Peter Dutton referred to national security watchdog over Abdul Nacer Benbrika detainment – MASHAHER

ISLAM GAMAL5 June 2024Last Update :
Peter Dutton referred to national security watchdog over Abdul Nacer Benbrika detainment – MASHAHER


Abdul Nacer Benbrika.

Benbrika was kept in custody after his prison term ended on the basis he was an ongoing risk to national security.

This was based on the findings of a VERA-2R – the Violent Extremism Risk Assessment 2 Revised – report, which measures the threat posed by extremists when considering their release from prison.

But the test has fallen out of favour following a report written by Australian National University lecturer Dr Emily Corner, who found the assessment was unable to accurately predict a person’s “specified risk with anything other than chance”.

Corner’s report was completed in May 2020 and submitted to the Department of Home Affairs.

The then Coalition government failed to send Corner’s report and four other reports critical of the extremism assessment to Benbrika’s defence team. In December 2020, a judge ruled Benbrika should stay in custody for another three years.

“There is no doubt that the administration of justice has been adversely affected by the non-disclosure of the Corner report and the four other expert reports critical of VERA-2R,” Hollingworth said on Wednesday.

“The accepted validity of VERA-2R was absolutely fundamental to the decisions to impose and continue the CDO [continuing detention order].

“The statutory requirement that the AFP minister disclose exculpatory material [such as the reports] is a fundamental safeguard to ensure the protection of individual liberty under what is very unusual and draconian legislation.

“What happened in this case should never have happened, and should not be repeated in the case of Mr Benbrika or any other person the subject of a post-sentence order application.”

Benbrika’s detention has presented considerable political and legal complications for the Commonwealth since 2020.

Benbrika, an Algerian grandfather who goes by “Nacer”, was convicted in 2009 of directing a terrorist organisation. A jury found him guilty of being the spiritual leader of a terror cell, with members in Melbourne and Sydney, that planned attacks on Australian soil.

His group discussed carrying out attacks because it wanted the Australian government to withdraw troops from Iraq and Afghanistan. No attacks were ever carried out.

Benbrika, speaking at his home in Melbourne’s north, said he wanted to see fairness in Australia’s legal system.

“We tell ourselves that we live in a country where everybody’s equal, so let’s see it. What I did in the past was bad and I was punished for it. Now it’s clear that the government has done something bad. I hope the monitor will do his job,” he said.

Benbrika’s detention has presented considerable political and legal complications for the Commonwealth since 2020.

Benbrika’s detention has presented considerable political and legal complications for the Commonwealth since 2020.

A spokesman for Attorney-General Richard Dreyfus said the former Coalition government was responsible for the High Risk Terrorist Offender scheme at that time.

In December last year, the former watchdog for Australia’s national security laws, Grant Donaldson, SC, labelled the Commonwealth’s treatment of Benbrika a disgrace and criticised his continued detention.

In his final report, Donaldson said the government had failed to explain why it had concealed the Corner report criticising the efficacy of VERA-2R. Donaldson also called for an inquiry to examine the government’s withholding of crucial evidence.

Australian Lawyers Alliance criminal justice spokesman Greg Barnes said it is fundamentally important in Australia’s system of democracy that the rule of law be consistently applied by government departments.

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“An element of this includes ensuring fairness in proceedings against individuals, particularly where a person’s freedom of movement and liberty is at stake because of course, these are fundamental human rights,” he said.

Hollingworth also specifically criticised the behaviour of a senior public servant inside Home Affairs, Stephen Webber, who she suggested was acting “disingenuously” when he apologised on behalf of the department.

“I do not accept the proffered ‘explanation’ or ‘apology’ from Mr Webber on behalf of Home Affairs. They are both utterly disingenuous, in circumstances where Mr Webber (or others in the department) has deliberately chosen not to put a proper explanation before the court,” she found.

Hollingworth said that after she refers the matter it will be up to the watchdog to undertake any further investigations “to get to the bottom of why the various expert reports were not disclosed to Mr Benbrika”.

“I am going to refer the non-disclosure of the Corner report and the four other expert reports to the current [Independent National Security Legislation Monitor], and provide him with a copy of these reasons and all of the relevant evidence,” she said.

Hollingworth also flagged that lawyers within Home Affairs may be subject to professional sanction for failing to disclose the information they were legally obliged to.

“If any of [the lawyers] have been involved in improperly withholding exculpatory material, that may have professional disciplinary consequences for them,” she said.

Doogue + George partner Isabelle Skaburskis, who has worked on Benbrika’s case for four years, said the government has harmed many people with the CDO legislation, and that many people are still impacted by it.

“In hundreds of hours of contact I’ve had with Nacer and his family, I have seen how desperately this man wants to live his life, peacefully, outside of the public eye and outside the constant surveillance,” Skaburskis said.

Hollingworth ordered Benbrika be released into the community last year. Benbrika is currently in the community subject to 30 conditions imposed by the court, including a curfew, an order he that live at a specific address that he cannot change without permission, and a condition that he must come to the door when called upon by police.

He must also continue receiving psychological treatment and continue to engage with de-radicalisation programs.

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