Brave Cop Who Kept Victoria Safe
Brave Cop Who Kept Victoria Safe
By Sasha Uzunov
International terrorists must be rubbing their hands with glee at the news that the Australian state of Victoria’s Police Force will abolish its highly effective counter terrorism unit, the Security Intelligence Group (SIG).
Why you would tamper with something that
has been successful is hard to fathom? In comparison, the
United States has learned its lessons after the initial 9/11
intelligence gap and recently after a decade has finally
taken out terrorism mastermind Osama bin Laden.
Australia is a federation of six states and two territories, each with their own police force. The Australian Federal Police (AFP) is a separate entity. The domestic spy service is the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO).
In light of this, a little known Victoria
Police operation 20 years ago helped to stop the flood of
illegal weapons getting onto the streets and into the hands
of home grown terrorists. The impact it had was to send a
message--loud and clear-- that overseas linked crime and
terror were not going to be tolerated in the state of
Victoria, Australia.
That story can now be told
because one of the leading figures behind that operation
passed away early last year after a long
illness.
Detective Senior Constable Geoffrey Ian Gardiner, who retired in 1998, was part of the PSG (Protective Services Group) within the Victoria Police at the old Russell Street complex in Melbourne’s city centre. His office was situated on the 5th floor, East Wing. He was a clean, honest, hard working cop.
Det Snr Const Gardiner was tasked with investigating terrorist organisations including the Tamil Tigers, and ethnic-linked crime. He was very knowledgeable about the activities of Yugoslav intelligence (UDBa) on Australian soil and even knew some of the key agents of influence!
As detailed in a previous
scoop article: www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL1003/S00021.htm
Tuesday, 2 March 2010
Yugoslavia was a
multi-ethnic communist federation founded in 1945, modelled
on the Soviet Union, and fell apart in 1991 into various
independent nation states.
Yugoslav intelligence
(UDBa) later known as SDB, together with Yugoslav military
counter-intelligence (KOS) were largely pre-occupied with
silencing dissident Croats, Macedonians, Serbs and Albanians
living in Western Europe, North America, Australia and New
Zealand, who were agitating for independence from
Yugoslavia.
UDBa was so ruthless and efficient it at
one time rivalled the old Soviet KGB and Mossad in
liquidating opponents. In Munich, West Germany, a whole
section of a cemetery was set-aside for Croats assassinated
by UDBa.
Communist strongman Marshal Josip Broz Tito
ruled Yugoslavia until his death in 1980 and during the
height of the Cold War managed a great balancing act between
East and West. He was seen as an indirect ally of the West
after his infamous split with Soviet dictator Josef Stalin
in 1949.
A number of Australian left-wing politicians,
including Victorian State MP Joan Coxsedge, began to allege
that ASIO was turning a blind eye to extremist Croatian
elements, who were secretly training on Australian soil to
undertake terrorist attacks on Yugoslav territory or upon
Yugoslav diplomatic missions in Australia.
In this
atmosphere of terrorism mania during the 1970s Australia’s
Croat community were looked upon as the bad guy.
We
now know that the alleged Croatian terrorism on Australian
soil was the work of UDBa.
Even though he passed
himself as a member of PSG, Det Snr Const Gardiner no doubt
would have worked side by side with SIG.
I got to know
Det Snr Const Gardiner in 1989 as a young cadet reporter
working for the Australian Macedonian Weekly newspaper, who
was interested in ethnic-related crime. My parents are
Macedonian migrants.
He in fact tracked me down. He
was a canny operator who would pump you for information and
would never reveal anything unless it was in his interest to
do so.
When he got wind of me investigating a leading
UDBa agent of influence based in Melbourne with links to the
Australian Labor Party’s (ALP) Socialist Left faction and
the national multicultural broadcaster The Special
Broadcasting Service (SBS), he offered some fatherly advice
by warning me that the agent of influence was “being
protected by people high above.”
But then to my
surprise Det Snr Const Gardiner proceeded to reveal to me
that the agent of influence had between 1968 and 1979
amassed criminal convictions in the state of Victoria for
stolen goods, illegal gaming and financial deception. The
last conviction was obtained for passing off a bogus cheque
in the name of Red Star Belgrade, an overseas Yugoslav
soccer team, at a pub in the Melbourne western suburb of
Footscray.
The UDBa agent of influence was permitted
to work as a state public servant despite their criminal
record. ASIO had sealed their rap sheet from ordinary police
access. The inference being that the agent of influence may
have been cultivated as a “double agent.” But questions
remain as to why an employee police check was never
conducted by both the Victorian Public Service or
SBS?
In a visit to Skopje, the capital of Macedonia in
1992, a year after it declared independence from Yugoslavia,
I met with Mr Aleksandar Dinevski, a former Interior
Ministry Officer, who confirmed the above-mentioned
individual was an UDBa informer in Australia. The Interior
Ministry is responsible for policing and the secret
service
Another name supplied by Det Snr Const
Gardiner was an individual who was a member of a Balkan
mafia group based in Melbourne. In 2002 when I mentioned
this name to another Macedonian Interior Ministry Officer,
he confirmed that the individual was involved in drugs and
illegal weapons.
One of Gardiner’s favourite
warnings was" If you write anything about me, I'll chop you!
Wait till I’m long gone." I kept my end of the bargain for
20 years!
In 1990 he telephoned me out of the blue
asking for some information on a stolen weapons racket and
if I had heard anything. He said he was deeply concerned
about weapons getting into the hands of the wrong people. I
told him I knew nothing and asked if he would
elaborate.
But being the loyal policeman he did not go
into detail. Months later, the story unfolded about a Police
operation targeting stolen weapons. One of those
unexpectedly caught in the dragnet was Oliver Bubevich (aka
as Bubev, Bubevski), also the son of Macedonian migrants,
and a Vic Roads (vehicle licensing office) employee and the
then owner of a pub (bar) in Fitzroy, a Melbourne’s
northern inner suburb. Bubevich was an obsessed illegal gun
collector without links to organised crime or Yugoslav
intelligence.
According to a Herald Sun newspaper report, dated 22 March 1991, "A MAN who hid a gun in his stove and ammunition in his kitchen cupboards was fined $2500 yesterday for possessing 15 unregistered firearms. Magistrate Mr David McLennan also ordered Oliver Bubevich to perform 300 hours of unpaid community work.
"Melbourne
Magistrates' Court heard on Wednesday that Bubevich was
fascinated with guns and had 23 weapons - all with serial
numbers drilled out or stamped over. The weapons, hidden
throughout his Thomastown house, were found when police
raided the property last year. Bubevich, 36, of Winamarra
Cres, pleaded guilty to two counts of unlawful possession,
one count of possessing silencers and 15 counts of
possessing unregistered and unlicensed firearms.
The
court was told police raided Bubevich's house after finding
two unregistered handguns in his car and another two
unregistered weapons in a second man's car after Bubevich
had sold them to him.
"Bubevich denied supplying guns
to the underworld and said his fascination with guns had led
him to disregard the fact the serial numbers had been
deleted. He told the court he had bought two of the guns
from a man at a Fitzroy hotel and had found the rest on the
site of a demolished Preston house.
" On 21 March
1991, the Herald Sun wrote: "Prosecutor Sen-Constable
Maurice Lynn told the court Bubevich was arrested after
police found two guns in his car on November 7, 1990. "They
found two more guns, a .38 Rossi revolver and a .32 Webley
and Scott pistol in a second man's car after Bubevich had
sold them to him, he said. Sen-Constable Lynn said police
then raided Bubevich's house and found 23 unregistered guns,
two silencers and a large quantity of ammunition in kitchen
cupboards.
"Bubevich's lawyer, Mr Peter Finkelstein,
said his client was a "gun collector gone wrong". Magistrate
David McLennan said he was not satisfied beyond reasonable
doubt that Bubevich had supplied guns to crime figures."
Mr Aco Talevski, a long time Macedonian human rights
activist and former Orthodox Church leader, gave an
interview filmed on camera last year.
He
revealed:
“I met Geoff Gardiner in the early 1980s
through my friend Stojan Sarbinov (another long time
Macedonian activist). Geoff Gardiner was a member of the
Victorian Police anti-terrorism squad.
“I had
numerous meetings with Geoff Gardiner as a representative of
the Macedonian community (in Melbourne) because in the past
we organized a lot of protests…He was assigned to
communicate with the ethnic groups.
“As a democratic
society here in Australia everybody has the right to express
their opinion…but it has to be conducted in a civilized
and peaceful manner.”
Mr Talevski said that Gardiner
had confirmed to him that a number of individuals who were
saboteurs of Macedonian community events were connected to
the Yugoslav government.
“These people were well
connected and protected by certain forces. He (Gardiner)
didn’t go further in saying…” Mr Talevski
said.
Police of the calibre of Geoff Gardiner are very rare. It was because of his attention to detail, the willingness to be flexible that the shenanigans perpetrated by UDBa in the state of New South Wales, and aided indirectly by the incompetence of NSW Police Special Branch and ASIO, in the 1970s, such as the Croatian Six case did not happen in the state of Victoria.
Infamous ex-NSW Police Detective Roger Rogerson, now an author, was involved in two of Australia’s highly contentious cases, the Ananda Marga-Hilton Hotel bombing and the the Croatian Six case. In February 1979 Rogerson led the raid on the Sydney home of Mile Nekic, one of the Croatian Six.
In 1991 legendary
ABC TV investigative reporter Chris Masters dropped a
bombshell on the Four Corners program.
Masters filed a
story about The Croatian Six case. An agent provocateur set
up members of Australia's Croatian community in 1979. Six
Croats were imprisoned on false charges of wanting to plant
bombs in Sydney.
Masters tracked down the agent
provocateur, Vitomir Visimovic, who was an ethnic Serb
living in Bosnia but had passed himself off as a
Croat.
In fact, ASIO, the Australian Federal Police
(successor of the Commonwealth Police) and the infamous and
corrupt New South Wales Police Special Branch were all aware
that Visimovic was an UDBa operative but suppressed the
information during the trial of the Croatian Six. Moreover,
the alarming thing was the Australian authorities let the
man depart the country. This was during Malcolm Fraser’s
tenure as Prime Minister (1975-83).
In a filmed
interview last month, Rogerson revealed to me that ASIO were
“amateurs.”
Victoria Police's motto is Uphold the
Right...Tenez Le Droit...It certainly did that back in
1990-91 in keeping our streets safe from weapons falling
into the hands of the bad guys. But we should never remain
complacent.
(end)