Chapter 1 Introduction
1.1
This review is conducted under section 102.1A of the Criminal Code
Act 1995 (the Criminal Code). Section 102.1A provides that the
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (the Committee) may
review a regulation specifying an organisation as a terrorist organisation for
the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of terrorist organisation in
section 102.1 of the Criminal Code and report the Committee’s comments to each
house of the Parliament before the end of the applicable disallowance period.
1.2
Under section 102(3) of the Criminal Code regulations, the listing of
organisations as terrorist organisations ceases to have effect on the second
anniversary of the day on which they took effect. The organisations must, therefore,
be relisted.
1.3
The Committee is currently conducting a full review of the operations,
effectiveness and implications of the proscription powers and expects to report
on this matter soon. A number of approaches to the proscription process are
being examined and it is hoped that procedures may be refined as a result of
the review. In particular, the criteria and the way in which they are applied will
be addressed. In the meantime, in this review, the Committee has used the
criteria and assessment methods which it has used throughout its consideration
of listings and relistings over the last three years.
1.4
This review covers the relisting of Hizballah’s External Security
Organisation (ESO). The ESO (also known as Islamic Jihad Organisation and
Hizballah International) was originally listed in 2003 under legislative
arrangements which required that organisations to be listed had to be on the
United Nations list of terrorist organisations. In 2005, the ESO came up for
review under new legislative arrangements, which had been passed by the
Parliament in 2004. At that time, the Committee reviewed the relisting of the
ESO and reported to Parliament in September 2005. This review is of the second
relisting.
1.5
The Attorney-General wrote to the Chairman of the Committee on 7 May 2007 advising that he had decided to relist Hizballah’s ESO as a terrorist
organisation for the purposes of section 102.1 of the Criminal Code Act
1995.
1.6
The regulation was tabled in the House of Representatives on 29 May 2007 and in the Senate on 12 June 2007. The disallowance period of 15 sitting days
for the Committee’s review of the listing began from the date of the first tabling.
Therefore, the Committee is required to report to the Parliament by 15 August 2007.
1.7
The Committee advertised the inquiry in The Australian on 5 June 2007. Notice of the inquiry was also placed on the Committee’s website. Two
submissions were received from the public.
1.8
The Committee wrote to all Premiers and Chief Ministers inviting
submissions. One response was received in which the Chief Minister of the Northern Territory advised the Committee that the Northern Territory did not wish to make a
submission to the enquiry.
1.9
Representatives of the Attorney-General’s Department, ASIO and the
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) attended a private hearing on
the listings on 18 June 2007 in Canberra.
1.10
In its first report, Review of the listing of the Palestinian Islamic
Jihad (PIJ), the Committee decided that it would test the validity of the
listing of a terrorist organisation under the Criminal Code on both the
procedures and the merits. This chapter will examine the Government’s
procedures in relisting the ESO and chapter 2 will consider the merits of the
listing.
The Government’s procedures
1.11
In a letter sent to the Committee on 29 May 2007, the Attorney-General’s Department informed the Committee of its procedures in relation to the relisting
of Hizballah’s ESO. These procedures are set out in Appendix A.
1.12
An unclassified Statement of Reasons[1] for the relisting of the
ESO was prepared by ASIO in consultation with DFAT. The Committee heard that
DFAT was consulted at the initial stage of developing the statement of reasons
and, also, ‘there was consultation on the finalised document’[2].
1.13
There were twelve working days between the time when the
Attorney-General sent letters to the Prime Minister, the Leader of the
Opposition, the Attorneys of the States and Territories and the Chairman of the
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security on 7 May 2007 and when the Governor-General made the regulation on 23 May 2007. The Committee notes, as it has in previous reports, that letters were addressed to
Attorneys in the States and Territories rather than the Premiers and Chief
Ministers as agreed under subclause 3.4(6) of the Inter –Governmental Agreement
on Counter-terrorism Laws.
1.14
The Leader of the Opposition did not seek a briefing on the matter and,
at the time of the hearing, two State governments (Western Australia and Queensland) had replied to the Attorney-General advising no objection to the relisting.[3]
1.15
On 24 May 2007, the Attorney-General issued a media release announcing
the decision to relist Hizballah’s ESO. There was no other community
consultation regarding this relisting.
1.16
In his submission Dr Emerton noted that community consultation would
have provided ‘members of the Australian community who oppose the listing of
the ESO as a terrorist organisation’ with the opportunity to express their
views. [4]
While the Committee agrees that community consultation would be desirable, it
notes that, as mentioned above, it placed an advertisement in The Australian
calling for submissions from the public in order to provide a forum for members
of the Australian community who oppose the listing of the ESO to do so but,
apart from submissions by two academics, the Committee received no submissions
from any other members of the Australian community.