Chapter 1 Background
1.1
In 2002 the Commonwealth Parliament passed a package of security and
counter terrorism laws to strengthen Australia’s capacity to respond to the
threat of international terrorism.[1] The legislation
established a suite of personal and terrorist organisation offences and an
executive power to proscribe an entity as a ‘terrorist organisation’ under the Criminal
Code Act 1995 (the Criminal Code).
1.2
The Committee is required to review the operation, effectiveness and
implications of the proscription regime and to report to each House of
the Parliament and to the Minister as soon as possible after March 2007.[2]
1.3
In 2005 the Government established the independent Security Legislation
Review Committee (SLRC) under the chairmanship of the Honourable Simon Sheller
AO QC.[3] The Committee is required
to take account of the report of the SLRC, reference is therefore made
throughout the report to the findings and recommendations of the SLRC relevant to
this review. The Committee has also drawn on its own experience of reviewing
the listing of ‘terrorist organisations’, a function it has discharged on
behalf of the Parliament since 2004.
1.4
The inquiry was advertised generally on 18 November 2006 and published on the Parliament House website on the same date. In November and December
2006 the Committee wrote to relevant Ministers, the Premiers of each of the
States and Territories and a wide range of non-government organisations,
academics and individuals with an interest in the subject matter. Twenty-nine
written submissions were received and all are published on the Committee’s
website. The Committee also took evidence in public from twenty witnesses
during one and a half days of hearings held on 3 and 4 April 2007 conducted in Parliament House, Canberra.