1
Listening in as minds turn to murder INSIDE STORY Cameron Stewart IT was a single phone call that sparked the second-largest terror investigation in Australian his- tory, known as Operation Neath. In January, at the height of Melbournes parched summer, an Australian-Lebanese man in his 30s telephoned a Somalian in the citys western suburbs and made a disturbing request. He wanted assistance for him- self and some of his friends to travel to the war-torn African state of Somalia. The men wanted to become Islamic warriors with al-Shabaab, an extremist group in that coun- try with close links to al-Qaida, and which is listed as a terrorist organisation by the US. The fledgling Somalian terror group, barely three years old, had be- come the new face of Islamic resistance in Africa and was actively recruiting foreign fight- ers to help it overthrow the US- backed government in Somalia. Investigators were monitoring the Lebanese mans calls after he came to their attention late last year for espousing extremist views at his local mosque in Melbournes northern suburbs. What unfolded over the next few months would confirm the worst fears of the nations counter-terrorism chiefs and pro- vide a grim reminder that Aus- tralians remain vulnerable to the threat posed by a handful of Islamic extremists, living in our suburbs, who are seduced by the dark side. Australias security agencies had suspected for several years there were illegal links between small pockets of the nations 16,000-strong Somali community and the extremists in their war- torn homeland. But the AFP and ASIO had never been able to prove the links, and an AFP investigation called Operation Rochester in 2007 petered out after no illegal connections were identified. Now the authorities had found what they were looking for. And they would find much more than they bargained for. Authorities learned that the Somalian man who had been contacted by their Lebanese suspect was the ‘‘facil- itator’’, or point man, for Austral- ian jihadists seeking to travel to the failed state and join the al- Shabaab resistance there. Working from Melbournes western suburbs, this travel agent for would-be jihadists had close connections with al-Shabaab members in Somalia and was able to arrange funding and logistics for Melbourne recruits. Authorities believe he had in recent months arranged for two Somali Australians to be smug- gled into Somalia, via Kenya, to train with al-Shabaab. One of those Australian men remains in Somalia, where he is presumed to be training or fight- ing with al-Shabaab. The other Somalian man has recently re- turned to Melbourne. But the Lebanese man proved more problematic for the Somal- ian facilitator in Melbourne. Visa and passport difficulties pre- vented him from making the trip to Somalia. Frustrated by his inability to travel abroad to join al-Shabaab, the Lebanese man and the core hardline group discussed their options. Investigators listened in horror as the men were then overheard planning a terrorist attack in Australia. From that moment, about three months ago, the top-secret investigation known as Opera- tion Neath became the dominant focus of Australias national security agencies. Jointly run by the AFP, Vic- toria Police and ASIO, the inves- tigation comprises about 150 police, intelligence agents and officials. The group of suspects, involv- ing Lebanese and Somali Austral- ians, is believed to total about 18 men, with a core of hardliners. While they are deeply religious, there are no imams, or self-styled religious leaders, among them. They are working-class men, consisting mostly of construction Continued — Page 4 TUESDAY AUGUST 4 2009 THE HEART OF THE NATION www.theaustralian.com.au $1.50 INCLUDES GST FREIGHT EXTRA ($1.90 TAS) Out of Africa, a new threat dawns CAMERON STEWART ASSOCIATE EDITOR THE global reach of Islamic terrorism has been grimly underlined by news that an extremist movement from a failed African nation has served as the inspiration for a group of men in the suburbs of Melbourne to hatch a plan to kill innocent Australians. The extraordinary plot, revealed exclusively by The Australian today, shows how easily the toxic philosophies of militant Islam can infect the minds of those who are susceptible to its call, wherever in the world they may be. In this case, it was a nondescript group of Melbourne labourers and taxi drivers, of Somali and Lebanese descent, who were seduced by the lure of the violent Somali extremist group al-Shabaab. They were attracted to the group despite apparently having little understanding of Somali politics or theology. Al-Shabaab (meaning The Youth, in Arabic) is a shadowy militant organisation that has risen to prominence only since Continued — Page 4 EXCLUSIVE: Somali Islamists planned suicide raid on Australian soil Army base terror plot foiled Cameron Stewart Target: Holsworthy Barracks in Sydney Violent extremists: Al-Shabaab fighters train at a camp outside Mogadishu. At least two Australians have trained at the group’s camps Links: Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, an architect of the 1998 Nairobi embassy bombing, below A PLOT by Islamic extremists in Melbourne to launch a suicide attack on an Australian Army base has been uncovered by national security agencies. Federal and state police, armed with search warrants, are poised to swoop on members of the suspected terror cell as early as this morning, as they seek to arrest Australian nationals of Somali and Lebanese back- ground in what will be the second-largest counter-terrorism operation in the nations history. The men are expected to be charged with a range of terrorism-related offences. Authorities believe the group is at an advanced stage of preparing to storm an Australian Army base, using automatic weapons, as punishment for Australias military involvement in Muslim countries. It is understood the men plan to kill as many soldiers as possible before they are them- selves killed. Members of the group have been observed carrying out sur- veillance of Holsworthy Barracks in western Sydney and other suspicious activity around de- fence bases in Victoria. Electronic surveillance on the suspects is believed to have picked up discussions about ways to obtain weapons to carry out what would be the worst terror attack on Australian soil. The cell has been inspired by the Somalia-based terrorist movement al-Shabaab, with two Melbourne men, both Somalis, having travelled to Somalia in recent months to obtain training with the extremist organisation, which is aligned with al-Qaida. One of those men has already returned to Melbourne. The other is still in Somalia. Al-Shabaab, which is using suicide bombers and jihadist fighters to try to overthrow the Somali government, seeks to impose a pure, hardline form of Islam, and sees the West as its enemy. It has been declared a terrorist organisation by the US and it has close links with al- Qaida leaders, including Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, an archi- tect of the 1998 attacks on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanza- nia in which 223 people died. The investigation of the group, dubbed Operation Neath, in- volves about 150 members of the Australian Federal Police, Vic- toria Police and ASIO. It was launched in late January. Search warrants for at least 19 properties across Melbourne have been prepared to allow authorities to obtain more evi- dence against the group, which is believed to number about 18, with a smaller, hardcore element. The suspects include Austral- ians of Somali and Lebanese decent, most of whom are labour- ers employed in Melbournes construction industry, or taxi drivers. It is understood that several members of the group also wanted to travel to Somalia to fight with al-Shabaab, but when travel became difficult, they turned their attention to carrying out a terrorist attack in Australia. Al-Shabaab is currently searching for jihadist recruits around the world, including in Australia. Authorities fear that Australian Muslims who travel to Somalia to fight for al-Shabaab could return to Australia as sleeper agents for future attacks in this country. In the US, more than 20 Somali American men have dis- appeared from their Midwest homes in recent months to fight alongside al-Shabaab troops in Somalia. The FBIs investigation into the radicalisation of Somali refu- gees in the US, via al-Shabaab, was described by The New York Times last month as ‘‘the most significant domestic terror inves- tigation since September 11’’. The AFP is understood to have recently presented its evidence against the Melbourne cell to the Office of the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, which advised that the evidence was sufficient to support charges being laid under national terror- ism laws. A previous AFP investigation — Operation Rochester, in 2007 — into extremist activities within small pockets of the nations 16,000-strong Muslim Somali community petered out after it was established there was no evidence of wrongdoing. Only a small number of Aus- tralias Somali community adopt the hardline Wahabist view of Islam, but authorities fear radi- calism among this minority is being fanned by recent events in Somalia. Intelligence analysts warn that Somalia has become the new breeding for international Is- lamic terrorists, as extremists seek revenge for the events of December 2006, when US- backed forces from Christian Ethiopia toppled the hardline government known as the Is- lamic Courts Union. The US and Australia de- fended the Ethiopian invasion as a front in the global war on terror, but it awakened the nationalism of many Somalis in Australia, as well as Muslims of other ethnic backgrounds, who viewed it as a Christian crusade into a Muslim land. Lobbyist Bolkus headhunted for connections Michael Owen ONE of Australias top political lobbyists, former Labor senator Nick Bolkus, was headhunted because of his connections with the Rann government to be a director of an aquaculture company that has gone into administration. The collapse of Australian Bight Abalone has left 1200 people who invested $43.8 million in limbo. Mr Bolkus, who is a business partner with Howard government foreign minister Alexander Downer in Adelaide-based lobbyist firm Be- spoke Approach, also chairs the state Labor fundraising body SA Progressive Business. Inquiries by The Australian reveal ABA chief executive And- rew Ferguson is a regular at SA Progressive Business events, where those in attendance pay up to $1500 each for intimate din- ners and special briefings with South Australian Premier Mike Rann. SA Progressive Business documents show that between September and November, Mr Rann is scheduled to host eight Labor fundraising events Continued — Page 2 More reports — Page 2 Grech: Why I faked email EXCLUSIVE Paul Maley Grech GODWIN Grech has admitted he created the ‘‘fake email’’ at the heart of the OzCar affair and claimed that he passed the contents of that email to Mal- colm Turnbull under ‘‘enor- mous pressure’’. The senior Treasury official, speaking from a psychiatric ward in Canberra last night, where he is being treated for depression, admitted to an error of judgment in creating the email. He said he still believed there had been an original email from Ke- vin Rudds of- fice, urging help for Ipswich car dealer and La- bor donor John Grant, but con- ceded it could not be found. Speaking exclusively to The Australian, Mr Grech said he co- operated with the opposition to save the jobs of 2000 people by seeking their support to pass the OzCar finance bill in the Senate. ‘‘My concern was that the issue of Grant could be used to frustrate the passage of the bill,’’ he said. Mr Turnbull declined to com- ment on the meeting but last night a spokesman for the Op- position Leader said Coalition support for the bill was never in doubt, citing comments from the Coalition supporting the bill as early as May. And senior Coali- tion sources said it was Mr Grech who initiated the meeting at which the email was handed over. They said that, far from being a passive victim, he en- couraged the opposition to go after the Prime Minister on the email and to pursue the claims of favours in the Senate. Mr Grech said he handed a printout of the emails contents to Mr Turnbull and Senate deputy leader Eric Abetz which he later took back — at a meeting at his wife Lucy Turn- bulls office in Sydneys Potts Point on June 12, one week before Mr Grechs explosive evidence before a Senate inquiry. In a claim that will increase pressure on Mr Turnbulls lead- ership, the ailing official said he wrote down a series of questions for the Opposition Leader to ask in parliament that concerned Mr Rudds statements that he had not sought special favours for Mr Grant. Mr Grech said he made an error of judgment in faking the now notorious email, in which the Prime Ministers economics adviser, Andrew Charlton, pur- portedly sought Mr Grechs help in seeking special treatment for Mr Grant. Mr Grechs claims, revealed exclusively in The Australian, will place enormous pressure on Mr Turnbull as the Auditor- Generals report into OzCar, to be released today, is expected to clear Mr Rudd and Wayne Swan of any wrongdoing. The government has de- manded Mr Turnbull apologise and resign if his allegations are not substantiated. Mr Rudd moved to increase pressure on Mr Turnbull ahead of the release of the Auditor-Generals report. ‘‘I think its important for Mr Turnbull to come out and de- scribe in detail all of his dealings with Mr Grech. All meetings and all conversations,’’ Mr Rudd said. Continued — Page 6 More reports — Page 6 Abortion drug racket exposed A VETERAN Brisbane obstetri- cian has blown the whistle on a new form of backyard abortion, involving contraband supplies of the controversial drug RU486 being smuggled into the country for women to terminate their own pregnancies. Adrienne Freeman, who is licensed to perform medical (as opposed to surgical) abortions, said three patients had told her they obtained RU486 on black markets in China or India with the intention of taking it here. Separately, Cairns-based ob- stetrician Caroline de Costa, who established the countrys first abortion service using RU486, said two other doctors had sought her advice on how to treat women using illegally imported abortion pills. Full report — Page 3 people who love their job. CumminsNitro © VIR 1909/AUSSER AFTA NTIA Hall of Fame inductee; CSIA “Best of the Best” Award 2008; CSIA state winner large business 2008; AFTA NTIA – Best National Airline 2006, 2007, 2008; AFTA NTIA – Best Regional Airline 2006, 2007, 2008; Freddie Award – Best Award Redemption 2005. CumminsNitro © VIR 1909/AUSSER Best Award Redemption 2005. virginblue.com.au Where great ideas fly Some airlines run on just jet fuel - we’re powered by passionate people. 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SIA “Best of the Best” Award 2008; CSIA state winner large business 2008; AFTA NTIA – Best Nat Nti ional Ai l Ai li rlin 20 e 2006 06, 2007 2007 20 , 2008 08; AFTA AFTA NTI NTIA A – Best Best Reg Regiona iona l Ai l Airlin rline 20 e 2006, 06, 2007 2007 , 2008; Freddie Award – B p pe eo op pl l e e w wh ho o l l ove t t h he ei i r r j j o ob. com.au Where g S Som me airlines ru run n on on j jus ust t je jet t fu fuel el - - w we’ e re re p p pow ower ered ed b by passio S Some e airlines ru un n on on j jus ust t je jet t fu fuel el - - w we’ e re re powered by passio Some airline nes s run on j just t j jet t f fu l el - we’ re powered by passio Some airline nes s run on j just t j jet t f fu l el - we’ re powered by passio ona ate te te peopl le e. onate te peopl p e. onate p people. onate p people. 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Army Base Terror Plot Foiled

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Cameron Stewart's Gold Quill Award winning article on how planned terror attack on an Australian army barracks was foiled.

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Page 1: Army Base Terror Plot Foiled

Listening in as minds turn to murderINSIDE STORY

Cameron Stewart

IT was a single phone call thatsparked the second-largest terrorinvestigation in Australian his-tory, known as Operation Neath.

In January, at the height ofMelbourne’s parched summer, anAustralian-Lebanese man in his30s telephoned a Somalian in thecity’s western suburbs and madea disturbing request.

He wanted assistance for him-self and some of his friends totravel to the war-torn Africanstate of Somalia.

The men wanted to becomeIslamic warriors with al-Shabaab,an extremist group in that coun-try with close links to al-Qa’ida,and which is listed as a terroristorganisation by the US. Thefledgling Somalian terror group,barely three years old, had be-come the new face of Islamic

resistance in Africa and wasactively recruiting foreign fight-ers to help it overthrow the US-backed government in Somalia.

Investigators were monitoringthe Lebanese man’s calls after hecame to their attention late lastyear for espousing extremistviews at his local mosque inMelbourne’s northern suburbs.

What unfolded over the nextfew months would confirm theworst fears of the nation’scounter-terrorism chiefs and pro-vide a grim reminder that Aus-tralians remain vulnerable to thethreat posed by a handful ofIslamic extremists, living in oursuburbs, who are seduced by thedark side.

Australia’s security agencies

had suspected for several yearsthere were illegal links betweensmall pockets of the nation’s16,000-strong Somali communityand the extremists in their war-torn homeland.

But the AFP and ASIO hadnever been able to prove thelinks, and an AFP investigationcalled Operation Rochester in2007 petered out after no illegalconnections were identified.

Now the authorities had foundwhat they were looking for. Andthey would find much more thanthey bargained for. Authoritieslearned that the Somalian manwho had been contacted by theirLebanese suspect was the ‘‘facil-itator’’, or point man, for Austral-ian jihadists seeking to travel tothe failed state and join the al-Shabaab resistance there.

Working from Melbourne’swestern suburbs, this travel agent

for would-be jihadists had closeconnections with al-Shabaabmembers in Somalia and was ableto arrange funding and logisticsfor Melbourne recruits.

Authorities believe he had inrecent months arranged for twoSomali Australians to be smug-gled into Somalia, via Kenya, totrain with al-Shabaab.

One of those Australian menremains in Somalia, where he ispresumed to be training or fight-ing with al-Shabaab. The otherSomalian man has recently re-turned to Melbourne.

But the Lebanese man provedmore problematic for the Somal-ian facilitator in Melbourne. Visaand passport difficulties pre-vented him from making the tripto Somalia.

Frustrated by his inability totravel abroad to join al-Shabaab,the Lebanese man and the core

hardline group discussed theiroptions. Investigators listened inhorror as the men were thenoverheard planning a terroristattack in Australia.

From that moment, aboutthree months ago, the top-secretinvestigation known as Opera-tion Neath became the dominantfocus of Australia’s nationalsecurity agencies.

Jointly run by the AFP, Vic-toria Police and ASIO, the inves-tigation comprises about 150police, intelligence agents andofficials.

The group of suspects, involv-ing Lebanese and Somali Austral-ians, is believed to total about 18men, with a core of hardliners.While they are deeply religious,there are no imams, or self-styledreligious leaders, among them.

They are working-class men,consisting mostly of constructionContinued — Page 4

TUESDAY AUGUST 4 2009 T H E H E A R T O F T H E N A T I O N www.theaustralian.com.au $1.50INCLUDES GST FREIGHT EXTRA ($1.90 TAS)

Out of Africa, anew threat dawns

CAMERONSTEWARTASSOCIATEEDITOR

THE global reach of Islamicterrorism has been grimlyunderlined by news that anextremist movement from afailed African nation has servedas the inspiration for a group ofmen in the suburbs ofMelbourne to hatch a plan tokill innocent Australians.

The extraordinary plot,revealed exclusively by TheAustralian today, shows howeasily the toxic philosophies ofmilitant Islam can infect theminds of those who aresusceptible to its call, whereverin the world they may be.

In this case, it was anondescript group ofMelbourne labourers and taxidrivers, of Somali and Lebanesedescent, who were seduced bythe lure of the violent Somaliextremist group al-Shabaab.

They were attracted to thegroup despite apparently havinglittle understanding of Somalipolitics or theology.

Al-Shabaab (meaning TheYouth, in Arabic) is a shadowymilitant organisation that hasrisen to prominence only sinceContinued — Page 4

EXCLUSIVE: Somali Islamists planned suicide raid on Australian soil

Army base terror plot foiledCameron Stewart

Target: Holsworthy Barracks in Sydney

Violent extremists: Al-Shabaab fighters train at a camp outside Mogadishu. At least two Australians have trained at the group’s camps

Links: Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, an architectof the 1998 Nairobi embassy bombing, below

A PLOT by Islamic extremists inMelbourne to launch a suicideattack on an Australian Armybase has been uncovered bynational security agencies.

Federal and state police, armedwith search warrants, are poisedto swoop on members of thesuspected terror cell as early asthis morning, as they seek toarrest Australian nationals ofSomali and Lebanese back-ground in what will be thesecond-largest counter-terrorismoperation in the nation’s history.

The men are expected to becharged with a range ofterrorism-related offences.

Authorities believe the group isat an advanced stage of preparingto storm an Australian Armybase, using automatic weapons,as punishment for Australia’smilitary involvement in Muslimcountries. It is understood themen plan to kill as many soldiersas possible before they are them-selves killed.

Members of the group havebeen observed carrying out sur-veillance of Holsworthy Barracksin western Sydney and othersuspicious activity around de-fence bases in Victoria.

Electronic surveillance on thesuspects is believed to havepicked up discussions about waysto obtain weapons to carry outwhat would be the worst terrorattack on Australian soil.

The cell has been inspired bythe Somalia-based terroristmovement al-Shabaab, with twoMelbourne men, both Somalis,having travelled to Somalia inrecent months to obtain trainingwith the extremist organisation,which is aligned with al-Qa’ida.

One of those men has alreadyreturned to Melbourne. Theother is still in Somalia.

Al-Shabaab, which is usingsuicide bombers and jihadistfighters to try to overthrow theSomali government, seeks toimpose a pure, hardline form ofIslam, and sees the West as itsenemy. It has been declared aterrorist organisation by the USand it has close links with al-Qa’ida leaders, including FazulAbdullah Mohammed, an archi-tect of the 1998 attacks on the USembassies in Kenya and Tanza-nia in which 223 people died.

The investigation of the group,dubbed Operation Neath, in-volves about 150 members of theAustralian Federal Police, Vic-toria Police and ASIO. It waslaunched in late January.

Search warrants for at least 19properties across Melbournehave been prepared to allowauthorities to obtain more evi-dence against the group, which isbelieved to number about 18, witha smaller, hardcore element.

The suspects include Austral-ians of Somali and Lebanesedecent, most of whom are labour-ers employed in Melbourne’sconstruction industry, or taxidrivers.

It is understood that severalmembers of the group alsowanted to travel to Somalia tofight with al-Shabaab, but whentravel became difficult, theyturned their attention to carryingout a terrorist attack in Australia.

Al-Shabaab is currentlysearching for jihadist recruitsaround the world, including inAustralia. Authorities fear thatAustralian Muslims who travel toSomalia to fight for al-Shabaabcould return to Australia assleeper agents for future attacksin this country.

In the US, more than 20Somali American men have dis-

appeared from their Midwesthomes in recent months to fightalongside al-Shabaab troops inSomalia.

The FBI’s investigation intothe radicalisation of Somali refu-gees in the US, via al-Shabaab,was described by The New YorkTimes last month as ‘‘the mostsignificant domestic terror inves-tigation since September 11’’.

The AFP is understood to haverecently presented its evidenceagainst the Melbourne cell to theOffice of the CommonwealthDirector of Public Prosecutions,which advised that the evidencewas sufficient to support chargesbeing laid under national terror-ism laws.

A previous AFP investigation— Operation Rochester, in 2007— into extremist activities withinsmall pockets of the nation’s16,000-strong Muslim Somalicommunity petered out after itwas established there was noevidence of wrongdoing.

Only a small number of Aus-tralia’s Somali community adoptthe hardline Wahabist view ofIslam, but authorities fear radi-calism among this minority isbeing fanned by recent events inSomalia.

Intelligence analysts warn thatSomalia has become the newbreeding for international Is-lamic terrorists, as extremistsseek revenge for the events ofDecember 2006, when US-backed forces from ChristianEthiopia toppled the hardlinegovernment known as the Is-lamic Courts Union.

The US and Australia de-fended the Ethiopian invasion asa front in the global war onterror, but it awakened thenationalism of many Somalis inAustralia, as well as Muslims ofother ethnic backgrounds, whoviewed it as a Christian crusadeinto a Muslim land.

Lobbyist Bolkus headhunted for connectionsMichael Owen

ONE of Australia’s top politicallobbyists, former Labor senatorNick Bolkus, was headhuntedbecause of his connections withthe Rann government to be a

director of an aquaculturecompany that has gone intoadministration. The collapse ofAustralian Bight Abalone has left1200 people who invested$43.8 million in limbo. Mr Bolkus,who is a business partner with

Howard government foreignminister Alexander Downer inAdelaide-based lobbyist firm Be-spoke Approach, also chairs thestate Labor fundraising body SAProgressive Business.

Inquiries by The Australian

reveal ABA chief executive And-rew Ferguson is a regular at SAProgressive Business events,where those in attendance pay upto $1500 each for intimate din-ners and special briefings withSouth Australian Premier Mike

Rann. SA Progressive Businessdocuments show that betweenSeptember and November, MrRann is scheduled to host eightLabor fundraising eventsContinued — Page 2More reports — Page 2

Grech:Why IfakedemailEXCLUSIVEPaul Maley

Grech

GODWIN Grech has admittedhe created the ‘‘fake email’’ atthe heart of the OzCar affair andclaimed that he passed thecontents of that email to Mal-colm Turnbull under ‘‘enor-mous pressure’’.

The senior Treasury official,speaking from a psychiatricward in Canberra last night,where he is being treated fordepression, admitted to an errorof judgment in creating theemail. He said he still believedthere had beenan originalemail from Ke-vin Rudd’s of-fice, urging helpfor Ipswich cardealer and La-bor donor JohnGrant, but con-ceded it couldnot be found.

Speaking exclusively to TheAustralian, Mr Grech said he co-operated with the opposition tosave the jobs of 2000 people byseeking their support to pass theOzCar finance bill in the Senate.

‘‘My concern was that theissue of Grant could be used tofrustrate the passage of the bill,’’he said.

Mr Turnbull declined to com-ment on the meeting but lastnight a spokesman for the Op-position Leader said Coalitionsupport for the bill was never indoubt, citing comments from theCoalition supporting the bill asearly as May. And senior Coali-tion sources said it was MrGrech who initiated the meetingat which the email was handedover. They said that, far frombeing a passive victim, he en-couraged the opposition to goafter the Prime Minister on theemail and to pursue the claims offavours in the Senate.

Mr Grech said he handed aprintout of the email’s contentsto Mr Turnbull and Senatedeputy leader Eric Abetz —which he later took back — at ameeting at his wife Lucy Turn-bull’s office in Sydney’s PottsPoint on June 12, one weekbefore Mr Grech’s explosiveevidence before a Senateinquiry.

In a claim that will increasepressure on Mr Turnbull’s lead-ership, the ailing official said hewrote down a series of questionsfor the Opposition Leader to askin parliament that concerned MrRudd’s statements that he hadnot sought special favours forMr Grant.

Mr Grech said he made anerror of judgment in faking thenow notorious email, in whichthe Prime Minister’s economicsadviser, Andrew Charlton, pur-portedly sought Mr Grech’s helpin seeking special treatment forMr Grant.

Mr Grech’s claims, revealedexclusively in The Australian,will place enormous pressure onMr Turnbull as the Auditor-General’s report into OzCar, tobe released today, is expected toclear Mr Rudd and Wayne Swanof any wrongdoing.

The government has de-manded Mr Turnbull apologiseand resign if his allegations arenot substantiated. Mr Ruddmoved to increase pressure onMr Turnbull ahead of the releaseof the Auditor-General’s report.

‘‘I think it’s important for MrTurnbull to come out and de-scribe in detail all of his dealingswith Mr Grech. All meetings andall conversations,’’ Mr Ruddsaid.Continued — Page 6More reports — Page 6

Abortion drug racket exposedA VETERAN Brisbane obstetri-cian has blown the whistle on anew form of backyard abortion,involving contraband supplies ofthe controversial drug RU486being smuggled into the countryfor women to terminate theirown pregnancies.

Adrienne Freeman, who islicensed to perform medical (asopposed to surgical) abortions,said three patients had told herthey obtained RU486 on blackmarkets in China or India withthe intention of taking it here.

Separately, Cairns-based ob-

stetrician Caroline de Costa, whoestablished the country’s firstabortion service using RU486,said two other doctors hadsought her advice on how to treatwomen using illegally importedabortion pills.Full report — Page 3

people who love their job.

CumminsNitro © VIR 1909/AUSSERAFTA NTIA Hall of Fame inductee; CSIA “Best of the Best” Award 2008; CSIA state winner large business 2008; AFTA NTIA – Best National Airline 2006, 2007, 2008; AFTA NTIA – Best Regional Airline 2006, 2007, 2008; Freddie Award – Best Award Redemption 2005. CumminsNitro © VIR 1909/AUSSERBest Award Redemption 2005.

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ground and in the sky. Enjoy our company. We certainly enjoy yours.

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ground and in the sky. Enjoy our company. We certainly enjoy yours.

Some airlines run on just jet fuel - we’re powered by passionate people. Our awards show we’re committed to giving you the best service on the

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