Anonymous Bites Back - The second Special episode with David McBride #Afghanfiles​ #DavidMcBrideTrial

in #anonymous3 years ago (edited)

In our second interview with David McBride, we went into a deep dive about his experiences as a whistleblower. In particular, how he changed from a normal person into a whistleblower. He explained he never expected to become like this, but it had to be done. We also go into how digital wars are fought, how censorship plays a role and how every military now has it's own PR department.

An enlightening interview with this great activist for truth, who faces prison time for exposing the crimes of the Australian military in Afghanistan. He promised to be back next week, and we plan to do a weekly podcast with him from now on.

Background on David McBride:

Between 2014 and 2016, former Australian Defence Force lawyer, David McBride leaked material alleging war crimes by members of the Australia’s Special Operations Task Group in Afghanistan to two journalists at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), Dan Oakes and Sam Clark. McBride’s lawyer maintains he did this after reporting his concerns through the chain of command. In 2017, Oakes and Clark reported in the Afghan Files multiple incidents of special forces troops killing unarmed civilians including children and raised wider concerns around the “warrior culture” of Australia’s special forces.

David McBride was charged with multiple counts of unlawfully communicating military information contrary to s73A(1) of the Defence Act 1903, theft of Commonwealth property and unlawfully disclosing a Commonwealth document contrary to s70(1) of the Crimes Act 1914.

In May 2019, McBride pleaded not guilty to each charge on the grounds that his disclosures were in the public interest. He is presently awaiting trial.

In November 2020, the Australian Chief of Defence Force released the findings of the Inspector General of the Australian Defence Force Afghanistan Inquiry Report by Major General Paul Brereton, a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales (the Brereton Report). The Brereton Report found evidence for 23 incidents committed by 19 individuals resulting in the deaths of 39 civilians and the cruel treatment of 2 others.

The Australian Government has since established a new Office of the Special Investigator to investigate criminal charges arising from the Brereton Report and an Oversight Panel to investigate broader cultural and organisational issues.

Discontinuing prosecution of McBride, while expediting the continuing efforts to investigate prosecution of potential perpetrators of war crimes, would send a signal to the world that Australia takes these allegations seriously, respects the laws of war and is committed to making reform to prevent future misconduct.

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Great interview Mark!

You know who else I'd like to hear on Anonymous Bytes Back is Steven Donziger. He was the lawyer who represented indigenous people in Equador when they won the landmark ruling against Chevron for dumping massive amounts of toxic sludge in the Ecuadorian rainforest.
Now, he's under house arrest and Chevron is using all of their weapons and the legal system to bankrupt him and destroy his life. Seriously, get him on the show!

https://www.greenpeace.org/international/story/28741/steven-donziger-chevron-oil-amazon-contamination-injustice/

Also, please look into uploading your video content to @threespeak, the native video platform on Hive.

https://3speak.co/

Peace!

Hey thats a good idea, I will try to get him in.

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