The Chronicle

Spies’ licence to kill

Gloves off for Aussie agents working overseas

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AUSTRALIAN spies will be able to shoot enemies posing a risk to innocent bystanders or hostages during covert missions overseas.

Australian Secret Intelligen­ce Service officers will be able to use “reasonable force” to protect other people while working abroad, under legislatio­n that passed Parliament yesterday.

Foreign Minister Marise Payne (pictured) said current arrangemen­ts led to absurd situations such as spies not being able to use weapons to defend innocent people threatened by a terrorist or kidnapper, even if it was happening in front of them.

“As the world has become more complex it’s clear that the legislatio­n that governs ASIS operations also needs to evolve,” Senator Payne told the Upper House yesterday. “Changes to Australia’s national security requires ASIS to operate in hazardous circumstan­ces overseas, especially when operating against terrorists, violent extremists and other threats.”

But ASIS officers won’t have free rein, with the final approval for the use of the new powers resting with the foreign minister.

Greens senator Nick McKim said the legislatio­n joined many other laws passed in the past 20 years that eroded fundamenta­l rights, freedoms and liberties.

“This is mission creep,” he said.

The last expansion to ASIS powers occurred in 2004, in response to the September 11 terrorist attacks three years earlier.

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