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Lengthy terrorist trials underway in Australia
By Mike Head
10 March 2008
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Two major terrorist trials began last month in Australia, with
the public subjected to an almost daily media diet of sensational
stories about alleged plots to kill and maim thousands of people.
Much more of the same can be expected, because the trialsinvolving
12 Muslim men in Melbourne and nine in Sydneyare likely
to run for the entire year and possibly into 2009.
The proceedingsthe countrys largest ever terrorist
prosecutionscan only be described as show trials, conducted
amid massive security displays. The federal Labor government and
its police and intelligence agencies, in partnership with their
Victorian and New South Wales state counterparts, are pursuing
a highly-orchestrated operation initially launched by the former
Coalition government.
In November 2005, just days after Prime Minister John Howard
suddenly recalled parliament to deal with an alleged imminent
security threat, more than 400 federal and state police
were mobilised to arrest most of the defendants in much-publicised
house raids. For more than two years, the men have been locked
away in solitary confinement in super max cells, treated
as the worst prisoners in the jail system.
All have pleaded not guilty. The Melbourne men have been charged
with being members of an unnamed terrorist organisationwhich
allegedly consisted only of themselvesproviding resources
(themselves) to the same terrorist organisation and raising finances
for the group. The Sydney charges are even more vague: conspiring
to perform acts in preparation for a terrorist attack. Conspiracy
is a notorious charge, traditionally laid when there is no evidence
of an actual crime.
None of the charges alleges any specific terrorist plans, targets,
dates or locations. Under changes to the anti-terror laws rushed
through federal parliament on the basis of Howards 2005
alert, anyone can be convicted without such evidence.
The prosecution only has to show that a terrorist
act was contemplated.
Denied the right to have their cases heard individually, the
accused have been put on trial en masse. So many lawyers, police,
prison warders and security guards are involved in the Melbourne
trial, which began on February 13, that it was considered too
large for the Victorian Supreme Court building.
For the Sydney trial, which commenced on February 25, the state
government built a new court, declaring it the most secure
in Australia. Make no mistakethis is the Fort Knox
of Australian courts, Premier Morris Iemma boasted in opening
the facility. The court complex features more than 500 closed-circuit
cameras, and airport-style screening of all attendees, with X-ray
machines and walk-though metal detectors. Riot squad police and
sniffer dogs patrolled the building on the trials first
day.
Sensational accusations
If one were to believe the media coverage, the arrested men
were on the brink of assassinating Howard, killing 1,000 people,
blowing up a major sporting event or causing mayhem
in Australia, all in the name of violent jihad.
Headlines in the Melbourne Herald Sun, Murdochs
tabloid, have included: Plot to assassinate Howard
and Every day a cop must die, terror trial told. The
Australian, Murdochs national daily, was little different:
Muslim group planned mass murder. According
to the rival Melbourne Age: Accused plotted mayhem,
court told.
All these claims are reportedly based on dubious interpretations
of highly-selective extracts from nearly 500 phone calls and other
conversations between several of the Melbourne men, which were
allegedly secretly-recorded by police and the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) over an 18-month period.
The Howard assassination plot scenario, for example,
is derived from a September 2004 conversation, in which the groups
alleged religious leader, Abdul Nacer Benbrika, was purportedly
asked by another defendant, a 19-year-old follower, If John
Howard kills innocent families ... Muslims, do we have to kill
him? Benbrika apparently failed to reply to the question,
which arose in a religious lesson, or at least no reply was reported
to the trial jury by prosecutor Richard Maidment SC.
Nevertheless, Maidment told the jury the conversation was a
clear discussion on killing Howard. If that were the case, surely
the police would have arrested the men immediately, in order to
protect Howard. Instead, they waited another 14 months before
rounding up the group.
Maidments opening address to the jury took two weeks,
during which time he was able to make his claims without having
to produce witnesses. He suggested no new evidence that added
to what had been already alleged by the authorities after the
men were arrested. Much of the prosecution case rests on the mens
possession of Islamic fundamentalist literature and videos, some
of which praised resistance to the US-led occupation of Iraq.
Notably, however, Maidment referred to an undercover agent
who infiltrated the group and acted as a provocateur to incite
and entrap Benbrika. Posing as a Turkish Muslim man interested
in violent jihad, the agent, known as SIO39, professed a
knowledge of explosives and invited Benbrika to a remote location
to demonstrate his skills by igniting ammonium nitrate, a commonly
used fertiliser. In other words, a police agent conducted the
only explosion attributed to the group.
Benbrika and his followers are not the first to face terrorism-related
charges as the result of an agent provocateurs activities.
In 2005, a jury acquitted Zek Mallah in Australias first
terrorism trial after hearing that a police agent posing as a
journalist offered the young man $3,000 for a videotape of Mallah
uttering ludicrous threats against federal government agencies.
Defence lawyers ridicule allegations
When the defence lawyersafter two weeksfinally
had the opportunity to respond, they scoffed at the prosecutions
allegations. Representing one of the men, Trevor Wraight said
that at no point during the hundreds of hours of surreptitiously
recorded conversations had any of the men used the term violent
jihad. The prosecution had made up the term.
James Montgomery SC said the supposed terrorist organisation
was so unstructured and poorly conducted it would be better termed
a disorganisation. Benbrika couldnt organise
a booze-up in a brewery, he stated. Benbrikas barrister,
Remy van de Wiel QC, said the men were nothing more than a bunch
of typical males, full of bravado, bluster, nonsense,
all wanting to be heroes in their own lunchtime.
Another barrister, Julian McMahon, accused the prosecution
of shock and awe tactics, based on the President
Bush doctrine, by presenting photographs of people being
beheaded by Muslim extremists designed to seduce jury members
and lead them to pre-judge the accused. It was akin to McCarthyism
to suggest that the men were guilty just because they read and
viewed such material. Gerard Mullaly said the views and opinions
expressed were undoubtedly fundamentalist and extreme
but there is still no law against what you think. Its
not a crime to be angry about what you think are injustices wherever
they are in the world.
The Melbourne trial is expected to last for nine months, while
the Sydney trial will hear at least three months of legal argument
before a jury is even empanelled. The accused and their lawyers
have expressed frustration at the length of the trials, with one
barrister saying his client felt hamstrung by the fact that the
jury would be drip fed by the prosecution for six
months before he would have his say.
It is not yet possible to come to any definitive conclusions
about the evidence against the 21 men, although it is full of
holes and contradictions. What is clear is that the timing of
the mass arrests served the purposes of the Howard government
and the state Labor leaders. In 2005, they faced growing opposition
from the legal profession, civil liberties groups and the public
as they sought to push through new counter-terrorism legislation.
Howards terrorist alert was used to ram through,
within just 36 hours, the first installment of the Anti-Terrorism
Act 2005, changing the wording of all terrorism offences from
the terrorist act to a terrorist act.
By removing the need for the police to prove any specific terrorist
plot, this amendment paved the way for the arrests, which were
then staged to justify Howards claim that the law had to
be tightened up to avert an immediate threat.
By the end of 2005, the entire Act had been passed, with the
support of the then Labor opposition. The measures permitted two
new forms of detention without trialpreventative detention
and control ordersand outlawed encouraging or
expressing sympathy for terrorism. Sedition offences were widened
to cover urging disaffection with the government,
promoting feelings of ill-will or hostility between different
groups and urging conduct to assist an organisation
or country engaged in armed hostilities against Australia.
The treatment of the accused is setting precedents for the
anti-terrorism laws to be used to incarcerate people for years
in draconian conditions, stripped of basic legal, democratic and
political rights, before they can challenge the case against them.
The defendants, some of whom have serious mental health problems,
have held hunger strikes against being locked in Guantánamo
Bay-style isolation cells, shackled and dressed in orange, and
denied contact visits with their loved ones.
The conduct of these trials demonstrates that there is no difference
between the Howard and Rudd governments when it comes to the war
on terror. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has pledged to maintain
the anti-terrorism laws introduced since 2002, while convening
a judicial inquiry into the most notorious terrorist
frame-uplast years witch hunt against Indian Muslim
doctor Mohammed Haneefin order to try to restore public
confidence in the legislation.
In Haneefs case, the facts alleged by the
police, government and media, after a massive operation involving
more than 600 security personnel, proved to be completely false,
compelling the Director of Public Prosecutions to drop the charge.
Now the Labor governments, with the assistance of the media, are
going to extraordinary lengths to use the current trials to shore
up the somewhat discredited war.
If a genuine terrorist threat does exist in Australia, it is
the responsibility of the Howard government and its Labor partners,
and the Rudd government, which is continuing the thrust of their
policies, both domestically and internationally: deepening the
free market program at home while backing US-led military
aggression throughout the Middle East and Central Asia.
Incensed by the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, the alienation
and hostility among Muslim and Middle Eastern young men has been
fuelled by persistent anti-Muslim fear-mongering, which is continuing
through these trials, as well as worsening economic and social
inequality, which has produced high levels of disadvantage in
Islamic and other immigrant communities. If Islamic fundamentalists,
egged on by police provocateurs, can exploit marginalised young
men, the root causes lie in the program being pursued by the same
governments staging the trials in Melbourne and Sydney.
While Muslims have thus far been the prime targets in the war
on terror, the trials are also serving a wider political
purpose. They are part of bolstering the police-intelligence apparatus
as a whole for dealing with social unrest and political dissent
among working people as economic conditions deteriorate.
See Also:
Australian Federal Police commissioner
reveals scale of Haneef frame-up
[3 March 2008]
Australia's "Anti-Terrorism"
Bill: the framework for a police state
[3 November 2005]
To silence opposition
to police-state measures
Australian government declares "urgent" terrorist threat
[2 November 2005]
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