Decade Since Zaoui Sought Asylum In NZ – Have We Learned From SIS's Mistakes?
.Investigative Documentary: Behind The Shroud Released
Ten years has now passed since Algerian politician Ahmed Zaoui arrived in New Zealand seeking asylum. But what
assurances have we been given to ensure our intelligence agencies do not fail tax payers again?
Journalist and director of the investigative documentary film Behind The Shroud, Selwyn Manning, said after ten years
since Zaoui arrived at Auckland International Airport claiming to be a legitimate refugee - where he was accused by the
New Zealand Security Intelligence Service (SIS) of being terrorist – the public is none the wiser as to why he was
finally allowed to live freely in this country.
Ahmed Zaoui arrived in New Zealand on December 2, 2002 and was immediately detained under terrorism suppression laws.
In 2003, the SIS issued New Zealand's first security risk certificate deeming Ahmed Zaoui a threat to New Zealand's
national security. He was then imprisoned for almost two years (including ten months in solitary confinement in
Paremoremo maximum security prison). He experienced years of being vilified in the Parliament by Cabinet Ministers and
MPs, and he was considered a dangerous extremist by thousands of Kiwis.
Suddenly in 2007, the Director of Security Dr Warren Tucker informed New Zealanders Zaoui was no longer a threat.
“But after costing tax payers in excess of $4million, what the Director of Security did not tell New Zealanders was why
the intelligence agency got this asylum seeker case so wrong,” Selwyn Manning said.
“The way this case ended left a raft of unanswered questions.
“Why was it that in 2007 the New Zealand Government canceled its security risk certificate against the refugee? Why
after years fighting in the High Court and Court of Appeal the SIS and the Government dropped their case? Who or what
caused the Government to back down?
“In short, officially, the public were denied an explanation as to why Ahmed Zaoui and his family were suddenly invited
to live in peace in New Zealand,” Selwyn Manning said.
Finally, after five years of investigation, the documentary film Behind The Shroud answers many of the unanswered
questions and has now been released to the public.
The documentary goes deep into the backstory of Zaoui's experience, investigates why the NZSIS cancelled its security
risk certificate, and makes public for the first time interviews with two secret witnesses who each gave testimony at
classified hearings held by Justice Paul Neazor, New Zealand's Inspector General of Intelligence and Security.
“The revelations of Lieutenant Colonel Mohamed Samraoui, the Algeria regime's former head of intelligence and
counter-espionage in north Europe, and Professor George Joffe, the UK's expert on north Africa affairs from Cambridge
University, both reveal why Zaoui was considered an enemy of his homeland, why Algeria launched a black-flag operation
against him, and why he would likely be executed should he return to Algeria,” Selwyn Manning said.
He said: “The testimonies offer compelling evidence of how totalitarian regimes work to destroy or neutralise their
opponents.
“The testimony presented in this documentary also lays bare how our intelligence agencies in New Zealand failed to
accurately assess whether information supplied by France, Belgium and Switzerland could be relied on, or whether it had
been corrupted by disinformation created by Algeria's military intelligence agency the DRS,” Selwyn Manning said.
The documentary Behind The Shroud presents a critique as to whether New Zealand's intelligence agencies' external
assessments are serving our public and national interest.
Experts interviewed include: Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Wilkie, former senior intelligence officer and adviser to prime
minister John Howard; Dr Paul Buchanan, former US security analyst; and the late Graeme Hunt, journalist and historian.
These three men argue intelligence agency reform is necessary.
Others, like former politicians Hon Matt Robson and Green MP Keith Locke give a commanding appraisal of how the New
Zealand Government became compliant to a disinformation campaign masterminded by Algeria, a foreign authoritarian
regime.
“Surely, after ten years, the New Zealand public deserves to know why tax payer money to the tune of over $4million was
wasted. Additionally, Kiwis deserve to be assured that such a huge mistake in both fiscal and human terms will not and
can not happen again,” Selwyn Manning said.
For more on the documentary Behind The Shroud, including a list of the full cast and trailer, see www.LoneWolfFilmsNZ.com.
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