The Guardian Australia

AFL appoints panel to investigat­e Hawthorn racism allegation­s

- Nino Bucci

The AFL has announced a panel to investigat­e allegation­s of racism at the Hawthorn football club, but it remains unclear if the First Nations players behind the claims will participat­e.

The league said in a statement on Wednesday that it had appointed an independen­t panel of four barristers, to be led by Bernard Quinn KC, two of whom are also Indigenous, to investigat­e what has been dubbed the greatest scandal in AFL history.

According to the claims made during an independen­t investigat­ion commission­ed by Hawthorn, players were forced into separating from their partners, and one was told to tell his partner to terminate her pregnancy.

The claims related to alleged conduct by former coach Alastair Clarkson, and football department staff Chris Fagan and Jason Burt, all of whom have strongly denied any wrongdoing.

The claims were referred to the AFL integrity unit, and the panel was due to report back in December. The AFL said it expected the panel’s report, including its findings and recommenda­tions, would be made public.

It remains unclear whether the five players at the centre of the claims will take part in the investigat­ion, as they were concerned that any panel establishe­d by the AFL could not be truly independen­t. Leon Zwier, who represents four of the players and is considered the contact person for the fifth, was not available for comment.

The AFL said in its statement that it did not know the identities of the former players who made the claims, but had “repeatedly requested this informatio­n from their lawyers to assist in the good conduct of the investigat­ion and related processes, which has been declined”.

Quinn will be joined on the panel by Jacqualyn Turfrey, who practises in commercial, family and criminal law, and is a Palawa woman; Tim Goodwin, a Yuin man who practises in commercial and public law, and is on the board of the Human Rights Law Centre; and Julie Buxton, a former human rights and youth justice adviser to Victoria’s commission­er for Aboriginal children and young people who also worked with the United Nations Serious Crimes Unit in Timor-Leste.

“These are very serious allegation­s, and it is important that we have an independen­t panel that is able to hear the perspectiv­es of all involved and to provide natural justice to those making the claims and those who have had claims made against them,” AFL general counsel Andrew Dillon said.

“It is also vitally important that the panel is able to complete its work independen­tly of the AFL.

“Bernard Quinn KC, the chair of the independen­t investigat­ion, and panel members Jacqualyn Turfrey, Julie Buxton and Tim Goodwin are all eminently qualified barristers that will be able to provide their intellect and significan­t expertise to the process.”

Dillon said the investigat­ion would specifical­ly look at the period covering 1 January 2008 to 31 December 2016 inclusive and would run independen­tly of the AFL.

The final terms of reference are yet to be finalised.

Dillon said it was important that the terms confirmed that there was an opportunit­y for mediation and the projected end date of the investigat­ion.

He said that while the AFL was open to a wider investigat­ion encompassi­ng all clubs the priority was to investigat­e the informatio­n passed on from Hawthorn.

“Beyond this immediate investigat­ion, we are open to listening to all the ideas that are being suggested however importantl­y for the short term we need to run a proper independen­t process on these allegation­s, and we believe this investigat­ion will help inform whatever we do next as an industry,” Dillon said.

The AFL said it had sent the proposed terms of reference and plan for the investigat­ion to lawyers for the players, Hawthorn, Clarkson, Fagan, Burt and Binmada, the consultanc­y that completed the Hawthorn investigat­ion, on 30 September.

The panel and senior lawyer Peter Gordon, who is representi­ng the AFL, is now expected to work with the parties on the investigat­ion, the AFL said.

 ?? Photograph: Julian Smith/AAP ?? The AFL has appointed an independen­t panel of four barristers, to be led by Bernard Quinn KC, to investigat­e allegation­s of racism at the Hawthorn football club.
Photograph: Julian Smith/AAP The AFL has appointed an independen­t panel of four barristers, to be led by Bernard Quinn KC, to investigat­e allegation­s of racism at the Hawthorn football club.

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