Australian whistleblower who exposed war crimes allegations is jailed

14 May 2024, 10:24

Australia Whistleblower
Australia Whistleblower. Picture: PA

David McBride, 60, was sentenced to five years and eight months in prison after pleading guilty to three charges.

A former Australian army lawyer has been jailed for leaking to the media classified information that exposed allegations of Australian war crimes in Afghanistan.

David McBride, 60, was sentenced at a court in the capital, Canberra, to five years and eight months in prison after pleading guilty to three charges including theft and sharing with members of the press documents classified as secret. He had faced a potential life sentence.

Justice David Mossop ordered McBride to serve 27 months in prison before he can be considered for release on parole.

Human rights advocates argued that McBride’s conviction and sentencing – before any alleged war criminal he helped expose – reflected a lack of whistleblower protections in Australia.

A lawyer for McBride, Mark Davis, said that his legal team would appeal a ruling that prevented McBride from mounting a defence.

Judge Mossop ruled in November last year that McBride had no duty as an army officer beyond following orders.

“We know that the Australian military teach a much broader notion of what the duty of an officer is in a battle field than to follow orders,” Mr Davis said.

Mr Davis said the severity of the sentence also created grounds for appeal, but their effort would focus on the earlier ruling.

McBride’s documents formed the basis of an Australian Broadcasting Corp seven-part television series in 2017 that contained war crime allegations including that Australian Special Air Service Regiment soldiers killed unarmed Afghan men and children in 2013.

Police raided the ABC’s Sydney headquarters in 2019 in search of evidence of a leak but decided against charging the two reporters responsible for the investigation.

In sentencing, Judge Mossop said he did not accept McBride’s explanation that he thought a court would vindicate him for acting in the public interest.

McBride’s argument that his suspicions that the higher echelons of the Australian Defence Force were engaged in criminal activity obliged him to disclose classified papers “didn’t reflect reality”, Judge Mossop said.

An Australian military report released in 2020 found evidence that troops unlawfully killed 39 Afghan prisoners, farmers and civilians. The report recommended 19 current and former soldiers face criminal investigation.

Police are working with the Office of the Special Investigator, an Australian investigation agency established in 2021, to build cases against elite SAS and Commando Regiments troops who served in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2016.

Former SAS member Oliver Schulz last year became the first of these veterans to be charged with a war crime. He is accused of shooting dead a non-combatant man in a wheat field in Uruzgan province in 2012

Also last year, a civil court found Australia’s most decorated living war veteran Ben Roberts-Smith had likely unlawfully killed four Afghans. He has not been criminally charged.

Human Rights Watch’s Australia director Daniela Gavshon said McBride’s sentencing was evidence Australia’s whistleblowing laws needed exemptions in the public interest.

“It is a stain on Australia’s reputation that some of its soldiers have been accused of war crimes in Afghanistan, and yet the first person convicted in relation to these crimes is a whistleblower not the abusers,” Ms Gavshon said in a statement.

“David McBride’s jail sentence reinforces that whistleblowers are not protected by Australian law. It will create a chilling effect on those taking risks to push for transparency and accountability – cornerstones of democracy,” she added.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Election 2024 Trump Netanyahu

Netanyahu meets with Trump at Mar-a-Lago, offering optimism on Gaza ceasefire

APTOPIX Idaho Wildfires

Air tanker pilot killed as US wildfires spread

Donald Trump reacts after July 13 assassination attempt

Trump struck by bullet during assassination attempt, FBI says

France was rocked by a series of attacks against railway lines early on Friday

Celine Dion kicks off Paris Olympics in rain-drenched opening ceremony after France rocked by rail arson attacks

The Park Fire burns along a road in California

Man arrested over California fire sparked by burning car pushed into gully

Israel has hit out at Britain's decision

Israel hits out at Starmer for dropping Britain's challenge to international arrest warrant for Netanyahu

Justin Timberlake at a premiere

Timberlake ‘not intoxicated’ and drink-drive charge should be dismissed – lawyer

A crying woman at the site of a mudslide in Ethiopia

Ethiopia declares three days of mourning as toll of mudslide victims increases

Nasa may have found a sign of life on Mars

Nasa finds Mars rock that 'may have hosted life', with mysterious 'features we've never seen before'

Barack Obama with Kamala Harris

Barack and Michelle Obama give endorsement for Kamala Harris’s White House bid

Playa de las Cucharas, Costa Teguise

British tourist, 45, dies in suspected drowning off Lanzarote beach on family holiday

Travellers wait at the Gare de L’Est at the 2024 Summer Olympics (Luca Bruno/AP)

Rail arson attacks aimed at blocking trains to Paris Games, says PM

A diver from the Polish Baltictech team inspects wreckage

Sunken 19th century ship found with Champagne cargo off Swedish coast

US Mexico Sinaloa Cartel

El Chapo’s son and Sinaloa cartel leader arrested by US authorities

Passengers check departure boards at the Gare de Montparnasse in ParisOlympics Security Trains

Arson attacks paralyse French high-speed rail network hours before Olympics

Performers in traditional dresses stand outside Parliament Haus in Port Moresby

At least 26 people killed by gang in remote Papua New Guinea