Upon its election in late 1972, the Australian Labor Party
Whitlam government was determined to take strong action against the
white minority Rhodesian government. This differed from the stance taken by the
McMahon government that had preceded it. The Whitlam government's priorities included strongly enforcing the United Nations sanctions against Rhodesia, banning visits by Rhodesian sports teams that had been racially selected and closing the Rhodesian Information Centre. The Rhodesian Information Centre was located in
Crows Nest,
Sydney. Its ostensible purpose was to provide Rhodesian government-sponsored information about the country. The Rhodesian Government operated similar centres in the United States and France. At this time, only South Africa and Portugal had formal diplomatic relations with Rhodesia. Denzil Bradley was a South African, registered as the person carrying on business under the name Rhodesian Information Centre. Prime Minister
Gough Whitlam wrote to the Premier of New South Wales
Robert Askin on 7 December 1972 to request that Askin's government cancel the registration of the centre's business name. The Askin Government applied to the
Supreme Court of New South Wales for a declaration that would enable the cancellation of the registration of the centre's business name in March the next year.
Justice Sheppard permitted the federal government to intervene, and declared that (1) "Rhodesia Information Centre" was a name suggesting a connection with the government of the territory known as Southern Rhodesia and (2) the Corporate Affairs Commission had the power to cancel the registration of the business name. Bradley later appealed to the
New South Wales Court of Appeal which held in June 1974 that the federal government should not have been allowed to intervene but otherwise dismissed his appeal. While the declaration permitted the Corporate Affairs Commission to take steps to cancel the registration of the business name, it is unclear if it took any such steps and in any event the business continued under that name. Bradley also set up and registered a newspaper called
The Rhodesian Commentary and was going to send it through the Australian postal system. including locking their
post office box and deregistering
The Rhodesian Commentary as a newspaper. The rationale given for this was because the Postmaster-General was following an
Australian government policy to not recognize Rhodesia due to
United Nations Security Council Resolution 277 following
Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence from the United Kingdom in 1965 which was viewed as internationally illegal. Bradley sued over the ban, and a day later Justice
Harry Gibbs of the High Court issued an interim injunction restraining the government from enforcing it. == Case ==