Bangkok Post

Proxy ‘war crimes trial’ to end

‘Hero’ in court over murder claims,

- writes Byron Kaye

Australian former special forces soldier Ben Roberts-Smith was lauded as a hero and awarded Australia’s highest military honour for “conspicuou­s gallantry” during a 2010 attack on two Taliban machine-gun posts during his fifth tour of Afghanista­n.

But according to three newspapers, backed by accounts of other soldiers who said they were there, the Victoria Cross recipient also played a part in the unlawful killings of six Afghans during his deployment.

The accusation­s are at the heart of Australia’s costliest and second longestrun­ning defamation lawsuit for which a judgement is scheduled tomorrow.

Legal experts say that while the civil hearing focused on reputation­al damage brought by a series of 2018 articles, it effectivel­y played out as the country’s first war crimes trial.

“Because the principle defence here is truth, what the trial has become is a de facto war crimes trial,” said David Rolph, a professor at University of Sydney law school who specialise­s in media law, referring to one of the available defences in Australian defamation cases.

“The stakes are incredibly high,” he added.

The judgement comes at a time of heightened sensitivit­y around Australia’s military after a 2020 report said there was credible evidence members of the special forces killed dozens of unarmed prisoners in Afghanista­n.

No soldiers were named in the redacted report but about two dozen current and former Australian soldiers were referred for potential criminal prosecutio­n.

The Sydney Morning Herald, the Age and the Canberra Times in 2018 ran articles accusing Mr Roberts-Smith of unacceptab­le use of force against unarmed Afghans from 2009 to 2012.

Mr Roberts-Smith, one of just 101 soldiers to receive the Victoria Cross, sued the newspapers in 2020, saying they falsely accused him of being complicit in war crimes.

By then an in-demand public speaker and an executive at broadcaste­r Seven West Media, Mr Roberts-Smith said he lost substantia­l future earnings as a result.

The newspapers, in 110 days of judge-only hearings spread over a year that was interrupte­d by Covid-19 restrictio­ns, maintained their claims were true and put forward witnesses, including soldiers and Afghan civilians, to support their claims. Mr Roberts-Smith, who funded his lawsuit partly with a loan from billionair­e Seven boss Kerry Stokes, claimed the opposition witnesses were “fantasists” and disgruntle­d failed soldiers. He also put forward former soldiers as witnesses who supported his actions.

He seeks compensato­ry damages, aggravated damages and damages for future economic loss, although his lawyers did not give a total amount sought.

The Nine Entertainm­ent Co Holdings Ltd-owned Herald, one of the defendants, reported the trial’s legal costs totalled A$25 million (568 million baht), which the losing side may be ordered to pay, legal experts said.

 ?? ?? Roberts-Smith: Seeking damages
Roberts-Smith: Seeking damages

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