Pubdate: Mon, 05 Dec 2005 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: 2005The Australian Contact: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/files/aus-letters.htm Website: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/35 Author: Ian Moore Note: Ian Moore is a founding editor of the Sunday Herald Sun in Melbourne and former editor of The Sunday Telegraph in Sydney. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Nguyen+Tuong+Van Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Death+Penalty (Death Penalty) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Singapore MORAL COMPASS AWRY IN ATTACK ON POLITICIANS AUSTRALIAN drug-runner Nguyen Tuong Van has been executed in Singapore, but his death has not halted the stupidity of those that seek to blame the Howard Government over his death. Chief among this brigade must be Melbourne barrister Robert Richter who has launched a personal attack on members of the Government, but in doing so, has offended every Australian who comprehends the extent of suffering of Australian prisoners at the hands of the Japanese in Changi during World War II. Richter took to the steps of the Melbourne County Court on Friday to describe statements over Van by Prime Minister John Howard, Justice Minister Chris Ellison, Attorney-General Philip Ruddock and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer as lies. He said that he had heard these ministers say that they had done all in their power to save Van from the gallows, but "it is a lie, a complete lie". "We have not legally or politically done everything that we can. When did we propose to the UN that we should bring up capital punishment as being contrary to the rule of law because it does not recognise the notion of judicial discretion in sentencing, of proportionality between crime and punishment which lies at the root of all punishment," Richter said. "We know the Singapore Government is susceptible to pressure, it had not been pressured at all." Downer reacted angrily, as well he might. "You can imagine how we all feel about it now and for some creep to say something like that -- how contemptible can you get?" he said. Richter is plainly wrong, as the record -- discussed ad nauseam during last week -- will attest. He also is deluding himself if he believes anything said to the UN would make an iota of difference. The ineffectiveness of the UN also is a matter of record. However, from the downright stupid, Richter went on to cause much greater offence. In his grandstanding speech, he described Van's execution in Changi Prison as more shameful than the wartime atrocities committed there against Australian POWs, as it was not done in the heat of war. If shame could be apportioned, Richter should be given a full dose. There is no heat of battle to be considered when beating malnourished prisoners and leaving them to die, often an agonising death. His words not only equate the Japanese torturers of Changi to a legitimate government, but desecrate the memory of the Australian soldiers who died there, by giving a convicted drug-runner moral equivalency. There is no suggestion here that Richter is wrong to feel empathy with Van's family; to express his frustration and sadness at a young life squandered as a consequence of his own folly. Many would share those feelings. It is just that from a prominent barrister, a QC, one expects that emotion would not be allowed to blur facts; that morality would not be subverted to support a personal view against the death penalty in a foreign country. If Richter so opposes capital punishment in Singapore, his voice should be ringing out on behalf of Van's cellmates on death row -- along with those who mounted candlelight vigils for Van and called for a minute's silence to mark his death (yet another act that denigrates an honour reserved usually for Australians who have made the ultimate sacrifice in war). But no, there is silence. One can only conclude that the reason is that -- as these criminals are not Australian citizens -- they cannot be used as pawns to attack Howard or his Government. Richter, a former president of the Victorian Council for Civil Liberties, is no stranger to odd moral positions. The barrister who successfully represented Melbourne crime figure Dominic Gatto in a murder trial earlier this year, seems to support the argument that it is not criminals that are responsible for crime but politicians. In a recent speech on political intrusion into the legal process, Richter endorsed a book published in 1970 by Norval Morris and Gordon Hawkins, The Honest Politician's Guide to Crime Control. The premise of the book is that most crime is generated by politicians "who for one reason or another criminalise conduct which is not in the natural purview of core prohibitions for an organised and civil society". "Their solution involves profound analysis of the overreach of the criminal law; a harm reduction and cost benefit examination of several focal nodes of what is considered criminal conduct; and the reasoned assessment which, with a bit of clear thinking and non-moralising, can drastically cut what we call crime in our society by as much as 60 per cent" he told his audience. With a notion that crime can be reduced by making it it legal, it is little wonder his moral compass is awry. Similarly with David Marr, a former host of the ABC's Media Watch, who wrote at the weekend that Van's execution represented the death of compassion in Australia, is suggesting it is not Van, but the broader community that is at fault for a belief that heroin smugglers should be punished, even in Singapore where it means the death penalty. This execution has brought out the worst in Australia's leftist elites and shown how out of touch they are with Australian society. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath