Lurking in your
litter
Horror movie warns of
Britain's rising tide of rats.
Rats: the
story in links
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
Got Terror?
Terror all around us
By Jamie Walker
02aug02
MILLIONS of Australians are being told their home, business and car
insurance will not cover acts of terrorism, provoking warnings from
consumer groups last night that the new rules could void normal
cover.
Claims for "innocuous" accidents could be turned down, said
consumer rights lawyer Chris Field.
And shop owners take note: next time S-11 style protesters turn up or a
political demonstration turns ugly, the insurance might no longer cover a
brick though the window.
The nation's biggest general insurers, including Insurance Australia
Group, Suncorp and Zurich, are attaching terrorism exclusion clauses to
new policies and renewal notices in the run-up to the first anniversary
of the September 11 terror attacks in the US.
But the insurers have split over the definition of an act of terrorism,
with Suncorp refusing to nominate a specific set of circumstances on the
basis that "it would cause more problems than it would solve".
The definitions from IAG and Zurich are so broad that Australian
Consumers Association spokeswoman Gail Kennedy said they put "real
question marks over what will be covered".
Mr Field, executive director of the Melbourne-based Consumer Law Centre,
said terrorism clauses could strike out the cover for property damage
caused during political demonstrations, protests and rallies.
"It is incredibly wide ... and might involve innocuous things that
are perfectly legitimate in the political process," he said.
Zurich's home insurance policies now exclude all acts of terrorism,
"including but not limited to use of force or violence".
While the exclusion cites possible political, religious and ideological
reasons for a terror attack, it says any action intended to instil public
fear will be excluded from cover.
IAG, which trades principally as NRMA Insurance, has a similar terrorism
definition, referring to acts designed to influence the government or
"intimidate the public or a section of the public".
Spokesman Jason Falinski said the company had been sending notices to
policy-holders since July 1 on the insistence of its international
reinsurers, Munich Reinsurance and Swiss Reinsurance.
The exclusion clause was "driven entirely by the reinsurers"
and was a condition of their contracts with IAG being renewed, he said.
It would apply broadly to commercial policies, but the exclusion on
comprehensive motor insurance and home insurance would be limited
specifically to biological, chemical and nuclear attacks.
As the nation's biggest general insurer, IAG has about 3.4 million
policy-holders. Fifth-placed Zurich defended the terrorism exclusion
clause, saying without it the company's reinsurers would no longer
provide risk cover.
Insurance Council of Australia public affairs manager Sandie Watson said
policy wording was generally up to individual insurers, but in this case
had been on an "across the board" response to September 11.
Policy-holders had recourse to a free complaint system or could take
their case to court.
"There are very clear boundaries for what is an act of terror or an
act of vandalism," she said.
But a spokesman for Suncorp, the nation's second-biggest general insurer
with up to 2 million policies under its own name and subsidiary GIO, said
it would leave that decision to the courts in the event of a terrorism
attack here.