Senate debates
Wednesday, 6 July 2011
Committees
Joint Standing Committee on Treaties; Reference
3:57 pm
Scott Ludlam (WA, Australian Greens) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
I move:
That the Criminal Code Amendment (Cluster Munitions Prohibition) Bill 2010 be referred to the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties for inquiry and report by 7 September 2011.
I seek leave to make a short statement.
Stephen Parry (Tasmania, Liberal Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
Leave is granted for two minutes.
Scott Ludlam (WA, Australian Greens) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
Thank you, Mr Deputy President, and I thank the Senate. The Australian Greens at this point are seeking to refer the Criminal Code Amendment (Cluster Munitions Prohibition) Bill 2010, which is currently before this chamber, to the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties. The committee examined the parent convention, the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which is very good. It has been worked on over a number of years. It is as a result of the extraordinarily hard work of civil society organisations and governments, including, we thought, the Australian government. We have taken a lead role on this and it is a position that we should be proud of.
We understand that there are very serious flaws in the government's bill—flaws that the opposition may be contemplating supporting. The Selection of Bills Committee noticed that the bill was inconsistent with recommendations made by JSCOT. That is why we are seeking to have it referred back to the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties. The flaws are absolutely obvious to anybody with any regard to this issue. It is extremely important that the parliament takes time for second thoughts.
At this point I bring to the attention of the chamber an open letter to the Minister for Defence, the Minister for Foreign Affairs and the Attorney-General on this very issue. It is an open letter signed by dozens of eminent Australians, including: Tim Costello; Mark Purcell of the Australian Council for International Development; Emeritus Professor Ron McCallum AO, who is the Senior Australian of the Year; and Jody Williams, who is a Nobel Prize laureate. A number of prominent Australians have signed this letter calling on the parliament to take a second look.
I seek leave to table the letter, which I circulated well in advance to the whips, and have it incorporated into the Hansard.
Leave granted.
The letter read as follows—
Open letter to the Defence Minister, Foreign Affairs Minister and Attorney General
Dear Minister Smith, Minister Rudd and Attorney General McClelland
In 2008 you, Minister Smith, signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions for Australia. This important international treaty bans cluster bombs, an indiscriminate class of weapon known to cause significant and long-lasting civilian harm, particularly to children. We wholeheartedly endorse the treaty's aims and congratulate the government on having signed it.
In order to ratify the treaty, Australia must pass legislation to implement the treaty's obligations in our domestic law. However, the proposed legislation, shortly to be debated in the Senate, contains serious flaws which undermine the whole purpose of the treaty.
The treaty contains a clause which allows state parties to continue cooperating in military alliance with countries not party to the treaty. This clause protects troops of state parties if they are inadvertently involved in cluster bomb use during these joint operations. This is necessary and sensible, particularly for Australia, given that our major ally the USA has no intention of joining the ban on cluster bombs.
The problem with the government's proposed legislation is that it goes much further than is necessary to maintain our military alliances. The legislation allows Australian troops to directly and actively assist in the use of cluster bombs. It also explicitly allows non-state parties to stockpile cluster bombs on Australian soil and permits them to transit cluster bombs through Australian ports and airspace. No other ratifying country has provided such a blanket exemption.
These exemptions are unnecessary at best and add little or nothing to our national security. At worst, they run directly counter to the treaty's intent by setting a precedent which explicitly facilitates the ongoing use of cluster bombs.
In a submission to the government, the International Committee of the Red Cross said the abovementioned problems with the proposed legislation "would have the unfortunate consequences of effectively permitting activities that could undermine the objectives of the Convention and contribute to the continued use of cluster munitions rather than further their elimination." We agree.
The goal of the Convention on Cluster Munitions is clear. It aims to eradicate cluster bombs and put an end to the suffering they cause for all time. We therefore seek your support in ensuring that Parliament amends the draft legislation to reflect and fulfil that aim.
Yours sincerely
Barrister, and National President, Australian Lawyers Alliance
Paul Barratt AO
Former Secretary, Department of Defence, and former Deputy Secretary, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Fr Frank Brennan SJ AO
Professor of Law, Public Policy Institute, Australian Catholic University
Julian Burnside AO QC
Barrister
Professor Hilary Charlesworth
ARC Laureate Fellow and Director, Centre for International Governance and Justice, ANU
Sr Denise Coghlan RSM AM
Head of the Jesuit Refugee Service, Cambodia
Tim Costello AO
Chief Executive Officer, World Vision Australia
Mary Crock
Professor of Public Law, The University of Sydney
Bonnie Docherty
Harvard Law School International Human Rights Clinic, and Senior Researcher, Human Rights Watch
The Hon John Dowd AO QC
President, ActionAid Australia
Alistair Gee
Executive Director, Act for Peace, NCCA
Dr Norman Gillespie
Chief Executive Officer, UNICEF Australia
General Peter Gration
Former Chief of Defence Force
Jack de Groot
Chief Executive Officer, Caritas Australia
Brigadier Adrian d 'H ag é , AM, MC
Author
Michele Harris OAM
Andrew Hewett
Executive Director, Oxfam Australia
Dr Andrew Jacubowicz
Professor of Sociology, University of Technology Sydney
National Director, CBM Australia
Stephen Keim SC
Barrister-at-Law, and President, Australian Lawyers for Human Rights
Professor John Langmore
School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne
Archie Law
Chief Executive Officer, ActionAid Australia
Winthrop Professor, University of Western Australia
Executive Director, Human Rights Law Centre (Australia)
Dr Francis Macnab, AM
Executive Minister, St Michael's Uniting Church, Melbourne
Claire Mallinson
National Director, Amnesty International Australia
Professor William Maley, AM FASSA
Professor Jane McAdam
Director of Research, Faculty of Law, University of NSW
Professor Emeritus Ron McCallum AO
Senior Australian of the Year 2011
Dr Jeff McMullen AM
Writer, Foreign Correspondent, Filmmaker and CEO (Honorary) Ian Thorpe's Fountain for Youth
Graeme Mundine
Executive Officer, Aboriginal Catholic Ministry
The Hon Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC
Former Chief Justice of the Family Court; former Judge Advocate General of the Australian Defence Force
Marc Purcell
Executive Director, Australian Council for International Development
Professor Stuart Rees AM
Director, Sydney Peace Foundation
Professor Neal Robinson
Deputy Director, Centre for Arab & Islamic Studies, Australian National University
The Hon Susan Ryan AO
Chair, Australian Human Rights Group
Associate Professor Ben Saul
Faculty of Law, University of Sydney
Professor Gerry Simpson
Director, Asia Pacific Centre for Military Law, University of Melbourne, and Visiting Professor, London School of Economics
Nigel Spence
Chief Executive Officer, ChildFund Australia
Dr Timothy Stephens
Director, Sydney Centre for International Law
National Coordinator, Australian Network to Ban Landmines and Cluster Munitions
Isabel Thomas Dobson
Moderator, Uniting Church in Australia, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania
Christine Walton
Executive Officer, Australian Disability and Development Consortium (ADDC)
Professor Emeritus John Warhurst
School of Politics and International Relations, Australian National University
Dr Bill Williams
President, Medical Association for Prevention of War
Jody Williams
1997 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, and Campaign Ambassador, International Campaign to Ban Landmines
Matthew Zagor
Senior Lecturer, ANU Law School and board member, Australian Lawyers for Human Rights
I thank all parties and Independents in this chamber for leave to have that document incorporated. At this point, before we put the motion to the vote, I urge the Senate to refer this matter to the Joint Standing Committee on Treaties. (Time expired)
Question put.
The Senate divided. [16:00 ]
(The DEPUTY PRESIDENT: Senator Parry)
Question negatived.