likely to be
denied bail, meaning they will be locked away in solitary confinement
for many months before the charges against them are clarified
and they have the chance to defend themselves in court. By that
time, the Anti-Terrorism Bill will already be law, introducing
a vast array of extraordinary police powers, including two unprecedented
forms of detention without any trial at allpreventative
detention and control orders.
Last night, Howard denied that he was playing politics. When
it comes to the safety of the Australian people and the security
of this country there is no room for political manipulation. And
I have not sought to do that in relation to this issue and I will
not in the future. This is from the leader of a government
that has repeatedly fabricated allegationsfrom children
overboard to weapons of mass destructionto
justify war and police-military repression.
The immediate and transparent purpose of the current operation
is to silence the emerging opposition to the Anti-Terrorism Bill.
Howard and the Labor premiers had originally hoped to push its
measures through their parliaments with virtually no discussion
following their agreement at the September 27 counter-terrorism
summit. Federal Labor leader Kim Beazley had made it plain that
he was in full support.
Their plans were somewhat disrupted when ACT Chief Minister
Jon Stanhope, for his own political reasons, posted a copy of
a secret draft of the Bill on his official website. This allowed
ordinary people to see its draconian details for the first time.
An outpouring of objections began in letters to newspapers, leading
to nervousness among government and Labor MPs.
The hoped-for impact of the police raids on so-called small
l liberal sections of the media can be guaged by todays
editorial in the Sydney Morning Herald, which had earlier
expressed reservations about the Anti-Terrorism Bill. Even as
it noted that the details of what is alleged against the
16 are unclear, it declared that a threshold in Australias
historical experience has been crossed ... the event marks a new
and frightening stage in the war on terrorism, in which
the public must take on trust the governments assertions.
By this logic, every utterance of the government and its security
chiefs should now be accepted without question. Next months
passage of the Bill will pave the way for secret detentions, semi-permanent
house arrests, the outlawing of urging dissaffection
with the government and jail terms for lawyers and journalists
who alert the public to political internments. The government
has also used last weeks terrorist alert to
bring forward plans for expanded powers to call-out the military
against civilian unrest.
Another chilling measure was railroaded through federal parliament
this week without any noticeable media coverage. Witnesses in
terrorism cases will be able to give evidence by videolink under
the Telecommunications (Interception) Amendment (Stored Communications
and Other Measures) Act 2005. The Act makes it particularly difficult
for accused to challenge the credibility of testimony by overseas
prisoners, who may be under coercion. Justice Minister Chris Ellison
told the Senate: It ensures that the tough laws we have
put in place to target terrorist activities are enforceable.
The WSWS has no agreement with Islamic fundamentalism. But
the methods used in the current police-intelligence operationdemonisation,
provocation, entrapment and frame-up, backed by media witchhuntingwill
be used against others in the future as hostility grows to the
Iraq war, the assault on social conditions at home and the ripping
up of basic legal and democratic rights.
See Also:
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]
Unanswered questions about Australia's
"terrorist" alert
[5 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]
To silence opposition to police-state
measures
Australian government declares "urgent" terrorist threat
[2 November 2005]
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