Spy watch deemed weak
New research suggests oversight of Australia’s spy agencies is weak compared to its Five Eyes allies.
Parliamentary oversight of Australia’s intelligence agencies has been compared to others in the ‘Five Eyes’ intelligence sharing alliance between Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United Kingdom & the United States.
With the Government considering further expanding the powers and scope of the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD), a new report reveals important limitations that significantly weaken Australia’s ability to oversee intelligence agencies.
These limitations include the inability to review any intelligence operations, past, current or planned – in order better to protect the human rights and privacy of Australian citizens.
The study by the Australia Institute also expanded accountability and oversight measures should be considered for Australia’s intelligence agencies.
It calls for both general measures, like a National Integrity Commission to investigate corrupt conduct, and specific ones focused on the intelligence community.
The experts say protections on the civil liberties, human rights and privacy of individual citizens have not kept pace with the remarkable increase in the data collection, data interrogation and data cross referencing capabilities of Australia’s security agencies.
In a democracy such as Australia, this is the responsibility of the national Parliament.
“Australia’s spy agencies should always receive substantial, public and democratic scrutiny,” says Ben Oquist, Executive Director of the Australia Institute.
“As the surveillance powers of Australian intelligence agencies increase, it is ever more important that the rights of Australian citizens are fully protected and this requires a stronger parliamentary committee to exert greater control over the agencies and ensure greater accountability to Parliament.
“With the secret prosecution of lawyer Bernard Collaery and intelligence whistle-blower ‘Witness K’ over the East Timor bugging scandal, and the highly publicised AFP raids on journalist, there is widespread concern around how Australian intelligence agencies are operating.
“Public faith in Australia’s institutions is declining and while there has been a phenomenal proliferation of national security and anti-terrorism legislation in Australia over the last 20 years, checks and balances have not kept up.
“Australia can learn from the oversight mechanisms in other Five Eyes countries, and in some cases the countries will have the same intelligence from the same sources, so oversight should be equally robust in all Five Eyes countries.”
The full report is available in PDF form, here.