David McBride should be protected, not prosecuted

November 23, 2022
Issue 
David McBride
Whistleblower David McBride.

Many people are concerned that whistleblowers David McBride and Richard Boyle are facing criminal charges for behaving ethically.

Close to 75,000 people have signed a to stop McBride being sent to jail.

McBride, a lawyer in the Australian army deployed in Afghanistan, was concerned about alleged atrocities of Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel. Boyle, who worked at the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) was worried about alleged unethical debt recovery practices being pursued against small business owners.

Both used the 2013 (PID Act) to blow the whistleinternally initially 鈥 and then reported their concerns to oversight agencies.

Only as a last resort did they go public聽to the ABC.

The (HRLC) believes McBride and Boyle are being punished for doing the right thing.

Under the PIDA, , the HRLC said. This is because the law 鈥渞ecognises the important democratic role of the media and its importance as a safety-valve when things go wrong and whistleblowing is not heeded internally鈥.

McBride鈥檚 application for immunity from prosecution under the PID Act in the ACT Supreme Court on October 27 was knocked back. He will face a criminal court sometime in 2023.

McBride blew the whistle on alleged ADF in Afghanistan in 2016.

His disclosure of classified information led to ABC publishing The Afghan Files in 2017, a series of reports on the ADF in Afghanistan. McBride admits to being the source for the reports. He also accused his accusers of enabling war crimes and seeking to cover them up.

The ABC was raided by the Australian Federal Police in June 2019. Information previously leaked by whistleblowers led to the Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force authorising the four-year-long Brereton inquiry, which looked into the conduct of Australia鈥檚 special forces soldiers, including the alleged murder of 39 Afghans.

A was released in November 2020 and then-Coalition government defence minister Peter Dutton set about minimising the transparency changes聽.

McBride the only person being charged in relation to the inquiry. He faces five charges, which relate to his disclosure of information to journalists in 2016. These include the unauthorised disclosure of information, theft of Commonwealth property and three counts of breaching of the Defence Act.

鈥淢cBride鈥檚 case has been shrouded in secrecy due to the Attorney-General鈥檚 invocation of the National Security Information (Criminal and Civil Proceedings) Act,鈥 said the HRLC. 鈥淚t is not presently clear how much of the whistleblowing case, and how much of any ultimate trial, will be heard in closed court or with other restrictions on open justice.鈥

The ADF argues that McBride is not protected under the PID Act because one of the files he contained maps of Afghanistan that 鈥渃ould damage national security鈥.

Many organisations, human rights lawyers and activists are the attorney-general to drop the charges against McBride.

The HRLC that the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (CDPP) can end the prosecution of whistleblowers at any time 鈥渋f they decide that pursuing these cases is not in the public interest鈥.

Further it said: 鈥淚f the CDPP refuses to drop the prosecutions, the Attorney-General, Mark Dreyfus KC, retains the power to intervene in exceptional circumstances and discontinue a case. That legal authority was recently used to .鈥

on November 16 that the Labor government is 鈥渢hat Australia has effective protections for whistleblowers鈥 and that before year鈥檚 end he would introduce a new bill to amend the PID Act.

The amendments 鈥渨ill ensure immediate improvements to the public sector whistleblower scheme are in place before the NACC [National Anti-Corruption Commission] commences in mid-2023.

The HRLC said聽PID Act does not work now 鈥渂ecause it provides no practical support for whistleblowers鈥. It wants the government to establish a whistleblower protection authority, as recommended by , to protect and empower whistleblowers.

Meanwhile, the ABC released a new聽聽in September showing聽Australian special operation soldiers can be heard talking about killing at least 10 Afghans in one particular night.

They can be heard laughing and saying: 鈥淲e鈥檝e got a quota of ten. The quota is ten. Will we meet the quota?鈥 Another says: I believe we're going to get the quota.鈥 To which he is met with 鈥淲oo!鈥 and 鈥淭he quota! The quota must be met!鈥

The video is from late 2012, when the Taliban was Australia鈥檚 enemy and Afghan farmers were routinely accused of being with the Taliban.

Afghan-Australian said in October: 鈥淭hese are serious allegations and tell a lot about the culture of the ADF 鈥 It is through such revelations and disclosures that we can hold people in power, especially in the ADF, accountable. Without people like McBride, the Australian public will never know what is being done under their name.鈥

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