Saturday, September 28, 2013

PREPARE A SECURITY BRIEFING ON POSSIBLE THREATS TO THE SECURITY OF THE UPCOMING G20 SUMMIT IN BRISBANE, FROM NOVEMBER 14-17, 2014.

By Tim Tufuga, 6th Sept. 2013.
Prepare a security briefing on possible threats to the security of the upcoming G20 Summit in Brisbane in 2014. By Tim Tufuga sn 43311792
Submitted: 6th September, 2013.

Synopsis:

The security synopsis for the G20 summit meeting in Brisbane in 2014 will test the security integrity and organisational mettle of the Australian national security community. This event would easily be considered as the most critically concentrated security effective zone more so than the Baghdad Green Zone. The security community will be likened to an iceberg metaphor of coordination, monitoring, surveillance, and information sharing that will view at the prominent face of Australia’s national security being the Queensland Police service,on behalf of the Queensland government, to provide the G20 security. Submerged from the surface is the complex web and intricate networks of the Australian National Security community at the hub of which lies the Australian Intelligence Community. The Brisbane G20 summit meeting will be considered as a near to a ‘Titanic’ Australian National Security integrity challenge for not only the Queensland government, but, for Australia’s global reputation.

Legislative and executive powers pertaining to the G20 summit meeting.

The G20 (Safety and Security Bill) 2013.

The Queensland police, and affected law enforcement agencies, both within Australia and New Zealand, as well as, the G20 respective member nation’s security detail, will be specifically given relevant privileges, and or special powers, during the G20 summit event in Brisbane under law.

Special discretionary police powers will be legislated under the Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000 (PPRA), which will allow for the police to discretionary direct, order, search, and or detain, any person, property, or vehicle, without warrant. More specifically, such powers will include the exclusion, and, or the prohibition, of certain persons from being within the designated exclusion and security zones during the G20 event in Brisbane in November 2014. Therefore, blacklisting of persons of interest, as Excluded and Prohibited persons, during the G20 summit meeting, as legislated under the G20 (Safety and Security Bill) 2013, will be a peculiar feature of this temporary law.

Overall, the objective of the legislation is:

1. To protect the safety or security of persons attending any part of the G20 meeting.
2. Ensure the safety of the public from acts of civil disobedience in relation to the G20 meeting
3. Prevent acts of terrorism, and finally,
4. Regulate traffic and pedestrian movement.
G20 Security Detail:

Prima facie, the G20 security detail within Brisbane will be the specific responsibility of the Queensland government. Jurisdictionally speaking, the Queensland Police Service will be the primary source for the overall G20 Security. The Assistant Commissioner Katarina Carroll has been appointed as the head of the Brisbane G20 security detail. The G20 taskforce will articulate security matters from the Prime Minister and Cabinet Department, the respective security agencies within the Australian Intelligence Community, the Australian Federal Police, Australia Crime Commission, the Australian Defence Force, the respective state police services, including the New Zealand Police service. Externally from the immediate security detail is the adjunct coordination and cooperation with other local, State, and Federal government, and non-government, emergency service providers, who will all be part of the security contingency with their specific respective responsibilities before, during, and after, the 2014 G20 Summit meeting in Brisbane.

Externally, the coordination of security matters to other G20 member nations will be the through the advisement from the Australian Sherpa. The respective government’s will be duly advised and will work with the Australian domestic law enforcement, and intelligence community.

Geo-Spatial security zones for G20 Summit in Brisbane November 14th-17th, 2014.

The primary focus of this security brief will focus on the geo-spatial vulnerabilities of the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre (BCEC) and the proximity approaches to and from the centre by the motorcades of the respective political leaders. The schematic of the BCEC will demonstrate the transparency vulnerabilities for holding a G20 conference in such a public accessible and transparent institute.

 
(Brisbane Courier Mail)

(BCEC)

Potential sources of disruptive behaviour:
As the Saint Petersburg’s example has revealed the Russian G20 Summit had been disrupted only slightly by demonstrators protesting Russian anti-Gay Discrimination laws. In Brisbane, however, the most likely regional concern may emanate from the Anti-whaling lobby who may try to put a word in edgewise. The likely source of these potential disruptions are from the usual suspects of the disgruntled politically disaffected, the disenfranchised, and the specific political agenda setting lobby groups as sourced from the Indigenous people lobby groups; the Nationalist Anarchists; or, from the left wing neo-Marxist elements; as well as, current expected anti-war protestations, and other usual thematic political demonstrations, most protestors will likely be university and other tertiary institute students and unemployed politically charged people; and, finally, at the lowest ebb, the odd miscreant rabble rouser; all of which will aggregate, and converge, into Brisbane come November 14th through till the 17th, 2014.
Therefore, Brisbane, will undoubtedly, entice many and varied numbers of potential security threats. Once again to reiterate the theme that at the highest level of the critical threat matrix is a critical infrastructural terrorist event, and at the lowest level and the most probable expectation would be the street protest marches, all of which will expose many security vulnerabilities for Brisbane, and Australia’s national security strategy.

Modus operandi for anti-G20 protestation, and the Queensland Police Service’s Police Public Safety Response Team (PPSRT).

The primary threat to the G20 Summit meeting in Brisbane will most likely be in the form of protest marches. If the protest become potentially virulently violent, similar to the Toronto riots in the G20 Summit Meeting, in 2010, then the modus operandi for the protest organisers will be particularly noted. The Black Bloc tactics was initiated by the protest organisers and this form of organisation is considered as the most likely tactic to be initiated by professional rabble rousers.

The QPS PPRST, in response, will be trained accordingly in order to initiate the tried and tested method of kettling tactics. Conversely, the Black Bloc tactics methods will be spontaneously adopted by the Protestors. The strategy is not dissimilar to the Chinese strategic game of ‘Go’.

The objective of the strategic game seems straight forwardly simple in that the process of encircling an opponent, or in escaping an entrapment, will be initiated by protestors, and the kettling tactics, as the response by the police. In actuality, the police will encircle and corral the protest marches whereas the marches will endeavour to break the mustering cordon.


The challenge gauntlet has been given for the Australian National security integrity and the Queensland and Australian people will respond as effectively as well.

Tim Tufuga SN. 43311792
6th September, 2013.
References:

Queensland Government, G20 (Safety and Security) Bill, 2013, https://www.legislation.qld.gov.au/Bills/54PDF/2013/G20SafetySecurityB13.pdf

Queensland Government, Police Powers and Responsibilities Act, 2000, http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/qld/consol_act/ppara2000365/

Queensland Government, Op.cit.

Queensland Government, Queensland Police Media release, July, 23, 2013. http://statements.qld.gov.au/Statement/2013/7/23/police-consult-community-about-g20-plans

Occupy Brisbane, Facebook.com, https://www.facebook.com/OccupyG20Brisbane?fref=ts

Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre (BCEC), http://www.bcec.com.au/

Associated Press, ABCNews, September 5th, 2013. http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/activists-target-russian-gay-law-g20-protest-20167839

Occupy Brisbane, Op.cit.

Queensland Government Op.cit.

Wikipedia, Black Bloc Tactics, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_bloc

Wikipedia, Kettling Tactics, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kettling

YouTube.com, Kettling tactics in Glasgow Student protests, December 10, 2010, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvyfxghZLK0

Wibble, Kettling, http://media.pyweek.org/dl/8/Wibble/5.jpg


http://timbtufuga.blogspot.com.au/2013/09/prepare-security-briefing-on-possible.html


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