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Push to 'monitor' Benbrika

December 7, 2024

Saturday 07 December 2024
Jade Gailberger
Herald Sun


 Application to renew extended supervision order The Albanese government will  push to keep one of Australia's most notorious convicted terrorists under  strict supervision in the community.
 
 Abdul Nacer Benbrika's one year extended supervision order will expire in  less than a fortnight. He was put on the order last year, which resulted in  his release from jail, after 18years behind bars for leading a terror cell.
 
 The Herald Sun can reveal the federal government on Thursday made an  application to the Supreme Court for Benbrika to be placed on another one  year extended supervision p order (ESO) and an Interim Supervision Order.
 
 For the government to make an application, it needed evidence that Benbrika  still posed a risk to the community.
 
 A spokesman for AttorneyGeneral Mark Dreyfus said: "This was the  strongest possible action available under law and followed advice from all  operational agencies involved in the matter".
 
 "It is now a matter for the court to determine whether to make an ESO,  and if so, what conditions should be imposed.
 
 "The application for an ESO is in addition to the existing t e ex th  exis isti ting ng powers available to security and law enforcement agencies  to protect the community.
 
 "The Albanese government will always take the strongest possible action,  available under law, to ensure the safety of the community".
 
 But Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said it was  "remarkable" that the government left it "so late" to  apply for a new ESO.
 
 "But it's not surprising given the chaos and confusion we've seen from  the Albanese government with their illogical division of responsibilities  between twee tw een n Home Affairs and Attorney-Generals," Senator  Paterson said.
 
 Benbrika was released on an extended supervision order after Victorian  Supreme Court Justice Elizabeth Hollingworth found the risk of him committing  further offences was "now low enough" that he could be managed in  the community.
 
 He has been required to adhere to 30 strict conditions including wearing an  electronic monitoring device, submitting to a curfew between 10pm and 6am, as  well as participating in Commonwealth-paid psychological treatment and a  deradicalisation program with a Sheikh from the International Centre for the  Study of Violent Extremism.
 
 In June, the Herald Sun revealed that he was considering launching a legal  bid for a payout from the federal government, arguing he was kept in jail for  three years longer than he should have been.
 
 This is because Benbrika was placed on a continuing detention order at the  end of his 15year sentence, as he was deemed an "unacceptable risk"  of committing a serious terrorism offence if released.
 
 But questions have since been raised about the validity of the violent  extremist risk assessment tool, which was used by government experts to argue  he was an ongoing risk and should remain in custody.
 
 Greens justice spokesman David Shoebridge said the case had been a  "masterclass in political interference and injustice from start to  finish".
 
 "The federal government has repeatedly used tools that they know are  discredited to justify indefinite detention and even when they were caught  out they pretended nothing was wrong," Senator Shoebridge said. "Of  course we should listen to the best evidence about any future risks, but that  needs to be evidence, not biased and discredited speculation based on tools  the government knows don't work."
 
 Benbrika's lawyers were contacted for comment.

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