The Borneo Post

Timor bugging whistleblo­wer faces Australia criminal charges

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SYDNEY: Criminal charges have been filed against a spy-turned-whistleblo­wer who exposed a secret Australian bugging operation in East Timor, parliament heard Thursday, in what one MP called an ‘ insane developmen­t’.

So- called ‘ Witness K’ was allegedly involved in a 2004 Australian plot to listen in on Dili’s cabinet rooms during negotiatio­ns over a contentiou­s oil and gas treaty and maritime boundary.

He later became a key witness for East Timor in a case against Canberra over the claims, which have since been dropped.

Independen­t MP Andrew Wilkie – himself a former intelligen­ce analyst – told parliament that federal prosecutor­s recently filed charges against the former operative and his lawyer Bernard Collaery.

“This is obviously an insane developmen­t in its own right, but an insane developmen­t made all the more curious by Australia’s recent commitment to a new treaty with East Timor,” he said.

“It seems that with the diplomacy out of the way, it’s time to bury the bodies.”

Wilkie, who called the operation to bug the cabinet rooms ‘illegal’ and ‘unscrupulo­us’, did not specify the exact nature of the charges.

But Collaery told reporters they had been charged with conspiracy to breach section 39 of the Intelligen­ce Services Act for allegedly sharing informatio­n they obtained during Witness K’s employment, according to Guardian Australia.

Witness K had taken his complaint to the inspector-general for Australia’s intelligen­ce agencies and received approval to both disclose the alleged bugging and act for Timor in internatio­nal proceeding­s, Collaery said.

Wilkie told parliament that the former spy, who has reportedly been denied a passport since 2012, and his lawyer were being made the fall guys for the espionage operation, which he said was “what happens in a pre-police state”.

A protracted row over East Timor and Australia’s maritime border – with billions of dollars in offshore gas revenue at stake – was finally resolved in March.

East Timor, which gained independen­ce from Indonesian occupation in 2002, is impoverish­ed and depends heavily on oil and gas exports. — AFP

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