Australian Federal Police Accused Of Hiding Transcripts In Terrorist Case

THE Australian Federal Police have been accused of secretly hiding transcripts of interviews with Mohamed Haneef for more than a year.
The Indian Doctor who was working on the Gold Coast was arrested at Brisbane International Airport after police linked his mobile phone SIM card to botched terror attacks in Britain.
Dr Haneef’s legal team Maurice Blackburn lawyers also claimed in a statement released today the AFP repeatedly ignored Dr Haneef’s request for a lawyer in the moments after his arrest.
Maurice Blackburn partner Rod Hodgson said the AFP could have broken the law by failing to provide five records of interviews taken as police were arresting Dr Haneef on July 2, 2007 and in the first few days of his 25-day detention.
Dr Haneef was held for 12-days before he was charged with supporting a terrorist organisation under 2004 amendments to the Commonwealth Crimes Act.
His visa was cancelled by then immigration minister Kevin Andrews just hours after a Brisbane magistrate granted him bail on July 16.
The case collapsed for lack of evidence and is now the subject of a government-ordered inquiry headed by retired NSW Supreme Court judge John Clarke SC.
Mr Hodgson said they became aware of the additional five interviews two weeks ago only after counsel for the Clarke inquiry asked the AFP to provide them with copies.
He said the disclosure contradicted an assurance given in writing by the AFP’s head of counter terrorism, Ramzi Jabbour, in September last year that records of interview that Dr Haneef participated in had been supplied to his lawyers.





