The Sydney Morning Herald
http://www.smh.com.au/news/0008/10/text/national8.html

Dili film-maker denied entry to Australia

Date: 10/08/2000

By ANDREW CLENNELL in Canberra

A British film-maker who captured famous footage of the 1991 Dili massacre 
has been barred from visiting Australia after he tried to enter the country 
under a false name in 1995.

Max Stahl, who filmed Death of a Nation with journalist John Pilger, wants 
to visit Australia for the Walkley Awards ceremony.

He admits that providing a false name in 1995 was a mistake, but says he 
did so to get into East Timor at a politically sensitive time and to 
protect himself from arrest.

He tried to enter Australia again in 1996, and Sydney MP Mr Laurie Ferguson 
wrote on his behalf to the Immigration Minister, Mr Ruddock.

Mr Ruddock replied then that Stahl could apply for a visa but pointed out 
his record.

Last year Stahl, whose full name is Max Christopher Wenner (Stahl is his 
mother's name), tried to make a transit stop in Darwin on his way home from 
Dili but was stopped by Australian officials.

In the 1995 incident, Stahl applied for an Australian visa in London, using 
his real name.

He returned to the Australian Consulate with a false passport provided by 
the Timorese resistance movement to apply for a second Australian visa 
which he planned to use to leave East Timor. He would then use the visa in 
his real name to attend a conference in Australia.

He was caught out when a consular official recognised him.

"I was told by many people in Timorese resistance and others that I was on 
the black list," Stahl said yesterday from his home in London.

In a letter to the Australian embassy in 1997, Stahl said: "For reasons of 
personal security and the perceived threat to the lives of contacts and 
colleagues in East Timor, it was ... essential that I should not enter, 
reside or attempt to leave Indonesia under my legal name.''

Stahl said he was arrested for filming the 1991 Dili massacre and his 
passport was "recorded".

A spokesman for Mr Ruddock said last night that the Government rejected any 
suggestion Stahl had been refused "on the basis of activities in East Timor".

"All people who are seeking a visa to enter Australia must meet bona fide 
requirements ... nobody is above the law.''

This material is subject to copyright and any unauthorised use, copying or 
mirroring is prohibited.


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