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TRANSCRIPT
OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD
MP ADDRESS TO THE PARLIAMENT BOMBINGS IN
BALI
14 October 2002
I move that this House:
1. expresses its outrage and condemnation
at the barbaric terrorist bombings which
took place in Bali on 12 October 2002;
2. extends its deepest and heartfelt sympathy
to the families and loved ones of those
Australians killed, missing or injured in
this brutal and despicable attack;
3. offers its condolences to the families
and friends of the Indonesians and citizens
of other countries who have been killed
or injured;
4. condemns those who employ terror and
indiscriminate violence against innocent
people;
5. commits the Australian government to
work with the Indonesian government and
others to bring those who are guilty of
this horrendous crime, and all those who
harbour and support them, to justice;
6. reaffirms Australia’s commitment to continue
the war against terrorism in our region
and in the rest of the world.
For the rest of Australian history, 12 October
2002 will be counted as a day on which evil
struck, with indiscriminate and indescribable
savagery, young innocent Australians who
were engaging in an understandable period
of relaxation and whose innocence was palpable
and whose death and injury we join the rest
of the Australian community in marking and
mourning today.
In many respects the word terrorism is too
antiseptic an expression to describe what
happened. It is too technical and too formal.
What happened was barbaric brutal mass murder
without justification. It is seen as that
by the people of Australia and it is seen
as that by the people of the world. It is
a terrible reminder that terrorism can strike
anyone anywhere at any time. Nobody anywhere
in the world is immune from terrorism. It
is a reminder that, in this time of a borderless
world with a particularly mobile young population,
Australia can scarcely imagine that it can
be in any way immune from such horrible
attacks.
I know that the thoughts of everyone in
this parliament—and, indeed, the thoughts
of millions of Australians—are with those
of our fellow countrymen and women who still
do not know whether their daughter or their
son or their brother or their sister or
their lover or their mother or their father
or their mate is alive or dead. The agony
of waiting at the end of a mobile telephone
for a call is an anxiety that we can only
begin to think about and try in our own
inadequate way to share, and we hope that
that effort is of some comfort to them.
I know that the hearts of every man and
woman in this parliament will go out to
them and to those who know the worst already,
and our thoughts and prayers are with those
who are coping with injuries, many of them
horrendous burns as a result of the flames
that followed the bombing of the nightclub.
At present, the best advice I have is that
there is a total of 181 dead. Very few of
these have been identified. According to
advice from the Indonesian authorities and
our Consulate-General in Bali, 14 Australians
are now confirmed among the dead and at
least 113 Australians have been hospitalised
following the attacks. We are still trying
to establish the precise number of people
evacuated to Australia, but the best advice
is that it is in the order of 67 to 70.
There are still 220 Australians unaccounted
for. It should not be automatically assumed
that all of those are dead but, given the
very high percentage of Australians who
were in the nightclub at the time of the
bombing, we should as a nation prepare ourselves
for the very real likelihood that the death
toll of Australians will climb significantly
when the final tally and identity of the
fatalities is known.
As the House and, I am sure, the nation
will be aware, a major rescue and medical
evacuation operation has been under way
since news of the attack came through. On
behalf of this parliament and all of the
Australian people, I want to express our
gratitude to and admiration for the officers
of the Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade; the men and women of the Australian
Defence Force, particularly the Royal Australian
Air Force; and the doctors, nurses and paramedics,
many of whom have worked in very difficult
circumstances. I also record my thanks to
the various state governments that have
offered help, to Qantas and to many other
private individuals who have provided help
and assistance. The willingness of the government
to provide evacuation facilities for all
Australians and, indeed, others in need
of medical attention remains. No expense
will be spared and no limitation will be
placed upon our willingness to do that.
This foul deed—this wicked, evil act of
terrorists—has not only claimed the lives
of Australians but also claimed the lives
of many of the innocent people of Bali,
a beautiful, hitherto peaceful part of Indonesia.
Bali is much loved by so many Australians.
In many cases, it is the first place that
young Australians visit. Many of us will
feel the poignancy of this attack coinciding
with the end of the football season in Australia.
So many of the young people in that club
that night were members of Australian rules
football teams, rugby league teams and rugby
union teams. They were having a bit of fun
at the end of a hard season. It is that
connection with the everyday occurrences
of life which we know so well and embrace
so lovingly, that cruel conjunction, which
makes something such as this that much more
despicable and something that all Australians
will utterly repudiate to the depths of
their being.
We must remember, though, that this will
have an enormous impact on the people of
Indonesia and the economy of Bali. The Indonesian
economy is a fragile economy. It relies
very heavily on tourism. Those who did this
are no friends of Indonesia. Those who did
this sought to inflict misery on and deliver
hatred to not only the people of Australia
and the people of the other nations who
lost their sons and daughters but also the
people and the government of Indonesia.
We must understand essentially what has
happened. This is a vile crime which has
claimed the lives of an as yet uncounted
number of Australians on Indonesian soil.
All of us have a right to feel a sense of
deep anger and a deep determination to do
everything we can, as a nation and as a
community, working with the government and
the people of Indonesia, to bring to justice
those who are responsible for this crime.
We owe it to those who died, we owe it to
those who have been injured and we also
owe it to a proper sense of justice. Nothing
can excuse this behaviour. No cause—however
explained, however advocated, however twisted,
however spun—can possibly justify the indiscriminate,
unprovoked slaughter of innocent people.
That is what has occurred here. We must
do all we can, as a nation and as a community,
to mete out a proper response—a measured,
sober, effective response—which brings to
justice, if we can, those who are responsible.
It is necessary, in the course of this,
for us to cooperate with the government
and the people of Indonesia. Yesterday I
spoke by telephone to President Megawati.
She expressed her horror at what had occurred.
She agreed with me that, on all the evidence
available to us, this was clearly the act
of terrorists. There can be no other explanation.
Both of us agreed that every effort should
be made to bring those responsible for this
act to justice.
In that context, the House will be aware
that a number of Australian Federal Police
and some ASIO officers have already gone
to Bali. I can also announce that the Minister
for Foreign Affairs and the Minister for
Justice and Customs, Senator Ellison, will
travel to Indonesia either tonight or tomorrow
morning. They will go first to Bali to visit
a number of those who are still hospitalised
there and will then go on to Jakarta for
discussions with the Indonesian government
regarding cooperation between our two governments
in the pursuit of those who have been responsible
for this outrage. They will do that against
the background of the memorandum of understanding
against terrorism which was signed in Jakarta
during my visit earlier this year. They
will be accompanied on their visit by Mr
Mick Keelty, the Commissioner of the Australian
Federal Police, and also by Mr Dennis Richardson,
the head of ASIO. Their mission will be
to maximise cooperation between Australia
and Indonesia in pursuit of the murderers.
Their mission will be to emphasise, by their
presence and by what they convey on behalf
of the Australian government, the willingness
of Australia to offer all available resources
to assist the Indonesian authorities in
tracking down those responsible.
I can also inform the House that this morning
the National Security Committee of cabinet
met in the wake of this outrage. We discussed
the proposal that the two ministers travel
to Jakarta. We also decided to institute
a review of the adequacy of domestic terrorist
legislation. It is inevitable that, in the
wake of what occurred in Bali over the weekend,
the thoughts of Australians will turn to
the potential vulnerability of our own soil,
our own mainland, to a possible terrorist
attack. There is no point in ignoring that.
I do the Australian people no service if
I pretend that, in some way, it cannot happen
on the Australian mainland. In a sense,
this is sequential. I do not think any of
us believed that something like 11 September
2001 would happen until it really happened.
We might have intellectualised afterwards
and said, ‘Oh yes, we thought that might
happen,’ but in our hearts we did not really
believe it was going to happen.
Equally, I do not think many Australians
contemplated that what happened at the weekend
in Bali would in fact occur. It is therefore
very important that we disabuse ourselves
for all time if any of us entertain the
notion that something like that cannot happen
in one of our cities and on our own mainland.
We must dedicate and commit ourselves to
doing all we can to guard against such an
event. We therefore need to again assess
the adequacy of our domestic law. I know
it has been only recently reviewed, but
further events have occurred and we are
required as a matter of responsibility to
almost 20 million Australians to do that.
It is also necessary that we review the
adequacy, which I have asked be done, of
our counter-terrorism capacity. Once again,
that was the subject of significant review
after 11 September 2001 and major augmentation
of the assets followed as a result of that
review. It is therefore timely that those
assets and that capacity also be reviewed.
I do not say these things lightly or in
any sense of overdramatising the situation,
but we are living in different circumstances
and different times. That has been the case
since 11 September last year; it is dramatically
more so the case now, because what happened
at the weekend claimed our own in great
numbers, was on our own doorstep and touched
us in a way that we would not have thought
possible a week ago or even three days go.
It has been the case that all the world,
including Australia, has been more vulnerable
to potential terrorist attacks since 11
September last year. In relation to the
events in Bali, it is obvious that the Australian
government has been concerned for some considerable
time about the existence of extremist groups
in the region, especially in Indonesia,
with links to al-Qaeda and the real possibility
of terrorist attacks against Western interests.
That has been not only a concern of the
Australian government but also a constant
concern of the government of the United
States. That concern, and the concern of
our American friends, has been regularly
communicated to the Indonesian authorities.
It was one of the reasons that lay behind
the negotiation of the memorandum of understanding
on terrorism, to which I referred a moment
ago.
I can inform the House that the intelligence
available to the government highlighted
the general threat environment but was at
no time specific about Saturday night’s
attack in Bali. Indeed, the Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade’s travel advice
reflected the heightened level of concern
which followed the terrorist attacks in
September of last year. It was very much
against the background of the general threat
disclosed by intelligence that the government
issued its alert in early September about
the possible threat to Australian interests
in the region around 11 September 2002.
It is apparent from the words of the resolution
and from what has been said over the last
36 hours and what is self-evident from an
examination of the realities that confront
Australia and the rest of the civilised
world today that the war against terrorism
must go on in an uncompromising and unconditional
fashion. Any other course of action would
be folly. Retreat from the war against terrorism
will not purchase for the retreaters immunity
against the attacks of the terrorists. That
has been the experience of the last year;
that has been the experience of mankind
through history. You will not escape the
reach of terrorism by imagining that if
you roll yourself into a little ball you
will not be noticed, because terrorism is
not dispensed according to some hierarchy
of disdain; it is dispensed in an indiscriminate,
evil, hateful fashion. Those who imagine
that it is dispensed according to a hierarchy
of disdain do not understand history and
are deluding themselves.
The war against terrorism is not, as has
frequently been said in this place, a war
against Islam. People of good Islamic faith
will abhor what happened in Bali. They will
find it as despicable to the tenets of their
faith as Christians, Jews and many others
will find it despicable to the tenets of
their faith. It is therefore important that
we reaffirm again our commitment to a tolerant
Australian community—an Australian community
that, while embracing all, is an Australian
community bound together by common values
of openness, individual liberty and individual
freedom. We fight terrorism because we love
freedom; we fight terrorism because we want
to preserve the way of life that this country
has; we fight terrorism because we share
the values of other countries that are in
the war against terrorism; and we fight
terrorism because it is intrinsically evil
and you do not seek to covenant with evil
and you do not seek to reach an accommodation
with those who would destroy your sons and
daughters and take away the security and
the stability of this country.
In the hours that have followed this terrible
outrage—this dark day for the people of
Australia—there have been many expressions
of concern from world leaders. I spoke at
length this morning to President Bush of
the United States and I received a call
last night from British Prime Minister Tony
Blair and the Prime Minister of New Zealand,
Helen Clark. Her Majesty The Queen has sent
a message of sympathy and condolence and
I have received messages from many world
leaders. All of them have a common theme
and a common resonance, and that is that,
in the world in which we live, our problems
are the problems of others and the problems
of others are so often ours as well. We
live in a globalised world. We live in a
world in which the young, in particular,
are more footloose and more mobile than
even their mobile parents and grandparents,
and there is no escape in those circumstances
from the reaches and the ravages of terror.
I want to thank the Leader of the Opposition
for the constructive way in which we have
been able together to discuss these challenges
to our country. Our country belongs to all
of us, and this is a challenge to the fabric
of this country and what it stands for.
The Leader of the Opposition wrote to me
and suggested that we might have a national
day of mourning in relation to the events,
and I am very happy to support that proposition.
I propose that next Sunday be observed as
a national day of mourning. It is of course
sadly the case that we do not know the full
extent of the horror that has overtaken
our people—the precise death toll may not
be known for several days—and it does seem
that a national day of mourning next Sunday
would be appropriate, and perhaps at some
later stage it would also be appropriate
to have a national memorial service.
In different ways, different communities
in different parts of our country will mourn
the abrupt and brutal deaths of so many
and reflect on their own lives. In our own
way we must try to offer comfort, care and
hope to their bereaved friends, lovers and
relatives. It is a very sad time for our
country but it is a time—as always in cases
like this—that has brought forth heroism,
decency and goodness. Already stories of
people assisting others at enormous risk
to themselves are emerging, as are stories
of the dedication of the staff of the hospitals
and the commitment of so many. We think
also of the lovely people of Bali who have
been such friends to so many Australians
of so many generations on so many occasions.
We extend our thanks, our warmth and our
affection to them. I am saddened beyond
words of proper description by what has
happened. I hope I speak for all Australians
in sending my and their love to those who
are grieving and in expressing the fierce
determination to do everything I and we
can to bring to justice those who have done
such evil things to our people.
[ends]-
Source
Link : http://www.pm.gov.au/news/speeches/2002/speech1913.htm
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