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New attack on freedom of expression
Australian police seize artwork from gallery
By Susan Allan
15 February 2006
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In an unprecedented attack on democratic rights and freedom
of artistic expression, police in the Australian state of Victoria
illegally, and without any prior warning, removed an artwork displaying
a burnt and tattered Australian flag from a Melbourne gallery
last month.
Created by Azlan McLennan and titled Proudly unAustralian,
the flag was on a billboard on the first floor outside the Trocadero
Art Space gallery. It is the fourth time in the past two years
that McLennans work, which expresses political opposition
to the war on terror, the oppression of Palestinians
and the growing racial attacks on Muslims and Middle Eastern immigrants,
has been censored by authorities.
Police did not inform either McLennan or Trocaderos owners
that they planned to seize Proudly unAustralian. Instead,
they waited until the gallery was unattended and then entered
a neighboring Internet café and climbed through a window
to remove the artwork. A police business card was left behind
to inform the artist.
The National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA) and the
Australian Lawyers for Human Rights immediately condemned the
police actions. NAVA executive director Tamara Winikoff said that
the censorship of McLennan work was a serious violation of artistic
freedom.
A NAVA media release declared: In this case we are asking
urgent questions about the artists rights: did the police
have a warrant to remove the artwork, and if so on what grounds;
is burning or defacing an Australian flag illegal under state
or federal laws; are artists protected from these laws by satirical
or fair comment provisions; would such an act be considered seditious
under the new legislation; what must be the nature and form of
public complaints in order to justify such actions?
While police have since claimed that they acted in response
to public complaints, gallery director Michael Brenner said he
had received no objections to the billboard. The gallery, he said,
still had not been informed whether police had an official warrant
to remove the flag or any indication of when or if the artwork
would be returned.
So far no charges have been laid against McLennan or the gallery
owners, but police have told the media that they are still
investigating. They have suggested that McLennans
display could be treated as an offensive behavior or offensive
language incident.
The seizure of McLennans artwork occurs against a background
of ongoing nationalist hysteria whipped up by the state and federal
government and the mass media, which is primarily being directed
against Muslims and Middle Eastern immigrants.
A week before the police raid, a Western Sydney youth, Hadi
Khawaja, was jailed after he took an Australian flag from an ex-servicemans
club in Brighton-le-Sands and threw it to his friends, who burnt
it in protest over racist mob attacks on Middle Eastern youth
in the Sydney beach suburb of Cronulla last December. While it
is not an offense to burn the Australian flag, Khawaja was found
guilty of malicious damage and entering enclosed lands and sentenced
to a harsh three-month prison term.
Right-wing radio announcers, along with certain parliamentarians,
have seized on McLennans Proudly unAustralian to
demand new legislation.
A day after the police raid, Bronwyn Bishop, a Liberal MP and
former government minister, told a Young Liberal convention that
she planned to introduce a private members bill to make
it a criminal offence to violate the Australian flag.
She declared that such incidents denigrated our Australian
culture and way of life.
The censorship of Proudly unAustralian follows a series
of attacks on freedom of artistic expression across Australia
in the last decade, and particularly on the visual arts in Melbourne.
In 1996, the Kennett Liberal government banned artwork produced
for a Melbourne freeway tunnel by Karen Lindner because it was
critical of corporate sponsorship. In 1997, the National Gallery
of Victoria withdrew Andrés Serranos photograph Piss
Christ from the gallery after protests by right-wing Christian
fundamentalists. In 2002, a giant painting by antiwar artist George
Gittoes for a city apartment building was suddenly rejected by
the property developers who had commissioned it, just as it was
about to be unveiled.
McLennan has been a particular target. In 2004 his artwork
Fifty Six, which consisted of an Israeli flag overlaid
with statistics outlining the plight of the Palestinian people
since 1948, was prevented from being displayed in a shop-front
art space funded by Melbourne City Council. Zionist and other
right-wing elements claimed it was anti-Semitic.
A year later, another McLennan work, Canberra 18, also
partly funded by the Melbourne City Council, was prevented from
being displayed. The artwork was critical of the war on
terrorism, and referred to 18 groups on the federal governments
list of terrorist organisations. It consisted of pictures
of various terrorists, including Osama bin Ladenwith brief
excerpts from statements made by the US State Department and the
Australian governmentand indicated that some of the organisations
had previously received American backing.
Early this year, just before Proudly unAustralian, McLennan
produced posters highlighting the British police murder of Jean
Charles de Menezes on the London Underground in July 2005, and
opposing the frame-up trial of alleged Australian terrorist Jack
Thomas. McLennans posters were removed from city streets
after the state Labor government declared them to be offensive
and obscene.
On January 16, McLennan told the Arts Hub Australia
web site that Proudly unAustralian was a symbol of the
locally and internationally deplored treatment by the Australian
government of its indigenous peoples, asylum seekers, its industrial
relations and education reforms, US collaboration in the attacks
in Iraq and Afghanistan and the incitement against Muslim and
Arab populations at home and abroad.
Last week he told the ABC-TVs 7.30 Report
that he was considering legal action against the police unless
the flag was returned and with an apology. I mean were
talking about police intervening in an art exhibition here. Does
this mean that this is going to start happening on a regular basis
if theres a complaint?
In fact, the seizure of Proudly unAustralian demonstrates
that the government assault on freedom of expression is escalating.
It follows the recent introduction by the Howard government of
its new Anti-Terrorism Bill. Under the sedition provisions of
the legislation, any form of political dissent, including criticism
of the Australian governments so-called war on terror
and its military operations in Iraq or Afghanistan, can be punished
with a jail term of seven years.
See Also:
Australian government
tries to censor Indonesian film festival
[15 December 2005]
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