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New Zealand: 17 arrests in nationwide anti-terrorist
raids
By John Braddock
31 October 2007
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Seventeen people are currently under arrest, with all but two
refused bail, following a series of coordinated police anti-terror
raids around New Zealand. On October 15, arrests were made in
dawn operations carried out in Whakatane, Ruatoki, Hamilton, Rotorua,
Wellington and Auckland. Two days later, a house in Taupo was
searched. The raids involved 300 police and the closing of airspace
in the Bay of Plenty area covering the entire eastern-central
region of the North Island.
The accused, most of whom requested interim name suppression,
have been charged with firearms offences, including illegal possession
of Molotov cocktails, rifles and ammunition. The police have sought
court orders to gather the group together to face charges in Auckland
for what could well be an orchestrated show trial. Some defendants
have appealed to have hearings in their home areas.
The circumstances surrounding the raids follow a similar pattern
to numerous anti-terror operations in Australia, Canada,
the US and Britain; sensationalised media coverage, vague and
unsubstantiated claims of threats to the public, the suppression
of details, trampling on basic democratic rights, intrusive use
of widespread surveillance techniques and the extensive mobilisation
of security forces.
None of the reported facts in the New Zealand raids
should be taken at face value. Distortions and outright fabrications
as well as the use of agents provocateur have all surfaced in
terrorist cases overseas. There is no reason to believe
that similar methods would not be used in New Zealand.
The timing of the terror scare is very convenient for the Labour
government. It is barely a month since the abrupt collapse of
a previous high-profile security risk immigration
case against Algerian asylum seeker, Ahmed Zaoui. The Security
Intelligence Service (SIS) was forced to drop all official opposition
to Zaoui remaining in the country after declaring for five years
that he should be deported as a suspected terrorist.
More immediately, the raids took place the week that amendments
to the Terrorism Suppression Act were brought before parliament
for their second reading. The bill creates a new offence of committing
a terrorist act, punishable by life imprisonment. The definition
of such an act includes the vague charge of inducing fear
in a civilian population. The bill also removes the High Courts
power to review the declaration of groups as terrorist
and places it solely in the hands of the prime minister.
During the operation on October 15, the traditional homelands
of the Tuhoe Maori tribe in the remote Uruwera Ranges were placed
under siege as armed police and officers in camouflage gear swarmed
into the area in convoys of marked and unmarked vehicles and a
helicopter. In one incident, children in a school bus said they
were frightened when the bus was pulled over and searched at an
armed-police roadblock. Over 100 people were stopped and compulsorily
photographeda procedure that has no legal basis, according
to one academic.
Police claim that between 20 and 40 people had been conducting
and participating in bush training camps involving the use of
firearms and other weapons. Police, who said they were tipped
off by hunters, claimed to have secretly video-taped military-style
training with live ammunition. Police made highly-charged claims
that they expected to find machine guns and grenades during their
raids and that some of the instructors had Army or police backgrounds
and were experienced in handling weapons.
Police Commissioner Howard Broad told a press conference he
had timed the operation in the interests of public safety.
However, according to Broad, there was no imminent threat,
but a serious risk existed that needed to be mitigated.
Unsubstantiated rumours soon circulated in the media that Prime
Minister Helen Clark might have been endangered.
The arrests are the culmination of a year-long operation by
a specialist police anti-terror unit, which has accumulated hundreds
of hours of recordings from bugged conversations, video surveillance
and cell phone calls and texts, as well as records of internet
traffic and online purchases. A high-level secret group working
out of the prime ministers office has been involved throughout
the unprecedented procedures, which also involved the Security
and Intelligence Service (SIS). Political leaders from the government
and main opposition party received a briefing about the raids
before they took place.
Had the police been intent on simply laying firearms charges
they could have moved nearly 12 months ago, when the initial reports
of the training camps were received, at which point they could
have made arrests without resorting to the widespread use of surveillance
and warrants. If a decision is now made to proceed under the anti-terror
legislation and bail is denied, the accused could well be imprisoned
for anything up to two years before any case comes to trial.
Campaigners from various Maori sovereignty, environmental and
peace groups were targeted in the raids. One person
named following his arrest is Tame Iti, a prominent Maori activist.
According to one lurid report in the Dominion Post newspaper,
Iti was preparing to declare an IRA-style war on New Zealand
in a bid to establish his long-standing dream of an independent
Tuhoe nation. Another report alleged that several un-named
groups were training together, each planning to hit targets
related to their own interests and coordinated to cause
maximum chaos and stretching police resources across the country.
The operations net was cast extremely wide. A number
of targetted groups and individualsnot all Maorihave
protested vehemently that they have never had any contact with
or knowledge of firearms, let alone anything that can be remotely
construed as terrorist activity. A house stormed by
police in Wellingtons Te Aro student quarter is a well-known
meeting place for young anarchist, environmental and antiwar activists.
Another searched in Taupo is the home and business premises of
a middle-aged couple involved in organising an organic food co-operative.
The storming of the Ureweras was particularly significant for
members of the Tuhoe tribe, who staged a 1,000-strong protest
in the regional centre of Whakatane to express outrage over the
police actions. There is a powerful and lingering sense of injustice
among the Tuhoe, stemming from the British colonial governments
confiscation of their lands in 1864. Crops and buildings were
destroyed as part of a scorched-earth policy against the Maori
resistance.
Many of those caught up in the raid noted with bitterness that
police officers stationed their roadblocks on the confiscation
line, the point from where the land had been confiscated
in the 1860s. Despite the massive concentration of manpower and
weaponry in this part of the operation, only two people were arrested
around the town of Ruatoki, raising questions about why it was
necessary to blockade and lock down the entire Maori community.
Anti-terror laws
This is the first time that the so-called counter terror
laws, passed by the Labour government in 2001 in the wake of the
September 11 attacks, have been invoked.
Police obtained warrants under the Summary Proceedings Act
to search for evidence of offences committed against both the
Firearms Act and the Terrorism Suppression Act. At least one warrant
specifically cited the terrorism legislation and included an extensive
list of arms, gun parts, military clothing and other items, many
apparently purchased through a popular internet trading site.
Police admitted that while people had been arrested under the
Firearms Act, evidence was being accumulated to justify charges
under the Terrorism Suppression Act, which requires approval from
the attorney general. It was confirmed on October 29 that a file
had been presented to the attorney general with a request that
it be evaluated for proceedings under the Act.
The terrorism laws were rushed through parliament just six
weeks after the 9/11 attacks. At that time, the Terrorism (Bombings
and Financing) Bill had just been presented to parliament. The
government rapidly replaced the bill and pushed through the far
more draconian Terrorism Suppression Act, with minimal opportunity
for public comment.
Under the Act, any person inside or outside New Zealand can
be designated a terrorist or associated person
solely on the word of the Director of SIS, with no right of judicial
review. Anyone who participates in, recruits members for or funds,
directly or indirectly, any identified terrorist group
can be imprisoned for up to 14 years.
The definition of a terrorist act is so broad that
even the pro-Labour trade union bureaucracy had to point out that
routine protests and union activities could be branded as terrorism.
The government subsequently amended the Crimes Act to mandate
prison terms of up to seven years for carrying out an act with
the intention of causing significant disruption to commercial
interests or government interestspotentially outlawing
strikes.
Further underlining the New Zealand governments accommodation
with the US-led war on terror, it was announced two
days after this months police raids that the SIS had signed
a new information-sharing deal that will give it access to a US
government terrorist database. The SIS has begun recruiting
staff for a new section, which will use the information as a first
alert system to prevent anyone listed from entering the
country.
Leading Maori political figures have branded the raids as racially
motivated. Maori Party co-leader and MP Pita Sharples described
it as negative history repeating itself and said the
police storm trooper tactics had violated the
trust that has been developing between Maori and Pakeha [European
New Zealanders] and sets our race relations back a hundred years.
There may have been an element of racism involved in the raids.
But in targetting Maoris, the government is testing out, against
one of the most oppressed layers of the working class, police-state
measures that will inevitably be used against broader layers of
working people as social tensions rise. With the full knowledge
and consent of the Labour government, the police have now employed
the anti-terror legislation and legitimised the use
of extensive surveillance, police dragnets and other anti-democratic
methods.
Over the past week, there has been a wave of opposition to
the raids. Last weekend, marches and rallies were held in 13 New
Zealand locations, while protests were also held in Ireland, Australia,
the US and England. In Auckland, 1,000 people marched on Mount
Eden prison, where some of the accused are detained. They chanted
stand up, fight back when human rights are under attack
and called for the terrorism laws to be scrapped.
See Also:
New Zealand: asylum seeker
faces secret "security risk" hearing
[19 July 2007]
SEP public meeting
in Wellington
Causes and consequences of the "war on terror" Part
3
[6 October 2006]
SEP public meeting
in Wellington
Causes and consequences of the "war on terror" Part
2
[5 October 2006]
SEP public meeting
in Wellington
Causes and consequences of the "war on terror" Part
1
[4 October 2006]
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