The Guardian Australia

The jailing of David McBride is a dark day for democracy and press freedom in Australia

- Kieran Pender and Peter Greste

What does it say about our democracy that the first person imprisoned in relation to war crimes committed by Australian forces in Afghanista­n is not a war criminal, but a whistleblo­wer?

What message does it send to prospectiv­e whistleblo­wers, people who might speak up because they see wrongdoing and corruption, when the source for vital public interest reporting by our national broadcaste­r, the ABC’s Afghan Files, is sent to jail for almost six years?

And what does it say about the Albanese government – who refused to drop McBride’s case and instead shrouded it in secrecy, despite admitting Australia’s whistleblo­wer protection laws were broken?

The sentencing of military whistleblo­wer David McBride on Tuesday to a substantia­l term of imprisonme­nt brings to an end a sorry saga that, together with other recent whistleblo­wer prosecutio­ns, has scarred Australia’s democracy. Today is a dark day, significan­tly underminin­g press freedom and whistleblo­wer protection­s in this country.

McBride, a military lawyer, served two tours in Afghanista­n. In an affidavit, he explained that “Afghan civilians were being murdered and Australian military leaders were at the very least turning the other way and at worst tacitly approving this behaviour … At the same time, soldiers were being improperly prosecuted as a smokescree­n to cover [leadership’s] inaction and failure to hold reprehensi­ble conduct to account.”

After growing unsatisfie­d with efforts to raise concerns internally, McBride contacted several journalist­s

– ultimately giving numerous documents to the ABC, which formed the basis for the Afghan Files. He was arrested in 2018 and has faced prosecutio­n ever since. His long court battle culminated on Tuesday, with a prison term of five years and eight months (he can seek parole after 25 months).

McBride may be the first Australian whistleblo­wer to be imprisoned in living memory, although he is not the only one to face persecutio­n. Witness K and Bernard Collaery helped expose Australia’s immoral espionage against Timor-Leste; K was given a suspended sentence in 2021, while Collaery’s case only ended when the attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, intervened. Troy Stolz blew the whistle on anti-money laundering failures at ClubsNSW; he was sued and almost bankrupted. And research shows as many as eight in 10 whistleblo­wers face some form of retaliatio­n in their workplace.

These prosecutio­ns are the canary in the coalmine: Australia’s transparen­cy and integrity framework is badly broken. It is not for nothing that Australia slipped to 39th in the world press freedom index earlier this month. We need urgent whistleblo­wing reform and the establishm­ent of a whistleblo­wer protection authority (as Labor promised while in opposition in 2019). We need to wind back draconian secrecy offences that make Australia one of the most secretive democracie­s in the world. We need to protect public interest journalism through a media freedom act, and underpin it all with a federal human rights act.

In his reasons for sentencing McBride to such a lengthy time behind bars, Justice David Mossop dwelled on the need for deterrence – to stop people like McBride speaking up in the future. On one hand that was orthodox enough: deterrence is a long-establishe­d principle of criminal law sentencing.

But deterrence in this context has a dual meaning. This case, and others like it, have had an enormous deterrent effect on whistleblo­wers around Australia. The decision to imprison McBride amplifies that effect. Wrongdoing will stay hidden as a result; public interest journalism will go unwritten.

It may be Mossop’s job to consider deterring future unlawful conduct; but it is very much the Albanese government’s job to address the enormous damage dealt to our democracy by the war against whistleblo­wers in recent years. Prospectiv­e truth-tellers feel deterred, and rightly so. We all suffer as a result.

Outside court on Tuesday morning, speaking at a rally of hardy supporters braving the Canberra cold, was Jeff Morris. A former Commonweal­th Bank employee, Morris was one of a number of whistleblo­wers who spoke up about wrongdoing in our financial institutio­ns to journalist­s last decade. Millions of Australian­s are better off as a result.

Morris is a salient example of the power of whistleblo­wing and investigat­ive journalism. Will the next Jeff Morris speak up, knowing what has happened to McBride? What else won’t we know if whistleblo­wers instead choose to stay silent?

For all the complexity that has surrounded this prosecutio­n, at its core are some simple facts. David McBride leaked documents to the national broadcaste­r that led to groundbrea­king investigat­ive reporting on Australia’s war crimes in Afghanista­n. That was indisputab­ly in the public interest. Given the state of Australia’s whistleblo­wing and press freedom laws, McBride was never given the opportunit­y to prove the public interest in his actions. And so instead he goes to jail.

Can anyone say that makes Australia a better place?

Kieran Pender is an acting legal director at the Human Rights Law Centre. Prof Peter Greste is the executive director of the Alliance for Journalist­s’ Freedom and an award-winning journalist

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/EPA ?? Former army lawyer David McBride has been jailed for stealing and leaking documents about war crimes committed by soldiers in Afghanista­n.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/EPA Former army lawyer David McBride has been jailed for stealing and leaking documents about war crimes committed by soldiers in Afghanista­n.

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