The Sun (Malaysia)

Australian spies eye licence to use force

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SYDNEY: Australian spies operating overseas will have more leeway to use force, including lethal force, under legal reforms put forward by the conservati­ve government yesterday.

Under the proposals, intelligen­ce officers operating abroad for the Australian Secret Intelligen­ce Service would be able to “use reasonable force” well beyond situations of self-defence.

The measures would allow spies to use firearms more readily, as well as restrain or detain anyone posing a risk to their operations.

Officers and agents – a tradecraft term for any informant or operative – will also be allowed to use force to protect bystanders or hostages.

Justifying the reforms, foreign affairs minister Marise Payne cited a “more complex” world and “new circumstan­ces unforeseen” when current rules were forged a decade and a half ago.

Those rules allow intelligen­ce officers to use force to defend only themselves, other staff, or agents.

Leading government lawyers had expressed concern that spies could break Australian law by defending bystanders in the course of operations.

The government tried to bat away allegation­s the reforms amounted to a licence for spies to begin to operate like paramilita­ry special forces.

“The Australian Secret Intelligen­ce Service does not have, nor is it seeking, an offensive armed capability,” the government said in a statement to parliament yesterday.

The law would still proscribe intelligen­ce officers from “planning or undertakin­g paramilita­ry activities” and the foreign minister would have to authorise the deployment of weapons.

Before that, the minister would also have to consult the attorneyge­neral, the prime minister and any other relevant minister.

The independen­t InspectorG­eneral of Intelligen­ce and Security would oversee compliance. – AFP

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