Chapter 7
Consular support
7.1
The committee has considered the preparedness and competence of
government agencies in handling a kidnapping situation. Their goal is to secure
the release of the hostage as safely and expeditiously as possible. But during
this ordeal, families, often in shock and under great stress, also need special
assistance and support.
7.2
In its 1997 report, the committee acknowledged the anguish and grief
that families and friends may experience following a traumatic event such as
the violent death overseas of one of their own. At that time, a consultant
engaged by DFAT, Mr Tim McDonald, noted that the focus of consular services had
been on Australians overseas, their families at home being a secondary
consideration. Although in the context of a death overseas, not necessarily
following a hostage situation, he was of the view that in this day and age 'the
question of the welfare of the family has to be taken much more seriously.
Importantly, the problem does not end when the person overseas dies'.[1]
The same circumstances apply to victims taken hostage and held for ransom and
their families. In this chapter, the committee considers the consular support
provided to the family and associates of a kidnap victim.
Respect for the work of government officials
7.3
Before examining the services and support provided during and after
kidnapping events, it is important to acknowledge the extremely difficult work
undertaken by government officials in response to kidnapping events: work
requiring high levels of expertise and involving significant danger and stress.
The committee notes the remarks from a number of witnesses commending the work
of officials.
7.4
Dr Malcolm Wood noted in his submission that his family 'never had
occasion to criticise DFAT or any other agency publicly, and did not: indeed,
in our press conference at Parliament House after Douglas' rescue, Vernon and I
commended the Government and its agencies highly'.[2]
Dr Wood reiterated this to the committee stating:
In the case of Douglas Wood...his family's experience of the
role and conduct of the then Australian government and its agencies was
overwhelmingly positive. It seemed to me this committee, as also the government
and its agencies, deserved testimony to that effect for perspective and
balance, particularly as there have been few documented cases falling within
the committee's terms of reference.[3]
7.5
Nigel Brennan also acknowledged the work of some government officials in
his submission:
There were a number of individuals from the Government
agencies that should be commended for the dedicated work and abundant
compassion they shared with my family and myself throughout my 462-day ordeal
and since my release...In so many ways we will never be able to thank them
enough, which I hope they understand and accept. They are fine Australians and
we should all be proud of them.[4]
7.6
Although some officers stand out for commendation, both the Wood and
Brennan families identified particular areas of the government's consular
support that could be improved.
Consular services
7.7
In its submission, DFAT outlined its consular role in kidnapping
situations involving Australians:
Within the parameters of the no-ransom policy, DFAT has a
clear consular role to play to assist an Australian citizen who is kidnapped
overseas and their families.
We can provide information to families on what they can
expect, including on possible timelines and expected psychological and
emotional challenges, notwithstanding that each case is different and
experiences will vary.
- We will appoint a case officer as the primary point of contact for the
family.
We know from lessons learned from other hostage situations
that the provision of information, including on what the government cannot do,
is vital for families.[5]
7.8
The department can also provide a level of financial assistance in
emergencies such as kidnappings through the provision of a repayable consular
loan to assist with costs such as family travel associated with the hostage
situation or for counselling services.[6]
7.9
DFAT also offers support for arrangements in regard to the release and
return of hostages. The department may deploy an emergency response team with
specialised staff to a nearby location to provide support for family and make
reception arrangements following the release of the hostage.[7]
The Consular Charter and duty of
care
7.10
The range of consular services provided by DFAT is described by the Consular
Services Charter and the Consular Operations Handbook. The charter
signifies DFAT's 'commitment to providing effective, prompt and courteous
consular services delivered in an equitable way to all Australian citizens'.[8]
The handbook presents guidelines in regards to the operation of policies,
procedures and levels of service provided by the department. Neither
publication creates a legally binding duty or obligation on the Australian
Government to provide any particular consular assistance or services nor refers
specifically to kidnapping situations.
7.11
In this regard, DFAT made it clear that it was not legally obliged to
provide certain forms of assistance and services to Australians in foreign
countries:
There is not a duty of care as such. The way I would describe
it is that we will do all that we can to assist Australians who find themselves
in difficulty overseas. There is nothing legislated around that, but that is
our practice...
...As far as I am aware, there is nothing legislative about
what we do. As I said, the government will do all it can and we have a general consular
charter that we put out there which explains what the government can and cannot
do.[9]
7.12
The department has sole discretion over the most appropriate level of
consular services and this will vary depending on the case and the constraints
on DFAT's ability to provide appropriate services. As noted above, however, DFAT
appoints a case officer as the primary point of contact for the next of kin as
part of its assistance to the family.[10]
Communicating and liaising with families
7.13
Communicating with, and providing information to, victims' families is
one of the most important roles for consular services in emergencies such as
kidnappings.
7.14
Families learning of the kidnapping of a loved one experience a range of
emotions—shock, anguish, frustration and confusion—which continue as the days,
weeks and in some cases months pass. Naturally, throughout this ordeal, they
will feel as though they have no control over the situation. Their distress,
grief and sense of helplessness will affect the way they relate to others
including the consular and police officers involved in the kidnapping
situation. Assisting the family through this traumatic period requires special
skills and careful attention.
7.15
In 1997, the committee found that although the release of the hostages
should be of paramount importance, family members have a vital interest in the
proceedings and outcome. Importantly, they want to be as fully informed as
possible about developments relating to the kidnapping At that time, the
committee noted DFAT's concern that much information available was
unsubstantiated and proved to be incorrect or misleading.[11]
Even so, the committee formed the view that it was the department's role to
pass on its concerns about the quality of the information as that information was
relayed to the family.[12]
The committee recommended that:
...the provision of information to families, in such
distressing circumstances, be a high priority for DFAT and any mission abroad.[13]
7.16
Evidence before this committee also suggested that access to information
was vitally important to the family of a kidnapped person, as is confidence and
trust in those providing that information. The committee has already noted the
dissatisfaction of family members with the mixed messages conveyed by DFAT and
the AFP when they were considering the payment of a ransom or engaging a
private consultant to negotiate the release. The committee now considers
whether this failure in communication was evident in other areas.
7.17
As noted previously, DFAT explained to the committee that it can provide
information to families on what to expect in the event of a kidnapping,
including possible timelines and expected challenges.[14]
DFAT submitted that the department would work 'to share as much information
with families as practicable, to the extent permitted by privacy laws'.[15]
Differing levels of service and
support
7.18
Despite DFAT's awareness of the importance of helping family members
throughout the kidnapping process, especially of keeping them informed, a
number of witnesses were critical of the level and quality of the support
provided. There also appeared to be a marked difference in the experiences of the
Wood and the Brennan families.
7.19
Dr Wood praised the high quality and frequency of DFAT's consultation
with the family. He explained that he and his brother had several meetings with
DFAT officers including senior officers at the Deputy Secretary or First
Assistant Secretary level. He explained further:
The Assistant Secretary, Consular, with the senior staff
counsellor and a senior officer of the AFP (Counter Terrorism Unit), initiated
separate phone conversations with Douglas's wife, daughter and me on all
weekdays and most weekends throughout the crisis. I had other regular contact,
by email or phone, if not face-to-face, with the Assistant Secretary, Consular
(or his First Assistant Secretary), a staff journalist working on public
diplomacy and the senior staff counsellor. Other family members also had easy
contact.[16]
7.20
Dr Wood was also impressed with Mr Warner, who before packing his bags
and flying to Baghdad, 'made a point of coming to the meeting to talk with me'.
Mr Warner assured him 'of what he would try to do and, obviously, he gained
some information from me about Douglas'.[17]
Furthermore, the Minister for Foreign Affairs and the Prime Minister made
personal contact with Dr Wood.[18]
In addition to this high level attention, DFAT officers phoned family members
almost daily throughout the crisis, 'with information and to consult on the
next steps'.[19]
Dr Wood, however, cautioned against any direct comparisons with other
kidnapping cases:
Standard consular and humanitarian reasons aside, Australia’s
military engagement in Iraq—which was contentious—was surely relevant. An
execution of an Australian citizen by political terrorists in Iraq would have
weighed with ministers personally and politically...The public profile which
Vernon and I, and also Sheik Al-Hilali and representatives of Australia’s
Muslim community, adopted helped keep the case prominent in the Australian
media during the first week of the crisis and at its end. I make this comment
because the political and other circumstances of each case of kidnapping
differ. The circumstances of the Nigel Brennan case differed greatly.[20]
7.21
Even so, the consideration shown to the Wood family, particularly, in
relaying information about developments with the hostage taking, contrasts
starkly with the experiences of the Brennan family.
7.22
Mr Brennan believes that the early discussions between his family, DFAT
and the AFP were positive. He noted that the AFP set up a number of special
operational units, including one in his parent's home where regular family
briefings took place.[21]
The discussions covered developments and possible resolution strategies. He
noted that his family 'greatly appreciated' having these conversations at home.[22]
There were also phone and email correspondence with their DFAT case officer, believed
to be in charge of the government operation, who was based in Canberra. Mr
Brennan noted, however, that:
These briefings started to dwindle in October 2008, when the
AFP moved out of my family's home to the 'Villas' apartments in Moore Park, and
evaporated completely when the 'next of kin' phone was moved to Canberra in
February 2009.[23]
7.23
According to Mr Brennan, his family, always desperate for information,
'was soon and too often left stranded and alone'.[24]
He stated:
Increasingly, phrases such as 'no need to know, no security
clearance, it's confidential, it's a moving situation, it's uncertain etc'
became commonplace excuses for not giving new information. Daily briefings
became weekly and then non-existent.[25]
7.24
Nicole Bonney informed the committee about how constantly and
consistently her family requested information about the strategies being used
to obtain her brother's release from captivity. She explained the protocol
adopted for managing the flow of information:
...questions and information was to be passed through AFP
negotiators on site in the Brennan family home. This would be passed on up
through the chain of command and questions asked by Brennan family members may
or may not be answered by higher authority. These possible answers came back
down through the chain of command to the AFP negotiators to be passed on to the
Brennan family. The Brennan family were not given any written information in
regards to these questions and answers.[26]
7.25
In her view this approach was 'a deliberate move to give the Australian
government the ability to stagger and limit incoming information given to the
Brennan family and to create an obscure chain of information'.[27]
According to Mrs Bonney, the effect of this approach was that the Brennan
family was 'unable to ascertain facts from the Australian government'.[28]
Mrs Bonney summarised her family's experience:
Throughout the time Operation Mane was in place and beyond
the Brennan family was treated with little respect by the Australian government
in regard to their need and drive to obtain information regarding Nigel's
kidnapping...The Brennan family suspects that the general opinion of the
government was that of the Brennan family being dumb uneducated farmers and
accordingly should be kept ill informed and ignorant of Nigel's situation and
the situation in Somalia.[29]
7.26
Mrs Bonney indicated that regular contact from DFAT would have been a
better approach. She acknowledged, however, that family members 'were extremely
pushy because we wanted as much information as we possibly could get'. She
believed that they 'were not getting that phone call of "no change"
because whoever was on that phone knew that we were going to ask questions'.[30]
Withholding information and mixed
messages
7.27
The criticisms that the Brennan family had with regard to the flow of
information from government agencies were focused on a number of key instances
in which the family felt they had been kept uninformed of important
developments. Mr Brennan and Mrs Bonney cited a number of these instances, including:
- agencies not notifying the family of telephone conversations
between Mr Brennan and an AFP officer based in South Africa in August 2008
until December 2008;[31]
- officials not informing the family as to which government
departments were involved in the operation outside of DFAT and the AFP, their
mission and how they interacted and worked together;[32]
- the removal of the next of kin phone located in the Brennan
family home without the family's full understanding or endorsement;[33]
- calls and letters to the Minister for Foreign Affairs' office
that went unanswered for months and requests for the family to meet with the
Minister and the Prime Minister that received no response;[34]
- agencies not discussing any procedures or the implementation of
strategies in full with the Brennan family and not providing any written
documentation of meetings with government departments to the family despite
requests;[35]
- misleading information about the official Australian-Canadian
Government strategy;[36]
- agencies failing to adequately explain a change in strategy from
building rapport and keeping lines of communication open with the kidnappers to
the complete opposite;[37]
and
- the denial of the family's request in July 2009, after securing
the services of a private kidnap response firm, for the case details and a
situation briefing due to claims that a 'full security clearance' was required.[38]
7.28
One of the most disturbing accounts of the lack of awareness or
disregard for Nigel Brennan and his family involved unanswered phone calls from
Nigel Brennan to his family's phone over the Easter long-weekend in April 2009.
The phone had been re-directed to the AFP's Operations Centre in Canberra in
January 2009 under assurance that it would be under 24 hour monitoring. Mr
Brennan explained:
...when the phone was actually removed from my house, it was
under the proviso that it would be under 24-hour surveillance. The fact that
those two phone calls I made around Easter went through to voicemail was
absolutely distressing for my family. We went for a period of 10½ months when
my family had absolutely no idea whether I was alive or dead. So the fact that
the Australian Federal Police had told my family that it would be under 24-hour
surveillance and then missed the calls because it was a public holiday, I think
was disgraceful.[39]
7.29
The AFP informed the committee that there was an explanation for the
calls not being answered other than that the centre was not being staffed.
Officers could not, however, discuss the issue publicly.[40]
Even so, the Brennan family have not received any satisfactory explanation in
regards to this matter.
7.30
Family members also recounted instances where they were not informed
about offers to provide assistance from relevant people. Mrs Bonney noted that
on one occasion they visited Canberra to get the latest update. She explained
further:
Mum had sourced an NGO that was still on the ground that had
an Australian head. It was the only NGO functioning inside Mogadishu at that
point in time...We had specifically asked for contact with that NGO. Unbeknown
to us the person had been in contact with the Australian consulate within the
first 24 hours of Nigel actually being taken. That information was never passed
on to us. When we tracked him down ourselves...we asked if we could speak to him
through the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, who then said to us, 'He doesn't
want contact with you'...Which was incorrect, because we had already had contact
with him.[41]
7.31
Nicole Bonney submitted that her family often found out information
relating to her brother from local and international media. These accounts
included the first report of the kidnapping; the broadcast of a video of the
hostages on Al Jazeera; reports of deadlines in regards to the ransom; a phone
interview with the hostages conducted by Agence France-Presse; and, the release
of Somalis taken hostage at the same time as Mr Brennan and Ms Lindhout.[42]
She commented:
Unfortunately the Australian government were not forthcoming
with alerting the Brennan family to the fact when incoming media was
electronically coming in. At the time Heather Brennan questioned as to whether
Operation Mane was indeed a 24/7 case as the Brennan family had been led to
believe and assured it was.[43]
7.32
Mrs Bonney went further to suggest:
On many occasions unconfirmed information was deliberately
withheld from the Brennan family, a case in point was the attempted escape and
seeking of sanctuary in a mosque by Nigel and Amanda.[44]
7.33
She asked, did the Australian government recognise that 'this (in)action
effectively made the opportunities for the family to decide on further actions
an impossibility as they were not informed of unconfirmed information?'[45]
7.34
The Brennan family's evidence tells of a drawn out and distressing
experience where the family felt they were being misinformed, drip-fed and
fobbed off. This experience contrasts with DFAT's statements in regards to how
it views its service to families in regards to information sharing. As noted
above, DFAT's submission stated that it understands that the provision of
information, including on what the government cannot do, is vital to families. The
department informed the committee that it was preparing a written guide for
families on what to expect if a family member is kidnapped (see paragraph 4.47).
The submission noted:
Providing families with clear and up-to-date information on
developments in the case can help families make informed decisions and navigate
their way through sometimes unreliable information from other sources.[46]
7.35
DFAT did recognise, however, that:
There are complexities and challenges when dealing with
intelligence material and these are addressed on a case-by-case basis.[47]
7.36
While the committee understands the sensitivities around intelligence
and information on operational matters, it would appear that these issues were
never explained adequately to the Brennan family. This contrasts with Dr Wood's
experience:
I understood from the outset that a government agency was
never going to tell us—a family—about intelligence or military activities, and
broadly they did not. I understood that. Perhaps if I had not served in
government myself I would have been stronger in pushing.[48]
7.37
While the background of the two families may have contributed to
different expectations as to what information could be shared at the outset, it
does not explain the Brennans' ongoing distress at the lack of information and inadequate
explanations.
Breach of trust
7.38
Beyond their concerns with access to information, the Brennan family
also criticised the government and agencies for what they considered to be
misleading and untrue statements as well as significant delays in responding to
their letters and questions. These actions amounted to what was considered by
the family to be a breach of the trust they had placed in government officials.
Mr Brennan explained:
That was another thing with information from very early on.
DFAT and AFP asked my family to have no contact with Amanda's family, because
apparently Amanda's family did not want my family to contact them. The Canadian
family was told the same thing. There was disinformation that was being used.
Both families were going through an incredibly traumatic experience, and there
would have been nothing better than the two families working together and
trying to communicate and share the burden of what they were going through. For
a government to lie to my family and say 'The Lindhouts don't want you to talk
to them' was a blatant lie.[49]
7.39
Mrs Bonney told the committee that these discrepancies were 'really
difficult for us to deal with because they made us doubt our own government and
what our government was doing for us and if, in fact, they were helping us'.[50]
They also related that the family later discovered that the head of the NGO in
Mogadishu, referred to above, had, within 24 hours of the capture, contacted
the consulate in Nairobi offering help and information on the kidnapping. Mrs
Bonney elaborated on the man's efforts:
On the first day that Nigel was taken he rang three times. On
the second day he rang twice. He received no calls back from the Australian
High Commission in Nairobi...He then rang on a monthly basis and finally, in May,
the Australian government approached him. At that point in time we had told the
Australian government that we were planning on moving away from them and
engaging a private contractor. We got a phone call saying, 'This guy can do it.
Stick with us.'[51]
7.40
The man was believed to have been unable to obtain a proof-of-life from
the hostage takers and was not involved in the negotiations for the release of
the hostages.
7.41
The Brennan family stated that in mid-June 2009, they received a letter
from then Minister for Foreign Affairs, Stephen Smith, describing the
strategies which had been implemented by the negotiators in Nairobi as 'based
on wearing down the kidnappers'.[52]
Nicole Bonney wrote:
If it had been explicitly stated to us that this was their
main strategy, we would have pulled the plug on DFAT months ago. The emotions
of family members range from despair to fury. It's soul-destroying for Dad...He's
been completely let down by the government and its inability to help Nigel.[53]
7.42
The Brennan's evidence suggested a considerable breakdown in the
relationship between the family and government officials and their ability to
work together towards the release of the hostages. This came about primarily
through the way information was shared and the significant problems with the
way different matters were communicated to the family.
Continuity in liaison officers
7.43
A key factor identified by the Brennan family with regard to the
problems with the relationship with government agencies was the lack of
continuity in the personnel assigned to work with the family. While a number of
senior DFAT and AFP staff worked on the case for the entire period, those
placed in the family home and other officials working directly with the family
were frequently rotated. Mrs Bonney submitted:
A large number of people worked on 'Operation Mane' and from
the outset the Brennan family requested continuity...The Brennans found this an
important request as it was both time consuming and distressing to have to
constantly explain the family dynamics to new negotiators. New negotiators were
also not aware of the capabilities of the various family members and the Brennan
family felt they constantly had to prove themselves to new negotiators. This
request took a number of months for the AFP to implement, as a result a large
number of people lived with the Brennan family under very stressful situations
and on the whole relations were cordial. There were however exceptions to the
rule and when the Brennan family made it aware they had personality and working
issues with some individuals this was disregarded by the relevant authorities.[54]
7.44
While personnel may have been rotated for operational and health and
safety reasons, the family believed that agencies took issue with any bonds
formed between officials and the family. Mr Brennan told the committee:
There were...problems that arose because anyone from a
government department who got at all emotionally attached to my family were
very quickly pulled out of the house never to return. The fact was that my
family, as time went on, got less and less information.[55]
7.45
Mr Brennan noted further that the family liaison officer was removed
from the house. In his view a liaison officer 'should have been something that
should have been there even after the government was tasked off the job and a
private company was put in. There should have been some sort of family liaison
officer involved'.[56]
In this regard, Mrs Bonney stated:
I guess the real pity about that is that could actually
really effectively work—having a family liaison officer actually dealing
directly with a private contractor. If everyone is okay with it and happy with
it, it could actually work extremely well. That was another difficulty that we
had to deal with. We were dealing with different time zones and different
countries. We were extremely fortunate that we had 24-hour access to John Chase
[private crisis management consultant], but there may be other people in other
situations that do not.[57]
7.46
Mrs Bonney told the committee that the removal of the Queensland police
officers permanently from the case 'was very distressing for the family and
when the Brennan family questioned [an AFP officer] about these moves no
satisfactory answer was provided'.[58]
Mr Brennan also noted that family friends who were involved with Queensland
Police or with the Army were 'basically told not to contact my family'.[59]
7.47
Dr Wood submitted that his family had frequent contact, primarily with
the Assistant Secretary, Consular, and with the senior staff counsellor and a
senior officer in the AFP's counter-terrorism unit. While the Dr Wood had
recording equipment installed in his home, no DFAT or AFP stayed in the home. As
the Wood case was resolved in a much shorter period of time, it is difficult to
compare the experiences of family liaison between the two cases.
7.48
Despite the severe criticism levelled at the government's response to
the family's needs, the committee takes this opportunity to note again that the
Brennan family were highly appreciative of some government officials who
assisted them through their ordeal. Mr Brennan reminded the committee that
there were 'a number of people within departments who did a fantastic job and
who dealt with my family in a great way'.[60]
Previous report and McCarthy review
7.49
Given the trauma faced by any family dealing with a kidnapping
situation, the committee believes that the welfare of family members and those
close to the victim should be a priority for all agencies involved. This
finding is consistent with the committee's recommendation in 1997 that the
'provision of information to families, in such distressing circumstances, be a
high priority for DFAT and any mission abroad'.[61]
The committee also notes the McCarthy review's recommendation that families be
provided with oral and written advice on what to expect in a kidnapping case
and make it clear what the government can and cannot do.
7.50
The evidence before this committee and the two recommendations cited
above highlight the need for DFAT to improve the way it delivers its consular
service to people under severe stress. The committee believes that the good
relations between family members and government officials in such cases depend
upon trust and effective communication. It is important for families to feel as
though their interests are a high priority and that they are being kept in the
loop. DFAT needs to be aware of the importance of sharing information and of
selecting staff specially trained and equipped to deal with traumatised family
members and able to convey information effectively between the relevant
parties.
Committee view
7.51
The committee believes it is important that a sub-unit or section of the
emergency response task force be responsible for supporting the families of
victims. The members of this sub-unit should be specially trained for this
liaison role and be able to provide families with accurate information and continuity.
Recommendation 4
7.52 The committee recommends that any inter-departmental emergency response
task force include a sub group dedicated to supporting families of a victim of
kidnapping. This group should be made up of personnel specially trained for
this liaison role and able to provide the family with ongoing and accurate
information. Agencies should strive to maintain the continuity of the personnel
assigned to act in this role.
Interpreters
7.53
A key criticism made by the Brennan family with regard to consular
services and communication relates to the significant language difficulties
experienced by Nicole Bonney in her negotiations with the kidnappers. Mrs
Bonney told the committee:
DFAT were unable or unwilling to assist requests on two
particularly damning points: one, the refusal for a repeated request for a
Somalian interpreter and, two, the refusal to pass on information with regard
to legitimate private kidnap and ransom companies.[62]
7.54
The 1997 committee report raised the issue of the provision of interpreters
and translation services, specifically in regard to Australians involved in
legal proceedings overseas. At the time, the committee recommended 'in the case
of Australian victims of crime and those facing serious charges in overseas
jurisdictions, that DFAT provide them with translator and interpreter
services'.[63]
The government at the time did not support this recommendation stating:
The Government cannot commit itself to an open obligation to
fund translators overseas. However, the Government is prepared to consider
carefully providing translators and interpreters on a case by case basis.[64]
7.55
The response recognised further that:
...there will be particular cases which arise from time to time
which, for particular reasons, demand that public funding be made available for
translator and/or interpreter services. We consider that DFAT, in consultation
with other Government agencies such as the Attorney-General's Department,
should consider such cases as sympathetically as possible and subject to
appropriate financial tests.[65]
7.56
Mrs Bonney submitted that a request for a Somali translator was made in
the first week of her brother's kidnapping:
The phone calls that Nicole Bonney was having with [...] the
kidnapper spokesperson were extremely difficult to understand and the
transcribers in Canberra appeared to find his speech pattern no easier as
Nicole was asked to confirm on a number of occasions what he was saying...This
request [for a translator] was steadfastly ignored until the Brennan family
became very vocal and then the request was denied outright claiming that we
could not have a translator because then the government 'would need a
translator to translate the translator'.[66]
7.57
When asked the reason for not providing translator or interpreter
services, DFAT told the committee:
It has been a longstanding policy of government that that is
one of the things that we do not do. We do not provide translating or
interpreting services. We have a consular charter which sets out very clearly what
the government can and cannot do, and one of the things the government does not
do is provide translating or interpreting services. Families can access those
services if they wish, obviously, but it is set out clearly in our charter that
those are just not something that the government provides.[67]
7.58
When pressed on whether the circumstances of a kidnapping might require
a different response to that set out in the consular charter, Ms Bird replied:
'We just generally do not do it in that way'.[68]
7.59
DFAT addressed the issue of Mrs Bonney's calls with the kidnapper's
spokesperson stating:
Obviously there were some phone calls to Nigel Brennan's
family. They were in English. We clearly did need for our own purposes to have
some Somali language translating capacity, for obvious reasons. Clearly we had
some material that we needed to deal with. But the family calls were in
English. Because it is such a business, the kidnappers know that they are going
to be dealing with Western families, they will use English.[69]
7.60
DFAT stated that families are able access private interpreter or
translation services if they wished.[70]
7.61
While the calls were made in English, Mrs Bonney documents in The
Price of Life the considerable difficulties she had in understanding the
spokesperson's accent and explaining certain terms. The private contractor,
hired by the family to assist in negotiating the release of Mr Brennan and Ms
Lindhout, located a Somali translator to communicate for them.
Committee view
7.62
Due to the limited evidence before the committee on the details of the
negotiation process it is difficult for the committee to assess whether a
translator was necessary in the Brennan case. It is clear, however, that Nicole
Bonney experienced significant difficulties in understanding the kidnapper's
representative and that misunderstandings increased the level of distress
experienced by the family.
7.63
While DFAT's consular charter may rule out the provision of such
services for Australians in trouble overseas, it is not clear to the committee
why such rules should apply in special cases such as kidnappings where family
members in Australia and the AFP are involved in negotiations with hostage
takers. The committee believes that any measures which could assist in
obtaining the successful release of hostages should be considered. The
committee believes that it is inappropriate to encourage families to seek out
and finance private translation services when the AFP or other agencies are
involved in the negotiation process.
7.64
The committee agrees with the government's response to its
recommendation in 1997 regarding the provision of translation and interpreter
services: that agencies be 'prepared to consider carefully providing
translators and interpreters on a case by case basis'.[71]
Proposed written guidelines
7.65
As discussed in chapter 4, DFAT agreed to the recommendation of the
McCarthy review that written guidelines be prepared outlining for a family what
to expect in kidnapping cases and what government agencies can and cannot do.
DFAT told the committee that the written guidelines are 'very well advanced and
should be done very shortly'.[72]
Committee view
7.66
The committee believes that this written advice should be clear in
regards to the consular services available to families. It should state that
families will still receive support if they choose to engage a private
contractor.
Conclusion
7.67
One of the most compelling messages coming out of this inquiry, was the
importance of DFAT exercising more care and diligence in the way in which it
deals with distressed families. In 1997, the committee noted advice that
following a traumatic event, ‘the question of the welfare of the family has to
be taken more seriously’.[73]
That advice is as relevant today as it was then.
7.68
The committee believes that DFAT must ensure that while efforts are
being directed toward the safe release of the kidnapped victim, the family must
also be a primary concern. The committee believes that the guidelines DFAT is
now drafting should contain a preface that recognises the importance of
treating families as a high priority, of building trust and of keeping family
members fully informed on developments.
7.69
The family members of a kidnap victim may be demanding of an agency's time
and resources: they may be difficult to converse with and ask hard questions.
Officers should be able to make allowances and remain sensitive to how their
actions affect families in such distressing circumstances. The committee
believes that liaising with and providing direct support to family members requires
special skills and training. It is of the view that those taking on the family
support role should be specially trained for their liaison role and also be
part of the emergency response task force. Being a sub unit of this task force
would ensure that the family has someone representing their interests able to communicate
directly with the task force and to convey back to the family information
received from the team. The committee has made a recommendation to this effect
(paragraph 7.52).
7.70
While consular support is most important for families in kidnapping
cases during the period of captivity, issues can also arise in the transition period
following the crisis. The next chapter examines the role of consular support
once an incident is over.
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