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Australia: Labor premiers join hands with Howard at anti-terror
summit
By Mike Head
5 October 2005
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In an extraordinary display of bipartisan unity, the premiers
and chief ministers of the eight Australian states and territoriesall
Labor Party representativesjoined Prime Minister John Howard
in adopting measures of a police-state character at a Council
of Australian Governments counter-terrorism summit
on September 27.
After a two-hour closed-door meeting, the Labor leaders agreed
to all Howards proposals, including preventative
detention without charge, the imposition of house arrests or other
control orders and enhanced powers to call out the
military to deal with domestic unrest. Howard thanked his Labor
counterparts for their unanimous agreement to major
changes.
Never before has such a sweeping dismantling of civil liberties
taken place, and in such an openly anti-democratic manner. These
provisions abrogate some of the most basic democratic rights:
the freedoms of speech, movement and association, the presumption
of innocence and the right not to be detained without charge or
trial. Yet, for all the talk of public opinion demanding
such measures, there has not been a single parliamentary debate,
let alone public discussion.
On the pretext of responding to the July 7 bombings in London,
the prime ministers and the premiers gave the go-ahead for laws
that far outstrip anything seen during World Wars I and II. Howard
declared that unusual circumstances called for unusual
powers. What he did not mention is that Tony Blairs British
Labour government had already imposed preventive detention
and control orders well before the July 7 bombings.
More fundamentally, both Howard and Blair, like George Bush
in the United States, have dramatically heightened the danger
of terrorist attacks by the occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Like his counterparts, Howard is cynically exploiting the consequences
to carry through far-reaching changes to the state apparatus.
To provide an air of national emergency, Howard opened the
summit with a secret briefing by the heads of the main police
and intelligence agenciesthe Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation (ASIO), the Office of National Assessments (ONA)
and the Australian Federal Police (AFP). These are the same agencies
that collaborated with Howard to peddle the weapons of mass
destruction lies used to justify the Iraq war.
The day after the summit, Murdochs Australian
featured a claim that ASIO was monitoring up to 800 Muslim extremistsa
tenfold increase over the past two years. It was a transparent
post-summit bid to justify the new laws. The figure is almost
certainly inflated to include many who are simply opposed to the
criminal activities of the US and its allies in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The leaked ASIO material provides an indication of the scale
on which these new powers are likely to be used against a wide
layer of Muslims and their families. They are only the most visible
and vulnerable targets, however. In the lead-up to the summit,
with Labors backing, Howards government detained and
deported Scott Parkin, an American antiwar and anti-corporate
activist, because ASIO advised that his presence in the country
threatened security.
The few details provided in the summit communiqué confirm
the vast scope for these powers to be utilised for wider political
purposes.
Via secret court hearings, people will be subjected to 12-month
control orders. Without any notice, they can suddenly
find themselves under house arrest, barred from working or communicating
with other people, banned from using a mobile phone or the internet,
obliged to give unlimited entry to police officers and placed
under round-the-clock electronic monitoring.
They can appeal, but only in a closed court, where ASIO will
vet their lawyers and they will be denied access to the information
alleged against them. The AFP only has to argue that on
the balance of probabilities it has reasonable grounds
to think that the order will help prevent a terrorist act or that
a person has trained with a listed terrorist organisation.
With even fewer rights, people as young as 16 can be placed
in preventative detention. The AFP can issue the initial detention
order, a magistrate or judge can extend it for up to 14 days (Ruddock
has canvassed extending this to three months), and there is nothing
to prevent it being renewed continuously. Detainees will be held
incommunicado, permitted only to contact their employer or family
to let them know they are safe. Even conversations
with lawyers will be monitored. Prisoners can seek judicial
review or complain to the Ombudsman, but hearings will also
be secret and lawyers vetted.
New laws will enhance and clarify the military
call-out legislation passed in 2000 to allow the government to
mobilise the armed forces against civilians. Other measures include
expanded police stop and search powers, lengthy jail terms for
inciting political violence or support for enemies
of Australia, and greater powers to outlaw organisations that
advocate terrorism. All these provisions are based
on defining terrorism so widely that it covers many traditional
forms of political protest.
Ludicrous safeguards
This latest package is no more about protecting the safety
of ordinary people than the 26 pieces of counter-terrorism
legislation already introduced, with Labors support, since
2001. Well before 2001, a vast array of police and spying powers
already existed to combat terrorism.
Provisions such as closed courts, secret evidence and vetting
of lawyers make a mockery of the claims by the Labor premiers
to have insisted on safeguards. Perhaps the most ludicrous safeguard
is the 10-year sunset clause to be inserted in the new legislation.
Keeping the laws in place for at least a decade, effectively makes
them permanent, in line with the indefinite war on terror.
Nevertheless, the lip service to safeguards betrays
a certain political nervousness. Despite the lack of any opposition
in the major parties, deep concerns exist about the tearing up
of democratic and legal rights. These were partly expressed by
civil liberties, Islamic and legal groups. Liberty Victoria president
Brian Walters, SC, said: It is just an absolute disgrace
and a dereliction of duty by the premiers and Prime Minister in
terms of failure to protect human rights and our way of life.
Letters to editors conveyed a mixture of shock and disgust
at Labors complicity in such totalitarian measures. One
said: Congratulations to all state ALP premiers for your
induction as a fully operative sub-branch of the Liberal Party.
The sun has indeed set.
Some drew connections to the occupations of Afghanistan and
Iraq. One correspondent wrote: I would not expect otherwise
of a government that allows its citizens to be held captive in
jail for years without charge and which supports the American
government, which refuses to observe the Geneva Convention.
Another commented: This is the same kind of democracy we
have so proudly given to the people of Iraq and Afghanistan.
A number of media commentators and editorials expressed fears
that the laws would backfire. Australians are now being
asked to accept that hundreds of residents are potential terrorists
and the government must be mindful of alienating sections
of the community, a Melbourne Age editorial cautioned.
However, this editorial, like the one in its sister newspaper,
the Sydney Morning Herald, did not oppose the laws outright.
It simply urged Howard and the premiers to consider stronger safeguards.
Similarly, the Australian Greens and Australian Democrats issued
statements merely calling for better legal protections. This is
a further warning that no section of the political and media establishment
will defend even basic democratic rights and civil liberties.
To try to justify their lineup with Howard, the Labor leaders
claimed to have been convinced by the serious briefing
given by the security agencies. Yet, they had spelled out their
readiness to fully cooperate with Howard long before the summit
assembled. In fact, the weeks leading up to the event saw a bidding
war between them to see who could unveil the most extensive police
powers.
So intent were the premiers on aligning themselves with Howard
that they effectively cold-shouldered the federal Labor leader
Kim Beazley who, two days before the summit, attempted to outdo
Howard by proposing even more draconian police powers. Beazley
proposed that on the basis of credible intelligence,
police should be given the power to seal off entire suburbs to
search people, houses and vehicles.
The consensus on display at the summit extends to every issue
facing ordinary people. Both major parties have implemented years
of attacks on health care, education, welfare, jobs and working
conditions.
At the post-summit media conference, each of the premiers emphasised
the spirit of cooperation that united them with Howard.
Queensland Premier Peter Beattie declared: I think weve
shown today that when the interests of the nation are put to the
test then the leaders of this country can actually work together
with the prime minister.
These are pledges to stand together to combat any threat to
the national interestthat is, the interests
of the ruling establishmentunder conditions where the bipartisan
imposition of the free market requirements of global
capitalism has produced widespread disaffection, alienation and
distrust. Moreover, the quagmires in Iraq and Afghanistan, combined
with the collapse of the lies used to justify the occupations,
have produced mounting scepticism in the war on terror.
In the final analysis, democratic forms of rule are incompatible
with the ever-widening social inequality and deepening hostility
produced by this program of militarism, social reaction and suppression
of free speech. It is to deal with the emergence of political
opposition and social unrest that the two major parties have come
together to boost the powers of the state.
See Also:
Australian government to deport
American antiwar activist
[14 September 2005]
Australian government unveils
legal framework for police state
[12 September 2005]
Australian "counter-terrorism"
summit to discuss police-state measures
[27 August 2005]
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