Australia to prosecute troops for war crimes in Afghanistan
 
 
Australia on Thursday announced a new investigative
agency to build criminal cases against Australian special forces suspected of
committing war crimes in Afghanistan.
The Office of the Special Investigator is to be
formed after a four-year investigation into allegations and rumors surrounding
behavior of some soldiers in Special Air Service and Commando Regiments in
Afghanistan from 2005 and 2016.
Benjamin Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most
highly-decorated member of the armed services when he left the SAS in 2013, has
been accused of by former colleagues of unlawful treatment of prisoners
including illegally killing prisoners. The former corporal, who was awarded the
Victoria Cross and the Medal for Gallantry for his service in Afghanistan, has
denied any misconduct.
Defense Force Chief Gen. Angus Campbell will make
public a redacted report on the four-year investigation next week.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the new agency,
headed by a retired judge or senior criminal lawyer, was needed because the
workload would “seriously overwhelm” existing police resources.
“This report will be difficult news and all of our
partners must be assured and those around the world who rightly hold the
Australian Defense Forces in high regard,” Morrison told reporters.
“In Australia, we deal with this stuff and we deal
with it honestly, but in accordance through the rule of law and by following
the justice practices and principles that makes Australia what it is,” he
added.
Two Australian Broadcasting Corp. journalists until
recently faced potential prison sentences for using leaked classified defense
documents as a basis for a 2017 report that detailed allegations of Australian
soldiers killing unarmed men and children.
Police raided ABC Sydney headquarters with search
warrants last year but prosecutors decided that charging the journalists would
not be in the public interest.
Prosecuting alleged Australian war criminals is
expected to take years.
“These are incredibly complex events involving
actions and conduct in another country, in a war,” Morrison said.
“This is not a simple matter ... and so it will take
as long as it needs to take to ensure we deal with our dual objectives of
addressing the justice that is necessary in accordance with our laws and
systems but also ensuring the integrity of our defense forces on which we all
rely,” he added.
Neil James, chief executive of the Australian
Defense Association think tank, said the Australian military wanted solders to
have their day in court to end a “continuous rumor mill.”
“It’s certainly the case that they’re going to take
a long time because we’re talking about a complex investigation, witnesses will
have to be interviewed under caution, in many cases those witnesses will be
overseas, and in some cases it’ll be hard to interview them because they are in
enemy-held territory in a war zone,” James said.
“So the complexity of this is going to be difficult,
but it’s got to be faced because ... Australia has to face up to this, that
things did go wrong and we need to fix it,” he added.
Around 39,000 Australians served in Afghanistan and
41 were killed.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


