Chapter 2 The Listing
The Criteria for listing an organisation
2.1
To be specified as a terrorist organisation for the purpose of paragraph
(b) of the definition of terrorist organisation in section 102.1 of the
Criminal Code, the Minister:
. . . must 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).[1]
2.2
At the hearing on 1 February 2005 for the Review of the
listing of six terrorist organisations, the Director-General of ASIO
advised the Committee of ASIO’s evaluation process in selecting entities for
proscription under the Criminal Code. Some of the factors included:
n engagement in
terrorism;
n ideology and links to
other terrorist groups or networks;
n links to Australia;
n threat to Australian
interests;
n proscription by the
UN or like-minded countries; and
n engagement in
peace/mediation processes.[2]
2.3
The Committee continues to use these criteria as the basis of its
reviews of all listings.
Overview
2.4
This report is a consideration of the re-listing of Hizballah’s ESO
under the Criminal Code. In past reviews of re-listings the Committee has
stated its preference to see information which relates to the activities of the
organisation since the last re-listing. Receiving information on activities
since the last re-listing, whilst not in itself conclusive, is an appropriate
consideration in the process of re-listing. Whilst historical background is
important to consider, and will be noted, evidence for a re-listing should
focus on what has changed since the last review. The issue of currency of
evidence was raised in the Committee’s report, Review of the re-listing of
Al-Qa’ida and Jemaah Islamiyah (October 2006):
The re-listing of an organisation is a fresh exercise of
executive discretion and the Committee believes that there must, therefore, be
a sufficient degree of currency in the evidence to warrant the use of the
power.[3]
Hizballah’s External Security Organisation
2.5
This organisation was initially listed in 2003 under legislative
arrangements which required that for an organisations to be listed they had to
be on the United Nations list of terrorist organisations. The ESO came up for
review under the current proscription regime in 2005, in 2007 and in 2009. This
review is of the fourth re-listing of ESO as a terrorist organisation.
2.6
The Committee would like to make it very clear that this is not a
listing of the entire Hizballah organisation. However, in looking at the ESO in
particular, the Committee is faced with a difficulty. Many of the resources,
such as Jane’s Terrorism and Counter Insurgency Centre and the United States National
Counterterrorism Centre, that the Committee uses to independently look at
terrorist organisation that have been re-listed do not now differentiate
between Hizballah and Hizballah’s ESO.
2.7
In relation to the difficulty of attributing specific attacks to
Hizballah’s ESO the statement of reasons refers to the “secretive” nature of
the ESO and that:
. . . it is difficult to gather detailed
information about the group’s role and activities. However, there is no
indication that the ESO’s role has changed in recent times, and considering
Hizballah’s stated desire to avenge the death of Imad Mughniyah, and the recent
arrest of a probable Hizballah operative in Bangkok, it is likely that the ESO
retains its separate terrorist function within Hizballah’s overall
organisational structure.[4]
2.8
The Attorney-General’s statement of reasons is at Appendix B
Engagement in Terrorism
2.9
The statement of reasons states that:
The External Security Organisation is a discrete branch
within Lebanese Hizballah responsible for the planning, coordination and
execution of terrorist attacks against Hizballah’s enemies outside of Lebanon.[5]
2.10
The statement of reasons states that Hizballah’s ESO has a record of
regular terrorist attacks mainly against Israeli and US targets up until the
early 1990s.
2.11
The statement of reasons refers to two attacks in particular against “Israeli
interests” in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1992 and 1994. While the 1992 attack
was against the Israeli Embassy, the 1994 attack was against a Jewish cultural
centre.
2.12
As mentioned above, Jane’s does not differentiate between Hizballah and
Hizballah’s ESO. It should be noted that the statement of reasons suggests, in
relation to the arrest by Thai authorities of an individual allegedly linked to
Hizballah that:
. . .any Hizballah connection almost
certainly would be through the ESO and points to ESO’s on-going interest in,
and preparations for, terrorist activities outside Lebanon.[6]
2.13
The Committee is satisfied that terrorist acts and fundraising overseas
attributed to Hizballah by Jane’s involve Hizballah’s ESO. In stating this the
Committee notes this paragraph of the statement of reasons:
There have been no major acts of terrorism
specifically attributed to the ESO since 1994. Nevertheless, Hizballah has
vowed to retaliate against Israel for Israel’s perceived role in Mughniyah’s
assassination. The ESO is likely to be responsible for planning future
terrorist attacks against Israeli interests to this end.[7]
2.14
In relation to Hizballah’s targeting of Israel,
Jane’s states that Hizballah:
. . . demonstrated an increasingly assertive military
confidence in a 16 February 2011 speech by Nasrallah in which he stated that Hizbullah militants
were now more than a local defence force. He went on to respond to alleged
statements made by IDF Chief of General Staff Benjamin Gantz that IDF soldiers
should be ready to re-engage with southern Lebanon in the event
of a crisis, stating that Hizbullah forces would
be ready to cross the border with Israel and secure the
Galilee region in the event of a conflict with Israel.[8]
2.15
GlobalSecurity.org states that:
In Israel’s view, Hizballah’s activities are part of Iran’s
overall policy with regard to Israel, which is to fan the flames of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and initiate terrorist activities against Israel,
despite the fact that Hizballah is a Lebanese organization consisting entirely
of terrorists from Lebanon, with no national connection to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. In view of Iran’s interest in smudging its fingerprints with regard
to direct control over internal terrorist activities, Hizballah’s status is
significant as Iran’s front-line operative arm against Israel. [9]
2.16
The United States National Counterterrorism Centre states that:
Several Hizballah operations have been disrupted since
Mughniyah’s death, including the 2008 disruption of a cell in Baku, Azerbaijan,
targeting the Israeli embassy there, and the late-2008 disruption of a
Hizballah cell in Egypt targeting Israeli tourists and ships in transiting the
Suez Canal. Additionally, a Hizballah operation was reportedly disrupted in
Turkey in 2009, and in early 2011 Israel warned its citizens of several
Hizballah plots against Israeli interests in Turkey, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and
Cyprus.[10]
Ideology and links to other terrorist groups/networks
Ideology
2.17
Jane’s states that:
Hizbullah, or Party of
God, was formed in 1982 but formally announced its existence in February 1985.
It was initially composed of small radical Shia Muslim groups that looked to
Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution for inspiration. Many of the early leaders had
studied in Shia seminaries in Najaf in Iraq where they were
inspired by the radical teachings of Mohammed Baqr as-Sadr and Ruhollah
Khomeini.
Hizbullah began to
emerge in the wake of the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon. Islamist
members of the mainstream Shia Amal Movement broke away to form Islamic Amal,
headed by Hussein Mussawi. Islamic Amal joined with former members of the
Lebanese Dawa Party and numerous small radical Shia groups to form Hizbullah. The group
originated in the northern Bekaa Valley before spreading to the southern
suburbs of Beirut and then slowly southward during the 1980s. It won a loyal
support base through the provision of social services, including health,
education, and infrastructure in impoverished Shia areas. In 1992, it stood
candidates in the first post-civil war parliamentary elections, securing eight
seats for Hizbullah members
which, along with four allies, granted the party a parliamentary bloc of 12.[11]
2.18
The statement of reasons describes how the ESO came into being:
The ESO was set up by Imad Mughniyah, who
has been described variously as the head of Hizballah’s security section, a
senior intelligence official and as one of the founders of Hizballah. After
Imad Mughniyah fled to Iran following Hizballah’s 1983 attack on the US military in Beirut, the ‘international wing’ grew out of the military wing to become a separate
branch under Mughniyah’s control. This is thought to be the genesis of
Hizballah's ‘international wing’, or the ESO.[12]
Links to other terrorist groups/networks
2.19
The statement of reasons states that:
Hizballah elements provide training, operational support and
material to Palestinian extremist groups, including the Palestinian Islamic
Jihad and HAMAS’s Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, both of which are proscribed
entities, and Shia militia elements in Iraq. Although these activities are
undertaken by units within Hizballah specifically created for these tasks,
elements of the ESO are likely involved.[13]
2.20
Global Security.org state the following in relation to fundraising:
Besides operating a worldwide network of fundraisers, funds
are also raised through so-called ‘charity funds’. Some of these are extremist
Islamic institutions that, while not directly connected to Hizballah, support
it, albeit marginally, in view of their radical Islamic orientation. While some
of these funds undoubtedly pay for Hizballah’s military and terrorist
operations, other funds enable the group to provide its members with day jobs,
to drape itself in a veil of legitimacy, and to build grassroots support among
not only Shi’a, but also Sunni and Christian Lebanese.[14]
Links to Australia
2.21
There is no information in the statement of reasons on Hizballah’s ESO
having any direct funding or support links with Australia.
Threat to Australian interests
2.22
The statement of reasons contains no information on this matter.
Proscription by the UN or like-minded countries
2.23
Hizballah’s ESO has been listed as a terrorist organisation in the
United Kingdom, under ‘Hizballah’s Military Wing’. Hizballah as a whole, which
includes the ESO, has been listed as a terrorist organisation by the governments
of the United States, Canada and Israel.
Engagement in Peace and Mediation processes
2.24
No information on this matter was provided in the statement of reasons.
Conclusion
2.25
It is clear that many research organisations, such as Jane’s
Counterterrorism and Insurgency Centre and the United States National
Counterterrorism Centre, that the Committee refer to in reviewing a re-listing
such as this no longer make a distinction between Hizballah and Hizballah’s
ESO. On this basis, and with the benefit of having examined this organisation
on numerous occasions, the Committee was able to conclude that certain
activities attributed to Hizballah could equally be attributed to Hizballah’s
ESO.
2.26
The Committee found that the Hizballah ESO continues to engage in activities
that satisfy section 102.1 of the Criminal Code. The Committee does not
recommend disallowance of the regulation.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee recommends that the regulation, made under the
Criminal Code section 102.1, to list Hizballah’s External Security
Organisation as a terrorist organisation not be disallowed. |
Hon Anthony Byrne, MP
Chairman