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Australian governments terrorist case against
Dr Haneef unravels
By Mike Head
20 July 2007
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In a serious blow to the Howard governments scare-mongering
campaign, Stephen Keim QC, the barrister for detained Indian Muslim
doctor Mohamed Haneef, has leaked a revealing transcript of his
clients initial police interview and called on the government
to release any undisclosed information it has on the case.
Keims action is another sign that the Howard governments
efforts to whip up new fears of terrorism by connecting the young
man to the recent failed bombings in London and Glasgow have begun
to unravel in the face of growing public disquiet over the indefinite
detention of the 27-year-old doctor.
The released transcript directly contradicts several key police
and government allegations that were broadcast throughout the
media over the past three weeks in a bid to link Haneef to those
arrested in Britain. It exposes police claims that Haneef had
lived with two of the arrested men, who are his second cousins,
and had no explanation for seeking to fly to India on a one-way
ticket.
Australian Broadcasting Corporation radios AM
program this morning reported the collapse of the centrepiece
of the police-government campaign, that Haneefs former mobile
phone SIM card was found in the jeep that was rammed into the
Glasgow Airport terminal. British and Australian sources told
an AM reporter that the card was found, eight hours
after the Glasgow incident, hundreds of kilometres away in Liverpool.
The card was in one of two mobile phones seized in the apartment
of one of Haneefs cousins, Sabeel Ahmed, who has not been
accused of any direct involvement in the bombings.
Reflecting the mounting opposition, leading lawyers have strongly
defended Keims courageous stand in declaring that he was
the source of the leaked transcript, potentially risking his career.
The barrister, a widely respected figure in the legal profession,
challenged the government to arrest him after Prime Minister John
Howard, Attorney-General Philip Ruddock and Australian Federal
Police (AFP) Commissioner Mick Keelty made threats of legal action
to punish whoever leaked the document.
Keim said his handing of the 142-page transcript to a journalist
was completely legal and ethical, and necessary to counter the
governments own systematic leaking of prejudicial material
calculated to skew public opinion against Haneef. His statement
exposed the methods of deceptive media leaks that the government
and its security agencies have employed, not just against Haneef
but every individual charged with terrorist offences over the
past five years.
My client has been subject to a barrage of leaks,
Keim told reporters. In a media statement, he said an aggressive
campaign of leaking, selectively and misleadingly, from the same
document and other allegedly secret documentation held by law-enforcement
agencies had been perpetrated in recent weeks. These leaks could
only have been motivated by a desire by those perpetrating them
to suggest to the Australian public that the case against Dr Haneef
was stronger than the Australian Federal Police, through their
counsel, the commonwealth DPP, had been able to put before the
court.
Ruddock has threatened to pursue charges of contempt of court
or breaches of professional ethics against Keim, and declared
that the transcripts release could delay Haneefs trial,
extending his detention. Keim responded: I challenge the
Prime Minister, his ministers, Mr Keelty and the police to produce
the legal basis which would make anything Ive done illegal.
They know where I am. If they think Ive done anything wrong,
they can come and take me away.
What the transcript shows
The released transcript of the July 3 AFP interview reveals
at least three crucial false statements in the subsequent police
court affidavit. According to the affidavit, Haneef had
no explanation as to why he did not have a return ticket
from India to Australia.
In reality, Haneef told the police his father-in-law had booked
and paid for a one-way ticket to India scheduled for July 2 because
I didnt have any money. He explained that the sole
purpose of his trip was to see his wife, Firtous Arshiya, and
new-born daughter, after they were re-admitted to hospital following
an urgent Caesarean birth on June 26. The doctor said his employer,
the Gold Coast Hospital, could confirm that he had wanted to leave
earlier but could not organise another doctor to cover his absence.
The affidavit also states that Haneef told police he lived
in Britain with his two cousins, and that in an on-line conversation
with his cousin Sabeel just before the bombing bids he had not
mentioned the recent birth of his daughter. Haneef actually told
police he had not lived with his cousins, and that his conversation
with Sabeel had been solely about the birth of his child.
The full transcript shows that despite a marathon six-hour
questioning of Haneefwho willingly answered all questions
and did not request legal advicetwo senior AFP agents came
up with nothing. Most of the interview consisted of Haneef giving
the police every conceivable piece of information about his life
and his personal affairs, including the names of all his relatives,
details of his email addresses, Internet account, computer, car,
bank accounts, finances and places of worship.
Throughout the interview, Haneef repeatedly denied any knowledge
of the London and Glasgow attacks, or any involvement in terrorism.
He told AFP agent Adam Simms he had never had firearms, explosives
or terrorist training and denied he had ever been asked to
take part in jihad or anything that could be considered similar
to jihad.
Haneef volunteered the information that he had left his SIM
card behind in Britain with Sabeel. He explained that after being
told that British police wished to ask him about the card, far
from absconding he had tried four times to phone a British police
officer, Tony Webster. Haneef said he feared he was being framed.
When he gave the card to his cousin, more than a year earlier,
it had only one months worth of use left, on a pre-paid
plan.
Lawyers and judges speak out
Last Monday, a magistrate granted bail to Haneef after he had
been detained for police questioning without trial for nearly
two weeks, then charged with recklessly providing
support to a terrorist organisation. The only police evidence
cited was that, before he left Britain more than a year ago, the
young doctor gave his nearly-used SIM card to Sabeel Ahmed, who
has not even been charged with membership of a terrorist group.
Before Haneef could be released, the government effectively
overturned the court ruling by ordering that he be kept indefinitely
in immigration detention. Without any notice or hearing, Immigration
Minister Kevin Andrews revoked his visa on bad character
grounds, declaring that he was reasonably suspected
of association with a terrorist organisation. Haneefs
lawyers have filed an appeal against that decision in the Federal
Court, but in the meantime the Queensland state Labor government
has declared that the young doctor will be treated as a
terrorist in jail, subjected to solitary confinement for
23 hours a day.
The Howard governments actions, followed by its threats
against Keim, have clearly generated public suspicion, as well
as outrage in the legal profession and sections of the judiciary.
Lawyers groups have sprung to the barristers defence.
Sean Reidy, chairman of the criminal law section of the Queensland
Law Society, said Keim acted lawfully. He added that the legal
fraternity was monitoring the case closely, Keim was
a lawyer of the highest integrity and the government
attack appeared to be vicious and personal.
You have to have a great deal of concern for the administration
of justice when in high-profile cases lawyers are being personally
attacked. This is exactly what happened in the Tampa case,
Reidy said, referring to 2001, when the government denounced lawyers
for attempting to help refugees legally challenge their forced
removal to the remote Pacific island of Nauru.
Australian Bar Association president Stephen Estcourt SC said
thousands of lawyers were deeply concerned at the governments
handling of the case. The disquiet is pretty universal,
he said. The cancellation of Dr Haneefs visa following
so closely on the granting of bail is a cynical exercise and constitutes
an assault on the rule of law. Estcourt said he was also
concerned by Ruddocks comments about a possible tightening
of the laws to make it harder for judges and magistrates to use
their discretion in bail cases. He said this indicated that Ruddock
believed he could simply frame new laws to overcome independent-minded
judicial officers.
The Australian Lawyers Alliance (ALA), representing 1,500 lawyers,
said the governments treatment of Haneef was deplorable.
ALA national director and Perth barrister, Tom Percy, said: When
the government is able to usurp the decision of a magistrate,
the rule of law no longer applies. Prominent Melbourne barrister,
Robert Richter QC, accused the government of terrorising
the legal system.
Concern among judges became apparent on Wednesday during an
urgent directions hearing in Brisbane of Haneefs appeal
against the visa cancellation. Federal Court judge Jeffrey Spender
described as absolutely astounding the governments
argument that an association of any kind with criminalseven
a cup of coffee, a picnic with the kidswas enough
for a non-citizen to fail the Migration Acts character test.
I have been associated with persons involved in criminal
activity. I have defended them, charged with murder. Unfortunately
I wouldnt pass the character test on your statement,
the judge said to Roger Derrington, SC, representing the immigration
minister.
Justice Spender also said that the visa cancellations
timing was curious. There is room for the view
that this was an act of circumventing the inconvenience of having
him on bail, he said. One of the grounds for the appeal
is that the ministers purpose in cancelling the visa was
to allow Haneef to be detained when he had been granted bail,
and that that was an improper purpose.
The previous day, Victorian Supreme Court justice Bernard Bongiorno
warned about the dangers of sacrificing the presumption of innocence
for political expediency. He declared that the
whole foundation of our criminal justice system could be
at risk.
Bongiorno granted bail to two accused members of the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). He expressed doubt that
they would be convicted under the anti-terrorism laws for fund-raising
for the LTTE, given that the organisation was not listed in Australia
or Sri Lanka as a terrorist organisation. The two leading members
of the Tamil community in Melbourne had been denied bail since
their arrests on May 1. Following Justice Bongiornos ruling,
a magistrate granted bail to another Tamil man who was extradited
from Sydney on similar charges last month.
Broader concerns
Widespread public concern in India about Haneefs treatment
has forced Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to intervene,
making a statement expressing the hope that Australia would extend
all the facilities to Haneef. The Indian government
had earlier summoned Australias envoy to the foreign ministry
in New Delhi to demand that Haneef be treated fairly and
justly under Australian law.
In Brisbane, where Haneef is detained, Muslim leaders said
Muslims were being targetted in the wake of his arrest. Dr Mohamad
Abdalla told the Murdoch-owned Courier-Mail many believed
that if Haneef were not a Muslim, the anti-terrorism laws would
not have applied to him. Muslims are feeling now, many of
them, particularly the vulnerable ones, who is going to be next?
he said. Since the issue of Haneef started, people have
been meeting every night until 10, 11 oclock, discussing
what they can do. How they can respond?
Murdochs outlets, which have vociferously fuelled all
the allegations made by the government and its police agencies
in the war on terror since 2001, have intervened prominently
in the Haneef case, including by obtaining and publishing the
police interview transcript. Behind these actions are concerns,
spelt out in an Australian editorial on July 18, that the
handling of the case is seriously discrediting the entire framework
of the anti-terrorist laws.
While defending the visa cancellation, the editorial said the
governments problem was that growing numbers of people no
longer trusted it. Without a speedy explanation by the government
of exactly why he must remain in custody, Dr Haneef will continue
to be martyred by the same anti-Howard forces who managed to turn
David Hicks from a confessed terror trainee into the focus of
widespread, and politically costly, public sympathy.
In other words, Haneefs persecution is now compounding
the damage to the governments credibility caused by its
complicity in the five-year detention of Hicks in Guantánamo
Bay, before he pled guilty to a dubious minor charge in order
to get back to Australia. Far from being concerned about legal
rights and civil liberties, the Murdoch stable is alarmed that
the governments ability to trample over these basic rights
has become compromised.
The Australians legal affairs writer, Chris Merritt,
elaborated these concerns, writing: The great lesson from
the fiasco in Guantánamo Bay was that the legal response
to terrorism will fail utterly unless it wins public acceptance.
The only reason David Hicks is serving a trifling sentence in
Adelaideinstead of rotting in Cubais because the Australian
public lost faith in the US military commission process... Instead
of speculating about what sort of punishment could be meted out
to this lawyer [Stephen Keim], those responsible for the war on
terror should remember the great lesson from the Hicks case: the
court of public opinion can sometimes be far more powerful than
a court of law.
Letters to newspapers indicate that broad layers of people
are now disgusted not only with the Howard government, but the
Labor Party as well for its in-principle endorsement
of every action taken against Haneef. Labor leader Kevin Rudds
support for the governments conduct is entirely in line
with Labors six-year record of backing the so-called war
on terror and voting for every piece of anti-terrorism legislation.
Occupying office in every state and territory, Labors
partnership has been crucial in handing constitutional powers
to the federal government to impose its laws, and in passing legislation
that has either matched or exceeded the federal measures. The
state Labor government in Queensland has had no qualms in consigning
Haneef to solitary confinement as a terrorist.
Since 2001, there has been complete bipartisan agreement between
the Howard government and the Labor opposition on
boosting the powers of the police, intelligence and military apparatus
as public opposition deepens to militarism, worsening social inequality
and the assault on basic legal and democratic rights.
See Also:
Australian government unilaterally detains
doctor after court agrees to bail
[17 July 2007]
Australia: British terrorist attacks
used to detain doctor without trial
[14 July 2007]
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