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Sunday, April 19, 2026

Criminal trial for war crimes whistleblower to begin - 9News

The trial of a man who revealed allegations of Australian soldiers committing war crimes in Afghanistan is set to begin today, despite late calls from whistleblower advocates for the government to halt the prosecution.

The Commonwealth is prosecuting former military lawyer David McBride in the ACT Supreme Court for allegedly leaking classified documents.

He is facing charges of theft of commonwealth property, breaching the Defence Act and unauthorised disclosure of information.

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A subsequent inquiry following his revelations found that Australian special forces committed at least 39 unlawful killings during the Afghanistan war and treated two prisoners with cruelty.

Former senator and founder of the Whistleblower Justice Fund Rex Patrick said the government needed to use the powers it had to stop the trial.

Whistleblower activists are planning to protest the prosecution outside the court before the hearing.

Human Rights Law Centre senior lawyer Kieran Pender said there was no public interest case for prosecuting whistleblowers.

"Today is a dark day for Australian democracy - the truth is on trial," he said.

Patrick said the government needed to use the powers it had to stop the trial.

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"We may now see one brave whistleblower behind bars and thousands of prospective whistleblowers lost from the community," he said.

"There was no public interest...



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