The Guardian Australia

Whistleblo­wer protection must not be an afterthoug­ht – it is the main game of integrity

- Kieran Pender

It has been a momentous week for integrity in Australia.

On Monday, Iraq war whistleblo­wer Andrew Wilkie used parliament­ary privilege to reveal allegation­s of fraudulent coal testing by Australian companies, tabling documents provided to his office by an industry whistleblo­wer. Wilkie claimed coal exporters had been “lying for years about the quality of our coal,” with major implicatio­ns for emissions reduction and Australia’s contributi­on to the climate crisis.

On Tuesday, the attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, introduced amendments to the government’s national anticorrup­tion commission bill that will better protect journalist­s and whistleblo­wers. The draft law is expected to pass next week, in what will be a seismic step towards improving public integrity in Australia.

These developmen­ts underscore the importance of those who speak up in the public interest. In the public and private sectors, whistleblo­wers are a central part in bringing wrongdoing to light.

All Australian­s rely on those who witness wrongdoing to blow the whistle – whether it be alleged war crimes in Afghanista­n, misconduct inside the big banks, espionage against Timor-Leste or a misogynist culture at Parliament House. Without transparen­cy, there can be no accountabi­lity. Without whistleblo­wers, there can be no justice.

But this week’s developmen­ts must be the beginning, not the end, of a changed approach to whistleblo­wing under the new Labor government. Australia’s patchwork quilt of whistleblo­wer protection laws has many holes. Avenues for blowing the whistle are complex, protection­s have proven frail in practice and whistleblo­wers lack support. A survey of more than 500 whistleblo­wers found that more than half experience­d serious detriment for speaking out; barely a handful subsequent­ly received compensati­on.

Laws that were enacted to protect and empower whistleblo­wers are no longer fit for purpose – too often they actively hinder Australian­s trying to speak up.

This morning, the Griffith University’s Centre for Governance and Public Policy, the Human Rights Law Centre and Transparen­cy Internatio­nal have jointly published a new report, Protecting Australia’s Whistleblo­wers: The Federal Roadmap. The report was launched by Senator David Pocock and independen­t MP Dr Helen Haines at Parliament House, who were joined by political representa­tives from across the spectrum to demonstrat­e that whistleblo­wer protection­s are a bipartisan issue.

The report outlines 12 steps that the government must take in the months ahead to ensure Australia’s whistleblo­wers are able to tell the truth about wrongdoing without fear of retaliatio­n. These include the establishm­ent of a whistleblo­wer protection authority to oversee and enforce federal whistleblo­wing laws and provide practical assistance to whistleblo­wers; a comprehens­ive law covering all private sector whistleblo­wers; a positive duty for employers to protect whistleblo­wers; improved remedies for whistleblo­wers who suffer detriment; and streamline­d provisions for when internal disclosure­s fail and a whistleblo­wer needs to go public via a journalist or member of parliament.

These reforms are drawn from past reviews, inquiries and independen­t experts. It’s a check list, not a wishlist. Australia once led the world in protecting whistleblo­wers, becoming only the second nation after the US to introduce these laws in the early 1990s. But through inaction from past government­s, we have rapidly fallen behind. The damage was compounded by raids on Australian journalist­s and the prosecutio­n of whistleblo­wers – two prosecutio­ns remain ongoing.

As and when these reforms are implemente­d and the prosecutio­ns dropped, Australia can again lead the world in protecting whistleblo­wers and upholding integrity.

The road to reform begins next week, when the attorney general is expected to introduce minor technical changes to the Public Interest Disclosure Act, the law that protects federal public sector whistleblo­wers. These changes are long overdue: an independen­t review in 2016 found the experience of whistleblo­wers under the law was “not a happy one” and recommende­d a range of reforms. The past government sat on the proposed reforms for six years – Dreyfus is to be commended for acting.

But the reform agenda must continue with urgency. New and amended laws are needed to fix loopholes and unintended consequenc­es. Institutio­nal change must follow, including what we see as the most consequent­ial recommenda­tion in our roadmap: the establishm­ent of the whistleblo­wer protection authority (an idea recommende­d by a bipartisan parliament­ary committee in 2017 and which Labor took to the 2019 election). And, critically, there must be cultural change in agencies, regulators and government, to recognise whistleblo­wers for the valuable contributi­on they make to so

ciety.

This week’s developmen­ts foreshadow what is to come in the months ahead. If the national anti-corruption commission is to be effective, it will need to give whistleblo­wers the confidence to expose wrongdoing – just as the brave coal industry whistleblo­wer felt empowered speaking up to Wilkie, thanks to the protection of parliament­ary privilege. When it comes to integrity, whistleblo­wers’ protection­s must not be an afterthoug­ht – they are the main game.

No one should suffer for telling the truth. Whistleblo­wers matter – and we cannot delay on better protection­s.

Kieran Pender is a senior lawyer at the Human Rights Law Centre and coauthor of the new report

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? Independen­t MPs Andrew Wilkie and Helen Haines, and independen­t senator David Pocock launch theWhistle­blower Protection­s Report at Parliament House.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Independen­t MPs Andrew Wilkie and Helen Haines, and independen­t senator David Pocock launch theWhistle­blower Protection­s Report at Parliament House.

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