INT58
International/Diaspora/
Law/Terrorism'Haneef's plight underlines need for
public scrutiny of terror laws'By Neena Bhandari Sydney, Sep 22 IANS A
public forum held here Monday on
Indian doctor Muhammad Haneef's botched
terrorism case has been told that robust
public scrutiny is the
key to ensuring Australia's
terrorism laws strike the right balance between
community protection and respect for individual rights.We have long argued that our anti-
terrorism laws strike the wrong balance between
community safety and individual freedoms,
Law Council of
Australia president Ross
Ray told the
forum convened by the
Justice John Clarke inquiry investigating the series of
events from the arrest of Haneef at Brisbane
International Airport on July 2, 2007, until his release from detention and return
home about a month later.As the Haneef case demonstrates, the content of these
laws is only part of the problem. The difficulties endured by Dr. Haneef have shown us that the way these
laws are understood and applied by the officers responsible for their implementation is also a problem,
Ray told the
forum, joining a panel of
legal and
law enforcement experts.Haneef, a former
Gold Coast registrar, was incarcerated in
Australia for three weeks last July after being charged with supporting a terrorist organisation by "recklessly"
giving his mobile
phone SIM
card to
people planning the botched
London and Glasgow bomb attacks.The charges against Haneef were dropped and he returned to his
family in
Bangalore on July 29 last year. His
work visa was reinstated last December by the new Labour
Immigration Minister Chris Evans.Recently, the Australian Federal
Police AFP dropped its
investigation, after over a year of pursuing the botched
terrorism case against Haneef that has caused the AFP much embarrassment and cost the taxpayer A$8.5 million.Haneef's
lawyer Peter Russo, who had flown in from Brisbane for the
forum aptly entitled Too safe or too sorry, told IANS: The inquiry is very important to get a clearer
picture of what exactly happened."Queensland
Health Minister Stephen Robertson recently told Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Radio Haneef had been treated "absolutely appallingly" and was welcome to return to
work in Queensland.Haneef's
lawyer Rod Hodgson has said his client would be seeking compensation after the federal inquiry into the case was over. "We have made no secret of the fact that he
will be seeking compensation for the immense damage to his
career, his
family and his reputation." The Clarke Inquiry
will report its findings on Nov 14.--Indo-Asian
News Servicenb/am/dg430
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