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Australian jury dismisses main charges in Melbourne terrorism
case
By David Taylor
1 March 2006
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After deliberating for more than two days, a jury of nine women
and three men dismissed two serious terrorism charges against
Jack Thomas, a young Melbourne worker, on February 26. The decision
to reject the Howard governments threadbare case, based
on confessions made under coercion in a Pakistani jail, reflects
underlying resistance to the governments dismantling of
basic democratic and legal rights as part of the war on
terror.
The criminal proceedings against Thomas over the past 15 months
were conducted against a backdrop of an ongoing government and
media campaign of fear and hysteria directed against Muslims,
designed to stereotype them as actual or potential terrorists.
Thomas himself was dubbed by the media as Jihad Jack
and the authorities initially brought him to court in shackles,
directly prejudicing his chances of a fair trial by seeking to
create the impression of a dangerous and violent fanatic.
But after the prosecution ultimately presented just a single
day of evidence, the jury acquitted Thomas of the only two charges
that alleged that he was actually involved in, or intended to
carry out, terrorist acts. The first was that he worked and trained
with Al Qaeda in Pakistan between July 2002 and January 2003,
providing himself as a resource to that organisation. The second
was that he had agreed to become an Al Qaeda sleeper,
awaiting terrorist instructions upon his return to Australia in
mid-2003.
Thomas acquittals on these charges mark the second occasion
within a yearin the only two cases to go to juries so far
under the terrorist lawsthat a jury has dismissed charges
in the face of lurid police, government and media claims of terrorist
cells and imminent threats in Australia. Last April, Zeky
Zak Mallah, 21, was found not guilty of preparing
to storm government offices in a supposed suicide mission (see
Jury throws
out charges in first Australian terrorist trial).
However, Thomas, 32, a father of three children from the Melbourne
western suburb of Werribee, was found guilty of two lesser offencesintentionally
receiving funds from a terrorist organisation and travelling on
a false passport. He could be sentenced to 25 years jail on the
first charge and two years on the second. Thomas will appeal against
the guilty verdicts, but Supreme Court Justice Philip Cummins
denied bail and remanded him pending a pre-sentence hearing on
March 2.
These convictions and the methods by which they were achieved
set dangerous precedents. The prosecution case relied on evidence
that should never have been admitted into courtabove all,
an 80-minute taped interview that Thomas was compelled to give
the Australian Federal Police (AFP) in March 2003 while he was
being held for five months and tortured in a Karachi prison.
The interview was the result of more than 100 hours of interrogation
during which Pakistani and CIA interrogators choked and suffocated
him. Thomas was chained to a metal plate in the floor of his dog
kennel cell, with his hands cuffed behind his back and a
hood covering his face. He was threatened with execution, told
his wife would be raped and that his testicles would be crushed.
Thomas told the AFP that he agreed to the taped interview because
he believed he had done nothing wrong and that cooperation with
the Australian authorities would end the torture and allow him
to be reunited with his family in Australia. He was also denied
his rights under Australian law to have legal advice and representation
before making such a taped statement.
I did not understand my rights, he told the media.
They say you have a right to silence but keep going [talking]
as you areits better to be perceived as co-operative.
They are using the fact that you are in indefinite detention and
in legal limbo. I could not contact anyone. I was never in handcuffs
talking to the Australians. I was always in handcuffs talking
to the Americans. At the end of the day, I did not have much choice.
During the AFP interview Thomas freely admitted that he had
been given an airline ticket and $US3,500 to return to Australia,
while denying vehemently that he ever agreed to assist any terrorist
attack in Australia. None of this money was ever planned
or was ever intended for terrorism, he told the AFP.
The picture that emerged from the police tape was clearly one
of a confused young man who had converted to Islam during the
1990s and went to Afghanistan in March 2001 in an effort to defend
the fundamentalist Taliban regime against the warlords of the
Northern Alliance.
Thomas told the AFP he originally went to the al-Farooq camp
in Afghanistan so he could fight for the Taliban government. He
had no idea the camp was run by Al Qaeda until the attacks on
America on September 11, 2001. Thomas said he saw Osama bin Laden
three times and thought about pledging his loyalty to the group
before deciding against it.
He told the AFP officers that he was shocked by the September
11 events and later horrified by the suggestion of assisting a
terrorist attack in Australia and decided to return home. One
mans terrorist is another mans freedom fighter. I
believe that they are on a wrong path. I dont agree with
their methods. They terrorise, they do strike terror, he
said.
Thomas also wrote 13 pages of notes for the AFP and the Australian
Intelligence Security Organisation (ASIO) describing his training
in Islamic fundamentalist camps in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and
cooperated in six ASIO interrogations inside Pakistani jails.
This cooperation continued after he arrived back in Australia
in June 2003.
Despite this, and lacking any evidence that Thomas had made
any preparations for a terrorist act or made any contact with
alleged terrorists after returning, the federal police suddenly
arrested him in November 2004, 17 months later.
A trophy trial
Lex Lasry QC, counsel for Thomas, told the court that Thomas
was not a terrorist. He was never a member of a terrorist
organisation. He did not belong to Al Qaeda. He never pledged
any loyalty or allegiance to them. Lasry told the jury:
This is a trophy trial designed to show the AFP are working
hard protecting us from terrorism.
The timing of the case demonstrates that it was a trophy
trial not just for the AFP but the Howard government. His
arrest came just as the government, backed by the Labor opposition,
was bringing forward a new raft of anti-terrorist legislation,
including measures to allow for closed-door trials and secret
evidence.
During the 15-month period that Thomas trial has taken
to get to court, the federal Coalition government and its state
Labor counterparts have introduced a further barrage of laws that
allow for detention without trial, life imprisonment for advocating
terrorist acts and lengthy jail terms for seditious
conduct, which has been extended to include advocating support
for resistance to Australian military interventions overseas.
Significantly, the jury asked the judge why the authorities
waited 17 months to arrest him. This was damaging to the government
case because prosecutor Nick Robinson told the jury that an Al
Qaeda operative, Khaled bin Attash, had asked Thomas to lie low
for six to 12 months, surveying Australian military installations.
The obvious time gap between that supposed arrangement and the
arrest indicated that the charges bore no relationship to the
evidence but were an attempt to justify and bolster the war
on terror.
Thomas family expressed relief and gratitude that the
jury dismissed the most serious charges. Thomas father Ian
told reporters: As we have always known, Jack had nothing
to answer for with these charges... the acquittal has been a great
victory.
Thomas solicitor Rob Stary said: The fact that
Jack Thomas has been acquitted of ... supporting a terrorist organisation
or being a resource for a terrorist organisation, which were the
... most-serious charges in our view, is a very significant victory.
The media, however, generally presented the findings against
Thomas as a victory for the government and resumed their derogatory
labelling of Thomas as Jihad Jack, further prejudicing
his sentencing and appeal hearings. As usual, the Murdoch outlets
were the most blatant, with the Melbourne Herald-Suns
headline declaring: Jihad Jack guilty of taking al-Qaida
money.
Attorney-General Philip Ruddock added his own detrimental commentary,
telling ABC radio: The individual has been convicted of
a terrorist offence. I see that as very significant. His
remarks simply highlighted the substantial political stake that
the government has in the Thomas case.
None of the media coverage referred to other unprecedented
features of Thomas trial. The new secrecy provisions of
the anti-terrorist laws were invoked to prevent the press reporting
the pre-trial hearings into the admissibility of the AFP interview.
FBI officials and unspecified witnesses testified on behalf of
the prosecution that the interview was given voluntarily.
At those hearings and at the trial itself, video-link testimony
was presented from prisoners in US jails, who were clearly acting
under duress or as part of plea-bargaining arrangements. Some
appeared on video screens handcuffed and shackled.
While Thomas trial itself was conducted in open court,
Ruddocks legal representatives told the judge that the Attorney-General
would seek certificates to shut parts of the proceedings if evidence
emerged that endangered national security. Thomas lawyers
were also obliged to obtain ASIO security clearances.
Thomas convictions on two charges demonstrate how the
anti-terrorism laws are being utilised to tear up fundamental
democratic rights, including not to be tortured or detained without
trial, to have legal assistance and to be tried in open court
so that members of the public can assess the alleged evidence.
See Also:
Australia: terrorism
trial of Jack Thomas to rely on coerced evidence
[18 August 2005]
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