Chapter 8
Post crisis support
8.1
The effects of a kidnapping incident do not end for captives on their
return home. Hostages are often held for long periods of time and endure
injuries, sickness, beatings, torture and mental anguish. Even those held for
shorter periods, especially where violence and the fear of impending death are
involved, may suffer from the trauma of the kidnapping long after their
release. In this chapter, the committee looks at the post resolution period,
focusing on the role of relevant government agencies during this important recovery
period.
Support for Mr Martinkus
8.2
Mr Martinkus explained to the committee that soon after his release he
was in a colleague's house/office recounting the details of his kidnapping when
a DFAT official rang his colleague. He remembered distinctly 'waving away the
phone call' because he did not want to talk to them. In his words, although
exhausted he was 'quite wired up' and wanted to wait until he was 'more
together'.[1]
He was also in the process of arranging his departure and wanted to wait until
he was out of the country before speaking to Australian representatives from
the embassy. Mr Martinkus described the range of emotion and the adrenaline he
was experiencing on gaining his freedom—'exhaustion, elation at my release and
what I later realised was shock'.[2]
Debriefings
8.3
According to Mr Martinkus, the conduct of DFAT following his return to
Australia has only added to his suffering.[3]
As noted earlier, Mr Martinkus was abducted outside his hotel which he argued
was deemed to be in 'a secure part of the city'. Indeed he told the committee
that it was the only place in Iraq at the time that had Australian troops
securing it:[4]
It was where a lot of foreign journalists were staying and
where the Australian Embassy was. There were Australian troops outside. People
thought that was reasonably safe but, because the situation was unpredictable
and deteriorating, the insurgents managed to get in and snatch me.[5]
8.4
Mr Martinkus was surprised to learn, however, that before he could be
interviewed or debriefed by DFAT officials the then Foreign Minister, who was
led to believe that Mr Martinkus had been in a dangerous part of the city,
informed the media as though this was fact.[6]
The minister was reported as stating that Mr Martinkus, whom he did not name,
'had been captured when he went to an area of Baghdad against advice'. He then
said:
Obviously, we're concerned about the safety of Australians
and we do ask that Australians don't go to Iraq. Some do. When they're in Iraq
some of them take risks.
In this particular case, the journalist went out to
investigate a story, I understand, and went to a part of Baghdad that he was
advised not to go, but he went there anyway and journalists do that sort of
thing, but he was detained, but just for 24 hours and subsequently has been
released.[7]
8.5
According to Mr Martinkus, he was on his way home and in a plane between
Baghdad and Amman, Jordan, when the minister made the statement that in essence
'the kidnapping was my fault'.[8]
Mr Martinkus was of the view that, in his case, DFAT officials in Iraq
'basically' misinformed the minister as to what had actually happened. He
suggested that DFAT seemed intent on trying to downplay his story and
ultimately to discredit him and damage his reputation as a journalist.[9]
Mr Martinkus does not know where the story originated but surmises that it may
have started as 'a value judgement probably made by a lower level DFAT official
in Baghdad in that I was doing dangerous things, behaving inappropriately'.[10]
In his assessment, the Minister for Foreign Affairs at the time increased his
distress and trauma by endeavouring to make a political point.[11]
8.6
Mr Martinkus concluded that DFAT should be mindful that people may be
readily victimised rather than helped to get back on with their lives on their
return to Australia.[12]
He stated:
There is this knee-jerk reaction to blame the victim. They
blame them for being somewhere they should not be or whatever, like what happened
in my case...a knee-jerk response to somehow implicate them in their own
misfortune. In the case of journalists, I think there is almost a refusal to
see that they legitimately have a right to be where they are in these conflict
zones and that they have a job to do and are supposed to be there.[13]
8.7
He recommended that in future DFAT officials could seek 'to be properly
informed about issues before incorrectly briefing the minister and should
refrain from imposing their preconceived and institutionally biased opinions
onto the victim's case'.[14]
8.8
Furthermore, he was concerned that DFAT officials have continued to
doubt his story 'long after the event without ever seeking to clarify events
with myself'.[15]
Mr Martinkus informed the committee that since his return to Australia after
his kidnapping, DFAT have never contacted him, sought his account of the
kidnapping or offered him assistance.[16]
He recalled:
The fact that DFAT never tried to verify that with me and
continued to run this rumour campaign that somehow something was wrong, that I
was not telling the full truth, or that there was something not right about
what happened without even bothering to verify it with me is unacceptable. The
minister at the time was basically trying to downplay the security situation in
Baghdad by denigrating me and denigrating SBS—basically playing politics with
the whole incident—and, at the end of the day, I was the one who had to defend
myself against all these charges that I was somehow involved.[17]
8.9
As an example of DFAT's failure to check the facts and recognise that he
had been the victim of a kidnapping, he recalled that at the time of Mr Wood's
abduction he was shown a fax received at the SBS office from DFAT outlining the
previous Australians kidnapped. In his words:
They basically said that my kidnapping had never happened and
that it was alleged. For me, that was extremely hurtful because it was the
press release DFAT was putting out and it was basically calling me a liar. That
was incredibly insulting...I remember I was quite angry and I got the boss at
SBS...to write a letter to them. They then amended the press release, but it was
all after the fact.[18]
8.10
He told the committee that he has had to go through the government's
reaction to his kidnapping with his counsellor a few times including what he
believes was the politicisation of his predicament. He explained:
It made me feel under attack and having to justify myself
continually to colleagues and to the general public about what had happened. To
be honest, what traumatised me more was the stigma and pigeon-holing and
accusations from right-wing members of the press and having to continually
justify my actions. This has gone on for years.[19]
8.11
Comments to the media soon after Mr Martinkus' kidnapping highlight the
importance of government officials ensuring that any public statements they
make or advice they provide are based in fact and sensitive to the
circumstances of the victim. The committee also notes that since his return to
Australia, DFAT is yet to offer Mr Martinkus a debriefing or contact him
directly or formally about his welfare. The AFP visited him in his office about
two weeks after his release asking him about the insurgents who had kidnapped
him.
Advice and counselling
8.12
Mr Jon Philp, Acting First Assistant Secretary, DFAT, indicated that his
department tried to contact Mr Martinkus immediately after his release and
before his departure from Iraq on 18 October but not after his return to
Australia.[20]
In response to Mr Martinkus' account of DFAT's lack of concern for his welfare,
Ms Bird noted that as he had already been freed there was no role in terms of
trying to get him out of there.[21]
She acknowledged that the usual approach would have been to offer consular
assistance, to make sure he was okay and ask whether there were any messages he
wanted to pass to his family. But, she explained, DFAT tried to contact him and
as he did not respond to DFAT's call and he was out and working again, there
was 'no longer any need for consular assistance per se'.[22]
She indicated on a number of occasions that:
We did try to contact him a couple of times and passed on
that offer of consular assistance and asked to speak to him at the earliest
opportunity. If he had wanted to get in touch with us, that offer was
definitely there.[23]
8.13
According to Ms Bird, having inquired whether he was 'okay' and whether
anything could be done for him—'It was up to him to take it up if he wanted to'.[24]
Mr Philp noted further that in Mr Martinkus' case—'he had an employer who has a
formal duty of care'.[25]
He told the committee, however, that he was not aware whether SBS were in touch
with DFAT and that the department would not as a matter of course be in touch
with them.[26]
8.14
Ms Bird informed the committee that DFAT provides exactly the same
consular assistance in all cases. She mentioned on a number of occasions that
DFAT sought to do so in Mr Martinkus' case but he did not see any need to take
it up.[27]
When pressed on this matter of providing assistance after his return, Ms Bird
replied:
...our role would have been to make sure that he was okay; that
he had got out; whether he needed any assistance in leaving the country—we
would not have wanted him to hang around Baghdad any longer than he needed to;
and whether there was something we could pass on to his next of kin to assure
them he was okay. That was unnecessary by the time he was back in Australia.
All that was self-evidently done: he was out and presumably he had been in
touch with his family directly.[28]
8.15
On a number of occasions, Ms Bird repeated her explanation that if Mr
Martinkus had wanted counselling, 'he could have got in touch with us':[29]
...if he was back in Australia he would clearly be able to
avail himself to whatever the domestic services were. We would want to have
made sure that he was well and out of the country, which he was.[30]
8.16
The committee has described Mr Martinkus' state of mind at the time DFAT
tried to contact him in Baghdad—he had just been freed from a traumatic
experience where he had been abducted at gun point, held, restrained and
interrogated, and at times feared execution. In the committee's view, DFAT's
effort to provide consular services to Mr Martinkus fell short of acceptable.
The onus was on DFAT to ensure that all effort was made to make direct contact
with Mr Martinkus, especially on his return to Australia, to ensure that he was
safe and well and to offer him consular assistance. DFAT may have gained the
impression that Mr Martinkus did not need or want assistance, but it was
incumbent on the department to make sure this was so.
Support for Mr Brennan
8.17
Eventually released after being held hostage for 462 days, Mr Brennan
similarly found DFAT unsympathetic to his needs. The committee has recorded the
numerous instances of where Mr Brennan and his family believe that they were poorly
treated especially with regard to access to information. The dissatisfaction
with their treatment continued after Mr Brennan's return to Australia. Indeed,
Mr Brennan stated that in their experience, the government's treatment of them,
during and after his detention, was 'overwhelmingly poor' in almost all
respects.[31]
Debriefings—filling in the blanks
8.18
Mr Brennan explained that after his return, the family wanted 'some
closure' on the kidnapping incident by gaining a better understanding and
insight into the government's handling of the case.[32]
After his release, the Brennan family requested 'full debriefings' with
government agencies. According to Mr Brennan when he requested a debrief from DFAT
and the AFP they asked him why he wanted one. He then replied:
I have heard my family's side of the story and I would like
to hear the government's side of the story of where you think you did stuff
right and where you did stuff wrong.[33]
8.19
Mr Brennan explained that 'I sort of got a laugh at that and they said,
"What do you mean we did stuff wrong?"'[34]
His sister added that when they requested information, DFAT was 'quite
surprised'. This response alarmed them because from the beginning they had
requested information and wanted to know what was going on. In her words:
We felt that we were falling, yet again, into the situation
where communication was only going one way, which was something that had been
problematic for us from the outset.[35]
8.20
The family had to wait more than six months before a meeting with
relevant government agencies was finally arranged. Several DFAT and AFP
officers attended a debriefing on 10 June 2010.[36]
This meeting covered various legal matters with the Criminal Code and counter
terrorism provisions as they relate to the payment of a ransom. At this
meeting, the family expressed concern about possible surveillance and phone
tapping.[37]
The family also attended a meeting as part of the McCarthy review. Mr Brennan
informed the committee that the minutes of either meeting or their outcomes or
a copy of the McCarthy review have not been provided to his family.[38]
8.21
Yet again, the committee received very different interpretations about
this post resolution period. DFAT acknowledged that an important part of any
kidnapping incident occurs post-resolution. The department explained:
After each case involving an Australian overseas, we have
conducted in-depth and careful analysis of all the detail of the specific
kidnapping: how each scenario has played out and what can be learned. This
critical examination is a key element in maintaining a strong response
capacity. As a result, we have made some minor adjustments to aspects of our
policy response, but the fundamental principles have been reaffirmed.[39]
8.22
The committee believes that a post-resolution review is extremely
important but the benefits should not be limited to the department and related
agencies. Such an exercise is an opportunity for a two-way exchange of
information. For example, an interview with Mr Martinkus could have allowed him
to put his account of the kidnapping to DFAT, to clear up any misunderstandings
and to express his disappointment with the handling of his case. The Brennan family
could have sought answers to its many questions—questions that remain largely
unanswered even today (see further discussion and recommendation in chapter 11).
Counselling
8.23
The Brennan family also raised 'strong concerns about the fact that no
assistance was given' to either the family or Nigel after his return to
Australia with regards to counselling services.[40]
Nicole Bonney informed the committee that prior to leaving for Nairobi, the
family asked if counselling would be available after Nigel's release but were
told that 'this was not the case and they should contact the government service
Centrelink for assistance with counselling services'.[41]
8.24
Mr Brennan noted that after his lengthy confinement his cognitive skills
were very slow and his doctors had said that he could not operate any sort
machinery—'anxiety, hyper vigilance and stuff like that'. He then stated:
To sort of be fobbed off as soon as I got off the plane from
Nairobi was, I think, a little bit rude. That is my thing. The government has a
responsibility for its citizens. I take responsibility for what I did.[42]
8.25
Mr Brennan stated that he had to find out about a government scheme,
‘Better Access to Mental Health Care’, through his GP, who referred him to a
psychologist.[43]
8.26
Nigel and his family's account of DFAT's offers of support differs
significantly from that of the department.
8.27
When asked about the government's general duty of care for Australians
overseas, Ms Bird indicated that the department would do all that it could 'to
assist Australians who find themselves in difficulty overseas. There is nothing
legislated around that, but that is our practice'.[44]
DFAT explained that it could help with post-release return to Australia and
reception arrangements and, wherever possible, work with other government
agencies that may be able to provide continued support to the victim and their
families.[45]
8.28
Ms Bird informed the committee that DFAT transfers the responsibility
for following up a person who has suffered a traumatic experience overseas to 'services
through Centrelink and others that can be made available, and we do work with
Centrelink on an ad hoc basis'. She indicated that DFAT assisted Mr Brennan
with counselling services in Nairobi after he was released.[46]
She explained further:
As I said, in the case of Nigel Brennan—because we knew,
obviously, he would be extremely traumatised after the time he had spent—we had
arranged for counselling in Nairobi when he first got out. But, as you said,
when they come back to Australia it is helping them transition into the
Australian system that is important.[47]
8.29
According to Ms Bird, DFAT are looking to see how it 'can continue to do
that and perhaps make that as effective as possible so that when people
transition back they can be helped into the Australian services'.[48]
8.30
Again, this general description of the way in which DFAT helps a person
through the transition period to a local service provider does not match the
specific cases of Mr Martinkus and Mr Brennan.
Benefiting from the experiences of former hostages
8.31
When Mr Brennan arrived back in Australia, he considered trying to set
up some sort of foundation that would deal with Australian citizens finding themselves
in trouble overseas 'so that there is a think tank for people who are
imprisoned or kidnapped'. He would like to involve DFAT and the AFP in some
respect as well.[49]
He was also of the view that there should be a position created within DFAT or a
government agency whereby a person who understands the trauma of a kidnapped
victim is able to represent the interests of and provide the best advice on
behalf of any future kidnapped Australian.[50]
He said:
There should be some sort of task force that does involve the
Australian Federal Police, DFAT, a private company and families like mine, the
Woods and the Danes that can put together an information package for those
families. I do not know how you would get the government sector and the private
sector to work together without the ego and the bravado. That is the difficult
task.[51]
8.32
Mr Brennan elaborated on how the government could capitalise on their
skills and experience. He said:
At the end of the day, when we came home we offered our help
to the Australian Federal Police to improve their negotiations and how they
deal with a family...My sister Nicky spent 15 months negotiating. She probably in
some respects has more skills than some of the AFP negotiators. Why not hone
Nicky's knowledge? We have offered on several occasions, and they do not seem
to be interested whatsoever. I think they would prefer us just to crawl under a
rock and disappear. We have done negotiation skills with Queensland police. We
are about to start doing it with the New South Wales police. It is not as if we
do not want to offer our knowledge and skill base.[52]
8.33
Mrs Bonney added that it would be tragic to think that pride is the only
thing stopping them. According to Mrs Bonney, she has been in contact with a
number of international families that have been through the same experience
since her brother's kidnapping and release. She noted:
I was in probably fortnightly contact with Stephen Collett,
who was the next-of-kin negotiator for Rachel and Paul Chandler. We are also in
contact with the South African family of the couple that have just been taken
and the Canadian family of the young fellow who has been taken in Afghanistan.
We certainly have information that we are quite willing to share. I think
governments should be able to pass this information and our names on readily,
but at this point in time it tends to be the grapevine thing rather than more
official channels that it happens through.[53]
8.34
It appears to the committee that an initiative that would capture and
make use of the experiences of kidnap victims and their families in order to benefit
others caught up in any future hostage situation is certainly worthy of
government recognition and support.
Conclusion
8.35
The committee is of the view that both the Martinkus and Brennan cases
have demonstrated that DFAT needs to give much greater attention to how it can
better manage the post resolution phase of a kidnapping.
8.36
The committee noted at the beginning of chapter 6 that there are two
major considerations for the government when it first learns that an Australian
has been taken captive overseas—mobilising its resources to effect the safe and
expeditious release of the captive and assisting the family and friends of the
kidnapped victim. The committee has underlined the importance that DFAT needs
to attach to the second consideration—the welfare of the family. This
consideration extends to the family and the kidnapped person even after the
victim has been released.
8.37
The committee believes that DFAT should offer to debrief Mr Martinkus
and ensure that its record of his kidnapping incident is correct and
incorporates his account of what occurred. The committee also suggests that
DFAT and the AFP invite Mr Brennan and his family to a meeting where the family
can ask their many unanswered questions. The committee understands that,
because of the sensitive nature of some of the questions, DFAT or the AFP may
not be able to give a complete answer. They should, however, be able to give a
satisfactory explanation for not being able to do so.
8.38
It is clear to the committee that people who have undergone a
frightening and traumatic experience, such as being held hostage, need special
care and consideration after their release. Further, that DFAT's consular
responsibilities do not end when the victim finally regains his or her freedom.
The committee is of the view that DFAT has a role facilitating a smooth
transition from the services provided to a kidnap victim overseas to the appropriate
domestic service provider. In light of this finding, the committee makes the
following recommendation.
Recommendation 5
8.39 The committee recommends that the family liaison sub group
within the emergency response task force assumes responsibility for ensuring
that a victim of kidnapping has access to appropriate counselling services once
released and is active in helping to facilitate a smooth transition from medical
and counselling services provided overseas to the appropriate domestic providers
once the victim returns home. This recommendation also applies to people who
are released before an emergency task force is mobilised or can take any
substantial action such as in the Martinkus case.
8.40
The committee also sees merit in DFAT maintaining contact with the
victims or the families of victims who make known that they would be available
should a kidnapping happen in the future and the family of the kidnapped person
wishes to meet or speak to people who have had similar experiences.
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