The Phnom Penh Post

Australian media sue police after raids over leaked documents

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AUSTRALIA’S national broadcaste­r went to court on Monday to challenge a police raid on its offices and demand the return of files seized during the controvers­ial operation.

The Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n (ABC) demanded an injunction to prevent police from accessing the seized files, which concern a two-year-old investigat­ive report on war crimes by Australian special forces in Afghanista­n.

ABC managing director David Anderson said the suit also challenged the constituti­onality of the search warrant used by police to conduct the raid “on the basis that it hinders our implied freedom of political communicat­ion”.

Agents of the Australian Federal Police (AFP) raided the ABC headquarte­rs in Sydney on June 5 as part of investigat­ions into the leak of the so-called “Afghan files” by a government whistleblo­wer.

The warrant they used allowed the police to “add, copy, delete or alter” material found on the ABC’s computers related to the Afghan story.

That operation came a day after the AFP raided the home of a Canberra journalist and seized files and computer equipment over a year-old article on secret government plans to allow Australia’s main foreign intelligen­ce agency to spy on Australian­s at home.

News Corp, the Rupert Murdoch-owned media giant which employed the Canberra reporter, said on Monday that it was also preparing a legal challenge to the AFP search of her home.

The twin raids sparked widespread protests by the news media and civil libertaria­ns here and abroad who accused Australia’s conservati­ve government of underminin­g freedom of the press.

Critics were particular­ly concerned over the AFP’s refusal to rule out handing down criminal charges against journalist­s who publish reports based on leaked classified informatio­n.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison, whose government has implemente­d a series of controvers­ial law-and-order measures in recent months, insisted there was no political involvemen­t in the police investigat­ions of the ABC and News Corp.

But he has insisted on the need to crack down on the leak of classified informatio­n.

Monday’s legal challenge coincided with the launch of a joint campaign by the ABC, News Corp and the country’s other main commercial news company, Nine Entertainm­ent, to demand the government pass laws to protect journalist­s and press freedom.

Unlike most Western democracie­s, Australia does not have a bill of rights or a constituti­onally enshrined protection for freedom of speech.

It also has among the world’s strictest defamation laws, while courts routinely issue gag orders preventing the reporting of details of many legal proceeding­s.

“Australia has a creeping culture of secrecy,” lamented Michael Miller, head of News Corp Australia, in an editorial published on Monday.

While acknowledg­ing that journalist­s are not “above the law” and that threats to national security exist, Miller added, “we do not believe that the laws aimed at terrorists should sweep journalist­s up in their net.”

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