Introduction
Moruroa, Mon Amour, the celebrated and damning indictment of French nuclear colonialism in the Pacific, by the late Tahiti-based authors and campaigners Marie-Thérèse and Bengt Danielsson (1977), was republished with new sections in 1986 under the title Poisoned Reign. At the time, French intransigence over nuclear testing and demands for independence in Tahiti were at a peak. The Greenpeace environmental campaign flagship Rainbow Warrior had been bombed by French secret agents the previous year. It seemed unlikely then that less than two decades later, nuclear testing would finally be abandoned in the South Pacific, and Tahiti’s leading nuclear-free and pro-independence politician, Oscar Manutahi Temaru, would emerge as the territory’s new president, ushering in a refreshing “new order” with a commitment to pan-Pacific relations.
In January 2006, then French President Jacques Chirac threatened to use nuclear weapons against any country that carried out a state-sponsored terrorist attack against it (cited in Robie, 2006). During his missile-rattling defence of a €3 billion-a-year nuclear strike force, Chirac said the target was not “fanatical terrorists”, but states that used “terrorist means” or “weapons of mass destruction” against France. The irony seemed lost on him that the only example of state-backed terrorism against New Zealand, codenamed Operation Satanic, had been committed by the French secret service on July 10, 1985. French authorities initially covered up the attack with a litany of lies and hypocrisy (Amery, 1989; King, 1986; Lecompte, 1985; Robie, 1986; 1989; 2005; Szabo, 1991; The Sunday Times Insight Team, 1986).
Chirac made the threat at a naval base near Brest while addressing the crew of one of four nuclear submarines that carry almost 90 per cent of France’s nuclear warheads. It came a few months after documents published in France showed the Rainbow Warrior attack had been conducted with the “personal authorisation” of the late President François Mitterrand. On July 10, 2005, a Le Monde newspaper article published extracts from a 1986 handwritten account by Admiral Pierre Lacoste, former head of France’s DGSE secret service (France’s Mitterrand authorised 1985 bombing of Greenpeace boat, 2005). Lacoste said he had asked the President for permission to embark on a plan to “neutralise” the Rainbow Warrior and would never have gone ahead without his authorisation.
I asked the President if he gave me permission to put into action the neutralisation plan that I had studied on the request of Monsieur [Charles] Hernu [Defence Minister at the time]. He gave me his agreement while stressing the importance he placed on the nuclear tests. (Ibid.)
Figure 1: Chronology of key cases involving the Rainbow Warrior
July 10, 1985 Rainbow Warrior bombed in Waitemata Harbour, photographer Fernando Pereira drowned
July 12, 1985
French secret agents Alain Mafart and Dominique Prieur arrested as “Swiss honeymooning couple”
July 16, 1985
Three French secret agents on board the bomb supply yacht Ouvea released by Australian authorities on Norfolk Island, set sail and disappear – apparently picked up by the French nuclear submarine Rubis in the Coral Sea.
July 24, 1985
French secret agents Alain Mafart and Dominique Prieur charged with murder, arson and conspiracy to commit arson
September 23, 1985
French Prime Minister Laurent Fabius admits DGSE agents had sunk the Rainbow Warrior and they were acting under orders
November 4, 1985
Mafart and Prieur plead guilty to manslaughter in the High Court at Auckland
November 22, 1985
Mafart and Prieur sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment
April 23, 1986
High Court overturns ruling allowing NZBC to broadcast guilty plea tape
July 23, 1986
Mafart and Prieur transferred to Hao Atoll, French Polynesia
October 30, 1987
Law student Colin Amery seeks release of the “guilty” tape for thesis research
April 28, 1988
Amery unsuccessfully seeks release of the tape for a planned book
March 1, 2000
Lawyer Amery’s third application for the tape (for a TV documentary) fails
August 7, 2006
TVNZ succeeds when Court of Appeal upholds right to show guilty plea footage – clips broadcast on same day’s news bulletins
August 11, 2006
Online clips of footage on TVNZ website withdrawn after four days in the public domain when French agents seek further appeal
September 26, 2006
Final Supreme Court victory for TVNZ when French agents’ final appeal dismissed
After being awarded by the International Arbitration Tribunal NZ$8 million from France in compensation for the attack, on December 12, 1987, Greenpeace finally towed the Rainbow Warrior to Matauri Bay and scuttled it to create a living reef off Motutapere, in the Cavalli Islands. Its namesake, Rainbow Warrior II, formerly the Grampian Fame, was launched in Hamburg on July 10, 1989, four years to the day after the bombing. On July 15, 1990, a memorial by Kerikeri sculptor Chris Booth was unveiled at Matauri Bay, featuring an arched creation incorporating the bombed ship’s brass propeller.
An earlier compensation deal for New Zealand, mediated in 1986 by United Nations Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, awarded the Government $13 million ($US 7 million). The money was used for a nuclear-free projects fund and the Pacific Development and Conservation Trust. The agreement included an apology by France and the deportation of jailed secret agents Major Alain Mafart and Captain Dominique Prieur after they had served less than a year of their 10-year sentences for manslaughter and wilful damage of the bombed ship.
Mafart and Prieur, posing as a Swiss honeymooning couple, “Alain and Sophie Turenge”, had been arrested on July 12, 1985, just two days after the bombing, as an exhaustive police investigation escalated. Police came close to arresting four more French suspects who crewed on an 11m sloop, Ouvéa, chartered in Noumea, New Caledonia, to transport the explosives to New Zealand. Detectives flew to Norfolk Island in an attempt to retrieve incriminating forensic evidence. But without cooperation from Australian authorities, the secret agents were released and the Ouvéa and its crew subsequently vanished in the Coral Sea – three of the agents were believed to have been picked up by the nuclear-powered submarine Rubis and smuggled into French Polynesia.
The attack on the Rainbow Warrior, involving state terrorism by a friendly nation, became iconic in New Zealand history because it highlighted NZ opposition to nuclear testing in the Pacific. New Zealand High Court closed circuit television (CCTV) footage of the criminal proceedings showed Mafart and Prieur pleading guilty to manslaughter after being initially charged with murder. During the next two decades, five separate attempts were made to gain legal access to the videotape of their guilty pleas, for media purposes. For the first four attempts, lawyers acting for Mafart and Prieur succeeded in blocking public release of the footage by invoking privacy and administration of justice grounds (see Akel, 2007; Pearson, 2007, pp. 371-409; Price, 2007 for evolution of general privacy principles in Australia and New Zealand). However, the fifth attempt, by state-owned public broadcaster Television New Zealand, was finally successful in the Court of Appeal and the footage was broadcast on August 7, 2006. A further appeal to the Supreme Court by the agents was dismissed. This article analyses a case study of the 20-year struggle to broadcast this historic footage and how a remarkable triumph in the public right to know was achieved and balanced against privacy values.