💧Mary Kostakidis Profile picture
Sep 18, 2020 65 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Extradition September hearing Day 7 (Day 9 incl 2 Covid days)

Waiting for the Host to connect me
We can see the courtroom but have no sound yet.
The first witness is NZ journo is Nick Hagar
Glimpse of JA
NH: I’m a user of the data. Book on NZ role in intel. Wants to read something from his statement. Lewis objects. Nick reads: reads about his personal motivations. Judge says little point because it is all before the court. He continues: we want to reveal the truth to save us from
The scourge of war, & JA similarly motivated.
We need classified info, essential for our role to inform the public. There is no realistic & effective alternative. Govts automatically say someone will be harmed, shown as wildly exaggerated. My books are used as training tools for intel recruits. In the W docs I read about
aspects of the war that gave me a good overall picture of the war - an outstanding example of info that serves the public interest.
I am experienced in evaluating classified material. (Nick is hilarious, he ignores the questions & the judges comments & says what he wants to say, can’t wait for the cross examination)
Nick: collateral Murder video effect was the equivalent of the death of George Floyd - I can’t breathe. It, the rules of engagement, war logs affected the guidelines/precautions in dealing with civilians.
In Nov 2010 I was part of Wikileaks rigorous program to vet the docs with experts all over the world. Plan was to do it in a slow, orderly, diligent process - they were very serious about what they were doing, focussed, responsible.
Nick: I’m tired of the news coverage on JA - the person I know is thoughtful, humorous, energetic, very principled & trying to make the world a better place, an inspired idea: in an era where secrecy was was increasing, the digital era could be harnessed for good.
Lewis: have you read the indictment? The Extradition request. Tell us what you understand the essence of the charge
Nick: it’s a mish mash.
Lewis: going thru the usual questions ie do you know he hasn’t been charged with publishing the Collateral Murder video.
Nick: yes. The reason I raised it is because the effect & significance of the releases affect the world as a whole.
ie the entire release, incl Coll M
Lewis: have you ever conspired to hack a password?
Nick: no, but What you’re asking shows a fundamental misunderstanding of what I do. Investig. Journos do not receive info “Passively”, we seek sources, we actually encourage them. We work with people who are breaking the law. We
Have pastoral responsibilities to.. Lewis interrupts.
Lewis: you have evidence in an Inquiry & didn’t reveal sources. Would you publish the name of your source?
Nick: of course not but .. Lewis interrupts
Lewis refers to an extract from the Guardian 2 Sept deploring W dump
Nick: my understanding is the information came out before it came out elsewhere. You know those facts are disputed so can’t comment sorry.
Lewis going to the bundle.. reads from Leigh & Harding’s book: “W intended to release the lot... including names of informants.. J not
Concerned.. saying they are informants, they deserve to be killed”. Do you agree with those sentiments.
Nick: there was bitter animosity & I don’t want to dignify hearsay.
Lewis: do you just want to help JA here?
Nick: I regard him an unreliable source
Lewis goes to the quote
from JA at the Frontline Club.. from Dwyer affidavit.. “regrettable .. we are not obligated to protect them except from unjust retribution but if they are.... then the public need to know about it” do you agree?
Nick: no
Lewis: Did you need the names of the informants to write
your book?
Nick: no (wants to add.. but Lewis cuts him off)
Lewis: you say the claims of harm are wildly exaggerated. Do you agree the lives of those sources are put at risk?
Nick: the comment was not about the W docs specifically but about my life’s work. When I wrote the book
JA was not charged under the Esp Act, this changes everything (sorry I missed the question)
Lewis asks him about a report that was issued as a result of your work Hit & Run, exonerated the police.
Nick: you quoted a minor footnote in the book. Most of the findings were confirmed.
Lewis reads more allegations about inaccuracies in his boo.
Nick: no that’s not correct
and goes thru a list of allegations that were confirmed saying we got most of it right.. what’s this got to do with it he asks ( his reputation/credibility)
Lewis: how many cables did you review?
Nick: a few hundred concerning NZ
Lewis : what criteria did you use to make redactions?
Nick: in the countries I was looking at there was no threa5 to the people, just embarrassment.
How long did you take?
Nick: a few weeks.
Lewis: Maurizi says it took 2 people 9 months to review Italy docs (opportunity for a joke about Italy not taken)
Nick: I was happy with the time I took

Fitzgerald: do you understand JA also being charged with “obtain & receive”
Nick: yes, thank you that was what I was trying to say earlier
Glimpse of JA, sitting upright & back in his seat. He is wearing a burgundy tie.
Fitzgerald
clarifies which source he should protect (your source rather than sources in docs).
Nick: I don’t believe that JA & his staff changed their view & approach to redactions after I left. The publication of the password which could not be retrieved once published is the cause of
names being published.
Fitzgerald asks about JA’s Frontline club & clarifies he does agree on protecting people from unjust retribution, but won’t commit to a position on other informants who may be sobbing people in dishonestly, saying these issues are at the cutting edge of
Journalistic ethics.
Relevance of Rules of Engagement: a yardstick to measure their behaviour but also to evaluate the rules - this was never discussed before in public. The basis of claiming this presented a dire risk to the troops is a misunderstanding - there is nothing to
Prevent them from acting in self defence.
Fitzgerald going to consult JA before winding up re examination of this witness (thankfully this pattern has developed .. otherwise JA has no way of pointing anything out to his team)
Short break before next witness, there will be an interpreter. Oooooo. It’s El-Masri!
There were drawn out negotiations about what parts of his statement the Prosecution was prepared to allow to be read in court. Perhaps they got around it by producing him.
General chatting going on.. Gareth, Jennifer with Fitzgerald. Earlier it looked like Kristinn also headed over with Fitzgerald to confer with JA.
Having someone who has been tortured by the CIA appear in person would seem an Own Goal for the Prosecution but you never know what will happen do you.
Still waiting for the interpreter but Defence will read a statement in the meantime.
Judge points out it should be a summary.
Summers says Ms Robinson is editing it. We can see Jen is on her laptop as is Kristinn
Jen is wearing a black suit & Stella is next to her in a white suit ( just so you can picture them)
Jennifer’s statement being read out: in 2017 I attended a meeting with JA & a US Congressman who attended with a Mr Johnson. They said they were acting on behalf of POTUS. They wanted to know source of the DNC leaks. Rohrbacher described a win win situation where JA would
Walk free. JA provided no information but they asked they convey to POTUS the first amendment issue & that Manning, the source, had been pardoned. (Much more articulate than I have summarised here).
The Prosecution said they have nothing to disagree with in the statement
Break, waiting for interpreter still.
Btw we got another glimpse of JA as he returned to his position after the last break. He was holding a red folder. It was a medium shot. I think asking to see him more often has made a difference.
(Oh, correction, just realised Stella is wearing black pants with a white jacket.)
I have just been disconnected
No, we have all been put on ice temporarily hope
We have picture now. Apparently they were doing a test with the next witness
Judge has left the room, still not ready
They are telling the judge he is dropping out
Summers: he is engaged in a good faith attempt to get connected. He isn’t a very technical gentleman. We have spoken to him today via Zoom. It’s a pity Madam the Court doesn’t use a more user friendly medium.
Judge asks if we can just have him on the telephone
Summers would like us to see him
Lewis concerned the judge doesn’t accept the veracity of El Masri’s allegations
Summers: defence are prepared the court not make a finding - not necessary for a finding on war crimes but the Strasberg Court has found the allegations are true. But Lewis’ concerns extend to disputing the whole of his evidence about what Wikileaks did ie reveal US attempts
to conceal it, so it was not possible to reach an agreement about what to leave out.
Lewis: we don’t accept the Us govt pressured the German govt.
Summers: that’s what the Wikileaks cables said.
Judge: I’m not prepared to make a minding
Summers: you don’t need to accept it
the Strasbourg court has made a finding.
Lewis: we won’t accept the Strasburg court finding
Can’t see why he should appear, at all.
Summers: the fact of the allegations are an important fact & the subject of the W disclosures is relevant.
Julian saying “I won’t accept that.”
Lewis: we have no instructions from the US re editing the statement, why doesn’t he just put the cables in.
Lewis: if we don’t object, you may make a finding about inadmissible evidence. As long as you don’t make any finding whatsoever Madam, we are happy.
Judge releases interpreter. El Masri WILL NOT TESTIFY Personally.
Summers summarises El Masri statement:
In 2003 on a tourist bus in Macedonia he was detained incommunicado by officials...

Madam I am instructed to stop, and take instructions.
Can you believe it? What a let down. No habeas corpus.
Fitzgerald still consulting JA, Kristinn pitching, judge back
Summers continues: I’ll treated for 24 days, handed over to a CIA rendition team, he was stripped, soddomised, beaten, hood over his head, flown to. Afghanistan, tortured for 5 months, incl by American prison director, the flown to Albania & dumped in the middle of nowhere
Encountered Albanian police, flew back to Germany, eventually began telling people about what happened ( his wife & children left the country thinking he had died). He was attacked, govts including his own tried to discredit him & silence him. He engaged a lawyer, & others also
Helped him, incl Goetz, who found the names of the CIA men involved, as a result the Munich prosecutor issued a warrant but it was not served, as we know from the Wikileaks docs, the US put pressure on Germany, as a result of the W cables el Masri says we now know why.
The revelations in the W cables were relied upon by the Strasburg court ( long look at JA for us).
El Masri filed a suit against the CIA agents in the Eastern Court of Virginia, which the prosecutor refused to pursue. The ICC have agreed to investigate & Pompeo has said extreme
measures would be taken against the officials of the court. He says without the cables, we would not have known.
Lunch break
Me: so to be clear, the judge has said she can accept that is what the cables say, but she does not have to accept, and won’t, that what they cables say is true.
It is on that basis that Summers was permitted to summarise El Masri’s statement

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More from @MaryKostakidis

Jul 26
A devastating and damning report by @nirhasson 🧵

‘For Israeli decision-makers, starvation of the Gaza Strip was in the cards from day one of the war..
1. About 30,000 people live in the southern Israeli city of Sderot. Imagine that the refrigerators of all Sderot residents are empty. In fact, they don't even have refrigerators. The bakeries are closed. The supermarket shelves offer nothing. Residents are hungry. And then, once every 24 hours, a single truck enters the city gates and distributes food, door to door. And the food on that truck? That's all there is, for the entire city.
About 30,000 people also live in Or Akiva. And in Arad. Each city gets one truck a day.
Will the residents of Sderot still be hungry by the end of the day? And what will happen after a week? And after a month?’ Cont
‘2. According official data from the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, which is responsible for carrying out the government's civilian policy in those areas, an average of 71 trucks entered the Gaza Strip each day over the past month. Seventy-one trucks meant to feed 2.1 million people. One truck for every 30,000. Half of the trucks made it to a distribution center but the other half of them, brought in by the United Nations and various aid organizations, were looted en route.

It's a pitiful amount of food. But one can only wish the Sderot scenario was the reality in Gaza. The situation there is much worse.’ Cont
‘3. In Gaza, the truck does not distribute food door to door. Half of the food it carries is unloaded in large piles in remote military zones. The gates there open for just 15 minutes a day, according to a random schedule. You're reading that right: 15 minutes a day.

People loot the other half of the goods straight from the trucks. In both cases, those who manage to get to the food are almost exclusively young men, those who can carry heavy loads, run fast and are willing to risk their lives.

Over 1,000 have died so far while crowding around to get food, since late May, most of them from Israel Defense Forces gunfire.
What happens to those who can't make it to the trucks or the distribution centers? What about the women, the disabled, the sick, the elderly? What about the unlucky?
They are starving to death.’ Cont
Read 5 tweets
Jul 12
Louise Adler in The Guardian: 🧵
‘One must acknowledge the remarkably effective Jewish community organisations in Australia behind the latest antisemitism report. Collectively, with their News Ltd megaphone, they have successfully badgered the government of the day, cowed the ABC, intimidated vice-chancellors and threatened to defund arts organisations.
With the ability to garner prime ministerial dinners, a battalion of lobbyists has gained access to editors, duchessed willingly seduced journalists keen to enjoy junkets and corralled more than 500 captains of industry to subscribe to full-page ads against antisemitism and thereby blurring political argument with prejudice and bias. It is no surprise that this relentless propaganda effort has paid off…’
On those forever quoted statistics on antisemitism:
‘16 students at Sydney University feeling intimidated by the slogan “from the river to the sea” was reframed as 250 complaints submitted to parliamentary inquiry. A childcare centre that was not in fact a Jewish centre was added to the list of terrifying antisemitic attacks. The individuals police believe were hired by criminals seeking a reduction in their prison sentences who allegedly placed combustible material in a caravan became a “terrorist plot”’’

The figures include all the ‘fake’ antisemitism attacks by paid criminals orchestrated by a crime figure not in any way driven by antisemitism, antiZionism or anti Israel motivation. As for the keffiyeh and the phrase from the River to the Sea, interpreting the symbols and slogans of another group as threatening while promoting your own as needing protection is one eyed and undermines social cohesion.
‘The publication of the special envoy’s plan is the latest flex by the Jewish establishment. The in-house scribes have been busy: no institution, organisation or department is exempt from the latest push to weaponise antisemitism and insist on the exceptionalism of Australian Jewry. One might pause to wonder what First Nations people, who are the victims of racism every day, feel about the priority given to 120,000 well-educated, secure and mostly affluent individuals…
The envoy wants to strengthen legislation apparently. Isn’t that the role of the government of the day? Who is to be the arbiter? Who is to be the judge, for example, of universities and their report cards? Who will adjudicate “accountability” in the media? Who will recommend defunding which artist? Should this government endorse this proposal, it will clearly be the envoy.
Fortunately, a suite of laws protecting us from racism, discrimination, hate speech and incitement to violence are already deeply embedded in our civil society. No university is oblivious to these laws, no public broadcaster, no arts organisation.
Educating future generations about the Holocaust has long been a priority. I hope the envoy is aware of the work done engaging thousands of school students at such institutions as the Melbourne Holocaust Museum where my own mother was the education officer for over a decade. If the envoy is concerned that school students aren’t sufficiently well versed in the horrors of the Holocaust, she might take heart from such evidence as the sales of Anne Frank’s diary continue unabated, in the past five years more than 55,000 copies were sold in Australia.
The envoy helpfully proposes to nominate “trusted voices” to refute antisemitic claims – yet again seeking to prescribe who speaks and which views are deemed acceptable. One hopes that media organisations are resolute against the plan’s determination to monitor, oversee and “ensure fair reporting to avoid perpetually incorrect or distorted narratives or representations of Jews”. It seems that the envoy wants to determine what is legitimate reportage. Freedom of the press is of less importance. Independent journalism that is factual and speaks the truth is lightly abandoned.


What is Australia’s proposed antisemitism plan – and why are some parts causing concern?

Read more
Universities appear to be on notice: adopt the IHRA definition, act on it or be warned that in March 2026 a judicial inquiry will be established as the envoy demands.
Cultural organisations be warned – your funding could be at risk too. There isn’t a cultural organisation in the country that doesn’t have well-argued codes of conduct for staff, artists and audiences – in place well before the 7 October attack to combat homophobia, racism and hate speech. Now it is proposed that a Jewish Cultural and Arts Council is to advise the arts minister. To privilege one ethnic community over others is deeply offensive and dangerous.’

And there I’ll stop because Segal’s shopping list is deeply offensive and dangerous.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 13
A very fine post on safety/unsafety by @RandaAFattah
on Instagram 🧵
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Read 5 tweets
Feb 10
Breaking
ABC changes its position and defence, now acknowledging @antoinette_news IS Lebanese . A recognition the race exists 🤦🏻‍♀️
Today’s hearing began with the ABC apologising for filing an unredacted affidavit revealing the name of a complainant.
Two own goals for @ABCaustralia
With respect to the very wise move to change their position on race in this case, I think it can be assumed Chair Kim Williams would have come down on management like a ton of bricks. He has been outspoken on change required at the broadcaster, and this catastrophic case is public confirmation of the rectitude of that position.
@ABCaustralia Currently Ahern being cross examined by ABC - he is held responsible for hiring Lattouf. Next today will be then Chair Buttrose followed by Green, her direct supervisor whose evidence will be an integral piece in the puzzle of what Lattouf was told, as she did the telling.
Read 15 tweets
Feb 8
In light of the ongoing court case brought by @antoinette_news against the @ABCaustralia for unfair dismissal, it’s worth recalling her proposal to the ABC in order to settle the matter which I’ll post in a thread below.
Instead, the ABC decided to defend their decision, exposed in excruciating detail and at enormous expense to the taxpayer - we are funding the 14 month battle (so far) and the massive US law firm Seyfarth the ABC has engaged to fight it. It will be costing a fortune.
Here is what she had asked for to settle it months ago:
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Read 4 tweets
Feb 3
Fascinating day in court as @antoinette_news lawyer outlines content of emails between senior members of the ABC prior to her HRW post, the pressure they came under from the lobby group Lawyers for Israel from the moment she was on air, because of her known political opinions, their conclusion the position was untenable but that they could not sack her abuse she had done nothing wrong and for fear of the phenomenal ‘blowback’.
The manner in which she was sacked - called to a brief meeting and told to collect her things and leave the building did not follow the proscribed procedure under the enterprise agreement according to her lawyer.
Her sacking followed her repost of a HRW report stating Israel was using starvation as a weapon of war.
Court adjourned briefly..
If you wish to follow, livestream here

youtube.com/live/a8RorBeAi…
Lattouf’s lawyer lists numerous additional complaints from the lobby group to the Chair and MD on the day she was sacked, and The Australian, which evidently knew of the complaints, called the ABC.
He says emails show ABC senior figures were sympathetic to the Israel lobby’s position.
A slide of AL’s post simply saying ‘HRW reporting starvation as a tool of war’ is shown - apparent this could not be construed as anything but a statement of fact, and in addition, with ABC news stories appeared on the HRW report prior to and after AL’s post.

Her lawyer refers to an unwritten expectation that ABC employees will not do at any time anything that may convey the view they are not impartial.

He says ABC claims it imposed on AL a bespoke rule (not to post about Gaza) and then sacked her for breaching that standard.

If Senior Exec Oliver Taylor asserts the post expresses an opinion, then the dismissal is because of her political opinions - ‘opinionated’ and ‘partial’ mean the same thing, so they hold the post revealed impartiality.

If Senior Management were agnostic on the Gaza issue, then they succumbed to a campaign.
Either ABC capitulated to a lobby or she breached a standard specific to her.

He says the ABC submission is long and an elaborate navigation for the ABC narrative, characteristic of a lawyers drafting, when there is ample material in the contemporaneous emails, in order to reinterpret clear statements in emails; the affidavits don’t deal with critical issues - who gave the direction and when? Her supervisor Green stated in their meeting that she did not give Lattouf a ‘directive’ not to post, she ‘advised’ her to avoid it. The complex affidavits don’t describe why the post was ‘partial’ - the post doesn’t appear in Taylor’s affidavit at all ie the very thing that was ostensibly the reason for the sacking.
Apropos communications, the ABC are prohibited from using Signal as they are subject to the Archives Act and can’t delete.
ABC Witness statements are he says replete with terms like ‘trust and confidence’, ‘impartiality’ etc
Oliver Taylor believes she was given a direction ‘bespoke to her’ not to post about Gaza, and her post ‘may’ have breached that direction.
He says the ABC justify not following their protocols for dismissal because a presenter can be removed even if she hasn’t done anything wrong (rostering change etc).
Lattouf asserts if she was not of the Lebanese race she would not have been removed in that way.
The ABC will assert says there is no evidence there is such a thing as a Lebanese race. The ABC lawyer rose - he objects to this being run as a discrimination case because it departs from the pleadings.

SAl’s lawyer says the issue is whether she was dismissed because of the HRW post, or because of objections to her political opinion by the lobby group and the Chair of the ABC.

Also, AL’s lawyer says that there could be no rational basis for Taylor to believe her post was a sackable offence. That the evidence she was given a directive particular to her was implausible given Green told management she didn’t issue a directive. Nevertheless, Taylor concluded a directive was given. And he thought there ‘may’ have been a breach of ABC social media policy.
1 of 2 for this morning session
Read 35 tweets

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