Pacific whanau must be honoured
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The persecution of Bernard Collaery

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Bernard Collaery - "The contemptible prosecution of Bernard Collaery is an assault on the rule of law”

KEITH JACKSON

NOOSA – When I resigned as president of the Papua New Guinea Association of Australia in January 2009, I continued working on a few projects I did not want to see languish.

One was to gain national recognition of the 1,053 civilian and military prisoners interned by the Japanese in Rabaul who drowned when the prison ship Montevideo Maru was torpedoed on 1 July 1942 en route to Hainan in China.

The men had been captured after the Japanese forces invaded Rabaul in January 1942. Their deaths represent the greatest maritime tragedy Australia has known. And for 66 years their relatives had sought without success some expression of regret from the Australian government.

I had met a number of these people and agreed with their contention there was unfinished business attached to the tragedy. I believed this was a cause that could be successfully prosecuted.

Accordingly, a small group was established to press for appropriate national recognition of the relatives, to familiarise Australians with the story and to encourage further research into events relating to the sinking.

So began what was to become the Rabaul and Montevideo Maru Society, an association that grew to well over 300 members which, first under my presidency and later, when I became ill, under Phil Ainsworth, gained parliamentary recognition (which cost little but required much persuasion) and constructed an elegant memorial within the Australian War Memorial (which cost a lot and also required much persuasion).

By late 2010, I knew our group would need to incorporate and that it would need legal advice. It was suggested I write to Bernard Collaery:

“Don Hook referred me to you, something you may or may not be grateful for, in relation to the sinking of the Montevideo Maru on 1 July 1942.

“About a year ago, I was inveigled by some relatives of the men who died on the ship to become chair of an informal, unincorporated group that had the purpose of overcoming decades of official neglect of the tragedy and gaining greater recognition of it in our Australian community.

“We have had some success. The media has shown great interest. The Federal government is engaged. The War Memorial has invited us for discussions. And, after nearly 70 years, the relatives of the men who died are feeling that someone cares.

“The Committee has been told that, to properly memorialise the sinking of the Montevideo Maru and the fall of Rabaul that preceded it, it will need something of the order of half a million dollars, which is a daunting task.

“To achieve this quantum, it is clear we will need to offer tax deductions for donations, and to do this we must incorporate. So our rather pleasantly unbureaucratic and informal organisation has to step up to another level of activity and formality.

“We have a meagre $2,000 in the bank (funds that the 160 or so registered Friends of MvM have spontaneously donated), a great deal of enthusiasm and not much else. I was wondering if you would be willing to act pro bono on our behalf to establish a body incorporated in the ACT.”

The very next day, Bernard replied:

Bernard1“I should be honoured and pleased to assist your Committee pro bono. I am in London working on some loose ends to our successful case against the UK Ministry of Defence over the loss of an RAF Hercules aircraft and crew in Iraq. Returning on 12 January.

“My father has no known grave and I often visit the memorial to the 20,000 odd WW2 Europe theatre aviators with no grave at Runnymede. He was a RAAF Beaufighter pilot who went missing in action in June '44 after ditching in the North Sea shortly before I was born.

“Not wanting to jinx him my mother used not his first name but his best friend's, Bernard McMahon, then a prisoner of the Japanese to name me. So Don Hook knew I was a sure thing!”

Bernard Collaery is a litigation lawyer with great experience in complex and compelling cases. In 2010, when I first met him, he had been long time legal adviser to the East Timor Resistance and to East Timor President, Xanana Gusmao.

“Collaery Lawyers is deeply committed to the principle of giving back to the community,” he says, and the sheer bulk of his track record portrays this honorary service for many organisations representing disadvantaged and marginalised people.

They include the National League for Democracy in Burma; Winnunga Nimmunga Nimmityjah Womens Aboriginal Health Service; Australian Government Determination of Refugee Status Committee; Refugee Council of Australia; ACT Council for Social Services; Australian Catholic Bishops Immigration and Refugee Advisory Council; Tongan Association of Canberra and Queanbeyan; and East Timor Relief Association.

To add to this impressive list, Bernard for three years (1989 -92) was Deputy Chief Minister and Attorney General of the Australian Capital Territory and he was also a member of the National Crime Authority.

Which brings me to the present and the “contemptible prosecution of Bernard Collaery …. an assault on the rule of law”, as Spencer Zifcak wrote in Pearls & Irritations. The treatment of Bernard Collaery is a shocking indictment on a Federal Government that has taken Australia to places we have never been before.

Dark, sinister, corrupt, vengeful and wicked places. Places reminiscent of the disorienting, illogical and oppressive character of Franz Kafka's fictional world.

____________

The contemptible prosecution of Bernard Collaery

Bernard Collaery (AAP Lukas Coch)
Bernard Collaery (AAP, Lukas Coch)

SPENCER ZIFCAK

MELBOURNE - The Coalition’s vindictive legal campaign reveals its contempt for democratic rights and shows how easily prosecution can slide into persecution.

The criminal prosecution of former ACT attorney-general Bernard Collaery is a perversion of justice. The Morrison government has spent more than $3 million on conducting a case that should never have been initiated.

In pursuing the prosecution, Collaery has been brought to the brink of financial ruin. The government’s legal strategy and tactics have been contemptible.

In its flagrant disregard of constitutional and legal principle, the government has abandoned its proper role as a model litigant and damaged the rule of law in Australia.

In this article, I consider detrimental aspects of the strategy and tactics to make the point more clearly.

First, a brief reminder of how we have got here. It is well known that in 2004, at then foreign minister Alexander Downer’s behest, the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) planted surveillance devices in the Palaco Governo, the building that housed the offices of Timor-Leste’s prime minister and the cabinet conference room.

The purpose of this intelligence-gathering enterprise was to listen in to Timor-Leste’s cabinet deliberations concerning a legal dispute with Australia over the location of the maritime boundary between the two nations.

The outcome of that dispute would determine the share of rich oil and gas revenues that Timor-Leste and Australia would receive from prospective drilling in the Timor Sea.

Through this secret surveillance activity, the Australian government obtained crucial information on Timor’s case concerning the maritime boundary before the International Court of Justice (ICJ). This provided it with an unfair advantage in the oil and gas argumentation. In the end, to evade the ICJ’s ultimate judgment, the Australian government withdrew from its jurisdiction.

Witness K had been an ASIS officer involved in the surveillance operation. He had been troubled by it.

His reservations were magnified when Downer obtained a highly paid consultancy with Woodside Petroleum, the company responsible for exploiting the oil and gas reserves in the Timor Sea.

Witness K lodged a complaint with the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security concerning the legality of the surveillance. The inspector-general agreed that Witness K could disclose relevant information in any related legal proceedings.

Later, information regarding the secret surveillance operation made its way progressively into Australian and Timor-Leste’s media.

In 2013, Timor-Leste sought to re-open proceedings on the maritime boundary issue in the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. It briefed Collaery to represent its interests.

Witness K also briefed him to guard against any legal action that may arise from his decision to give evidence before the court.

Bernard2The Australian government put an immediate end to that. It cancelled his passport to prevent him from leaving the country to provide that evidence. His passport has still not been returned.

In the same year, the Australian Federal Police raided Witness K’s and Collaery’s home and office. At Collaery’s office, it uncovered and took a copy of a detailed legal memorandum containing his advice to Timor-Leste’s government on the maritime boundary.

It also obtained a copy of Witness K’s draft affidavit prepared as evidence for the Permanent Court.

Things went quiet for five years. Then, late in 2018, out of the blue and for reasons that are unclear, then attorney-general Christian Porter approved the criminal prosecution of Witness K and Collaery.

In essence, the allegation was that they had disclosed classified information on the activities of ASIS, contrary to the Commonwealth Intelligence Services Act.

Witness K and Collaery believed, with justification, that they acted in the national interest.

They took their case — that the Australian government acted unlawfully by secretly tapping the Timor-Leste cabinet and engaging in contractual fraud — to the Permanent Court of Arbitration.

In 2019, Porter made an application to the ACT Supreme Court for parts of Collaery’s trial to be conducted in secret.

A secret trial, of course, constitutes a radical attack on the fundamental principles of open justice and fair trial, constituent elements of the rule of law. Justice David Mossop agreed that most of the trial should not be open to the media or the public.

The principal reason Justice Mossop agreed that large parts of the trial should be held in secret was that if Australia’s ‘Five Eyes’ security partners learnt that sensitive intelligence documents were capable of public disclosure in Australia, the trust of our intelligence allies in the security of their own documentation here may be prejudiced.

Looked at abstractly, this was a persuasive argument. It neglected the fact, however, that the documents at the heart of this case were likely to expose government illegality and, possibly, criminal activity. In that circumstance, our security allies would in all likelihood understand that to keep documents disclosing unlawful government behaviour secret would be contrary to Australia’s national interest.

Collaery appealed against the decision to keep substantial segments of the evidence against him secret, and to close most of the hearing of his trial.

He argued that to withhold relevant evidence and conduct a secret trial breached a fundamental principle underlying the rule of law: that criminal proceedings should be conducted openly, transparently and fairly.

The appeal was conducted before the Full Court of the ACT Supreme Court in October this year. The court agreed with Collaery.

In a summary of its judgment, it accepted that the public disclosure of information relating to the truth of the matters at issue may involve a risk of prejudice to national security.

However, quite rightly, it doubted that a significant risk to security would materialise given that the events in question had occurred 17 years earlier.

Furthermore, the court stated that if relevant evidence could not be publicly disclosed, there was a very real risk that public confidence in the administration of justice could be damaged.

The court made clear its opinion that the open conduct of criminal trials was important because it deterred political prosecutions, allowed the public to scrutinise the actions of prosecutors and permitted the public to properly assess the conduct of accused persons.

This was clearly a win for Collaery.

But critical matters remain related to the conduct of these criminal proceedings that illustrate how easily prosecution can slide into persecution in the face of an ideologically driven administration bent upon secrecy and deterrence.

In the past three years, the government has taken every conceivable step to delay and extend the proceedings.

Almost 50 Supreme Court hearings have had to be held to discuss technical, procedural points of law. A trial date is still not in sight.

Every Supreme Court hearing has meant that Collaery has been required to pay substantial legal costs. With every hearing, he has become more indebted.

In the judgment of the Full Court it emerged, for the first time, that the government had held back affidavits of evidence that had not yet been provided either to the primary Justice or to Collaery and his legal team.

This was a straightforward denial of procedural fairness. The Full Court remitted these affidavits for consideration by the primary Justice to determine whether they contain matter that the government has argued should remain secret.

Given the absence of notice, the government should be required to pay the costs.

In recent days it has been suggested in legal circles that the government is procuring even more affidavits sworn by ASIS staff to bolster its argument that the actions of the defendants damaged the agency’s intelligence-gathering capacities. On this matter ASIS staff would hardly be independent or impartial.

Further, it is legitimate to ask why such affidavits will have been submitted so tardily.

One suggestion is that by dropping ever more complex and technical evidence upon the court, together with extrapolated legal arguments, the proceedings will be delayed indefinitely.

If, as is likely, the government claims that the new affidavit evidence should also be secret, a single judge will have to review the new material, while Collaery and his legal team will have no access to it.

Another plank of the rule of law will have been fractured to Collaery’s detriment.

Perhaps most remarkably of all, the government has submitted that the written judgment of the Full Court of Supreme Court itself should remain secret.

Bernard3So far Collaery has only the one-page summary. In making that submission, the government appears to neither understand nor appreciate that openness and transparency are significant, constituent elements of the rule of law in Australia.

The Collaery case is, perhaps, the most important case ever brought before the Australian courts concerning the extent and limits of freedom of public and political communication in this country.

The government’s determination to undermine such fundamental democratic rights is a clear indication that it is willing to act ideologically and illiberally rather in a manner consistent with core principles underlying liberal democracy.

Freedom of the press and whistleblower protections are always the first targets of a repressive state.

Spencer Zifcak is Allan Myers Professor of Law at the Australian Catholic University, a former President of Liberty Victoria and a Director of the Accountability Round Table

Link here to support Bernard Collaery

Comments

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Bernard Corden

Dear Dave,

Aneurin (Nye) Bevan provided some very apt descriptors, which included:

"What is Toryism but organised spivvery? … No amount of cajolery can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party … So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin."

http://www.nyebevan.org.uk/

Arthur Williams probably has it saved as a favourite website

Bernard Corden

Politics is no longer left versus right, it is now top against bottom and underpinned by a kakistocracy using power and control.

Many politicians and public serpents in our federal and state government who enter the tower of power often do so with good intentions. However, if they are not corrupt when they start out they certainly are when they resign, usually for enigmatic personal or family reasons.

"Corruption is nature's way of restoring our faith in democracy" - Peter Ustinov

Dave Ekins

Bernard’s wonderful adjectives accurately describe our elected representatives from the left but what about our right-wingers? Some, if not many, are even worse.

What epithets can be employed to describe them?

Lindsay F Bond

Expect he'll go scot free?
Whither christian values?

William Dunlop

Keith, you are to be highly commended for this article.

I have made my views clear in my comments on Facebook.

My late distant cousin, the Law Lord, Lord MacDermott of Belmount in the City of Belfast, would by now have rotated a number of times in his tomb.

The Hon Justice Kirby gave a number of the MacDermott Law Lectures at Queens University in the late 1990s.

Chris Overland

You have to wonder why, after 17 years, the Federal government actually bothers with all this.

The only logical reason is to protect the members of a now long defunct government from being held accountable for their conduct.

The supposed adverse impact upon our intelligence agencies is of no real consequence given what we know about the misuse and misrepresentation of intelligence gathered by other countries.

The truth is that the Liberal National Party government is deeply illiberal in its outlook, being composed overwhelmingly of people who are variously reactionaries, instinctive authoritarians and political simpletons.

The comparatively few remaining 'moderates' are now busily fleeing these parties to form new, community based support structures for independents.

This case is a symptom of the malaise now afflicting the conservative side of Australian politics, which no longer stands for anything except being in power and, perhaps more importantly, denying power to their perceived enemies.

I would expect an incoming ALP government to abandon this case on the basis that neither the national interest nor the interests of justice will be well served by its continuation.

Bernard Corden

Bernard Collaery has represented many bereaved families in several high profile disasters, which include:

a) The Thredbo Landslide (1997)

b) Royal Canberra Hospital demolition (1997)

c) HMAS Westralia (1998)

He is an epitome of integrity and professionalism and a crusader for the downtrodden.

Many of the socially autistic, crepuscular and vespertine vermin that were elected to represent and serve us in our federal and state parliaments should reflect on his noble attributes.

Lindsay F Bond

Is it not a duty of Australian courts of law to remain discrete from the safeguard of any intelligence-gathering capacities?

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