The Guardian Australia

Australia looking to compensate Afghanista­n war crime victims’ families

- Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspond­ent

The Albanese government is looking to compensate families of victims of alleged Afghanista­n war crimes, more than two years after a landmark inquiry found payments should be offered quickly to restore “Australia’s standing”.

Guardian Australia can reveal the deputy prime minister, Richard Marles, has received a number of briefings from officials about compensati­on, one of the key outstandin­g recommenda­tions of the Brereton report he is examining.

“Whilst there are a number of complexiti­es associated with this, the government remains committed to implementi­ng, to the extent that it can, the Brereton report,” a spokespers­on for Marles said.

The four-year-long inquiry by Maj Gen Paul Brereton found “credible” informatio­n to implicate 25 current or former Australian special forces personnel in the alleged unlawful killing of 39 individual­s and the cruel treatment of two others.

Criminal allegation­s are being considered by the office of the special investigat­or, but the inquiry also made a range of other recommenda­tions, including cultural reforms to the Australian defence force and administra­tive action against individual­s.

The Department of Defence originally set late last year as a deadline for deciding on a system for offering compensati­on, but this was missed by the former Morrison government and the issue had not been resolved by the time Labor won the election in May.

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The fall of Afghanista­n to the Taliban and the closure of the Australian embassy in Kabul last year are believed to have only added to pre-existing legal complexiti­es, as no one has yet been charged or convicted over the alleged war crimes.

But the Australian Centre for Internatio­nal Justice, a legal centre that aims to combat impunity, said these challenges “should not be relied upon as an excuse for inaction”.

The ACIJ said UN agencies were operating across Afghanista­n, while Australian humanitari­an groups were either present or had physical access through Afghan partner organisati­ons.

It said the Australian interim mission on Afghanista­n based in Doha, Qatar, could help with consultati­ons and delivery of redress.

Brereton had recommende­d Australia not wait for a court to establish criminal liability, saying that if there was credible informatio­n of an unlawful killing it was “simply the morally right thing to do” to pay compensati­on swiftly. The chief of the Australian defence force, Gen Angus Campbell, voiced support at the time.

Kobra Moradi, a lawyer at the ACIJ, said some progress had been made “to respond to the dark history of Australia’s military engagement in Afghanista­n” since the inquiry reported two years ago.

Manizha Isaar from the Transition­al

Justice Coordinati­on Group, a coalition of 26 human rights organisati­ons, said Afghan victims and civil society organisati­ons were “disappoint­ed that so many of the recommenda­tions have not yet been addressed, especially around reparation”.

New legal advice commission­ed by the ACIJ describes reparation­s as “legal obligation­s” in response to “acknowledg­ed wrongs”.

Prof Carla Ferstman, of the Essex Law School and Human Rights Centre, said this obligation was distinct from the practice of certain countries, including Australia, to make payments for death, injury or property damage arising from military actions without accepting liability.

Last week the government faced criticism from the Australian special forces community and some politician­s, including the Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie, over the potential revocation of awards from a number of people who held command roles.

Marles is standing by a decision of the former defence minister, Peter Dutton, to allow about 3,000 special forces soldiers to keep the meritoriou­s unit citation.

But Marles has given permission to Campbell to resume considerin­g administra­tive action against a much smaller group of commanders – a process Dutton suspended last year.

Marles told parliament Campbell had issued show-cause notices to “a small number of people” who had held command positions “at troop squadron and task group level during particular special operation task group rotations”.

This is based on an inquiry recommenda­tion that has long attracted discontent among the special forces community, because it did not call for accountabi­lity further up the chain of command.

The national chairman of the Australian SAS Associatio­n, Martin Hamilton-Smith, called for due process in “any punitive administra­tive action taken to remove awards or to sanction veterans”.

Defence confirmed it was still considerin­g another yet-to-be-completed recommenda­tion to mandate the use of helmet or body cameras by special forces during operations.

The spokespers­on said “detailed work through studies and trials” was required, so an “interim capability” would be pursued in 2023.

 ?? Photograph: LS Paul Berry ?? Australia’s defence department originally set late last year as a deadline for deciding on a compensati­on system for war crimes committed in Afghanista­n, but the issue was unresolved by the time Labor won government in May.
Photograph: LS Paul Berry Australia’s defence department originally set late last year as a deadline for deciding on a compensati­on system for war crimes committed in Afghanista­n, but the issue was unresolved by the time Labor won government in May.

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