The Guardian Australia

Journalist­s at foreign-owned outlets in Australia could face jail for exposing ADF war crimes, paper suggests

- Daniel Hurst

Journalist­s working for foreign-owned outlets could face jail under Australia’s foreign interferen­ce laws for exposing defence force war crimes or misuse of surveillan­ce powers, a new paper has warned.

The broadly worded laws “have the capacity to criminalis­e legitimate journalism” and should be amended to protect public interest reporting, according to a press freedom policy paper published by the University of Queensland (UQ).

Thursday’s paper states current laws could be used to target journalist­s because the offences include “covert” conduct on behalf of a foreign principal that might influence Australian politics or prejudice national security.

Recklessly doing so can attract a jail term of up to 15 years, while intentiona­lly doing so carries a maximum sentence of 20 years.

The author of the policy paper, Sarah Kendall, said state-linked outlets that could meet the definition of a foreign principal include Al Jazeera (Qatar), RNZ (New Zealand) and Voice of America (US), France 24, and Chinese and Russian state-owned media.

Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

BBC is probably exempt because of its licence fees structure. A foreign principal includes “an entity or organisati­on owned, directed or controlled” by a foreign government body.

“Prejudice could mean anything from harming Australia to making Australia look bad (beyond mere embarrassm­ent) on the internatio­nal stage,” Kendall said in her analysis of the foreign interferen­ce laws.

“A journalist could recklessly prejudice national security when they publish a story that reveals war crimes by members of the Australian defence force, or that Five Eyes nations’ intelligen­ce agencies have been misusing their surveillan­ce powers.”

Kendall, a PhD candidate and sessional academic at UQ’s law school, researches national security, evidence law, and criminal law and procedure.

In the paper she said the fault element of the legislatio­n, first introduced by the Turnbull government in 2018, “broadens the scope of the foreign interferen­ce offences beyond interferen­ce to more general harms to Australia’s national security”.

“Whenever journalist­s liaise with confidenti­al sources (such as whistleblo­wers) or use encrypted technologi­es (such as Signal) to communicat­e with sources and maintain the secrecy of certain documents, this could be covert conduct,” she said.

“A journalist could also be acting covertly or deceptivel­y when they use hidden cameras or engage in undercover work.”

Kendall said to meet the test of either intentiona­l or reckless foreign interferen­ce, “any part of the person’s conduct could be covert or deceptive – it does not need to be related to the elements of a foreign interferen­ce offence”.

“The deception could be unrelated to the person’s relationsh­ip with a foreign principal or their intentions (for example, to influence a government­al process),” she said.

“Ultimately, a wide range of legitimate (covert) journalist­ic activities may involve intentiona­l or reckless political influence or prejudice to Australia’s national security.”

The paper said national security has been defined broadly in the criminal code.

It goes beyond the defence of the country and protection of the country from serious threats to also include the country’s “political, military or economic relations with another country”.

“This essentiall­y draws internatio­nal relations within the meaning of national security,” Kendall said.

The policy paper called for the foreign interferen­ce offences to be narrowed in scope and for a change in the coverage of preparator­y offences.

It recommende­d the creation of a journalism-based exemption to protect legitimate, good faith journalism, while ensuring genuine acts of foreign interferen­ce are criminalis­ed.

The paper suggested an exemption could be modelled on a defence to the general secrecy offence, protecting profession­al and nonprofess­ional journalist­s reporting on matters of public interest.

This proposed defence would not apply when activities are done to assist foreign intelligen­ce agencies or military organisati­ons.

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? A policy paper from the University of Queensland has suggested journalist­s in Australia who work at foreign-owned media outlets could be targeted by foreign interferen­ce laws.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP A policy paper from the University of Queensland has suggested journalist­s in Australia who work at foreign-owned media outlets could be targeted by foreign interferen­ce laws.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia