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Research Note No.63 2003–04
The politics of proscription in Australia
Nigel Brew
Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Section
21 June 2004
Introduction
Proscription is a mechanism by which a country can
outlaw organisations deemed a threat to its national security, generally
making it an offence to belong to, train with, recruit for, fund, or
otherwise support a banned organisation. Until the passing of the Criminal
Code Amendment (Terrorist Organisations) Bill on 4 March 2004 (and its
assent on 10 March 2004), Australia could only proscribe those organisations
which the UN had already identified as terrorist organisations(1),
or create separate legislation for each individual group. The Australian
Government now has the power to proscribe organisations it believes
on reasonable grounds to be involved in terrorist activities (and which
by implication, pose a threat to Australia’s national security), without
the prior approval of the Parliament. The question is, of course, which
organisations should Australia proscribe now that it has the independent
power to do so?
Proscribed groups in Australia
Australia has to date proscribed a total of 17 organisations: (2)
-
al-Qaeda (21 October 2002)
-
Jemaah Islamiyah (27 October
2002)
-
Abu Sayyaf (14 November 2002)
-
Salafist Group for Call and Combat (Groupe
Salafiste pour la Predication et le Combat – GSPC) (14 November 2002).
-
Armed Islamic Group (Groupe Islamique
Armée—GIA) (14 November 2002)
-
Harakat Ul-Mujahideen (14
November 2002)
-
Ansar al-Islam (27 March 2003)
-
Asbat al-Ansar (11 April 2003)
-
Egyptian Islamic Jihad (11
April 2003)
-
Islamic Army of Aden
(11 April 2003)
-
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
(11 April 2003)
-
Jaish-e-Mohammed (11 April
2003)
-
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (11 April
2003)
-
Hezbollah (External Security Organisation)
(5 June 2003)
-
HAMAS (Izz al-Din al-Qassem Brigades) (9
November 2003)
-
Lashkar-e-Taiba (9 November
2003)
-
Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ)
(3 May 2004).
Australia bans Palestinian Islamic Jihad
(PIJ)
Several of the above groups were banned in response
to an apparent threat, link to, or specific incident involving Australia,
as was the case with Jemaah Islamiyah after the Bali bombings in October
2002. The only group not listed by the UN which the Government has
banned using the new power is PIJ. When asked in a media interview
on 21 April 2004, immediately prior to the proscription of PIJ, about
what links the then unnamed group might have with Australia, the Attorney-General
appeared to indicate that a link to Australia is one of the primary
factors in deciding whether or not to proscribe an organisation:
We may move from this, but generally speaking we look to see whether
there are linkages in Australia. Those linkages can be in a variety
of forms … There are a range of factors but we look for linkages … The
aspects that have to be looked at first are—is it a terrorist organisation?
Then you establish whether or not before you proscribe that as a terrorist
organisation that it has linkages with Australia. I think the United
Nations have proscribed - or have suggested proscription - for something
like 100 or more organisations and we've proscribed to date 16. You
can see that the fact that it’s been influencing us is whether there
is a connection with Australia.(3)
In proscribing PIJ, Australia joins the US, the UK
and Canada, all of which have proscribed PIJ, although the group’s links
with Australia remain unclear. Indeed, the press release issued by
the Government on 3 May 2004 which announced the banning of PIJ, did
not refer to any links the group might have with Australia.(4)
A subsequent media report cited Australia’s Attorney-General as saying
that PIJ has ‘no known presence in Australia’ and was proscribed by
the Government ‘because of its activities overseas’.(5)
The recent review by the Parliamentary Joint Committee (PJC) on ASIO,
ASIS and DSD of the listing of PIJ notes that the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) ‘acknowledged that there were no links
to Australia and no Australian financing of the PIJ’, and that ASIO
initiated the listing of PIJ largely on the basis that other major countries
had already listed it.(6)
Groups not proscribed in Australia
Proscribing groups which do not traditionally operate
outside their immediate region or have any clear link to Australia,
raises the possibility that any group might now be subject to proscription,
regardless of whether or not it has links to Australia and irrespective
of the threat it poses to Australia’s security.
In order for the Government to proscribe a group,
the Attorney-General need only be ‘satisfied on reasonable grounds that
the organisation is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing, planning,
assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not
the terrorist act has occurred or will occur)’.(7) Although
the Attorney-General has indicated that listings are determined on the
basis of advice from ASIO(8), there is in fact no requirement
that the group to be proscribed has links to Australia or poses a threat
to Australian interests. The PJC review has strongly urged that in
considering future listings, the transnational nature of the group being
considered and the threat to Australia or the involvement of Australians
be given ‘particular weight’.(9)
It is perhaps curious that the first group the Government
has chosen to proscribe under the new power is one which ASIO has stated
has no links to Australia when there are a number of groups not proscribed
in Australia which perhaps have a more obvious connection with Australia
than PIJ appears to have. The following examples illustrate the different
types of links to Australia that exist and highlight what appear to
be the inconsistencies of the proscription process as it is currently
applied. Despite the violent track records of each of the following
groups and their various connections with Australia, it has not been
suggested that any of them pose a present or prospective threat to Australian
interests.
Mujahideen-e-Khalq (MeK)(10)
The MeK, a militant Iranian opposition group also
known as the People’s Mujahideen Organisation of Iran (PMOI), is known
for its attacks on Iranian officials in Iran. However, in what is perhaps
one of the most notorious cases of organised politically motivated violence
to have occurred in Australia, supporters of the MeK attacked the Iranian
Embassy in Canberra in 1992 as part of a coordinated simultaneous attack
on Iranian diplomatic missions worldwide.
The MeK does not appear to have ever targeted Australian
interests as such, and today most of the MeK’s activities outside Iran
appear to be limited to fundraising and publicity campaigns. Furthermore,
the MeK now attracts increasing overt political support in both the
US(11) and the UK.(12)
Despite the fact that the embassy attack occurred
over a decade ago, the Australian Federal Police (AFP) conducted raids
on the homes of suspected Australian supporters of the MeK in June 2003
at about the same time that there was an apparent worldwide crackdown
on the group.(13) Suggestions at the time that the AFP raids
were related to a visit to Iran by Australia’s Foreign Minister in the
preceding weeks were denied by the Government.(14)
The MeK is designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation
in the US, although the Clinton administration’s listing of the MeK
in 1997 was reportedly ‘widely interpreted as a goodwill gesture to
the Iranian Government and its president’.(15) The MeK is
also banned by the UK and the European Union, but is still not listed
as a terrorist organisation by the UN, or in either Canada or Australia,
which, incidentally, were both recently reported to have been experiencing
trade difficulties with Iran.(16)
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
Described as ‘one of the most effective and devastating
insurgencies in the world’(17), the LTTE has fought an armed
struggle for some 20 years against the Sri Lankan Government with the
aim of establishing an independent Tamil state. A well-armed and resourced
group, the LTTE has earned a reputation for suicide bombings and assassinations.
It has been claimed that the LTTE has a ‘significant
presence’ in Australia and that it was raising ‘A$1 million a year in
Australia’.(18) Of perhaps more concern is the claim that
the LTTE ‘purchased two gliders from an Australian supplier in 1994
and unsuccessfully attempted to buy a helicopter the next year’.(19)
The LTTE was listed as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation
in the US in 1997 and later banned in the UK, reportedly at the urging
of the Sri Lankan Government.(20) It is not listed by the
UN, Canada or Australia. The LTTE does not appear to have ever targeted
Australian interests, and has technically been subject to a ceasefire
since 2002.
Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path)
The Canadian Government claims that Shining Path
‘has been stated to be among the world's most ruthless guerrilla organizations’.(21)
A leftist Peruvian group, Shining Path aims to destroy state institutions,
establish a peasant regime and ultimately rid Peru of foreign influences.
Taking up arms in 1980, Shining Path has conducted sporadic bombings,
kidnappings and murders against foreign companies and diplomatic missions
in Peru ever since. Canadian and US interests have often been targeted,
and the group is listed in both countries. The UK, like Australia,
has not banned Shining Path.
Although Australia does not appear to have ever been
a specific target of the group, Shining Path is alleged to have been
responsible for the execution-style murder of an Australian nun, Sister
Irene McCormack, in Peru in 1991.(22) Although now much
smaller than it once was, Shining Path is still believed to be active
and well-armed.(23)
Other Groups
There are numerous other organisations which may
or may not be linked to Australia, but which, like PIJ, could be said
to have engaged in terrorist acts and might be candidates for proscription
‘because of their activities overseas’.
For example, the Basque separatist group, Euskadi
Ta Askatasuna (ETA), has a clear history of politically motivated violence,
as does the Revolutionary Organisation 17 November and other Greek leftist
groups, which, given the recent bombings in Athens attributed to such
groups, perhaps warrant particular scrutiny ahead of the 2004 Olympic
Games. There are the Sikh groups Babbar Khalsa International and the
International Sikh Youth Federation, both of which the US added to its
Terrorist Exclusion List at the end of April 2004.(24) The
radical Egyptian group (al-)Gama’a al-Islamiyya has been listed by the
US, Canada and the UK. In addition to its spiritual leader being convicted
over his involvement in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Centre,
(al-)Gama’a al-Islamiyya is also held responsible for the 1997 shooting
attack on tourists in Egypt in which over 60 people were killed.(25)
The following table outlines those organisations
not already banned by the UN or Australia, but which have been proscribed
by the US, the UK or Canada, as indicated.
Table 1: Groups not proscribed in Australia, but listed
by the US, the UK or Canada
| GROUP
NAME |
DESCRIPTION |
UNITED
STATES
(Foreign Terrorist Organisations as at
22 April 2004) |
UNITED
KINGDOM
(as at 7 June 2004) |
CANADA
(as at 17 May 2004) |
| Abu
Nidal Organisation |
Pro-Palestinian
group |
yes |
yes |
yes |
| Al-Aqsa
Martyrs’ Brigade |
Pro-Palestinian
group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| Aum
Shinrikyo (Aleph) |
Japanese
cult |
yes |
no |
yes |
| Babbar
Khalsa/Babbar Khalsa International |
Sikh
separatist group |
no |
yes |
yes |
| Communist
Party of the Philippines/New People’s Army |
Militant
Communist group |
yes |
no |
no |
| DHKP/C
(Devrimci Halk Kurtulus Partisi/Cephesi – Revolutionary People’s
Liberation Army/Front) |
Turkish
Marxist group |
yes |
yes |
no |
| ETA
(Euskadi Ta Askatasuna) |
Spanish
Basque separatist group |
yes |
yes |
yes |
| FARC
(Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia) |
Colombian
Marxist group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| (al-)Gama’a
al-Islamiyya |
Egyptian
radical Islamic group |
yes |
yes |
yes |
| International
Sikh Youth Federation |
Sikh
separatist group |
no |
yes |
yes |
| Kahane
Chai/Kach |
Jewish
extremist group |
yes |
no |
no |
| LTTE
(Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) |
Sri
Lankan Tamil separatist group |
yes |
yes |
no |
| Mujahideen-e-Khalq/People’s
Mujahideen Organisation of Iran) |
Militant
Iranian opposition group |
yes |
yes |
no |
| National
Liberation Army/Ejército de Liberación Nacional |
Colombian
leftist group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| Palestine
Liberation Front |
Pro-Palestinian
group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) |
Pro-Palestinian
group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| PFLP
– General Command |
Pro-Palestinian
group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| PKK
(Partiya Karkeren Kurdistan)/KADEK |
Kurdish
separatist group (Turkey) |
yes |
yes |
yes |
| Real
IRA |
Northern
Irish group |
yes |
yes
(IRA) |
no |
| Revolutionary
Nuclei |
Greek
leftist group |
yes |
no |
no |
| Revolutionary
Organisation 17 November |
Greek
leftist group |
yes |
yes |
no |
| Shining
Path (Sendero Luminoso) |
Peruvian
leftist group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| United
Self-Defence Forces of Colombia |
Colombian
right-wing group |
yes |
no |
yes |
| Vanguards
of Conquest |
Egyptian
radical Islamic group |
no |
no |
yes |
Sources:
-
-
Compared to 37 in the US, 25 in the UK and 35 in
Canada.
-
-
Attorney-General, ‘Palestinian Islamic Jihad Listed
as a Terrorist Organisation’, press release, 3 May 2004.
-
-
Parliamentary Joint Committee on ASIO, ASIS and
DSD, Review of the listing of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ),
June 2004, p. 21.
-
Criminal Code Act 1995, subsection 102.1(2).
-
-
Parliamentary Joint Committee on ASIO, ASIS and
DSD, op. cit., p. 24.
-
-
-
‘British politicians against expulsion of Iran's
Mujahedeen from Iraq’, Agence France Press, 15
January 2004.
-
-
-
-
-
Paul Burton , Jane’s Terrorism
and Insurgency Centre (JTIC), 24 February 2004, http://jtic.janes.com (4 June 2004).
-
Rohan Gunaratna in Indo-Asian News Service,
5 October 2001.
-
ibid.
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