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Australian government revives book banning
By Mike Head
26 October 2006
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With the assistance of the state Labor governments, the federal
Australian government is carrying out overt political censorship
of books. So far, two Islamic volumes have been banned and preparations
are underfoot to tighten censorship laws by agreement with the
states.
The current campaign began in February, when federal attorney-general
Philip Ruddock moved to take more control over censorship rulings.
Ruddock announced that the two committees responsible for classifying
books, films, TV programs, video games and other materialthe
Classification Board and the Classification Review Boardwould
be integrated into his department. Previously, they were within
the Office of Film and Literature Classification, a formally independent
agency.
In June, Ruddock applied to the Review Board to outlaw eight
Islamic texts and one film, even though the Classification Board
had previously cleared them, on the advice of the Australian Federal
Police (AFP) and the Director of Public Prosecutions. None of
these agencies thought the books incited any crime, threatened
public safety or contravened the expanded sedition laws passed
late last year. According to the AFP, the material was descriptive
rather than inciting any type of violence.
Ruddocks intervention followed a media witchhunt, led
by the Murdoch newspaper stable. The Sydney Daily Telegraphs
headline on May 15, for example, screamed, Muslim Books
of Hate Get OK. The newspaper demanded the banning
of the books for, among other things, encouraging hostility toward
police among Muslim youth.
The seven government-appointed members of the Review Board
proscribed two books, Defence of the Muslim Lands and Join
the Caravan, but allowed six others. As well as a film of
a speech by a lecturer at an American university. People who display
or sell the censored material can be jailed for up to two years.
The two outlawed books were written by Sheikh Abdullar Azzam,
who was killed in Afghanistan in 1989. Ironically, both sought
to justify the Islamic fundamentalist war against the Soviet-backed
regime that ruled at the time in Kabul. There was no move to ban
the books in the 1980s, because the US and its allies, including
Australia, were backing the Islamic groups as freedom fighters.
In its decision on Defence of the Muslim Lands, the
Review Board acknowledged that the book, including its preface
by Osama bin Laden, was written in 1984 as a call to arms
against the Soviet invasion, which was condemned at the
time by much of the Western world including Australia, the UK
and the US.
Yet, the Board determined that the books promote and incite
the crime of terrorism. It relied upon the wide definition of
terrorism imposed by the federal and state counter-terrorism
laws passed since 2002, which covers any act that causes serious
damage to property in pursuit of a political, religious
or ideological cause with the intention of intimidating
any government or a section of the public.
The Board rejected submissions by the New South Wales Council
for Civil Liberties, which protested that, freedom of expression
(and freedom of political communication in particular) is fundamental
to the functioning of a successful democratic society. The
Council has since filed a Federal Court application to overturn
the ban.
Censorship legislation already allows the banning of publications
that promote, incite or instruct in matters of crime or
violence. Ruddock wants to take it further. In July, he
convened a meeting of Australias state attorneys-general,
who agreed to consider new laws outlawing any material counselling,
urging, providing instruction or praising acts of terrorism.
Under new federal and state anti-terror laws adopted
last December, organisations that advocate, praise
or counsel a terrorist act can be outlawed, exposing
members, supporters and financial donors to imprisonment as well.
Praising terrorism can mean merely expressing sympathy
for, or calling for an understanding of, the social and economic
roots of terrorism.
The law of sedition was also extended to proscribe urging
disaffection against the government, promoting feelings
of ill-will or hostility between different groups and urging
conduct to assist an organisation or country engaged in
armed hostilities against the Australian military. Those
convicted face seven years jail.
Several universities, including Melbourne University, have
since removed some Islamic fundamentalist books from their shelves
for fear of breaching censorship or sedition laws. In a letter
to Ruddock last month, university vice-chancellor Glyn Davis asked
for an assurance that limited access to the books for research
purposes was acceptable and would not place the university,
its staff or students at risk of prosecution.
A coalition of library and literary organisations has condemned
the forced removal of books from libraries. The Council of Australian
University Librarians, the Australian Library and Information
Association, the Australian Society of Authors and the International
Federation of Library Associations and Institutions said banning
books takes away not only our right to read the opinions
of others but also our right to disagree with what they say.
Replying to Davis, Ruddock said he was prepared to consider
exceptionsfor research purposes onlyprovided that
applications were made to his department on each occasion. His
response shows the governments determination to keep close
surveillance over anyone reading the material. Last year, a Monash
University student was questioned by police after purchasing and
borrowing books on Palestinian suicide bombings, a subject he
was researching for his course on terrorism.
A history of political censorship
Australian governments, state and federal, have a long history
of political censorship, dating back to British colonial times.
For example, Victorias Customs officials confiscated a shipment
of works by Emile Zola and others during 1889 to protect the colony
from the subtle and deadly infection of French literary
vice.
During World War I, the War Precautions Act provided
for suppression of material that showed the gruesome effects
of warfare, gave comfort to the enemy, were
likely to prejudice recruiting or promote disquiet
about the health or conduct of troops.
After the 1917 Russian Revolution, the anti-socialist character
of censorship was evident in a 1932 Commonwealth ban on John Reeds
Ten Days that Shook the World and a 1936 NSW ban on public
performances of Odets anti-Nazi play Till the Day I Dieon
advice from federal attorney-general Robert Menzies that it would
offend Germany.
World War II saw censorship of newspapers, radio and journals
under the National Security Regulations. On one occasion
in 1944, Commonwealth and NSW police were ordered to stop distribution
of the Daily Telegraph and other Sydney newspapers that
protested against censors by leaving blank spaces in articles
to indicate deletions.
By the 1960s, the battles over censorship primarily occurred
over allegedly sexually subversive material. In 1969 federal customs
minister Don Chippwho later founded the Australian Democratsbanned
the book of Kenneth Tynans Oh! Calcutta. The same
year, Philip Roths Portnoys Complaint become
a prohibited import, with prosecutions by four state governments
against local publishers or retailers in 1970.
More overt political censorship began to re-emerge during the
1990s. In 1997, the editors of the LaTrobe University student
newspaper, Rabelais, lost an appeal in the Federal Court
over the banning of an article entitled The Art of Shoplifting.
The editors each faced jail terms of up to six years and/or fines
up to $72,000. The charges were finally dropped in 1999.
In February this year, the Classification Review Board banned
Marc Eckos computer game Getting Up: Contents Under
Pressure, ostensibly on the grounds that it incited graffiti-writing,
vandalism and youth crime. The games
message was anti-authoritarianits scenario was a youth rebellion
against a dictatorial local government that denied free expression.
Ruddock applied for the ban at the request of Queensland premier
Peter Beattie, revealing the nervousness of both the Coalition
government and the Labor party toward material that might encourage
young people to challenge the official political establishment.
See also:
Bi-partisan censorship campaign
targets youth
[8 March 2006]
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