So ASIO says that five of the unfortunates from the Oceanic Viking constitute a threat to national security.
What have they done? ASIO won’t say. What’s the evidence against them? It’s secret.
It beggars belief that, in the year 2010, ASIO can still behave like this.
After all, there’s plenty of past examples of ASIO’s handiwork available in the national archives: yellowing files permeated with arbitrary and capricious judgements by unaccountable people. For the most part, the dossiers are like student cookery: anything on hand simply got thrown in.
The historian Richard Hall notes in his account of ASIO during the Cold War, “the main thing ASIO men in the trade union area seemed to want was sexual gossip — who was sleeping with whom.” Thomas Shepherd, a former ASIO agent sent to compile information on figures such as Jennie George and Marcia Langton and the various organisations of which they were members, makes almost exactly the same point: “[ASIO] were particularly interested in personal relationships. They wanted to know about who was getting off with whom, what kind of person everyone was. Were they stable or unstable, were they liars? Anything like that.”
Trivial, malicious tattle-tattle — but, once it got in the file, it stayed there, and impacted on people’s lives for years.
But you don’t need to delve into the distant past for examples.
Not so long ago, ASIO handed down one of its oracular pronouncements in respect of a certain Scott Parkin. Parkin, you will recall, was an affable-seeming peace campaigner, whose previous brush with authority involved dressing as Tony the Tiger and distributing peanut butter sandwiches outside Haliburton’s offices.
On the basis of one of ASIO’s mysterious findings, his visa was cancelled, he was detained in solitary confinement and then deported. The Australian helpfully reported a mysterious source saying that Parkin planned to teach locals how to roll marbles under horses hooves — a claim that subsequently proved entirely untrue.
Because Parkin was American and white and an articulate English-speaker, his case received considerable attention (by contrast, Iraqi refugees Mohammed Sagar and Mohammad Faisal were detained on Nauru for years on the basis of security assessments, with almost no publicity whatsoever), and the ongoing court case has thrown a certain amount of light on ASIO’s methodology.
For instance, at the time, Phillip Ruddock assured the world that politics hadn’t entered the case, nor had the assessment been influenced by a foreign government.
We now know that was — what’s the word? — a lie, and that information from abroad (presumably the United States) did, in fact, shape the determination.
Now, one presumes that the adverse judgement about the Tamil refugees relates, in some way, to the Tamil Tigers. Given the Parkin case, it seems pertinent to wonder what role the Sri Lankan government has played in the current assessment. After all, it’s already been alleged that Sri Lankan officials have been allowed to question Tamils in Indonesia. That would be, mind you, representatives of the same Sri Lankan government leading an army caught on camera systematically shooting prisoners, a government with one of the worst human rights records in the world, and a documented tendency to regard all Tamils as terrorists; indeed, the same government whose persecution has led to the Tamils being officially declared refugees.
It is, of course, possible that the five individuals — even the little kids — are, in fact, exceedingly dangerous people. But in that case, why not make the information available so that the public can make up its own mind?
For that’s the other issue here. Immigration is a contentious political issue in Australia, an ongoing debate in the public sphere. Now, when Wilson Tuckey fantasised about terrorists sneaking themselves into the lucky country via leaky boats, it sounded barking mad. But now, as Joe Hockey gloatingly pointed out, ASIO has essentially made the same point — and, though the agency has provided no more evidence than Tuckey did, suddenly the argument is treated a thousand times more seriously.
How can this be healthy in a democratic country? Should a secret agency be playing such a major role in a political debate, without even making its sources available?
“We’ll decide who comes to this country, and the circumstances under which they’ll come,” said John Howard.
Actually, that’s not true. ASIO will decide — and they won’t tell us why.
>blockquote>Should a secret agency be playing such a major role in a political debate, without even making its sources available?
Er, is that really what you meant to say? Surely ‘making its sources available’ is the one thing a secret agency should not have to do. Some indication of the nature of the risk posed by these individuals (i.e. the information, not the sources) wouldn’t have done any harm though.
And they’re hardly ‘participating in the debate’ or ‘making points’. In fact, you’d hope they’d continue to do the job they’ve been charged with irrespective of current political issues, albeit they could do it in a more accountable fashion.
What a heap of tripe. ASIO does the bidding of the government. It is not the government. It advises the relevant minister who can either take the advice or leave it. You should be debating the responsible politicians, not their servants. I’m sure it must be wonderful on the planet you’re on where all personal information is known by everyone so the mob can all make decisions about you. Do they ever reach a conclusion? Why don’t you post your income tax records here so we can all check the evidence. Or perhaps we should leave the tax office to do its job as ASIO must do.
Quite agree with Captain Col
ASIO should not become ‘a state within a state.’ We do not need another variety of CIA in Australia. They are world known for mistakes and blunders. And very expensive, too.
Mark Duffet
Calling people and their children ‘individuals’ is a kind of Rudduck’s (Yankis) jargon indicating that they are objects rather than humans.
F. The provisions of this Convention shall not apply to any person with
respect to whom there are serious reasons for considering that:
(a) he has committed a crime against peace, a war crime, or a crime against
humanity, as defined in the international instruments drawn up to
make provision in respect of such crimes;
(b) he has committed a serious non-political crime outside the country of
refuge prior to his admission to that country as a refugee;
(c) he has been guilty of acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the
United Nations.
This is the legal exclusion article from the refugee convention. It is pretty difficult to argue that the little kids did any of the above but the UNHCR clearly allowed that they are refugees so who are ASIO to decide they have done any of these things later on without a skerrick of evidence?
Of course Paul Maley of the OZ might know because the ignorant clown has been in the Sri Lankan ambassadors pockets for months now bleating about Tigers.
It might interest the pathetic and miserable but the Tigers are not a designated terrorist organisation in Australia.
What bothers me is that Evans disguised this filthy trick as “family reunion” when he knew he was illegally locking up genuine, accepted refugees.
Now we claim that the UNHCR is the body to make these assessments and we accept 6,000 or so people from the UNHCR list every year.
The question now is how many times do these ignorant, kidnapping spooks deny access to Australia after over ruling the UNHCR body we claim we trust?
And Captain Col. why the hell should any country ever trust a mob like ASIO? The US doesn’t even trust the CIA or FBI anymore and they are put under scrutiny like the ASIO thugs never are.
I suspect they found dad was “not fit” or “a risk” so they locked up the innocent mum and kids out of sheer spite.
“Parkin planned to teach locals how to roll marbles under horses hooves”
Did anyone else notice that? Let’s take a wild guess at how you might do that.
Hmm. Maybe you roll the marbles . . . along the ground . . . towards the horses’ hooves.
Phew! Got it? Good. Join us next week for lessons in how to walk and chew gum at the same time.