Top-secret government cabinet papers and documents found

  • Secret documents have been found inside two filing cabinets sold at an auction
  • Thousands of documents covering a decade included Middle East defence plans
  • They included national security briefs and intelligence on Australia’s neighbours

A treasure trove of secret and highly sensitive cabinet documents has been discovered in two second-hand filing cabinets bought at a Canberra auction.

Cabinet papers are usually not publicly released until 20 years after their production.

But the ABC has uncovered thousands of documents, some classified ‘top secret’, covering five governments over a decade.

The documents show ASIO was told to delay security checks to asylum seekers would miss deadlines and be unable to receive permanent protection visas.

They also reveal the National Security Committee under the Howard Government considered removing the right to remain silent under police questioning.

A treasure trove of secret and highly sensitive cabinet documents has been discovered in two second-hand filing cabinets bought at a Canberra auction (pictured is a stock image of Parliament House in Canberra)

One document points to an audit showing the Australian Federal Police lost almost 400 national security files over five years.

The loss of the documents, which had been through the national security committee of cabinet between 2008 and 2013, was uncovered in an audit by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet.

In one paper, it was revealed former prime minister Tony Abbott (pictured) ignored legal advice when he handed over cabinet documents to the insulation royal commission

In one paper, it was revealed former prime minister Tony Abbott (pictured) ignored legal advice when he handed over cabinet documents to the insulation royal commission

The papers also included a document that stated 195 top-secret codeword-protected and sensitive documents had been left in the office of former Labor government minister Penny Wong when Labor lost the 2013 election.

The documents which were left in the office – but not included in the old filing cabinets – included Middle East defence plans.

They also included national security briefs, Afghan war updates, intelligence on Australia’s neighbours and details of counter-terrorism operations.

In another paper, it was revealed former prime minister Tony Abbott ignored legal advice when he handed over cabinet documents to the insulation royal commission.

‘We think it would be highly undesirable (and legally confounding) if the Commonwealth were to simply produce cabinet-related documents to the royal commission on the basis of a purported waiver of public interest immunity,’ read the advice from Tom Howe QC, chief counsel at the Australian Government Solicitor.

 



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