|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australia: Latest terror plot claims unravel in
court
By Mike Head
24 April 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
For 24 hours last week, the Australian media featured the latest
terrorist scare campaign. On April 16, front-page newspaper articles
appeared with headlines such as Grand final terrorist plot
(Sydney Morning Herald) and Terror group plot to
hit MCG (Australian). They reported claims that in
2005 a group of 12 Islamic men currently on trial in Melbourne
had been on the brink of attacking the countrys largest
annual sporting eventthe Australian Football League (AFL)
grand final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
The Australians story began as follows: A
terrorist strike on the 2005 AFL Grand Final at the Melbourne
Cricket Ground was averted just two months before the game, after
police raids on members of an alleged homegrown Muslim terror
cell disrupted preparations for the attack. The article
went on to report that the jury in the trial had been told that
after plans to attack the MCG were foiled, the group
decided to target Melbournes Crown casino during a car racing
weekend or the AFLs pre-season NAB Cup football final early
in 2006.
The reports fitted a familiar pattern. Similar media claims
have accompanied each trial under Australias counter-terrorism
laws, introduced in 2002. In every instance, unsubstantiated allegations
have been presented as proof that ordinary Australians face grave
dangers from terrorists, either foreign-trained or
homegrown. So far, only one case has ended in a conviction,
however. Every other trial has ended in acquittal by a jury, or
the withdrawal of the charges, or the overturing of a conviction
on appeal because of coercive police methods.
The Melbourne trial and another running concurrently in Sydney
are the largest and most protracted terrorist trials yet conducted
in Australia. The 12 defendants in Melbourne are charged with
being members of an unnamed terrorist organisation, apparently
consisting only of themselves, while 10 Islamic men in Sydney
face charges of conspiracy to carry out an unspecified terrorist
act.
Most of the men were arrested in large police raids in November
2005, just days after the previous prime minister, John Howard,
declared there was an imminent terrorist threat and recalled parliament
to push through harsh amendments to the terrorism laws. Howard
publicly insinuated that the men were guilty, saying the arrests
highlighted the rise of locally-based terrorists and demonstrated
the need for stronger police powers, including new forms of detention
without trial.
From the outset, the latest claims, made by a prosecution witness,
Izzydeen Atik, a former associate of the men on trial, appeared
suspect. Atik offered no details of the supposed terrorist
strike on the football gamehe specified no methods
or weapons, and provided no evidence of any actual preparations.
His allegations were based solely upon a supposed conversation
with the groups alleged leader, Abdul Nacer Benbrika, in
which Benbrika told him that money to finance the attack on the
Grand Final had been seized by the police in raids on members
homes in July 2005. Yet, every media outlet, including the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation, published sensational reports of the
plot.
Within a day, the claims began to unravel. Once defence lawyers
commenced their cross-examination of Atik, it soon emerged that
he had suffered bouts of mental illness and previously been convicted
of fraud.
Questioned by Benbrikas lawyer, Remy van de Wiel QC,
Atik said he had suffered from schizophrenia, experienced hallucinations
and heard voices in his head while living in Sydney in 2002. He
admitted he had been facing jail terms for credit card frauds
at the time, but denied making up his psychiatric problems in
a bid to stay out of prison. Van de Wiel told the court of a 2002
psychiatric report in which Atik claimed birds often told him
their problems and that he had seen a female devil.
Atik admitted he had lived in a $450-a-week beachfront townhouse
in 2004 and 2005, employed a $500-a-week butler and drove a $500-a-month
luxury BMW car, all financed by committing frauds.
Van de Wiel accused Atik of fabricating the entire conversation
with Benbrika. The lawyer said Benbrika lived by a strict code
of Islam, had no television set and showed no interest in Australian
Rules football. Atik had claimed that Benbrika used the term NAB
Cup during the conversation, yet the name of the competition
had remained Wizard Cup during 2005 and did not change sponsor
to NAB until the following year.
Under cross-examination, it was also revealed that Atik only
told the police late last year about the alleged plan to attack
the football matches. Atik was originally arrested along with
other defendants in November 2005. When first interviewed, he
told police he knew nothing about terrorist plans and swore he
would have gone straight to police if he had known of any such
plots.
In April 2006, after being incarcerated in virtual solitary
confinement for five months with the other accused, Atik applied
for bail on the ground that he suffered from severe paranoid schizophrenia
and was in urgent need of treatment. Dr Mark Ryan, a psychiatrist
who had treated Atik told the court he had a severe mental illness.
A police officer testified that Atik had called them to the prison
and offered to tell us everything but declined to
be interviewed on tape. Nevertheless, Crown prosecutor Richard
Maidment QC insisted that Atik was a key member of Benbrikas
group, and a risk to public health and safety, and therefore could
not be released.
Last September, Atik was committed for trial. He also faced
charges of skipping bail on earlier fraud offences. Since then,
it seems, he has become a police informer, with the same prosecution
authorities now presenting him as a credible witness. No information
has been released on whether, and if so why, both sets of charges
have been dropped. Obvious questions are raised: what deal has
Atik struck with the police and prosecution to testify against
the remaining defendants?
The fact that the authorities are now relying upon Atiks
dubious testimony, arranged in unknown circumstances two years
after the initial arrests, points to serious weaknesses and problems
in the entire prosecution. Atik appears to have become the second
police informer involved in the case. In April 2006, media reports
revealed that police used an undercover agent to infiltrate Benbrikas
Islamic fundamentalist circle and that the agent acted as a provocateur
to incite and entrap Benbrika. The agent asked Benbrika to accompany
him in late 2004 to test explosives, secretly supplied by the
police. The resulting minor explosion on a remote hilltop was
the only blast allegedly conducted by any member of the group.
Benbrika was not the first to be set up by the police and Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) using undercover provocateurs.
In 2005, Zek Mallah was acquitted in Australias first terrorist
trial after the jury heard that a police agent posing as a journalist
had offered the troubled young man $3,000 for a videotape of Mallah
uttering wild threats to attack federal government buildings.
Late last year, the prosecution dropped a terrorist-related charge
against another Islamic young man, Sydney medical student Izhar
ul-Haque, after a Supreme Court judge accused police and ASIO
officers of illegally kidnapping and detaining him to try to force
him to become an informer.
Each case has displayed a common modus operandi. Provocateurs
and informers have been recruited, prejudicial allegations have
been splashed throughout the media, and politicians have done
their best to blacken the names of those arrested. These methods
have been driven by the political demands of the federal and state
governments and their security agencies to whip up fears of terrorism
and obtain convictions, in order to justify further extensions
of the counter-terrorism laws introduced since 2002.
With the help of these witchhunts, matching federal and state
laws have been passed that define terrorism so sweepingly that
it can cover political dissent, outlaw expressions of support
for resistance to Australian military operations, give the security
agencies vast surveillance powers, establish four different types
of detention without trial, and allow the government to ban organisations
by executive order.
The only conviction underlines the regressive nature of these
laws. In June 2006, Sydney architect Faheem Khalid Lodhi was convicted
on circumstantial evidence of preparing to commit an unspecified
terrorist act. Because of the wording of the laws, the police
did not have to prove that Lodhi planned a specific time, place
or method. Instead, the prosecution relied heavily on citing Lodhis
political and religious viewsparticularly his opposition
to the invasion of Iraqas proof that he was intent on terrorist
retaliation.
Growing distrust in the war on terror, fuelled
by the ul-Haque affair, on top of last years collapse of
the allegations against Indian Muslim doctor Mohamed Haneef and
the governments complicity in the five-year military detention
of David Hicks at Guantánamo Bay, became a potent factor
in last Novembers election defeat of the Howard government.
What has been revealed about the police methods in the current
terrorist trials, however, is another indication that nothing
has changed under the Rudd Labor government. Labor, which now
occupies office in every state and territory, as well as federally,
is fully committed to maintaining the barrage of terrorism laws
that have made the current trials possible, and which trample
over fundamental legal and democratic rights.
See Also:
Lengthy terrorist trials underway
in Australia
[10 March 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |