Senator
Nick Xenophon has called on Australia's charity regulators to
investigate Scientology in the wake allegations set out in Alex
Gibney's bombshell documentary on the movement.
The
shockwaves created by Alex Gibney's documentary on Scientology, Going
Clear, have reached Down Under.
More
than five years after first denouncing Scientology's activities in
Australia, independent Senator Nick Xenophon has returned to the
fray, calling on the authorities to investigate Scientology's
charitable status.
In
a letter to the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission
(ACNC), Senator Xenophon said he was prompted to write by the
allegations contained in Gibney's documentary, in which he says Scientology:
- tortures its members;
- has stolen US Government documents;
- requires current members to cut ties with friends and families who quit the movement (disconnection);
“The
Church of Scientology is a global organisation with common rules that
apply to all of its branches,” he continued. “I am deeply
concerned about the potentially wide-reaching and harmful influence
this organisation may have on its Australian branches...
“I
therefore request that a review is conducted into the charitable
status of the Church of Scientology and any associated entities in
Australia as a matter of urgency,” Senator Xenophon said.
Gibney's
documentary goes into detail about the violence meted about by
Scientology's leader, David Miscavige, and the humiliating
punishments he is still inflicting on those who are – nominally at
least – his most senior lieutenants.1
His
interview subjects include Mark Rathbun and Mike Rinder, two of the
movement's most senior former executives, both of whom have witnessed
Miscavige's violence, as well as being on the receiving end.
The
allegations of the theft of government documents appears to be a
reference to Operation Snow White, back in the 1970s. Those
activities, when they were finally uncovered, led to FBI raids of
Scientology premises in 1977 and the conviction of 11 senior members
– including founder L.Ron Hubbard's own wife, Mary Sue – a few
years later.
And
Scientology's practice of disconnection – forcing its members to
break off contact with anyone deemed an enemy of the movement – has
been well-documented in the media.2
Violence
at the top, espionage and Scientology's disconnection policy: on the
face of it, there is nothing her that a seasoned Scientology watcher
did not already know about.
And
having stood up in Australia's Senate in November 2009 to denounce
abuses committed by Scientology that were at least as serious, if not
worse, the issues he is raising now cannot be new to Senator
Xenophon.
But
the force of Gibney's documentary is such that it has become a major
media event. And as Tony Ortega recently pointed out over at The
Underground Bunker it has prompted more journalists to start
asking tougher questions of John Travolta and Tom Cruise, the two
celebrity members Gibney zooms in on in his film.3
Perhaps
the senator thought now was a good time to revive the campaign he
started in 2009.
“Scientology
is not a religious organisation,” he told the Senate at the time.
“It is a criminal organisation that hides behind its so-called
religious beliefs. What you believe does not mean you are not
accountable for how you behave.”
In
his letter to the ACNC, Senator Xenophon mentioned that Scientology's
organisations in Australia were registered as charities for the
purpose of “advance religion”. Clearly he doesn't see it that
way.
Vicki
Dunstan, Scientology's president in Australia, has responded to the
senator's latest initiative in comments
to the Australian media.
“I
am afraid he has bought into the propaganda and continues to try the
Church of Scientology in the media and hold a kangaroo court,’’
she said.
“Only
now he is using a Hollywood work of fiction as his source of
disinformation about the church, to resurrect his old witch-hunt and
waste taxpayer funds on this pointless exercise.’’
For
the moment, all the ACNC has done is acknowledged receipt of the
letter: it will be a while before we know if they actually intend to
act on it.
In
the meantime, listen to this interview with Senator Xenophon on
Australia's
Studio 10 programme, in which he sets out his case. As usual,
he's done his homework.
In
Australia, a group gets charitable status if is recognised as a
church. Senator Xenophon suggests that a better test would be the one
used by the Charity Commission for England and Wales – that a
group should serve the public good. The Charity Commission decided in
1999 that Scientology failed that test.4
And
not for the first time, he calls for a government cults watchdog
along the lines of France's MIVILUDES. Georges Fenech, when he was
still president of MIVILUDES (the inter-ministerial mission for
monitoring and fighting cults abuses), met Senator Xenophon during a
visit to Australia in 2011.
Start
here for a look back at Senator Xenophon's campaign and the
letters from former members that prompted him to stand up in the
senate and speak out.
And
go here for a detailed summary of the letters from former
Scientologists that prompted his campaign – letters he subsequently
filed with the Senate.
Update:
In
his letter, Xenophon wrote: “According to the ACNC's website there
are 14 organisations that contain the word 'scientology' in their
names that are, or have been, registered as charities. Of those 14
organisations, two have had their registration revoked and one has
had its registration voluntarily revoked.”
I
got 13 when I searched
under “Scientology”. Here they are:
Follow
the links to the Launceston and Melbourne missions and you learn that
both had their charity status revoked because their annual reports
were 12 months overdue.
As
Xenophon had noted, both had the advancement of religion as their
stated purpose.
In
his letter, the senator requested an investigation not just of
Scientology but of “any associated organisations”. A quick browse
of the database shows that that was a wise precaution.
Here
are some of the usual suspects.
The
Asoociation [sic] for Better Living and Education Inc.? Check.
(Shame about the typo, though.) ABLE of course, is an umbrella group for a number of Scientology-rooted organisations, as you can see from this
website.
Narconon?
Check. The disastrous drug rehab programme based on Hubbard's quack
treatment features no less than five times:
The
Commission has revoked the licences for three of them; a fourth
voluntarily, leaving just one still standing.1
In
any case, Australia seems to have woken up to the dangers of the
organisation. As Tony
Ortega reported in February, campaigners in Warburton, in the
state of Victoria, stopped one opening there.
Criminon,
Scientology's prison programme, does not feature on the charities
list. But Applied
Scholastics Western Australia is out there, running its
Hubbard-devised reeding-iz-eezee programme.
And
so on, and so forth; you get the idea. And no doubt there are more. But why should I have
all the fun?
Settle
down with cold drink and some munchies, open up your list
of Scientology front groups and start punching them into the Commission's search engine.
Only
don't go denouncing the horse rescuers or the bulldog breeders just
because they put “Second Chance” in their title.
---
1 For
those of you not lucky enough to have seen the documentary yet, Tony
Ortega wrote a comprehensive series of article in the run-up to its
March 29 HBO premier in the US. Start
here for full details of the documentary and Gibney's interview
subjects.
2 For
a more detailed explanation of disconnection, see “Introduction
to Disconnection” elsewhere at this site. For a particularly
egregious example, see “The
Henderson's Story”. Over at the Underground Bunker, Tony
Ortega had returned to this subject again and again: take
your pick from this list.
3 His
April 8 post, second item: “Reporters
asking better questions of Scientology celebrities”.
4 For
details of the Charities Commission's decision see
here.
5 If you want to know what's wrong with Narconon, have a look at the articles on the subject at this website; or search Tony Ortega's site for the string of lawsuits the organisation is facing in the United States; or look at the comprehensive website on the subject developed by Dave Touretzky and Chris Owen: Narconon Exposed.
5 If you want to know what's wrong with Narconon, have a look at the articles on the subject at this website; or search Tony Ortega's site for the string of lawsuits the organisation is facing in the United States; or look at the comprehensive website on the subject developed by Dave Touretzky and Chris Owen: Narconon Exposed.
Nick Xenophon needs to come to the United States and show us how it is done.
ReplyDeleteAlanzo
Every country should have a MIVILUDES...
ReplyDeleteI wonder if any former victims or any critics of the criminal organisation known as the "church" of $cientology have been followed by private investigators? The revelations from the US are coming hard and fast, and are completely aligned with teh experiences and suspicions of many other people. Using money for PIs on sleazy missions should not be tax exempt. We wonder about Nicole Kidman, the Packer family, etc etc.
Yes!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jonny.
ReplyDeleteActually, I meant to make the point that Xenophon is going great guns at a time when US citizens are being encouraged to write to their Congressmen. Perhaps that's something they should be drawing to the attention of their representatives.
ReplyDeleteGreat job Nick. I will snail mail my state Senators requesting they support him
ReplyDeleteWhat can I say, Richelieu, I'm an old-fashioned guy. :-) Actually no: it's just something I've never been able to fix.
ReplyDeleteIf anyone has any suggestions as to how to fix this, they would be most welcome. One of these days, when I have a moment to spare, I might just move the whole site over to WordPress -- but not any time soon.
OK, gotcha!
ReplyDeleteHere’s a good tip— just put black tape over the blinking 12:00 on your VCR.. It’s like it was ever there! ;-)
I am so busted.
ReplyDeleteWith great power comes great responsibility. The great power provided by the First AmenhmenIt should come with the great responsibility of bettering the public good. Scientology benefits nobody but their own leadership. It acts as a business (that's being charitable, it really acts more as a mafia) and therefore should be taxed as a business is.
ReplyDeleteThis! A thousand times This Thank you
ReplyDeleteI've just finished reading your piece about Nick Xenophon on your site
ReplyDeleteand thought you might like to know a little more about the Launceston,
Tasmania, church (and I use that word loosely) of scientology. It's
located in a dingy and dark cheap outer part of the C.B.D. (believe it
or not they occasionally turn on a light) otherwise it's more like a
gloomy dungeon. The dimensions of the "church" is on a rough scale of 6x8
metres. In the nearly three years I've been in Launceston I've seen
no-one enter the shop apart from the two middle-aged couples that man
(person?) the place. Somehow I think the 47x expansion seems to have
missed this cell.
Thank you for the link, Johnny. Some very interesting records on that site.
ReplyDeleteOf note, nothing listed for Citizens Commission On Human Rights or CCHR.
WIN!
Thanks for the update, Kronomex. I expect they're just biding their time, waiting for the right moment for the Next Big Push.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the update, Kronomex. I expect they're just biding their time, waiting for the right moment for the Next Big Push.
ReplyDelete