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To silence opposition to police-state measures
Australian government declares urgent terrorist
threat
By Mike Head
2 November 2005
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In a sinister bid to silence the opposition that has erupted
to the police-state measures contained in his governments
Anti-Terrorism Bill 2005, Australian Prime Minister John Howard
today suddenly called a media conference to declare that an imminent
terrorist threat made it necessary to rush urgent
parts of the Bill through parliament within 24 hours.
Without giving any details or providing any evidence, Howard
said the government had received specific intelligence and
police information this week which gives cause for serious concern
about a potential terrorist threat. Details had already
been provided to Kim Beazley, the leader of the Labor Party opposition,
and to all the state Labor premiers.
Howard claimed that immediate passage of this Bill
was essential to strengthen the capacity of the law enforcement
agencies to effectively respond to this threat. He refused
to give further details about the alleged threat or when the government
became aware of it, citing operational security reasons.
Instead, he stated vaguely that the government was acting
against the background of the assessment of intelligence agencies
that a terrorist attack is feasible and could well occur.
He cited the just-released annual report of the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), which dovetailed with the governments
propaganda in favour of the Bill by warning of an underlying home-grown
terrorist threat, consisting of Australian-born Islamic extremists.
Noticeably, the Murdoch media played a prominent role in the
lead-up to Howards announcement. This mornings Australian
splashed the ASIO report all over its front page under the headline:
ASIO fears terror cells among us. Shortly after Howards
media conference, other Murdoch outlets, such as the Brisbane
Courier-Mail, quoted the Australians national
security editor, Patrick Walters, saying Howards statement
pointed to an imminent threat to Australians.
We know that ASIO and the AFP [Australian Federal Police]
have been monitoring a number of people considered high security
risks for a long period of time, Walters said. But
clearly this takes things to a new level. The requirement
for urgent laws, Walters said, indicates (the Government)
has far more precise intelligence relating to a group or an individual
wanting to carry out a terrorist attack.
At the press conference, Howard announced that a string of
amendments to the counter-terrorism legislation would be pushed
through all stages in the House of Representatives tonight and
that the Senate, which is not sitting this week, would be recalled
tomorrow to complete the passage of the laws. This immediate recall
and 24-hour deadline has no known precedent in Australian parliamentary
politics.
Howard also reiterated that the government remained determined
to have the entire Anti-Terrorism Bill, which is yet to be even
released to parliament, let alone the public, enacted before Christmas.
The urgent measures, contained in Schedule 1 of
the Bill, are draconian and far-reaching. In the first place,
they give the government and its security agencies far wider powers
to arrest and charge people with a range of terrorism offences
by removing the present requirement that the prosecution prove
a connection to an identified, specific terrorist act.
All that the authorities will have to allege is that the accuseds
conduct related to a terrorist actthat is, any
potential act. In addition, a person can be detained and ultimately
convicted even if a terrorist act does not occur.
This gives the federal police almost carte blanche powers to arrest
people on the vaguest possible charges of, for example, assisting,
preparing or supporting an unidentified
terrorist act that never takes place. Many of these offences carry
life imprisonment.
Even more ominously, the amendments dramatically expand the
governments power to outlaw organisations by executive fiat.
First, they extend the attorney generals proscription power
to groups that advocate terrorism. Second, they allow
the banning of a group for preparing, planning, assisting in or
fostering a terrorist act, also replacing the current
need to prove a connection to any specified alleged terrorist
act.
These provisions have sweeping implications because once groups
are listed as terrorist organisations, all their members,
supporters and financial donors are also liable to be arrested
and jailed for many years.
Furthermore, the advocacy measure is directly aimed
at suppressing free political speech. Advocacy is
defined as directly or indirectly counselling or urging
or directly or indirectly providing instructions on
or directly praising a terrorist act.
Praising terrorism could mean merely expressing
sympathy for, or calling for an understanding of the social and
economic roots of, terrorism. Counselling or urging
could consist of supporting the right of people under occupationfor
example, in Iraqto resist the occupying military forces
or a puppet regime.
These are among the most contentious provisions in the Anti-Terrorism
Bill, together with two new forms of detention without trialpreventative
detention and control ordersand wide-ranging
additional sedition offences.
Everything about the timing of Howards announcement points
to it being designed to create an atmosphere of emergency and
fear in order to stampede public opinion on the eve of the introduction
of the entire Bill into parliament.
For the past five weeks, Howard has been colluding with the
Australian state and territory leaders, all from the Labor Party,
to keep hidden from the public the details of the Bill, which
they all agreed to implement at a September 27 Council of Australian
Governments (COAG) counter-terrorism summit.
Just Friday, Howard went to the lengths of threatening legal
action against the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) chief minister
Jon Stanhope if he publicly released the final draft of the Bill.
Stanhope had posted an earlier draft on the Internet, sparking
widespread condemnation of its totalitarian features by lawyers,
civil liberties groups, former judges and ordinary citizens.
Now, just at the very point where the Bill is about to be officially
unveiled this week, with Howard having secured the final seal
of approval from the state premiers, the prime minister has launched
a blatant scare campaign so that the Bill can be railroaded through
parliament as quickly as possible.
It is not that Howard fears any opposition from the Labor Party,
federal or state. At his media conference, Howard revealed that
he already had the unanimous agreement of the state premiers to
the immediate introduction and passage of the Schedule 1 measures.
Almost simultaneously, Victorian Premier Steve Bracks announced
his acceptance of the final version of the whole Bill, adding
his support to that of his New South Wales and Queensland counterparts,
Morris Iemma and Peter Beattie.
Having been secretly briefed by the government, Beazley swiftly
followed suit, confirming his embrace of the urgent
laws. In fact, Beazley went one step further, saying he was ready
to recall Labors Senators today to approve the changes.
If it has an extensive urgency, as indicated by the Prime
Minister, it ought to be capable of being passed today and we
stand ready to ensure that it goes through today.
His assent was entirely predictable. Last Monday he declared
that federal Labor would back the passage of the entire Bill,
with or without the cosmetic legal and judicial safeguards
sought by the premiers to prevent the Bill being challenged as
unconstitutional.
Rather, Howards sudden emergency is directed
at suppressing the growing public hostility to the Bill and Labors
support for it. Letter writers to the Sydney Morning Herald
today provided a glimpse of the anger that greeted Beazleys
vow to pass the Bill.
One wrote: So the Labor leader plans to give the Prime
Minister everything he wants to combat terrorists, but only after
a token fight. The day will come when Mr Beazley writes his memoirs
and finally admits that he was a sleeper for the Liberal Party
all along. Why doesnt he come clean now instead, and officially
join the party he clearly believes has the vision for the Australia
he wants to live in on every significant issue being publicly
debated?
Another commented: If Kim Beazley likes John Howards
anti-terrorism laws so much, why doesnt he simply join the
bloody Liberal Party? I think the laws are a disgrace and I will
be writing to ASIO and the Howard proclaiming sedition. Down with
the Queen, down with the Government, down with the war in Iraq,
down with Guantanamo Bay, free David Hicks [the Australian citizen
incarcerated in Guantanamo Bay since January 2002].
As this writer suggests, his declared opinions will become
seditious under the Anti-Terrorism Bill, exposing him to the threat
of imprisonment for seven years for urging disaffection
with the government.
Howards invocation of a security emergency
is a serious warning of what is to come once the Bill becomes
law. Terrorist alarms issued on the basis of secret
and unverifiable information supposedly supplied by the police
and intelligence agencies will be used to whip up scare campaigns
to justify the suppression of political dissent.
These are the same politicians, security agencies and media
organisations that pumped out the lies about children overboard
to defend sending naval gunships to turn back leaking refugee
boats in 2001 and weapons of mass destruction to join
the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Now, once more with Labors bipartisan backing, the Howard
governments modus operandilies, deceit and misinformationis
being taken to a new level internally, in order to pave the way
for implementing laws that will strip away fundamental democratic
rights and political freedoms and establish the legal framework
for a police-state.
See Also:
Australia: Leaked "Anti-Terrorism"
Bill details draconian police-state plans
[20 October 2005]
The Australian media on the
origins of terrorism
[12 October 2005]
Australian government instigates
move to jail journalists
[10 October 2005]
Australia: Labor premiers
join hands with Howard at "anti-terror" summit
[5 October 2005]
Australian government to deport
American antiwar activist
[14 September 2005]
Australian government unveils
legal framework for police state
[12 September 2005]
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