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<H1>Shock as columnist investigated for un-American activity </H1>
<P>Date: 07/12/2001</P>
<P><FONT face=Arial size=2>Sydney Morning Herald</FONT></P>
<P><B><FONT color=#333333><B><WOF>Phillip Adams, defender of the rights of man,
is in an unexpected spot of bother, Pilita Clark reports. </WOF></B></FONT>
<P></B></P>
<P><B></B></P>
<P><BOD>It sounds too strange to be true.</P>
<P>Warren Beeby, the group editorial manager of News Ltd, publisher of <I>The
Australian</I> newspaper, says he can barely believe it himself.</P>
<P>But yesterday he confirmed that one of the paper's better-known columnists,
the ABC broadcaster Phillip Adams, is under investigation for alleged racial
vilification by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission.</P>
<P>Adams is such a vigorous opponent of racism, discrimination and all manner of
oppression that the Prime Minister once famously urged the ABC to find a
"right-wing Phillip Adams" to balance its political output.</P>
<P>But Mr Beeby said an American citizen had complained to the commission over a
column Adams wrote in October about Australia's "blank cheque" support of the
United States's war against terrorism.</P>
<P>In the column, Adams argued that US history was replete with racial violence
at home and flawed foreign policy abroad, including the bombing of Cambodia,
complicity with the Pinochet regime in Chile and one-time support for Iraq's
Saddam Hussein.</P>
<P>"If Australia is to be a true friend of the American people, we must try to
rein them in, not urge them on," he wrote. "The US has to learn that its worst
enemy is the US."</P>
<P>Mr Beeby said the commission wrote to News Ltd in late November asking for a
response to a complaint it had received about Adams and the column.</P>
<P>"We're in the process of replying on behalf of the newspaper and Phillip is
in the process of thinking what he will say as well," he said.</P>
<P>Mr Beeby first raised the complaint, without naming Adams, in a speech on
press freedom to the Commonwealth Press Union earlier this week.</P>
<P>He told the <I>Herald</I> yesterday he found it hard to believe the
commission could take such a complaint seriously. "I've never heard of an
American being racially vilified before. I think this is one of the great
tragedies of our time."</P>
<P>He said it was of deep concern to all Australian media organisations when
bodies such as the commission used their powers to stifle debate critical to the
public interest, such as Adams's column.</P>
<P>"It was a clinically argued case, whether you agree with it or not, and an
important part of the debate about what is going on, and suddenly it's racial
vilification of Americans."</P>
<P>A spokeswoman for the commission said it never commented on complaints before
it. "All I can say is the normal procedure for complaints is to ask for a
response [from those being complained about]. We would then examine the
complaint and if it is lacking in substance we would terminate it."</P>
<P>Phillip Adams could not be reached last night.</P></DIV></BODY></HTML>