Chapter 2 The Proposed Re-listings
The Evaluation Process
2.1
To be specified as a terrorist organisation under the Criminal Code
Act, the Minister must be satisfied on reasonable grounds that the
organisation:
(a) is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing,
planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or
not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur); or (b) advocates the doing of
a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur).[1]
2.2
As mentioned in chapter 1, ASIO’s evaluation process in selecting
entities for proscription under the Criminal Code includes examining the following
criteria in relation to the group:
n engagement in
terrorism;
n ideology and links to
other terrorist groups/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
As with all reviews of listings and re-listings, the Committee used
these criteria as the basis of its review of the re-listing of the Abu Sayyaf
Group, Jamiat ul-Ansar, the Armed Islamic Group, and the Salafist Group for
Call and Combat.
2.4
These groups were originally listed in 2002 under the Criminal
Code Act following their listing by the United Nations Security
Council. The Committee first considered the listing of these organisations in
2004 after the Committee’s role in the Criminal Code procedure had been
established. These four organisations were re-listed for the first time on 5 November 2004.
2.5
In a letter to the Committee Chair on 16 October 2006, the Attorney-General advised that he intended to re-list the four organisations prior to the
lapsing of the current listing as provided for in section 102.1(3). New
regulations were made on 1 November 2006.
Currency of information about the groups
2.6
At a private hearing relating to these re-listings, the Committee specifically
sought information about the activities of the groups since the last re-listing.
In response to this request, ASIO told the Committee that where there is a lack
of available new evidence regarding each or any of the organisations, this does
not necessarily mean that the organisation is not still active and dangerous.
A lack of ‘evident activity’ may mean that the organisation is preparing for a
future act of terrorism. [3]
2.7
The Committee accepts that this may be the case, but it believes that it
is by examination of new information that it can best decide if a re-listing is
warranted and thus the Committee continues to urge the Attorney-General and
ASIO to provide it with as much relevant up-to-date information as possible when
seeking to list or re-list a terrorist organisation.
The use of open source material
2.8
In view of the limited amount of information about recent activities of
the groups, the question of the adequacy of using only information from open
sources to assess listings and re-listings of groups was discussed at the
private hearing.
2.9
A member of the Committee pointed out that in at least one of ASIO’s statements
of reasons, the evidence for re-listing from open sources was not sufficient to
provide a basis for re-listing the organisation and, therefore, the conclusion
must be drawn that ASIO has made an independent assessment, using information
that may not be open source. ASIO advised the Committee that it uses a number
of sources of publicly available information on terrorist groups but often the
information from those sources is not up-to-date when compared to what ASIO has
learned about the group through intelligence. Thus, ASIO’s statements of reasons
use open-source material backed up by intelligence.
2.10
ASIO confirmed that in one or more of the statements of reasons being considered
at the hearing, while historic information was open source material, the key
judgement in regard to the recent activity of the organisations was not derived
from open source evidence. [4]
2.11
The point was made by a Committee member that it was Parliament which
originally decided that only open source material would be used when assessing
the listing of a terrorist organisation and that security matters would not be
discussed in a disallowance motion. This was not at the request of ASIO and
the process has always relied to some extent on ASIO backing-up open source
evidence with its intelligence when it decides to list or re-list a group.
2.12
The Committee was assured by ASIO that:
We have a very detailed process by which we fact-checked
every point that was made in our statement of reasons and each fact is
generally supported by open-source and classified supporting corroborating
intelligence. [5]
2.13
At the request of the Committee, ASIO provided details about the number
of hours its staff spent on preparing information about the re-listings for the
Committee.
Evaluation of the Re-listings
2.14
In the following paragraphs, the current nature and reach of the four
organisations under review, with particular emphasis, to the extent possible,
on what might have changed since the Committee last reviewed the listing of
these organisations, is examined. The Committee believes that it is important
that the Parliament seek to establish as accurate a picture as possible of the
nature, size, reach and effectiveness of organisations and that these reviews
should reflect the most current information available about the organisations
under review.
2.15
Using the statements of reasons and other publicly available
information, the four groups have to the extent possible, been measured against
ASIO’s stated evaluation process.
Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG)
2.16
ASIO’s statement of reasons did not specifically address most of ASIO’s criteria
for evaluation of a listing and there was not a lot of new information relating
to activities of the group in the last two years.
2.17
Jane’s reports that since 2004 there has been some indication that the ASG
may have shifted back towards its Islamist ideology, although criminal
motivations remain, and:
Increasing co-operation between the ASG and Jemaah Islamiyya
(JI) could lead to ASG members carrying out actions in pursuit of JI’s
objectives, which include the creation of an Islamic caliphate in Southeast Asia. [6]
2.18
The International Crisis Group also observed this increasing cooperation
between JI and ASG, reporting at the end of 2005 that during the previous two
years key JI fugitives from Indonesia and Malaysia had moved closer to the ASG,
as the MILF engaged in peace talks with the Philippines government. [7]
2.19
Regarding the peace process, the Committee heard that:
… in a general sense, there has been some progress in terms
of a peace process that has continued to be the subject of ongoing negotiation,
particularly between some mainstream elements of the MILF and the Philippines
government. That process has been … variable in terms of the optimism one
might have as to it producing a genuine outcome of resolution of this conflict.
Nonetheless, … there has been a belief on both sides that the process has
delivered a useful breathing space and has a benefit of itself in that it has
possibly restricted violent acts to some extent. [8]
2.20
In early 2005, a terrorist with ties to ASG and JI, killed four bus
passengers in Manila’s Makati business district. The blast was coordinated
with blasts in Davao and General Santos cities in the south. The Makati bomber, Angelo Trinidad, a convert to Islam, admitted his guilt, as well as his
ties to the ASG and JI. [9]
2.21
All the acts of terrorism which were claimed by or attributed to the ASG
since the last listing of the group occurred in the Philippines. However, a
tenuous link may be made between the ASG and Australia, Australian interests or
Australian citizens in that, as reported in the Australian press in late 2006, Patek
and Dulmatin who are both listed by the Australian Federal Police as among
Australia’s most wanted terrorists after the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings, fled
to the Philippines after the bombings and formed an alliance with the ASG. Both
were said to be hiding out in a region which is a stronghold of the ASG.[10]
2.22
US special operations in the Philippines have been credited with helping
to weaken the ASG through military training, road building and medical aid. It
has been reported that the help provided by the US won popular support and led
to the collection of useful new intelligence. [11]
2.23
The Committee heard during the private hearing that recent efforts by the Philippines military,
with advice from US special operations, have ‘seriously impacted’ the ASG and diminished
the capability of the group to conduct terrorist activities, but have not
negated the Group’s capability. [12]
2.24
The ASG continues to be listed in the United Nations 1267 Committee’s
consolidated list and as a proscribed terrorist organisation by the governments
of Canada, New Zealand, the United States and the United Kingdom.
2.25
The Committee is satisfied that the ASG is or has the potential to be
active and dangerous and the Committee does not recommend disallowance.
Jamiat ul-Ansar (JuA)
2.26
It was noted by the Committee that although the Harakat-ul-Mujahideen
changed its name to Jamiat ul-Ansar in 2003, Australia is one of the few
countries which refers to the group as Jamiat ul-Ansar, while the United
Nations, Canada, the UK and the US all continue to refer to the group as
Harakat-ul-Mujahideen.
2.27
Terrorist groups sometimes change their name to avoid the restrictions
imposed upon them by proscription. This often enables group members to
continue going about their activities under a new identity which is not
recognised as part of the official listing and it was suggested to the
Committee that this could be the reason why most other countries have not
adopted the more recent name of this group.
2.28
According to Jane’s, the level of threat from JuA is now extremely low although
former members have joined other groups or operate under various guises, and
therefore remain highly dangerous, especially in Pakistan. [13]
2.29
ASIO’s statement of reasons for Jamiat ul-Ansar did not specifically
address most of ASIO’s criteria, however, it provided some evidence that the
group remains active.
2.30
In the private hearing, the Committee was told that although the
organisation may have decreased in numbers over recent years, they have neither
ceased to exist nor ceased to have a capacity to act as a terrorist group and
the organisation ‘presents itself as a destabilising influence on the
subcontinent’. [14]
2.31
The Committee heard that there is a concern by Australian authorities
that JuA continues to provide training capacity to ‘organisations which are
antithetical to Australia’s interests’. [15] Individuals trained at
JuA facilities have engaged in terrorist operations in places where Islamist
resistances have arisen including Tajikistan and Bosnia, and also Afghanistan to participate in the post-Taliban insurgency. In June 2005, several JuA
trained individuals were arrested in Afghanistan preparing to carry out acts of
terrorism and two American citizens who were arrested for suspected
participation in an al-Qa’ida plot to attack the US claimed to have attended a
terrorist training camp run by JuA leader Fazlur Rehman Khalil. [16]
2.32
Since the previous re-listing of the group in November 2004, JuA is
reported to have been responsible for multiple attacks directed at a range of
security and civilian targets in and around Jammu and Kashmir, in conjunction
with the group Hizb-ul-Mujahideen. In June 2005, such attacks resulted in 15
deaths, including two school children. [17]
2.33
The JuA continues to be listed in the United Nations 1267 Committtee’s
consolidated list and as a proscribed terrorist organisation by the governments
of Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Pakistan.
2.34
The Committee found that there was enough evidence of activities
relating to the group in the last two years to warrant re-listing. The
Committee is satisfied that the JuA continues to exist, albeit in a diminished
capacity from its capability of the late 1990s, and that it has the capacity to
act as a terrorist group. The Committee does not recommend disallowance.
Armed Islamic Group (GIA)
2.35
The Committee found little evidence that the GIA has engaged in
terrorism activities since early 2005. In its report of September 2005, the
Australian Strategic Policy Institute reported that ‘the GIA is considered to
be essentially defunct’[18]. ASIO’s statement of
reasons states that the GIA’s current strength is between 30 and 100 active
members.[19]
2.36
Jane’s lists the group as ‘active’ but since late 2004 it ‘appears to
have disintegrated into autonomous cells with logistics and communications
seriously disrupted by the security forces’. Jane’s assesses that the GIA’s ‘current threat now lies
in the dispersal of its radical cadres both within alternative groups in Algeria and through the diaspora in Europe’.[20]
2.37
The Committee heard that Australian authorities have noted that the GIA
has been less active since the last re-listing, and this is thought to be due
to some internal splintering within the group: however, the Committee was told
that the GIA carried out ‘fairly heinous activities in 2003, 2004 and 2005
[and] … we should not assume that they would not have the capacity to do so
again.’ [21]
2.38
Since the last re-listing, the GIA is accused of killing 14 civilians in
an attack in Blida Province in Algeria on 7 April 2005. Following the attack, Algerian authorities moved against the GIA and recovered caches of
weapons and explosives. ASIO reported that this action and defections to the
GSPC, have resulted in GIA’s reduced strength.
2.39
GIA continues to be listed in the United Nations 1267 Committee’s
consolidated list and is a proscribed terrorist organisation by the governments
of Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom.
2.40
The Committee found no evidence that the GIA has links to Australia or has threatened Australian interests but it notes that the GIA has been a
deadly organisation and, although it appears that its numbers and support have
been drastically reduced, the Committee accepts that the group may still be
capable of terrorist activity and it does not recommend disallowance.
Salafist Group for Call and Combat (GSPC)
2.41
The statement of reasons for the GSPC provided substantial evidence of
recent engagement in terrorism activity by this group, citing eight terrorist
attacks during 2006 for which ‘responsibility has been claimed by, or reliably
attributed to, the GSPC’. [22]
2.42
The statement of reasons stated that there is evidence that the GSPC is
evolving from a domestically focussed group to one with a global Jihadist
ideology. For example, on the fifth anniversary of the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, al-Qa’ida’s second in command, Ayman al-Zawahiri officially announced
an alliance between al-Qa’ida and the GSPC and the GSPC subsequently made a
statement on 13 September 2006 pledging allegiance to Usama bin Laden.
2.43
Jane’s reports that the group ‘has suffered from in-fighting and
factionalism, and these internal divisions have sharpened as the group has come
under increasing international pressure since 2002. It is estimated that the
GSPC’s current membership is ‘no more than 500 cadres and falling’. [23]
2.44
The GSPC officially rejected the Charter for Peace and National
Reconciliation which was an Algerian government initiative offering amnesty for
all persons convicted of insurgency related crimes.
2.45
While the presence of GSPC sleeper cells among Algerian communities is a
concern in Western Europe, no evidence has been provided to link GSPC members
in any way with Australia or Australians apart from the 2004 statement which
the GSPC released declaring ‘war on all foreigners and foreign interests in
Algeria’. [24]
2.46
The GSPC continues to be listed as a proscribed terrorist organisation
by the United Nations and by the governments of Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom.
2.47
The Committee is satisfied that the GSPC is still active and dangerous
although a direct threat to Australia and Australians was not demonstrated.
The Committee does not recommend disallowance.
Conclusions
2.48
The Committee reiterates the view it expressed in its Review of the
listing of six terrorist organisations, March 2005, that is:
… that it is important to include, in any decision about
listing an organisation, its links to Australia and Australians, because,
despite the lack of a legislative requirement for this, the listing will have
little practical effect without it. Application of the powers of the Criminal
Code under the geographical extraterritoriality provisions appears to be an
unlikely prospect. Prosecution of Australians, or foreigners acting in Australia, has a greater prospect of success. Therefore, listing only terrorist
organisations which Australians support through financial contributions or by
providing personnel makes sense in the fight against international terrorism.
As well, listing those organisations that have a presence and operatives in Australia, where there is an immediacy of threat to the Australian community, also makes
sense. All else is symbolism that is costly in time and effort and possibly
distracting for Australia’s anti-terrorism efforts.
2.49
As with some previous reviews of listings and re-listings, the Committee
will err on the side of caution with respect to these re-listings and will not
recommend to the Parliament that any of these regulations be disallowed,
although, the Committee found that the evidence for re-listing several of the
groups could be deemed to be inadequate for the Committee to judge the case for
proscription with confidence.
Recommendation 2 |
|
The Committee does not recommend the disallowance of the
regulations on the four terrorist organisations:
n Abu Sayyaf;
n Jamiat
ul-Ansar;
n The
Armed Islamic Group; and
n The
Salafist Group for Call and Combat.
|
Hon David Jull,
MP
Chairman