So that’s it, then. The Lindt cafe siege, which cost two lives plus that of self-obsessed rapist, domestic violence perpetrator and murder conspirator Man Haron Monis, was a learning experience. The NSW government would “take the lessons learned” from the coroner’s report, said Premier Gladys Berejiklian.
“There will always be lessons to be learned from events such as this,” then-Premier Mike Baird said.
“I need to ensure that NSW police learn valuable lessons,” new NSW police commissioner Mick Fuller said.
No one was really responsible except Monis, although NSW police should have stormed the cafe earlier, rather than waiting until Monis began shooting at hostages — and certainly not ten minutes after he began firing. That, and a host of procedural stuff-ups by NSW police at all levels during its handling of the incident.
All some sort of learning journey for people in power — those who are still around, of course.
It’s a common refrain these days from officials and senior corporate figures when lives have been wrecked, or, in this case, lost. We’ve heard it a lot from banks and banking regulators about the havoc inflicted on customers by renegade financial planners and gouging financial institutions — although thankfully most of those victims are still alive to be compensated. What it really means is that no one will be held responsible — or if someone was responsible, they’ve conveniently moved on. We’re meant to nod sagely, relieved that organisations will be more prepared “next time”. Until the same thing happens again.
In any event, a coronial inquest was never the appropriate mechanism to provide genuine accountability for what went wrong in Martin Place, and for the long chain of failures that left Man Haron Monis free to take a weapon into the cafe on that day, despite being known to be a radical with a serious history of violence. This is the indelible pattern of contemporary terrorism: the perpetrator will be revealed as known to security agencies, but not considered a threat, or having escaped surveillance. All the time we’re told more mass surveillance is the answer, when the glaring failure of targeted surveillance costs lives.
In the wake of the siege, Labor’s deputy chair of intelligence and security committee, Anthony Byrne, called for an independent judicial inquiry, and copped plenty of grief for doing so. Instead, what we’ve got was an embarrassing desktop review of the handling of the siege by NSW and the Commonwealth and a coroner’s report. And we don’t have full access to the latter, given the issue of ASIO’s role, and its interaction with Monis, remains secret. It’s woefully inadequate. The survivors and the families of the victims have every right to be deeply aggrieved at the lack of genuine accountability.
George Brandis is firmly in the “lessons learnt” camp. Yesterday, he was at pains to explain arrangements for handling correspondence had already been changed in the wake of the Attorney-General’s Department’s grievous mishandling of Monis’ red flag 2014 letter to Brandis about Islamic State — which eventually became the subject of a cover-up when ministers assured parliament, wrongly, it had been provided to the government’s inquiry.
Unlike most of the debacles that have occurred on his watch, the Monis letter had nothing to do with Brandis. He can’t be expected to process correspondence — he has staff, and an entire branch of his department, plus line area staff, to deal with correspondence. Even his office shouldn’t necessarily have been expected to pick up on the import of the letter — but departmental officials should have. For once, Brandis is covering for his department, despite the fact that they made both him and Julie Bishop look bad in parliament. It’s entirely possible, given how inexplicably sanguine ASIO was about Monis, that the letter would have made no difference had it been brought to the intelligence organisation’s attention. But we’ll never know.
Brandis only addressed the issue late yesterday afternoon, after being allowed to avoid questions at Estimates on it. He wouldn’t even hand over a copy of his statement after he’d read it out, insisting that a different copy be provided to the committee, which took considerably longer. It’s a funny thing, but his reluctance to speak on the issue is at odds with this government’s normal enthusiasm for talking about terrorism. Usually this government will take any excuse, no matter how meaningless, to talk about national security and terrorism; prime ministerial media conferences have been convened merely for arrests of people, we’ve been assured, who weren’t engaged in planning attacks. But when an actual incident has seen lives lost, and there are serious questions over both the lead-up to the event and its handling, suddenly it’s hard to get a word out of them.
It’s not too late for a proper, judicial inquiry. The victims deserve better than this.
one thing is sure, the career of anyone in the NSW police who had command of this should be over. They botched it from go to whoa, refusing offers of negotiation, lack of communications equipment, dull witted and outdated thinking. Scipione proved a useless bully and Catherine Burn a goose.
An entirely fair account BK. There’s been a lot of ‘clarity in hindsight’ commentary to excuse police actions, which I can accept for the greater part, but the coroner’s report found telling areas of lack of planning or competence on the part of the police. Sure, it was entirely Monis’ fault, and the court’s and Attorney’s who allowed him out on bail, but ……..
I’m at a loss to understand why there was a 10 minute delay between shots being first fired by Monis and the police going in, too late for one person as it was. I can’t recall, or wasn’t aware of that detail.
And I don’t point the finger at the police whose duty it was to go in, I recognise their courage, but surely part of the higher-ups planning should have been ‘when shots start ringing out, we go in regardless.’ Why wasn’t that thought of beforehand, they had something like 14 or more hours to consider that contingency.
Above all though, it showed that police communications preparedness was woeful. Delve into the preparations for the communications vehicle that was supposed to be state of the art for terrorist events. Has that been delivered yet? How state of the art is it, and is there anyone in police who has the skills to manage it? Those questions seem to be outstanding to my mind.
The “communications vehicle” is probably costing a fortune in maintenance despite being unused just like the water cannon truck that Mighty Mouse.. Mouth Scipione demanded for the Rodent’s last hurrah at the G21.
A wonderful quote fromhim at the time “This is how we do business (sic?) in NSW!”.
The inquiry should extend to who made the decision to let a fleeing criminal who was also an Islamic Fifth Columnist and a woman-basher into the country in the first place. How deeply does appeasement penetrate our own administration? The British can blame EU for their lax immigration laws, but we don’t have this excuse.
Great article from Bernard Keane. He really nailed it.
Dion -will you please Fkoff using that term “Fifth Columnist”?
Syd, please read https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_column, or for simplicity just read the definition that comes up on Google* and explain why this term is inappropriate in the current context.
*”a group within a country at war who are sympathetic to or working for its enemies”
Maybe you claim there is no war. Ask the enemy and they’ll tell you otherwise.
Dion – Google??? that actually tells me a lot about you. I don’t need to search the term anywhere because I know enough about it to know you are using it out of context. The term Fifth Column was originally used back in the 50’s in the context of Communist secret agents being used and seconded into various organizations such as Education, Unions, Arts & Entertainment, politics, corporations, sport etc. Their role was to infiltrate and lead by stealth. If there are any real bonafide “Fifth Columnists” operating within mid-eastern religions then they are probably intelligence agents dressed in -slamic drag. Get a day job, Dion.
Syd – it was that great humanitarian Franco, at the head of his Moroccan troops (having been relegated to the Spanish Foreign Legion years before for his fascist sympathies) fighting for Catholicism against the Republican government who first used the term when asked how he could possibly take Madrid with too few troops. “We have a Fifth column in Madrid.”
Irrespective of the historical origin of the term Fifth Column and its misuse by Cold War ideologues and the sneers of smartalec knowitalls re Google , the actual meaning is simply
“a group within a country at war who are sympathetic to or working for its enemies”
The cult behind the murders at Manchester is Britain’s enemy. And ours despite the verbal hide-and-seek of the appeasement industry..
Thanks for an excellent editorial BK. Here here.
We all learn from our mistakes – we cannot learn from our successes.
BUT
the problem is in our society where no-one makes A DECISION any more – everything is about processes – Yep, this box has been ticked , now the next box – when all ticked that the is the result- society is governed digitally – life is analog.
Yes the DPP negligence is the actually source of the Lindt tragedy – not one lawyer looked at the the total picture of the criminal when making a decision prior – all they did is what was needed to tick the boxes each day when the Monis problem arose.
The police are really the next cab on the rank – unfortunately the hierarchy were all experts in ticking boxes on the way up – not used to confronting the “the angry man’ on the street – so the police on the street had no leadership or decision making .
Immigration Department negligence preceded police negligence.
That’s exactly the problem Desmond, the system was what failed the people @ the
lindt cafe, there are too many bureaucrats hiding behind their desks, when & if these things happen the police on the ground are ham strung as they were during the Bourke street carnage, they had 4 hours to get the guy, but the desk jockeys didn’t have the stomach to prevent the deaths, because there is a level of squeamishness that those that are tasked with such preventative decision making struggle with. This has nothing to do with terrorism, it is all about the powers that be maintaining popularity & being seen to appease everyone. Mon Manis was a time bomb waiting to go off, pity the legal system didn’t do something about him before this all happened, defence lawyers need to search their consciences before they present arguments for allowing the likes of Monis out on the street, considering the police, bureaucratic, idiocy/bungling that occurred. May be a case of too many levels of authority involved in making life changing decisions I would suspect. You know what they say about “too many cooks”