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Judge temporarily halts Australian terrorist trial over mistreatment
of prisoners
By Mike Head
2 April 2008
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In an unprecedented decision, an Australian judge temporarily
halted a major terrorist trial in Melbourne last month, because
the prolonged detention of the defendants in intolerable
conditions endangered their mental health and made it impossible
for them to receive a fair trial.
On March 20, Justice Bernard Bongiorno of the Victorian Supreme
Court handed down a ruling in which he threatened to indefinitely
postpone the six-week-old trial unless the states prison
authorities met a March 31 deadline to change the high-security
prison regime for 12 Islamic men charged with being members of
an unnamed terrorist organisation.
Most of the accused, and 10 others held on related charges
in Sydney, have been incarcerated for more than two years in inhuman
conditions, including prolonged isolation. Most were arrested
in police raids in November 2005, just after then Prime Minister
John Howard declared a serious terrorist alert and
recalled parliament to rush through draconian new anti-terrorism
laws.
All 22 men have been denied bail under the anti-terrorism legislation,
which permits bail to be granted only if a prisoner proves exceptional
circumstances. The laws overturn the centuries-old presumption
in favour of granting bail so that defendants can properly prepare
their defence. In his judgment, Bongiorno said he would also hear
fresh bail applications from the men if he further halted the
trial.
On March 31, the judge gave the go ahead for the trial to resume
after receiving affidavits from state government and prison authorities
promising that the changes he specified have been or would
be effected immediately. However, talks are continuing between
defence lawyers and prison authorities over various problems,
including the lack of air in the new cells.
Soon after the trial commenced on February 13, lawyers for
the men applied for a stay of proceedings, arguing that their
imprisonment, daily transportation and repeated strip-searching
during the trial were so onerous that they could not conduct their
defence and were at risk of aggravated mental illness. Bongiorno
agreed, noting that the trial could last beyond the end of 2008
and that seven of the men were already on daily medication for
psychiatric reasons.
At the end of his March 20 judgment, Bongiorno revealed that
two of the prisoners had just been declared unfit to attend court
because of a psychiatric condition. Both had been placed under
psychiatric observation and sent to the prison Acute Assessment
Unit. Doctors had also expressed concern about the health of several
other defendants.
In his ruling, the judge said that for the first year of their
detention inside the maximum security Acacia Unit, about 60 kilometres
from Melbourne, the defendants had been kept locked in individual
cells for up to 23 hours a day, with severe restrictions on receiving
visitors and consulting with lawyers. From March 2007, prison
authorities eased these conditions, marginally, in order to head
off an initial legal application to halt the trial.
Throughout the trial, the men were being woken at 6am and offered
breakfast (which some of the prisoners refused for fear of motion
sickness) before being strip-searched, handcuffed, shackled and
loaded into small box-like steel compartments inside a totally
enclosed van for the long drive80 minutes or moreto
the court. The return journey each night was similar, complete
with another strip-search.
During the long hours of the trial each day, the men were obliged
to closely follow the proceedings and read the transcripts of
police telephone intercepts and listening devices, contained in
seven lever arch folders. A number of expert doctors gave evidence
that the defendants were likely to become depressed, irritable,
anxious and fatigued.
Bongiorno summed up the testimony of Dr Douglas Bell, a government
forensic psychiatrist, as follows: Dr Bell considered that
in the circumstances of the applicants it is more likely than
not that an ordinary person would experience significant psychological
and emotional difficulties. These difficulties are likely to have
a significant effect on the applicants ability to concentrate
or to remember things from day to day or week to week with respect
to their case. He considered that the burden of these difficulties
would be cumulative and would be likely to impact to a significant
extent on the cognitive mental functions that would be required
to appropriately attend to the trial process, particularly because
of its protracted length and its complexity. He thought that there
was a risk that they, or some of them, may develop major depressive
illness. This was particularly so having regard to the fact that
they have already been in custody, in what he described as austere
circumstances, for two years or more.
The judge required the authorities to carry out a list of alterations
in the incarceration. These included transfer to a nearby Melbourne
city prison, with conditions no more onerous than those for ordinary
remand prisoners awaiting trial, an end to daily shackling and
strip-searching, and 10 out-of-cell hours per day when not attending
court.
Bongiorno rejected an extraordinary suggestion by the federal
prosecutors that the prisoners be kept in the remote Acacia Unit,
with their participation in their own trial restricted to a video-link.
Such an arrangement would violate one of the most basic legal
rightsto be present at ones trial to fully contest
the charges and evidence. The judge noted: None of the accused
have, on any occasion, behaved other than impeccably in the courtroom
and no other legitimate reason has been advanced as to why they
should not be permitted to remain.
There has been no previous case in Australia in which the conditions
of detention were so oppressive and damaging to mental health
that a judge felt compelled to shut down the proceedings. Bongiorno
cited numerous judicial authorities for halting unfair trials,
but none related to the detention regime imposed on the accused.
His ruling amounts to an indictment of the Victorian and New
South Wales Labor governments, which have kept all 22 defendants
in their prison systems most punitive supermax
facilities, reserved for convicted prisoners classified as highly-dangerous.
The judge declared that neither the prison authorities nor the
prosecution had ever placed any evidence before this court
in any form to justify either the accuseds classification
or their treatment which is, in terms of the fairness of this
trial, intolerable.
The Rudd government is also responsible for the conduct of
the Melbourne trial, which is a federal prosecution. Like the
Howard government before it, the Rudd government is pursuing the
Melbourne and Sydney trials as proving grounds for securing convictions
under the draconian anti-terrorism laws introduced since 2002.
In allowing the trial to resume, the judge accepted the evidence
of a forensic psychiatrist that the two defendants who had suffered
psychiatric conditions were now fit for trial.
A number of the Melbourne defendants had serious mental health
problems before they were arrested, which made them likely to
suffer extreme difficulties in prison. In April 2006, it was revealed
that medical reports given to Victorian police showed that at
least four were mentally ill. Two had suffered from schizophrenia
for at least two years and one had been in and out of psychiatric
institutions suffering from, among other things, psychosis, delusions
and hallucinations (see Use
of police infiltrators raises fresh questions about "terrorist"
raids in Australia).
As the WSWS has previously reported, the cases against the
22 defendants are dubious and full of contradictions. From the
police evidence, it is clear that the men, some of whom were highly
unstable, were entrapped by at least one undercover police provocateur.
The allegations against them primarily relate to the making of
loose statements and expressions of support for Islamic extremism,
with no indication of any concrete terrorist plot (see Lengthy
terrorist trials underway in Australia).
Unease in legal profession
Bongiornos March 20 decision is another indication of
disquiet in the judiciary and legal profession, as well as wider
public concerns, over the use of the war on terror
to trample over basic legal and democratic rights. Over the past
18 months several judicial rulings have exposed serious abuses,
including torture and coercion, in terrorist cases.
In August 2006, the Victorian Court of Appealcourt president
Chris Maxwell and justices Frank Vincent and Peter Buchananruled
that Australian Federal Police statements obtained from Muslim
convert Jack Thomas should never have been allowed as evidence,
because of the coercion, violence and emotional manipulation
inflicted on him. Thomass conviction and five-year sentence
on terrorism-related charges were quashed, although he still faces
a retrial.
Last July, Bongiorno himself warned about the dangers of sacrificing
the presumption of innocence for political expediency.
He granted bail to two accused members of the separatist Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and expressed doubt that they would
be convicted under the anti-terrorism laws for fund-raising for
the LTTE, because the organisation was not listed in Australia
or Sri Lanka as a terrorist organisation. Following that ruling,
a magistrate granted bail to another Tamil man who had been extradited
from Sydney on similar charges.
The following month, Federal Court judge Jeffrey Spender ruled
that the Howard government had unlawfully cancelled the visa of
Indian Muslim doctor Mohamed Haneef, in an attempt to detain him
indefinitely after a magistrate granted him bail on a charge of
supporting terrorism. Spender said Immigration Minister Kevin
Andrews had applied a guilt by association test that
many people, from Galileo Galilei to Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson
Mandela, would have failed. By the time that Spender delivered
his judgment, Haneefs charge had been dropped after it was
revealed that police evidence against him was false.
Last November, NSW Supreme Court judge Michael Adams threw
out an alleged confession of terrorism training by Izhar ul-Haque,
a Sydney medical student. Adams accused AFP and Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) officers of committing the crimes
of false imprisonment and kidnap at common law in
an unsuccessful effort to coerce the young man into becoming an
undercover agent.
The Howard government publicly backed all these prosecutions
as part of its efforts to whip up fears of terrorism to justify
the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, introduce police-state
measures and divert attention from mounting social inequality.
Despite the increasingly discredited character of the war
on terror, Rudd has repeatedly stated his hard line
determination to retain the anti-terrorism provisions. The treatment
of the men on trial in Melbourne makes clear that this is inseparable
from the ongoing destruction of fundamental legal rights and civil
liberties.
See also:
Australia: Haneef inquiry
seeks to restore confidence in terror laws
[26 March 2008]
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