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Australian media debates legalisation of torture
By Richard Phillips
19 April 2005
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Over the past three and a half years, the Howard government,
in line with its embrace of the Bush administrations war
on terror and the illegal invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq,
has conducted an unrelenting assault on fundamental democratic
rights.
With tactical support from the Australian Labor Party, the
government has endorsed the illegal US detention and abuse of
Australian citizens David Hicks and Mamdouh Habib in Guantánamo
Bay, enacted its own anti-terror laws, asserted the right to imprison
asylum seekers indefinitely and imposed other repressive measures.
In addition, the Howard government has refused to support the
Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on Torture.
Endorsement of this protocol, which was designed to strengthen
the 1984 Convention, would compel Canberra to allow regular inspections
of Australian detention centres and prisons by international and
local monitoring organisations, something it has no intention
of allowing.
In line with this dangerous erosion of basic rights, sections
of the local media, with encouragement from the government, have
attempted to create a social and moral climate where torture is
legitimised as a necessary, if unpleasant, fact of life.
International human rights laws have long been the targets
of right-wing talkback radio hosts and various high-profile Murdoch
press commentators, but over recent months calls for the legalisation
of torture have been aired by other sections of the media. They
include the state-funded Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)
and Special Broadcasting Service (SBS). Both networks, which are
under intense pressure to end all criticism of government policy,
have held forums on the acceptability of torture,
with various right-wing commentators given media time to peddle
their views on the subject.
On February 15, The Law Report, an ABC Radio National
program, discussed torturewhat it was and was it ever
justified? Among those participating were various human
rights activists and Julie Clarke, a Deakin University law lecturer
who openly called for torture bans to be lifted.
Clarke said torture should be allowed in certain circumstanceswhen
urgent information was required to prevent an impending
terrorist attack. This, in the parlance of those attempting to
justify the physical and psychological abuse of prisoners, is
known as a ticking bomb scenario. She favourably cited
a recent German case where a deputy police commissioner instructed
his officers to torture a man involved in the kidnapping of an
11-year-old boy.
Given the widespread international outrage over the US military
abuse of prisoners in Abu Ghraib, Clarke said she did not
condone the practices at the notorious prison, but insisted
that they had occurred because there were bans on torture.
Not having torture legalised, she said, means
that its sort of been driven underground a little bit, beyond
accountability... The idea of making it accountable would be to
try and reduce the instances of torture that actually take place,
and to be able to demonstrate publicly why they are taking place.
When it was suggested that this would only institutionalise
the practice, she replied: Well it could, but I think thats
perhaps better than circumstances where we have people that are
not trained using torture.
While the programs presenter and other guests, including
Jumana Musa, an Amnesty International official observing the military
trials in Guantánamo Bay, opposed Clarke, her position
reveals the extent of the rightward shift by sections of Australian
academia and the so-called small-l liberal media.
Airing such calls would have been regarded as an abomination only
a few years ago.
On April 5, SBS televisions Insight program
followed up with an hour-long dialogue on the subject. Guests
included two former US military interrogatorsBob Newman
and Mike Ritzand a studio audience.
Among those commenting from the audience were two Howard government
supporters and advocates of harsh interrogation techniquesTed
Lapkin, associate editor of the Review, a Zionist publication,
and Neil James, executive director of the Australian Defence Association.
While various human rights activists, a philosopher, psychologist
and an East Timorese man who was tortured by the Indonesian military,
voiced their concerns about the growing incidents of prisoner
abuse, Insight presenter Jenny Brockie allowed Newman,
Ritz and other right-wing elements to dominate the forum.
Much of the discussion centred on whether torture, which was
largely defined in physical terms, worked or not.
Virtually no consideration was given to psychological abuse and
its impact. Nor was any attempt made to explain how and why torture
was first outlawed in England in 1640; was an early reform of
the 1789 French Revolution; and why it remains a war crime today.
Moreover Brockie put television audiences off their guard by providing
few political details of the background and agenda of those who
were redefining torture or suggesting that bans be
lifted.
Newman is a former combat Marine and a veteran of the first
Gulf War. He runs nationally syndicated radio programs in the
US, which promote Washingtons war on terror,
is a director of an international security and counter-terrorism
corporation and a regular contributor to Frontiers of Freedom
and other extreme right-wing publications.
Ritz heads Team Delta, a private US company that provides realistic
military experiences and interrogation training for law
enforcement officers, security companies and other individuals.
Its slogan is We can make you talk. Former US military
intelligence, Special Forces and other elite military personnel
conduct Team Delta classes.
Lapkin, an Australian resident, previously worked as an Israeli
intelligence officer and was recently a publicist for the US Republican
Party. James is a former Australian military intelligence officer,
who taught specialist courses, including interrogation techniques,
to Australian military intelligence personnel and private security
agencies.
Prisoner mishandling
Newman opened the discussion by presenting another
ticking bomb scenario to justify the abuse of prisoners,
which he claimed was legal under the Geneva Conventions. He declared,
however, that terrorists did not rate protection under
the Conventions. Ritz attempted to whitewash the US treatment
of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, declaring that it was not torture
but a prisoner mishandling process.
James, while claiming to oppose torture and insisting that
such practices never occurred in the Australian military, made
the extraordinary statement that there were a lot of thingssleep
and sensory deprivationwhich were falsely described as torture.
This, he said, complicated the issue.
In an attempt to denigrate widespread concern about prisoner
abuse, he declared: Most things are torture, if you do it
for long enough. Eating ice cream and beer, especially if you
do it together, would be torture if you did it forever. But its
not torture in the short term.
When Sarah Joseph from the Castan Centre for Human Rights explained
that international law not only prohibited torture but all inhuman
and degrading treatment, Insight host Brockie glibly
concluded that a definition of torture was still very interpretive.
Ritz concurred, claiming that lower-ranking US soldiers were
not clear about the issue. Asked point-blank whether he would
physically abuse someone to save lives, he responded:
Im going to do what it takes.
The program then screened a fictional SBS news report about
an impending terrorist bomb attack in Sydney. Lapkin was asked
to comment. [W]ere at war with terrorists ... [so]
talking about the conventions of civilian courtrooms and the rules
that govern civilian life are really irrelevant, because its
a battlefield situation.
Another audience member, Raimond Gaita, a philosophy professor
from Kings College, correctly insisted that torture was one
crime against humanity whose prohibition should be exceptionless.
When he suggested that the Australian and other governments had
been complicit in the rendition of prisoners, James interjected,
claiming that there was no evidence that the Australian government
was involved.
Challenged on this, James responded: [A]spects of the rendition
policy are probably a bit... for want of a word, illegal. However,
I once watched an entire one-hour documentary on Mamdouh Habib,
which bleated at length about him being sent back to Egypt and
didnt once point out that he was an Egyptian citizen.
Although an audience member attempted to refute this well-known
lie, presenter Brockie remained silent.
As the show continued, Ritz made the astonishing claim that
sleep deprivation and stress positions were not torture
or even a violation of human rights laws.
Naldo Rei from East Timor, who was tortured on seven occasions
by Indonesian troops, described the abuse and explained that he
nevertheless refused to comply with his interrogators, because
it would have led to the killing of members of his family.
Ritz responded by suggesting that perhaps the torture could
have been avoided if Indonesian troops had just approached
discussing family with him. In other words, the interrogators
should have terrorised the East Timorese youth with suggestions
that the military authorities would target his family if he failed
to comply.
A day after Insight was broadcast, Newman published
a vitriolic newspaper column entitled Hate Down Under
in which he declared that most of the Insight audience
was infected with the anti-American contagion and,
like Aussie sheep, knew nothing about fighting terrorism.
[I]n their lazy arrogance and from the comfort of their
living rooms Australian liberals, like American liberals, see
not the terrorists as the enemy, but those who are willing to
fight them... [T]he only apparent hope for Australia, he
concluded, is Prime Minister John Howard who was attempting
to defend the country against terrorist attacks.
Notwithstanding Newmans hysterical comments, the fact
that he and his like-minded counterparts in Australia are given
a platform to denounce the most elementary of legal rightsthe
illegalisation of tortureis an alarming development. That
this issue can be politely debated by sections of the so-called
liberal media is a clear indication of the deep political and
moral decay within broad sections of Australias ruling establishment.
Perhaps one of the more revealing comments on the Insight
program came from Marian Wilkinson, national security editor for
the Sydney Morning Herald. The Herald has, on occasions,
criticised some of Canberras human rights violations.
Wilkinson told the program that she opposed the use of torture.
But her disagreements, like those of the Herald,
were from an entirely tactical standpoint. The US abuse of terror
suspects, she said, ran counter to Washingtons claims to
be democratising the Middle East and undermined its political
credibility. She did not challenge the bogus character of Washingtons
assertions or Australias participation in its criminal Middle
East operations.
Asked directly whether a ticking bomb scenario
justified the use of torture, Wilkinson replied that if this sort
of event ever occurred, the Australian prime minister should determine
what is acceptable in the self-defence of the nation.
This, she insisted, without batting an eyelid, was separate to
changing the laws on torture. [I]f an officer decided that
[torture] was absolutely necessary for the saviour of life, you
could look at a presidential or some sort of legal pardon situation
in the aftermath.
In other words, there would be no opposition from Wilkinsons
quarter if the government quietly sanctioned illegal acts of torture,
and then retrospectively legitimised them by pardoning the perpetrators.
See Also:
New details of Australian
involvement in the torture of Mamdouh Habib
[28 March 2005]
Australian woman imprisoned
for 10 months as an illegal immigrant
[9 February 2005]
Release Hicks,
Habib and all Guantanamo Bay detainees!
Australian government aids and abets US torture
[18 June 2004]
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