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Australian former soldier gets bail on Afghanistan war crime charges

By Thomson Reuters Apr 16, 2026 | 11:31 PM

SYDNEY, April 17 (Reuters) – An Australian court ordered bail with travel restrictions on Friday for the country’s most decorated soldier, following his arrest on accusations of war crimes while ​deployed in Afghanistan more than a decade ago.

Police arrested ‌and charged Ben Roberts-Smith, 47, with five counts of war crimes last week over the murder of five unarmed Afghan civilians between 2009 and 2012. Each charge carries a maximum term of jail for life.

Bail was “not punitive in nature”, ‌Judge ​Greg Grogin told a Sydney courtroom, adding ⁠that the veteran of ⁠the elite Special Air Service Regiment was entitled to a presumption of innocence though the charges were serious if proved, media said.

As the matter was likely to take “years to get before ​court”, Grogin added, there were exceptional circumstances justifying bail, despite prosecutors’ opposition to bail for fear Roberts-Smith might try to contact ⁠witnesses.

Roberts-Smith, who appeared via video link at ⁠the hearing, must furnish a surety of A$250,000 ($180,000) ​and refrain from contacting any prosecution witnesses, as bail conditions, in addition ​to the travel curbs.

Roberts-Smith spent more than a week ‌in custody as his legal team awaited an in-person bail review hearing after police initially refused bail following the arrest.

Roberts-Smith has consistently denied the accusations of wrongdoing, many first reported by Nine Entertainment newspapers ⁠in a series of articles starting in 2018.

The Australian Federal Police said they would allege that his victims were not taking part in ⁠hostilities at the time ‌of their deaths and were detained, unarmed and ⁠under the control of Australian forces when killed.

Police ​would ‌also allege the victims were either shot by ​the accused ⁠or his subordinates acting on his orders and in his presence, they added.

Roberts-Smith lost a defamation suit over the media accusations and was found on the balance of probabilities to have been involved in the murder of four Afghan civilians.

($1=A$1.3965)

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing ​by Clarence Fernandez)