Peter Dutton agrees to enter court-run talks with refugee activist over 'apologist' tweet

The Defence Minister and a refugee activist have agreed to enter court-run talks over an allegedly defamatory tweet ahead of an October trial.

Former immigration minister Peter Dutton.

Defence Minister Peter Dutton. Source: AAP

Defence Minister Peter Dutton's litigation over a six-word tweet is not "among the biggest defamation cases" before the Federal Court and is a good candidate for a pre-trial settlement, a judge says.

The Queensland MP is suing refugee activist Shane Bazzi over the now-deleted tweet dubbing him a "rape apologist" and linking to a news article.

Mr Dutton says the tweet defamed him and suggested he condones and excuses rape - charges Mr Bazzi denies.

If Mr Bazzi is wrong, the activist says the statement was permitted on the grounds of honest opinion and fair comment.
Before setting the matter down for a three-day trial in October, Justice Richard White on Wednesday repeatedly cast the matter as ripe for a settlement.

The issues were confined, the matter involved one document and only two defences were being pleaded, he said.

"To speak in the negative, this would not be among the biggest defamation cases that come before this court," he told the men's lawyers.

"This is a relatively narrow scope and I would have thought the parties, acting sensibly, should be able to achieve a compromise in many such circumstances."

He qualified his statement by acknowledging that, as a judge, he doesn't "know all the things going on in the background".
Mr Dutton's barrister Nick Ferrett QC said the former home affairs minister would give evidence at trial "about the distress caused by the publication".

In documents before the court, the MP claims he suffered hurt and embarrassment and was brought into "hatred, ridicule and contempt".

One or two unnamed witnesses were also expected to give evidence about Mr Dutton's reputation, the court heard.

The only potential witness in Mr Bazzi's case was the activist himself, and that was still to be determined, barrister Louise Goodchild said.

Both lawyers doubted any mediation before the trial would be successful but said their clients would happily participate if the court saw fit.

Justice White did, urging both sides to approach their meeting with a court registrar with "a willingness to achieve a settlement and a willingness to make compromises".

"My client will approach the mediation bona fide," Mr Ferrett said.
The case was also listed for a management hearing on 21 September ahead of the trial on 6, 7 and 8 October.

Mr Dutton in March promised to get litigious with Twitter users putting out defamatory statements that "lazy journalists" picked up as representative of a larger community view.

Mr Bazzi's rape apologist claim was similar to an earlier statement by Greens Senator Larissa Waters, who has since retracted her claims and apologised.

Along with the "rape apologist" claim, Mr Bazzi's tweet included a link to a 2019 Guardian Australia article reporting comments by Mr Dutton that women refugees were "trying it on" by making claims they had been raped.

Mr Dutton told Sky News that female refugees held on Nauru were claiming they needed to come to Australia for an abortion following rape but changing their minds when they arrived.

"You could question whether people needed medical attention," he said at the time.

Mr Bazzi will argue that the opinion in his tweet was based on that interview, as well as other public comments Mr Dutton has made about refugees sent to Nauru.


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3 min read
Published 16 June 2021 6:21pm
Updated 16 June 2021 6:50pm
Source: AAP, SBS


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