Australia:
Protesters in Hodgman's sights
IN
A hardline Australian first, environmental protesters who enter
Tasmanian workplaces will face mandatory jail terms under a Liberal
government.
8
December, 2013
In
a key platform of the Liberals' forestry policy, ``illegal''
protesters would also be hit with $10,000 on-the-spot fines - a
26-fold increase - for ``invading'' a workplace.
Under
the crackdown, corporations that ``incite or encourage this illegal
behaviour'' would attract fines of up to $100,000.
Kick-starting his party's
election campaign yesterday, Opposition Leader Will Hodgman said:
``We will send a very clear and strong message to people who engage
in illegal protests and who cost Tasmanians jobs.
``Under
the Liberals there will be no get-out-of-jail-free card if you
repeatedly invade a workplace.''
The
tough law-and-order stance comes just months out from the next state
election.
It also coincides with
the federal government's reaffirmed pledge to unwind the landmark
Tasmanian forest peace deal that was meant to end three decades of
forestry warfare.
Under
the protest policy, first-time offenders who enter or impede access
to a workplace will face on-the-spot fines of $10,000.
Second-time
offenders will serve three-month mandatory jail terms at a minimum.
Fines
of up to $50,000 and five years' jail could be slapped on protesters
who damage property.
Environmental
organisations that encourage such behaviour could face a crippling
$250,000 fine.
Mr
Hodgman said protesters would also be liable to pay for any economic
loss caused by their actions.
The
Liberals would ``instruct police and emergency services to recover
the costs of dealing with illegal protest activity,'' he said.
Currently
illegal protests carry maximum fines between $390 and $650 under
nuisance and trespassing offences. Both offences carry jail terms but
these are rarely if ever applied to protesters without criminal
records.
Mr
Hodgman said it would be necessary to create a new offence of
``invading or impeding access to a workplace''.
It
is unclear how such legislation might affect industrial action
unrelated to a forestry protest.
Tasmania
is not the only jurisdiction cracking down on activists.
Victoria's
Liberal government has proposed $3000 fines for people protesting in
logging coupes and $8660 fines for ignoring an exclusion order.
Last
year Russian president Vladimir Putin introduced $9000 fines for
unsanctioned protests, and Spanish legislators are considering
$900,000 fines for people who protest near their parliament.
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