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Australia: Bracks and the war on terror
By Will Marshall, Socialist Equality Party candidate for Broadmeadows
20 November 2006
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In the face of growing public disquiet over the war on
terror and its agendawar in the Middle East and police-state
powers at homeVictorian Premier Steve Bracks has postured,
from time to time, as a moderating voice. He has distanced himself,
on occasions, from the federal Howard governments anti-Muslim
campaign and claimed to have won protections for civil liberties
in the latest round of anti-terrorism laws.
In a March 2006 column in the Melbourne Age, Bracks
commented: no community should be alienated and segregated
on the basis of the faith they practice or the clothes they wear
and warned of a new sectarianism fed by fear, ignorance
and intolerance. He and his ministers have professed a commitment
to tolerance and diversity and opposition to discrimination
or vilification.
Yet the record shows that Bracks has been perfectly willing
to help fuel this new sectarianism to legitimise the
war on terror. Last month, he joined in as the media
and the Howard government seized upon a sermon by Sydney cleric,
Sheik Taj Din al-Hilali, to slander Muslims as defenders of rape
and whip up hysteria about young Muslim men becoming home-grown
terrorists.
Without any substantiation, Bracks declared: I think
we have had these same comments made by the mufti before and I
think enough is enough. He demanded that the Islamic community
remove Hilali from his post and ensure that his remarks were never
repeated.
Like Howard, Bracks requires a continual stream of terror
threats. While Howard needs to stir up fears of terrorism
to justify continued support for the Bush administrations
militarism, Bracks and his fellow state Labor leaders depend on
the war to deepen their attacks on democratic rights
and as a distraction from their participation in the assault on
the living standards of ordinary working people.
Ever since the terrorist attacks of September 2001, Bracks
has been a critical partner for Howard in ramming through legislation
dismantling fundamental legal and civil rights.
At the April 2002 meeting of the Council of Australian Governments
(COAG), Bracks and the other Labor premiers agreed to hand over
anti-terrorism powers to the Howard government. The
resulting federal and state laws defined terrorism so widely that
it could cover many traditional forms of political dissent, including
strikes in essential services or antiwar rallies that lead to
property damage.
State and federal police, together with the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) were given powers to question
and detain people without charge; political organisations could
be outlawed as terrorist by executive fiat; and semi-secret
trials could be conducted, with the accused denied access to vital
parts of the evidence against them.
Bracks cynically labeled his matching legislation, the Terrorism
(Community Protection) Act 2003 as community protection.
Police were handed powers to covertly enter and search homes,
and an elite anti-terrorist squad was formed, expanding the para-military
Special Operations Group. Freedom of Information laws were overridden
to block access to documents that the government considers damaging
to federal or state security.
This was not about community protection. No new
laws were needed to combat terrorismevery conceivable act
of violence was already a serious crime, and police and ASIO already
had vast powers of surveillance.
Among the first victims of the Bracks-Howard alliance was Melbourne
Muslim convert Jack Thomas, who was arrested in November 2004,
in a dawn raid by federal and Victorian counter-terrorism police
armed with automatic weapons and attack dogs. As media headlines
proclaimed Jihad Jack a dangerous terrorist, Bracks
boasted in parliament that the arrest vindicated his governments
sweeping counter-terrorism legislation.
Eighteen months later, Thomas was acquitted of all the charges
against himthe most serious were thrown out by a jury, while
others were overturned because his conviction was based on an
illegal confession, extracted through weeks of torture in Pakistan
by US, Pakistani and Australian officials.
Nevertheless, Bracks continued to drum up the war on
terror. In 2005, he cited a potential terrorist attack on
the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne as the pretext for announcing
extensive police powers to stop, demand identification and search
people or vehicles, seize items and cordon off areas. Just the
next day, he convened a multi-faith summit of religious
leaders, including Muslim clerics, and asked them to approve the
measures.
Howards terror scare and
the Melbourne 13
Brackss collaboration with Howard reached a new level
last September, when the Victorian premier became the first Labor
premier to sign up for the Anti-Terrorism Bill 2005.
All the Labor premiers endorsed the measures at a COAG summit,
despite intense opposition, including among lawyers and civil
libertarians. Bracks claimed to have convinced Howard to include
sensible and balanced safeguards, such as judicial
oversight, legal representation for detainees and a 10-year sunset
clause.
These changes did nothing to alter the unprecedented character
of the legislation. Two new forms of detention without trial were
introducedpreventative detention and control
orders, along with offences that require no evidence of
any terrorist act. Free speech was openly targeted: life imprisonment
for advocating terrorism, and revamped sedition measures,
allowing governments to jail opponents of Australian military
interventions.
Within days, Howard suddenly declared an imminent terror
threat. Two groups of Islamic menone in Melbourne and the
other in Sydneywere arrested in the largest police raids
in Australian history. On cue, the Murdoch press stirred up a
witchhunt atmosphere, with headlines in the Australian such
as Osamas Aussie offspringTerror plot foiled
after 17 arrested. The Melbourne men were later charged
with belonging to an unnamed terrorist organisationapparently
consisting only of themselves.
Before charges were even laid, let alone evidence produced
in court, Bracks called a press conference and announced that
police had disrupted probably the most serious preparation
for a terrorist attack that we have seen in Australia. The
presumption of innocence was abandoned, along with any hope for
a fair trial.
All ten of the Melbourne men lived in working class areasseven
from the northern suburbs, including Broadmeadows, and three from
the western suburbs.
In March 2006, having produced no evidence to substantiate
their lurid allegations, the police attempted to shore up the
case by arresting three more men.
A year on from the first arrests, the Melbourne 13
remain locked in virtual solitary confinement, held in shocking
conditions designed to break them mentally and physically. They
are kept in their cells for at least 18 hours a day and have no
physical contact with anyone except prison staff. Two of the prisoners
have been diagnosed with schizophrenia, another with clinical
depression. On July 28, magistrate Paul Smith ruled that prison
officials could forcibly drag the men from their cells, after
seven refused to attend a committal hearing.
In August this year, just a week after he was acquitted on
all charges, Jack Thomas became the first person to be subjected
to a control ordera form of house arrest. His
victimisation further exposed Brackss claims to have won
protections for civil liberties. The move followed a weeklong
media campaign, again led by Murdochs newspapers, demanding
that Thomas be punished by any means, regardless of the law.
For the election campaign, Bracks has unveiled yet another
anti-terrorism package, this time worth $5.6 million.
It includes funding for a new centre to coordinate the frequent
police-ASIO-military counter-terrorism exercises being held to
acclimatise Victorians to the sight of troops and para-military
squads on the streets.
It is hardly surprising that the Victorian Police Associationthe
police unionhas strongly endorsed the return of the Labor
government. Through a combination of law and order
measures and the war on terror, Bracks has boosted
police powers and resources to an unprecedented level, and has
promised to go further.
The immediate trigger for the unions endorsement was
Brackss promise to recruit 350 more police and spend $10
million to purchase enough new Taser stun guns and semi-automatic
pistols to make them available for general police use. Police
Association secretary Paul Mullett praised Bracks as having signed
up for community safety. He added: Bracks has done
a terrific job of providing Victorians with a net additional 1,700
police.
Labors real concern is mounting social unrest. Bracks
is conscious of the widespread discontent generated by a decade
of vicious cuts to schools and social services, as well as the
onslaught on working people launched by the federal Howard government.
Within months of taking office in 1999, Labor made clear it
would use the full force of the state to suppress political and
industrial opposition. Bracks invoked emergency services legislation
against locked-out striking electricity workers, forcing them
back to work. In September 2000, he ordered riot police to attack
demonstrators outside the World Economic Forum and subsequently
praised the assault, which injured 400 people and hospitalised
50.
Over the following two years, his government called out police
squads twice to break picket lines and enforce Howards workplace
lawsagainst Feltex textile workers in 2001 and BHP steel
workers in 2002. On both occasions, the trade union leadership
intervened to defuse workers anger and push the strikers
back to work.
I am standing in the Victorian elections on behalf of the Socialist
Equality Party to unite working people of all nationalities, religions
and ethnic background against the fomenting of anti-Muslim racism
and for the defence of fundamental legal and democratic rights.
I urge all those who oppose militarism, racism, police-state powers
and ever-widening social inequality to support my campaign.
See Also:
Victorian state election
Australian Greens pitch election campaign to political and media
establishment
[18 November 2006]
Australia: a socialist alternative in
the Victorian state election
Support the SEP campaign
[1 November 2006]
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