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Temptation to misuse terrorism laws 'too strong'

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  • Temptation to misuse terrorism laws 'too strong'

    Australian Financial Review
    October 25, 2014 Saturday

    Temptation to misuse terrorism laws 'too strong'

    by Hannah Low


    Civil liberties Leading QC calls for judicial oversight of new
    security legislation.

    Human rights lawyer Geoffrey Robertson, QC, has warned that any new
    terrorism legislation will be used in the future to prosecute everyone
    from drug dealers to tax evaders.

    The celebrity barrister, speaking from Sydney on Friday, told AFR
    Weekend that the new terrorism laws would have unintended consequences
    and result in an erosion of civil liberties.

    "There is an increasing demand once you get away with using these
    powers in relation to somewhat unlikely terrorist threats, then they
    will be used for other reasons," he said.

    "And you will find ... that these powers will be used to hunt down tax
    avoiders, they will be used for drug smuggling. Once you open
    Aladdin's cave to law enforcement, there will be no stopping them."

    The comments from the British-based human rights lawyer came hours
    after a suspected Islamic State sympathiser shot dead a soldier in
    Ottawa, Canada, and then went on a firing spree inside Parliament.

    It was the second killing in Canada within three days and came as the
    Canadian government was due to table new anti-terrorism legislation.

    The Australian government is attempting to pass the second tranche of
    laws aimed at combating so-called freedom fighters, which creates a
    new offence of advocating terrorism, as well as prohibiting travel to
    particular countries.

    Mr Robertson warned against the laws, saying any new terrorist threat
    caused a knee-jerk reaction that more laws were needed.

    "The extensive powers that the federal police and intelligence
    agencies already have are probably sufficient," Mr Robertson said,
    adding that they have been used to foil a number of plots.Judicial
    oversight key

    The key to any new laws which further eroded civil liberties was that
    there should be sufficient judicial oversight and an ability to
    investigate whether such draconian powers had been properly exercised,
    he said.

    "There has to be vigilance over the misuse, because just history tells
    us that give these powers unchecked and the temptation to misuse them
    will be too strong."

    Mr Robertson also raised concerns over proposed laws that make it
    illegal for anyone, including journalists, to disclose special
    intelligence operations, which could carry a 10-year sentence.

    "I do think the principle objection to the bill is the way it
    constrains and chills free speech about an important area of
    government activity," he said. "There should at least be a public
    interest defence."

    Mr Robertson was in Greece last week with the newly married Mrs
    Clooney, Amal Alamuddin, advising the Greek government on its push to
    have the Elgin Marbles returned to the Parthenon from the British
    Museum.

    He then flew to Australia to promote his new book, An Inconvenient
    Genocide: Who Now Remembers the Armenians?, which details the mass
    killing of the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turkish Empire during
    the First World War.

    Mr Robertson said a number of parallels could be drawn between the
    events that began in 1915 and what was happening today in northern
    Iraq and Syria. It was clear, he said, that IS was committing
    fundamental war crimes by executing prisoners of war, but there had
    also been killings of Christian and Shiite communities due to their
    failure to convert.

    "That is genocide that we are entitled to stop if either state - Iraq
    or Syria - fails or cannot meet their responsibilities to protect
    their own civilians," he said.

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