Secrets, spies and hidden trials. How do we balance national security with your right to know? Closed courtrooms, police raids on journalists, whistle blowers facing prison terms for sharing sensitive information. Is Australia becoming a secret state? Who should decide what we can and can’t know? Lawyer Bernard Collaery is facing jail for revealing national secrets relating to the bugging of East Timor’s cabinet room to gain an advantage in oil and gas negotiations. A man known only as “Witness J” was jailed in the ACT for 15 months for unspecified offences after a secret trial – a case even the ACT Government knew nothing about. And News Corp journalist Annika Smethurst had her home raided by AFP officers and was threatened with charges after revealing a spy agency’s plans to step up domestic spying against Australians. Joining Hamish on the panel: Dennis Richardson, Former Director-General of ASIO Nick Xenophon, Lawyer and former Senator Annika Smethurst, News Corp journalist and AFP raid victim Clinton Fernandes, National security analyst Jacinta Carroll, Counter-terrorism expert Please submit a question via our website by 9am Monday for the chance to ask the panel live via Skype. Watch Q+A Monday 9.35pm on ABC TV, streamed live 9.35pm AEDT on ABC iview or stream on our website. |
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| | | | Australian sporting institutions are making hard decisions about their financial position, how to bring back crowds and navigate closed state borders. Many grassroots clubs are struggling to survive COVID-19 restrictions. | | | |
| | | | | “Society will not get better if we keep leaving people behind." Bruce Djite calls for more diversity in sports leadership to bring about a real change in Australia. | | | |
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