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Tamils arrested in Australia under Howards draconian
anti-terrorism laws
By Mike Head
7 May 2007
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In a series of federal and state police raids in Sydney and
Melbourne, two prominent members of Australias Tamil community
were arrested on May 1 on terrorism charges, with
the police publicly declaring that more arrests were likely to
follow.
The operation follows a wave of similar arrests in the United
States and France of alleged supporters of the separatist Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in Sri Lanka. Last year President
Mahinda Rajapakse plunged the country back into civil war by ordering
military offensives against the LTTE in flagrant violation of
a 2002 ceasefire. Led by Washington, which has tacitly backed
Rajapakse, the Western powers are now seeking to cripple the LTTEs
support network among Tamils living in exile.
Aruran Vinayagamoorthy, 32, a former Tamil newspaper editor,
and Sivarajah Yathavan, 36, each face three charges of being members
of, funding and providing support to a terrorist organisation,
even though the LTTE has not been listed in Australia as a terrorist
group. They could be jailed for lengthy periodstwo of the
charges carry 25-year maximum jail terms, and the other 10 years.
In the meantime, they could languish in prison for many months
awaiting trial.
The two men became the first non-Muslims to be rounded up under
the Howard governments anti-terrorism laws.
Their arrests demonstrate how the legislation can be used not
only to victimise and demonise the Islamic community but also
to criminalise anyone regarded by the Australian government as
politically dangerous.
Police officers refused to provide details of the allegations
against the two men, but admitted there was no evidence of any
terrorist activity or planning in Australia. Instead, they accused
the pair of raising money for relief projects, including for victims
of the 2004 tsunami, with the knowledge that some funds were going
to the LTTE, which controls parts of the tsunami-affected north
and east.
The prosecution will rely on sweeping definitions of terrorist
act and terrorist organisation in the legislation
that has been passed since 2002. Anyone can be convicted for donating
to, or supporting, an overseas political group alleged to be attempting
to intimidate or coerce a government,
including by threatening to damage or disrupt infrastructure.
These provisions apply even if the group has not been officially
declared terrorist or is also involved in humanitarian
projects.
Under these vague definitions, people could have been previously
jailed as terrorists for giving money to the anti-apartheid movement,
Irish republican causes, or East Timorese independence groups.
The laws could currently be used against donors to Hezbollah-run
aid projects in south Lebanon, which was devastated by last years
Israeli blitzkrieg. Whether a movement is officially designated
terrorist or liberation depends entirely
on the political needs and calculations of the government of the
day.
While the LTTE has not been outlawed in Australia, it has been
named, together with more than 400 other groups and individuals,
by the UN Security Council as terrorist for financial
purposes. Others listed, mostly at the behest of the Bush administration,
include Spanish, Balkan, Peruvian, Irish, Kurdish, Afghan, Iraqi
and Palestinian groups. Organisations supporting these groups
can have their assets seized and their members jailed.
The latest raids and arrests are part of a two-year operation,
jointly conducted by the federal Howard government and the state
Labor governments of Victoria and New South Wales. In November
2005, federal and state police and intelligence officers conducted
raids on the homes and business premises of scores of Tamils,
five of whom were detained for interrogation before being released
without charge. Police predicted then that charges would follow,
just like raids on Muslims paved the way for the arrest of 18
Muslim men in the same month.
The 2005 raids served two inter-related purposes. The first
was to further stoke fears of terrorism in Australia to justify
draconian new counter-terrorism measures being pushed through
federal and state parliaments. These police-state measures included
detention without trial, and expanded sedition and advocating
terrorism provisions that could be used to silence criticism
of government policy, such as the Australian military interventions
in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Asia-Pacific region.
The second purpose was to meet a request by Rajapakse, who
had just taken office that month, for an international crackdown
on the LTTE. The unstable minority government formed by Rajapakse,
previously the prime minister, set about whipping up communalist
sentiment against the minority Tamil population as a means of
diverting widespread discontent over falling living standards
and deepening social inequality.
This months arrests come amid the Sri Lankan militarys
escalating military offensives, which have substantially driven
the LTTE out of its eastern strongholds. Since Rajapakse took
office as president, an estimated 4,000 people have died in the
renewed war and some 300,000, mostly Tamils, have been displaced.
The LTTE has responded with a series of bus bombings and primitive
air attacks, the latest of which took place last week, causing
panic throughout Colombo.
Last August, the Bush administration signalled its support
for Rajapkse by arresting more than a dozen people on charges
of supporting the LTTE. In late April this year, American police
arrested another alleged LTTE member for providing material
support to a foreign terrorist organisation. Last month,
French police also detained dozens of suspected LTTE supporters,
some of whom were later charged with criminal association
with a terrorist enterprise. According to press reports,
the French anti-terrorist agency was working with its equivalents
in the US, Britain, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Canada and
Australia.
While the World Socialist Web Site is fundamentally
opposed to the LTTEs political program of Tamil separatism,
the primary responsibility for the civil war, and the loss of
nearly 70,000 lives, lies with the Sinhala political establishment
in Colombo. It has based itself on anti-Tamil discrimination since
independence in 1948 as a means of dividing the working class
and rural masses. In 1983, this policy exploded into civil war
and successive governments have waged a vicious communal war since
then.
Australian Attorney-General Philip Ruddock claimed that the
police had acted independently in this weeks arrests, without
any political pressure or instructions. But Victorian deputy police
commissioner Kieran Walshe indicated that the police had acted
under political direction, telling a media conference: Weve
got to recognise that both the Australian government and the Victorian
government have had a commitment to dealing with terrorism.
For its part, the Sri Lankan government swiftly claimed credit,
saying it had been working with Australian officials for months.
We expect there to be more arrests, foreign affairs
secretary Palitha Kohona told Australian Broadcasting Corporation
radio. We are also aware that there are other people who
are being investigated and we will encourage the Australian authorities
to proceed to take action against them as well.
As soon as the Australian raids were announced, Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer joined police officials and the mass media in
branding the LTTE a terrorist organisation, even though this is
now a legal issue in the criminal proceedings against the two
men. The police held a media conference to proclaim their guilt.
Victorian police chief commissioner Christine Nixon accused the
men of duping people by raising money under the banner of the
2004 tsunami relief program. Downer later compounded the prejudice
to the mens case, declaring there was no doubt
that Australian money was funding the LTTE.
In court, defence lawyer Rob Stary objected that the police
press conference had contaminated the mens presumption of
innocence and said the police refusal to provide details of the
alleged offences had made it impossible to make a bail application.
Magistrate Clive Alsop declared he was not interested in political
statements.
Once more, unsubstantiated allegations of terrorism
are being used for outright attacks on basic political, legal
and civil rights. These developments highlight the extraordinary
scope for Australian governments to use the so-called anti-terrorist
laws to exploit the bogus war on terror launched by
Washington to target anyone considered a threat to Australian
domestic or foreign policy.
See Also:
Jack Thomas "control
order" case
Australian government argues for mass detention power in "war
on terror"
[24 April 2007]
Australia: The true face
of the "war on terror"
Anti-terror police raid homes of Sydney University students
[20 March 2007]
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