The Australian
government has asked the federal police to investigate if lawyer
Bernard Collaery and a former spy can be charged with disclosing classified
information after revelations Australia spied on East Timor during
sensitive oil and gas treaty talks.
Confirmation of the
investigation came as the AFP asked the ABC to hand over material relating to
its reports on the clandestine operation.
According to sources,
the AFP was particularly keen on getting unedited footage of Mr Collaery's
interviews with 7.30, Lateline and Four Corners.
It might also
want an extract of an affidavit from the former Australian Secret
Intelligence Service agent that reporter Conor Duffy claimed to have obtained.
In the interviews
with the ABC and other media organisations, Mr Collaery – who had acted for
East Timor and the former ASIS agent – detailed how the former spy led
the operation to insert listening devices into the wall cavity of East Timor's
government offices under the cover of an aid project.
Attorney-General
George Brandis and solicitor-general Justin Gleeson both said the former spy
and Mr Collaery appeared to have breached laws preventing the public disclosure
of classified information.
The offence carried a
prison term of up to two years.
When asked if it was
investigating Mr Collaery and the former spy for breaching commonwealth laws, a
spokesman for the AFP said: "The AFP can confirm it has received a
referral in relation to this matter. As this investigation is ongoing, it is
inappropriate to comment further."
The referral was
understood to have come from Senator Brandis or his department, which includes
ASIO.
In emailed comments,
Mr Collaery said he understood ASIO referred the matter to the AFP because of a
suspected breach of section 39 of the Intelligence Services Act.
He noted that current
ASIO boss David Irvine was head of ASIS at the time of the spying, which Mr
Collaery said was illegal.
"This is the
police knowingly or unknowingly trying to base a search warrant on an
illegality.
"The AFP should
be investigating [former foreign minister Alexander] Downer and Irvine."
The ABC was
considering its response but was understood to be prepared to reject the
request, despite intimations from the AFP that it would seek a warrant for the
material if it failed to comply.
While it was happy to
provide footage that went to air (it was available online anyway), it regarded
the unedited footage as including off-the-record information that might reveal
the identity of protected sources.
The AFP investigation
was the latest twist in the extraordinary spying saga that ruptured relations
between East Timor and Australia and drew the condemnation of the
International Court of Justice.
ASIO agents raided
the home of the former ASIS officer and the office of Mr Collaery in
December, seizing documents and electronic data then cancelling the former
spy's passport.
Mr Collaery was
acting for East Timor in international arbitration to nullify a treaty between
Australia and the tiny nation governing oil and gas reserves worth more than
$40 billion in the Timor Sea. The former ASIS agent was East Timor's star
witness in the arbitration.
East Timor argued the
spying meant the treaty was not negotiated in good faith, as required under the
Vienna Convention.
East Timor slammed
the raids as "unconscionable conduct" and the International Court of
Justice condemned the behaviour and gave an unprecedented interim order for
Australia to cease any intelligence monitoring of East Timor and seal the
material it seized in the raids.
East Timor was
especially outraged that ASIO seized much of the legal material it was using in
the arbitration against Australia. Moreover, the raids occurred
just before the planned trip of the former spy to the Hague to appear
before the arbitration tribunal.
But the government
maintained the raids were justified, arguing they were launched to protect
national security, not to hamper East Timor's legal case.
Ever since the raids,
Mr Collaery had remained in Europe working on the arbitration case.
Counsel for the
whistleblower also could not be reached.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/government-wants-east-timor-spy-charged-20140831-10aoad.html#ixzz3C0mgb73e
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/government-wants-east-timor-spy-charged-20140831-10aoad.html#ixzz3C0mgb73e
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