Fascism comes to Australia with new security powers to "defeat ISIS"
Aust
seeks tougher security powers
Australia's
government will seek broad new security powers to combat what it says
is a rising threat from militant Islamists, following
counter-terrorism raids last week involving hundreds of police.
22
September, 2014
Under
the tough legislation, which Attorney General George Brandis said
would be introduced into the Senate on Wednesday, it would be a crime
for an Australian citizen to travel to any area overseas once the
government has declared it off limits.
Although
the United States and several European countries are weighing legal
measures to stop their citizens fighting in conflicts in the Middle
East, Australia's proposed law appears to go farther than any other
in actually barring entire regions, Reuters reports.
Australia
is concerned over the number of its citizens believed to be fighting
overseas with militant groups, including a suicide bomber who killed
three people in Baghdad in July this year and two men shown in images
on social media holding the severed heads of Syrian soldiers.
"We
will be introducing a new offence and that is the offence of
travelling to a zone or a locality, I should say declared by the
minister for foreign affairs to be a declared locality," Mr
Brandis told reporters in Canberra today.
Mr
Brandis said the legislation would carve out exemptions for some
Australian citizens, provided they can prove that they have a valid
reason for being in a "declared area", such as journalists
or visiting family members.
He
also took the unusual step of including specific language in the
legislation barring intelligence operatives from engaging in torture,
he said, after two independent senators had raised questions in the
media in recent days.
Prime
Minister Toy Abbott has said that at least 100 Australians are in the
Middle East either fighting with or supporting Islamic State or other
militant groups - a number that he said has been increasing in recent
months.
At
least 20 are believed by authorities to have returned to Australia
and pose a security risk, and earlier this month the national
security agency for the first time raised its four-tier threat level
to "high".
More
than 800 police were involved in the security operation in Sydney and
Brisbane last Thursday, which authorities said had thwarted a plot by
militants linked to the Islamic State group to behead a random member
of the public.
On Friday, Mr Abbott ordered security boosted at Parliament House in Canberra, after he said that intelligence "chatter" had revealed a plot to attack the building and politicians on orders from overseas militants.
US President Barack Obama is expected to use a speech to the U.N. Security Council on Wednesday to call for more countries to join his coalition of more than 40 nations to prevent the Islamic State from expanding its territory.
Abbott: reduction in freedom necessary to save lives from terrorism threat
Tony Abbott says ‘delicate balance between freedom and security’ may have to shift
22 September, 2014
Australians must accept a reduction in freedom and an increase in security “for some time to come” to save lives from the significant threat of terrorism, Tony Abbott has told parliament.
In an address to parliament on Monday, Abbott also rejected suggestions the domestic terrorism threat would be aggravated by the deployment of 600 Australian Defence Force (ADF) members to the Middle East to fight Islamic State (Isis) militants.
The
opposition leader, Bill Shorten, broadly supported Abbott’s
position on security laws and the Iraq commitment, saying that
“keeping our people safe is above politics”.
Both
leaders made their statements to parliament as MPs prepared to
consider two bills this week: one to increase the powers of
intelligence agencies and the second to target foreign fighters.
Earlier
on Monday the attorney general, George Brandis, announced several
concessions in response to concerns raised by the Islamic community,
the Labor opposition and the Liberal Democratic senator David
Leyonhjelm.
Legal
immunities for Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (Asio)
officers conducting covert “special intelligence operations”
would specifically exclude torture, Brandis said. Other contentious
measures, such as the new offence of visiting declared “no-go
zones” without a legitimate purpose, would expire in 10 years.
Abbott
said he had three key messages: the government would do whatever was
possible to keep people safe; the target was “terrorism not
religion”; and Australians “should always live normally because
terrorists’ goal is to scare us out of being ourselves”.
But
he cited the the major anti-terrorism raids across Sydney and
Brisbane last week to make a broader point about the need to
reconsider the balance between freedom and security.
“I
can’t promise that hideous events will never take place on
Australian soil, but I can promise that we will never stoop to the
level of those who hate us and fight evil with evil,” Abbott said.
“Regrettably,
for some time to come, Australians will have to endure more security
than we’re used to, and more inconvenience than we’d like.
Regrettably, for some time to come, the delicate balance between
freedom and security may have to shift.
“There
may be more restrictions on some so that there can be more
protections for others. After all, the most basic freedom of all is
the freedom to walk the streets unharmed and to sleep safe in our
beds at night. Creating new offences that are harder to beat on a
technicality may be a small price to pay for saving lives and for
maintaining the social fabric of an open, free and multicultural
nation.”
Abbott
underlined the domestic security threat posed by Isis, saying that at
least 60 Australians were believed to be fighting with groups in
Syria and Iraq, at least 100 were supporting them, and more than 20
had already returned to Australia.
He
said it could “hardly be Islamic to kill without compunction Shia,
Yazidi, Turkmen, Kurds, Christians and Sunni who don’t share this
death cult’s view of the world” and nothing could “justify the
beheadings, crucifixions, mass executions, ethnic cleansing, rape and
sexual slavery”.
He
said it was in Australia’s national interest to stand ready to join
the US-led coalition to help the new Iraqi government disrupt and
degrade the Isis movement.
Australia
has offered Super Hornet aircraft to contribute to air strikes
against Isis targets in Iraq, while special forces military advisers
are preparing to help the Iraqi and Kurdish authorities in fighting
the group.
Cabinet
will consider the use of force after Abbott participates in a United
Nations security council meeting chaired by the US president, Barack
Obama, in New York this week.
Abbott
specifically rejected claims of a link between Australian and western
foreign policy and the terrorist threat, arguing the 11 September,
2001, attacks on the US and the 2002 Bali bombing predated the 2003
invasion of Iraq.
The
Greens have argued that Isis would recruit people to its cause by
presenting the latest Iraq conflict “as a western imperialist fight
against Islam”.
The
director general of the MI5 security service from 2002 to 2007,
Baroness Eliza Manningham-Buller, has previously told Britain’s
Chilcot inquiry into the 2003 Iraq invasion “undoubtedly increased
the threat” as it had “radicalised” young British citizens.
Abbott
said groups such as Isis would “cite our involvement but they would
attack us anyway for who we are and for how we live, not for anything
we have done”.
“It’s
our acceptance that people can live and worship in the way they
choose that bothers them, not our foreign policy,” Abbott said,
adding that stopping the advance of Isis should reduce its magnetism
for people around the globe looking to join a fight.
Abbott
told parliament last week’s police raids came after “an
Australian [Isis] operative instructed his followers to pluck people
from the street to demonstrate that they could, in his words, ‘kill
kaffirs’ ”.
The
prime minister said it was never right to kill or mistreat others in
the name of God.
Shorten
said Labor believed security agencies should have the powers and
resources they needed to keep Australians safe from the threat of
terrorism, but stressed the importance of “safeguarding fundamental
democratic freedoms”.
“We
must ensure that in legislating to protect our national security, the
parliament is careful not to damage the very qualities and liberties
that we are seeking to defend from terrorist threat,” Shorten said.
Labor
supported Australia’s contribution to the mission in Iraq, he said,
not as “a matter of jingoism or nationalism” but based on “a
calculation of conscience and national interest”.
Isis
was “intent upon only desecration and destruction” and was
murdering innocent people and oppressing and raping women and girls
across northern Iraq, Shorten said.
He
said Labor wanted the ADF to carry out a clearly defined mission at
the request of the Iraqi government, but he set some boundaries.
Labor
would oppose deployment of ADF ground combat units to directly fight
Isis, or an extension of the mission to Syria, or continuing it if
the Iraqi government forces engaged in unacceptable conduct or
adopted unacceptable policies.
“Like
the prime minister, I clearly reject the assumption that our
engagement in Iraq has made us more of a target,” Shorten said.
“I
accept, however, that Australia must always be vigilant in the face
of extremist threats. Very few Australians, poisoned by fanaticism,
travelling to this war zone with the intention of participating in
this conflict, represent a threat to our national security.”
Shorten
urged people not to stigmatise Muslim Australians for the crimes of
Isis, saying the nation would “not overcome hatred with hatred”
or tackle “intolerance by being intolerant”.
Abbott
thanked Shorten for his support, saying the bipartisanship on
national security “let’s our enemies know that they will never
shake our resolve” and that “hope is stronger than fear and that
decency can prevail over brute force”.
I can't find this reflected anywhere else yet
Security
Council to compel countries to clamp down
The
United Nations Security Council is poised to adopt a binding
resolution compelling all countries to clamp down on homegrown
jihadists
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