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Australia: Political vendetta resumes as David Hicks leaves
prison
By Richard Phillips
3 January 2008
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Former Guantánamo prisoner David Hicks was finally released
from South Australias Yatala prison on December 29, more
than six years after he was sold by Afghanistans Northern
Alliance to the US military for a $1,000 bounty. But the 32-year-old
father of two has now become the subject of a new harassment campaign
by the Murdoch media and Australias political eliteLabor
and Liberal alike.
Hicks has committed no crime under Australian or international
law. He has, however, detailed information on torture and abuse
by US authorities at Guantánamo Baywhere he spent
more than five and a half years, most of it in solitary confinementand
on Canberras collaboration in the violation of his basic
democratic rights.
While the Howard government was prepared to let Hicks rot in
Guantánamo indefinitely, it was forced to change tack in
the face of last years federal election and the massive
groundswell of public sentiment demanding his release.
In early 2007, in an effort to dissipate growing anger over
Hickss detention, the Howard government organised a deal
with US Vice President Dick Cheney to secure his repatriation.
Under the arrangement, Hicks was bullied into pleading guilty
on aiding terrorism charges and transferred to a South
Australian prison to serve out the remaining nine of months of
a seven-year suspended sentence.
Hicks was to remain in the Australian prison until December
29 and gagged from speaking to the media. But the gag will expire
at the end of March, when he will be able to detail exactly what
happened to him in Afghanistan and Guantánamo. With senior
Howard government ministers and Australian Federal Police and
security services officials deeply implicated in Hickss
illegal detention, the media vendetta is aimed at discrediting
him before that occurs.
In February 2007 Queens Counsel Robert Richter and a former
chairman of the Criminal Bar Association, together with six other
highly-qualified lawyers pointed out that Canberra had violated
Australian law over its treatment of Hicks. The lawyers called
for war crime prosecutions of Howard and other senior government
ministers.
The campaign against Hicks follows the one conducted against
Mamdouh Habib, who was released from Guantánamo without
charge and returned to Australia in early 2005. Habib had his
passport cancelled and became the subject of ongoing harassment
by the Howard government and the Murdoch media. His home was burgled
on several occasions and he was assaulted by three unknown men,
suffering a knife wound late one night near his home. These incidents
were reported to police but there have been no investigations
and no one has been charged. Habib is currently suing Murdochs
Daily Telegraph for its claims that he was not tortured.
Release
As Hickss December 29 release approached, the Rudd Labor
government imposed a 12-month control order on him and the Murdoch
press stepped up its invective, demanding he issue a public apology.
South Australian Labor premier Mike Rann followed suit, having
already made great play of demanding a control order on Hickseven
before he had been repatriated. Federal Liberal Party leader Brendan
Nelson chimed in as well.
Rann referred to the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, implying
that Hicks was a dangerous terrorist. He told the media that Hicks
should apologise to survivors of the Bali terror attack in 2002
and the families of all Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan.
Ray Chesterton writing the Daily Telegraph, Murdochs
Sydney tabloid, insisted that Hicks should have been jailed
for life and denounced the former Howard government as spineless
for allowing itself, to be manipulated into setting him
free.
When Hicks was eventually released on Saturday morning more
than 70 media representatives jostled each other outside the South
Australian prison, with the event given live-to-air national television
coverage. But the young man, who requires extensive medical help
to recover from his incarceration, did not directly address the
media. He quickly left in a car, waving briefly to a small group
of supporters holding signs protesting the 12-month control order.
In a short statement read by his lawyer David McLeod, Hicks
said that he was not well enough to speak and had agreed, as part
of his release from Guantánamo, not to talk to the media
before the end of March. Its my intention to honour
this agreement as I dont want to do anything that might
result in my return there [to Guantánamo], he said.
Hicks thanked his family and a range of people who had campaigned
for his release: I would like to recognise the huge debt
of gratitude that I owe the Australian public for getting me home.
I will not forget, or let you down. He said that he wanted
some quiet time with my wonderful Dad, my family and friends
and requested that the media leave him alone.
I ask that you respect my privacy as I will need time
to readjust to society and to obtain medical care for the consequences
of five and a half years at Guantánamo Bay, his statement
said. I have been told that my readjustment will be a slow
process and should involve a gentle transition away from the media
spotlight. Thank you for respecting my privacy and allowing me
some breathing space to get on with my life.
Hickss dignified appeal, however, was ignored. When Terry
Hicks told the media that no apology was necessary because his
son had done five and a half years pretty tough and
that none of the allegations against him had been proven in a
proper court of lawthe Murdoch press and their political
supporters went into overdrive.
The Adelaide Advertiser editorialised that Hickss
future was bound up with a statement of regret and
launched an online poll to back its line. It called on readers
to notify the newspaper if they saw Hicks or were able to track
down where he was living.
Murdoch journalists also contacted one of the survivors of
the 2002 Bali bombing and the brother of an Australian killed
in the 9/11 terror attack in New York to back the media outlets
calls for an apology.
Not to be outdone, George Newhouse, a legal academic and unsuccessful
Labor candidate in the recent federal election, provocatively
declared that Hicks should reassure Australian Jews that
he no longer wants to rob or kill them. Former Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer was even wheeled out to denounce Hicks as evil.
Newhouse and Downer are well aware that Hicks committed no
crime under Australian or international law, and that he long
ago renounced his previous backing of radical Islam and its reactionary
outlook. In May 2003, Hicks made clear in an interview in Guantánamo
with the Australian Federal Police that he opposed the 9/11 attack
on the US and other terror attacks. The interview was suppressed
by the Howard government.
Human rights lawyer Stephen Kenny, told the Sunday Age
last week that Hicks was forced into accepting an offer
he couldnt refuse to get out of Guantánamo.
Kenny, who previously represented Hicks, said that he would not
have been convicted of any terrorism related charges by any fair
court.
Kenny said that he would have liked to test the charges against
Hicks in Australia because there was no evidence that he
had actually committed any crime... I was quite convinced that
no Australian court would ever convict himI dont believe
that in a fair court he would have been convicted of anything.
Opposition
In the six days since Hickss release, the campaign for
an apology has rolled on. Premier Rann even declared that the
media circus will continue until Hicks issued an official
apology.
Notwithstanding these efforts by the political and media establishment,
support for Hicks among ordinary people has only grown.
On January 1, Advertiser journalists found out where
Hicks was staying and attempted to stir up anger amongst his neighbours.
But they were quickly rebuffed. One neighbour declared he wanted
to invite Hicks over for a barbecue. Others quoted by the newspaper
said they were happy to have Hicks in the area. It
doesnt worry me at all, said one. We dont
know really what he did. Im happy to have him in my neighbourhood.
I dont have a problem with (him) at all, said another.
Moreover, the Advertisers online apology
poll attracted little support. Instead, hundreds of outraged emails
were sent to the newspaper denouncing its campaign.
One letter stated: Why should David Hicks apologise,
hes done his time in prison and now hell take the
next step in his new life here in Adelaide or wherever....BUSH,
BLAIR and HOWARD are the ones who have to apologise as they were
the ones who first went in and started the bloody wars in the
1st place. They have sent troops to Afghanistan and Iraq and for
what... ah, that stuff that runs the world, OIL ....
Other readers directly attacked the Murdoch press: Your
front page today is a disgrace. Your paper is a disgrace. You,
Mr. editor, are a disgrace! Another letter declared: What
trash the Murdoch press is. The Brits have got rid of Blair, we
have got rid of Howard and Bush is politically dead (lost the
House and the Senate). Get the message, Mr. Murdoch? We do not
want your world...
Another wrote: The suggestion I saw on one online Advertiser
article early yesterday that we phone up if we spot Hicks was
nothing short of reprehensible; the just say sorry
headline in the Sunday Mail was part of the witch-hunting,
prurient, self serving, sensationalist journalism
we have to endure.
Some letters called for the federal Labor government to make
an official apology to Hicks, while others condemned the state
Labor government: David is owed an apology for being kidnapped
and handed over to brutal terrorists far more than he owes anyone
an apology. There is not even the slightest allegation he has
actually brought harm to anyone in Afghanistan. Remember he went
there to support the then recognised government. What it is alleged
he has done is train, like any army reservist.
Another pointed out: David Hicks has paid a huge price
and continues to do so. Before people latch on to the self
confessed terrorism supporter aspect of Hicks, they should
ask themselves what they would confess to get out of five years
in a concentration camp like Guantánamo, and the interrogations
and torture that goes with it. .... As for Premier Mike Rann,
I suspect he would have more value shutting his cake hole on this
and pondering why an Australian was left to rot in Guantánamo
for five years without trial or justice.
See Also:
Terry Hicks, father of former Guantánamo
prisoner, speaks with WSWS
[3 January 2008]
Australian Labor government
endorses further punitive measures against David Hicks
[24 December 2007]
Howard government
caught out lying over Hicks release from Guantánamo
[1 November 2007]
Terry Hicks, father
of Australian Guantánamo prisoner, speaks with the WSWS
[1 November 2007]
Terry Hicks, father
of former Guantánamo prisoner, speaks with WSWS People
are now waking up...
[23 June 2007]
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