Saturday, May 29, 2021
Tribune How the Shrewsbury 24 Were Vindicated
27.03.2021
How the Shrewsbury 24 Were Vindicated
By
Eileen Turnbull
In the 1970s, 24 construction workers were convicted for their role in a successful strike – the story behind their vindication this week reveals the degree to which the state wages war against the working class.
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Amid all the gloom on Tuesday 23 March, the first anniversary of the UK’s Covid lockdown, there was a ray of sunshine for the labour movement. On that day, the Court of Appeal quashed the convictions of the North Wales building worker pickets who had been prosecuted at Shrewsbury Crown Court over 47 years ago.
Six of them had been jailed, and 16 others had received suspended prison sentences at three trials. The first, involving six so-called ringleaders, began in October 1973 and lasted 12 weeks. Three of the pickets were found guilty of conspiracy to intimidate, unlawful assembly, and affray, and were sent to prison.
The leading picket, Des Warren, received the longest sentence – three years on each count, to run concurrently. Amnesty International adopted him as a prisoner of conscience while he was in jail. Two further trials, which each lasted approximately four weeks, saw three other pickets jailed. 16 were given suspended prison sentences, and just two were acquitted.
These convictions remained unfinished business for many trade unionists. The premature death in 2004 of Warren became the catalyst for a group of trade unionists in Liverpool and North Wales to revisit what happened: in 2006 they decided to launch a campaign to attempt overturn this historic miscarriage of justice. It has taken 15 years to achieve that goal.
The Background
1972 was a year of high trade union militancy. More strike days were recorded that year than any other since 1945, including the first ever national building workers’ strike.
Construction workers faced hostile and powerful employers, lump labour, and isolated workplaces that changed constantly whenever a contract finished. Health and safety measures on building sites were non-existent, and building workers faced dangerous working conditions on a daily basis.
On average one building worker died each working day in the early 1970s. There were over 70,000 registered industrial injuries and diseases each year in the industry.
Four unions were involved: UCATT and the T&GWU—which are now both part of Unite—and the GMWU and FTAT, now both part of the GMB.
The strike started on a selective basis on 26 June 1972. The unions organised picketing of sites throughout the country. After a pay offer from the employers was rejected on 8 August, the unions stepped up picketing and called an all-out strike.
At the end of the 12-week dispute, in September 1972, they won the highest ever pay rise in the history of the building industry. They did not win an improvement in conditions, but decided to accept the offer, regroup, and fight on for better health and safety and to eradicate the lump.
The Arrests
On the evening of 14 February 1973, five months after the strike ended, six of the pickets were arrested in their homes and driven to police stations in Shropshire. 18 others received hand-delivered summonses.
The 24 North Wales pickets (18 T&GWU and 6 UCATT members) were charged with over 240 offences, including intimidation, affray, and criminal damage. The six arrested were also charged with conspiracy to intimidate. None of the 24 had been cautioned or arrested during the strike. There were no picket lines and no confrontations with the police.
The prosecutions focused on picketing in the Shrewsbury and Telford area on 6 September 1972 – specifically at the ‘Brookside’ site, which was owned by Robert McAlpine Ltd. Approximately 80 police had accompanied the pickets on the site.
The Fight for Justice
In 2008, as a campaign committee member, I was asked to carry out research into the background of the case. We needed to obtain fresh evidence, not available at the time of the original trials, that would support an application to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) on behalf of the convicted pickets. The scope of the task was daunting, notwithstanding that I had never carried out research before and that I, like all campaign members, was doing this on a voluntary basis.
I travelled throughout the country, searching archives and libraries in Kew, Warwick, Salford, Hull, Shropshire, Oxford, Cambridge, Bournemouth, and central London. I discovered that the government was withholding many files relating to the trials. Despite repeated requests they refused to release them, relying on Section 23 of the Freedom of Information Act 2000, which relates to national security.
The campaign launched a Downing Street e-petition and a paper petition calling for the release of the missing documents, which gathered tens of thousands of signatures. Labour MPs raised many Early Day Motions. This culminated in a three-hour debate in the House of Commons on 23 January 2014, sponsored by David Anderson MP, calling on the government to give full disclosure. The MPs voted by 120 to 3 to release the documents. The government has never released them.
The pickets’ application to the CCRC was submitted on 3 April 2012. Over the following four years we sent in further submissions based upon the evidence that I unearthed, particularly at the National Archives. Despite the strength of our case, the CCRC turned us down in October 2017.
It was a desperate day for us all. But our lawyers, Bindmans, advised us that the CCRC had failed to apply the correct legal test to our evidence and recommended that we challenge the decision through a judicial review. The campaign was up for it, and so were eight of the original ten pickets that had applied in 2012. They never gave up.
Their courage was vindicated when the CCRC’s barrister threw in the towel half way through the hearing in the Administrative Court in Birmingham on 30 April 2019. But it took the CCRC a further ten months to reconsider the case.
The Latest Hurdle
Finally, on 4 March 2020, it announced that it would refer the convictions of the eight pickets to the Court of Appeal: Des Warren, John McKinsie Jones, Ken O’Shea, Malcolm Clee, Michael Pierce, Terry Renshaw, Kevin Butcher, and Bernard Williams. The CCRC publicly invited any of the other pickets to apply to them. The families of four deceased men contacted the campaign to ask to join the action. We successfully submitted further names: Alfred James, Roy Warburton, Graham Roberts, and John Seaburg.
The appeal had two grounds, based upon evidence that I discovered in the National Archives:
Original witness statements had been destroyed by the police and this fact had not been disclosed to the defence counsel or the court; and
A highly prejudicial documentary, Red Under The Bed, was broadcast on ITV halfway through the first trial, the content of which was contributed to by a covert agency within the Foreign Office known as the Information Research Department.
This week, the Court of Appeal unanimously upheld the first of these grounds:
‘If the destruction of the handwritten statements had been revealed to the appellants at the time of the trial, this issue could have been comprehensively investigated with the witnesses when they gave evidence, and the judge would have been able to give appropriate directions. We have no doubt that if that had happened, the trial process would have ensured fairness to the accused. Self-evidently, that is not what occurred. Instead, we are confronted with a situation in which an unknown number of the first written accounts by eyewitnesses have been destroyed in a case in which the allegations essentially turned on the accuracy and credibility of their testimony. As we have already described, we consider it correct to infer that the descriptions by the witnesses would in many instances have changed and developed as they were shown the photographs and as the police gained greater understanding of what those responsible for the investigation sought to prove. Those changes and developments could have been critical for the assessment by the jury of whether they were sure that the individual appellants were guilty of the charges they faced. The jury either needed to have this evidence rehearsed in front of them to the extent necessary, if the statements were still in existence, or they needed to be given clear and precise directions as to how to approach the destruction of the statements if that had occurred. Neither of those things happened, and in consequence we consider the verdicts in all three trials are unsafe.’
Justice At Last
The pickets are overjoyed with this decision. They always maintained their innocence. They were prosecuted for taking part in a strike and picketing to gain support from their fellow workers.
The government thought that North Wales workers would be an easy target because trade unionism was weaker there than in the main industrial centres; the press and TV of the day contributed to the witch-hunt against them.
But the campaign succeeded not only because of the vital evidence that I discovered, but also the tremendous support that we and the pickets received from 21 national unions, the TUC, hundreds of union and Labour Party branches, trades councils, and individuals. Our victory has been hailed as a boost by other campaigners, including those demanding justice for Orgreave and Grenfell.
Winning takes patience and perseverance, as well as unity and solidarity. Thank you to everyone who has supported us.
About the Author
Eileen Turnbull is the Researcher and Secretary of the Shrewsbury 24 Campaign.
Friday, May 14, 2021
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Commonwealth appeals ‘habeas corpus’ ruling
A 'landmark' refugee legal battle is putting Australia's immigration detention regime under scrutiny
A landmark refugee rights case is underway in the High Court, and it could have major implications for
Australia’s immigration detention policies.
The federal government is appealing a ruling that led to the release of Syrian man, known as
AJL20, who was released from detention in September last year.
In the previous case, the Federal Court accepted the legal principle of habeas corpus, which is
used to rule whether the detention of a person by the state is lawful.
Refugee Mostafa Azimitabar walks free after being released from the Park Hotel in Melbourne.
Dozens of men were suddenly released from hotel detention. Behind the scenes, a tireless fight goes on
Lawyer Alison Battisson, who represents AJL20, described the case as a
"landmark" decision that could have further implications for other detainees facing prolonged detention without reason.
“It is looking to find a way around decades of law that enables the indefinite detention of
incredibly vulnerable people being refugees,” she told SBS News.
“The Commonwealth is obviously very concerned about this case."
The High Court appeal hearing started on Tuesday, escalating the legal stoush over the habeas corpus ruling
to Australia's highest court.
The man at the centre of the case is a 29-year-old refugee from Syria who came to Australia as a child and
had been detained for six years.
In 2014, AJL20 had his visa cancelled on "character" grounds under section 501 of the Migration Act, making him an
"unlawful non-citizen" in Australia.
However, Justice Mordecai Bromberg last September found AJL20 had been unlawfully detained because the
Department of Home Affairs had failed to make arrangements for his deportation to Syria,
which was the primary purpose of his period of detention.
Ms Battisson said AJL20's case was significant because it showed the courts could hold the Department of Home Affairs to account when it did not fulfil its obligations.
“Australia has the most heinous and harsh detention regime in the Western world of asylum seekers,” she said.
“What is clear is that the Commonwealth is beginning to look at long term detainees who they’ve taken no action for for years - whether they should be taking action now or releasing them.”
Commonwealth appeals ‘habeas corpus’ ruling
Government lawyers on Tuesday made their case for the decision to be overturned - arguing it had resulted in an unlawful non-citizen being wrongly let into the community.
Before court on Tuesday, Solicitor General Stephen Donaghue described the decision as a
“complete aberration” in Australia’s migration system.
Dr Donaghue said the Migration Act made clear that an “unlawful non-citizen”
must be held in detention until they have been granted a valid visa, or leave the country.
“Unless you hold a visa you are in the unlawful non-citizen category,” he told the court.
The government has admitted it did not meet its refoulment obligations, but claims the
Federal Court ruling of "unlawful" detention remains the wrongful determination.
“Even if there was inexcusable delay - no such remedy is sought here,” Dr Donaghue said.
A warning sign on the fence of the Brisbane Immigration Transit Accommodation, where a number of Medevac transferees are held.
In a Brisbane immigration detention centre, this refugee says he struggles to access halal food
Lawyer Justin Gleeson, representing AJL20, rebutted these claims - describing his client's detention as
“purposeless” and “arbitrary”, while defending the Federal Court’s habeas corpus ruling.
“That is what the government doesn’t want to face up to,” he told the court.
Mr Gleeson also said the Australian government had acted in its own self-interest,
without taking responsibility for their refoulment obligations.
“The remedy will be, at the least, damages for false imprisonment,” he told the court.
Mr Gleeson also said the government had failed to use its “discretionary powers” to
provide his client an alternative other than facing indefinite long-term detention.
He said the failure to provide a reason for detention meant the Federal Court was justified in ordering his release from detention.
Farhad Bandesh
Hope for Australian immigration detainees after men freed under centuries-old legal principle
The Australian government argues the Federal Court should instead order the Department of
Home Affairs to comply with its refoulment obligations by making arrangements for AJL20’s return to Syria.
The High Court case comes as dozens of asylum seekers who came to Australia under
now-repealed medevac laws have been released from immigration detention in Melbourne,
Brisbane and Darwin since early this year.
Lawyers acting on behalf of the transferees have claimed this decision follows complex
and ongoing legal battles seeking to prove the detention of the men was unlawful.
Ms Battisson said the medevac cohort is a “complex” group and it is unclear how the
AJL20 case could “impact on those releases”.
The High Court has now adjourned to consider its decision.
Saturday, April 10, 2021
Paul Bongiorno
This picture shows vials of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine and a syringe in Paris on March 11, 2021. -
Scott Morrison
October vaccination goal under threat as AstraZeneca bombshell causes rollout chaos
This picture shows vials of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine and a syringe in Paris on March 11, 2021. - European countries can keep using AstraZeneca's coronavirus vaccine during an investigation into cases of blood clots that prompted Denmark, Norway and Iceland to suspend jabs, the EU's drug regulator said on March 11, 2021.
AstraZeneca explained: Why it’s no longer ‘preferred’ for under-50s
AstraZeneca side effects
Seven people who had the AstraZeneca vaccine tell us its side effects
COVID risk looms large as Londoners ignore social distancing to mourn Philip Philip outside Buckingham Palace
View from The Hill: Voters could wreak vengeance if Scott Morrison can’t get rollout back on track
WA to welcome Kiwis without quarantine requirements
Australia bumps up its Pfizer vaccine order by 20m
Australian medical team head to PNG to aid COVID response
April 2022: When Australia will most likely be fully vaccinated, maybe
COVID risk looms large as Londoners ignore social distancing to mourn Philip Philip outside Buckingham Palace
OPINION
Paul Bongiorno: Not even the states can save the Morrison government from itself this time
The Ferguson Report: Chris Lilley offers Andrew Laming empathy training
Dennis Atkins: Scott Morrison’s treatment of Christine Holgate shows his true colours
Madonna King: Dear Andrew Laming, I’ve written your resignation letter for you
Garry Linnell: Why Morrison’s ‘She’ll be Right’ vaccination model is failing on so many levels
LIFE
Facebook, Instagram outage sends users scurrying to Twitter
Selling fast: Most of the half-price airfares are already gone
Virus forces shutdown of Cambodia’s world-famous Angkor temples
How to make the most of the New Zealand travel bubble
IFM looks offshore as large-scale renewables projects hit the doldrums in Australia
Calls for JobKeeper 3.0 as vaccine rollout flounders
‘Fully panicked’: Nationwide outage hits Vodafone
SPORT
Sydney Roosters co-captain Jake Friend retires from NRL on medical advice
French Open moved back a week to May 30 amid COVID-19 crisis
Olympic torch events called off in Osaka due to surging COVID infections
Tiger Woods was speeding before crash
Sam Kerr says Matildas will embrace underdog status against Germany, the Netherlands
WEATHER
PUZZLES
Trivia
Crosswords
Sudoku
There’s something smug about the reaction of the federal government and its health advisers who believe the disaster they are presiding over could be worse and there’s nowhere else on earth you would rather be.
It’s a message the Prime Minister repeated at three news conferences this week – despite the unraveling of a vaccine rollout they all had a year to plan for.
Sure Australia is nowhere near the plight of Brazil, India, Papua New Guinea – or for that matter France and Italy – all facing repeat waves of a pandemic claiming thousands of lives and pushing their health systems to the verge of collapse.
But by now, four million Australians were promised they would be vaccinated. We were promised that by October the whole population would have received at least their first jab, and the nation would be well on the way to a return to accustomed prosperity.
Morrison pleads pandemics are by definition unpredictable and this one-in-100-year crisis has the whole world on a steep learning curve.
But the evidence is our Prime Minister and his government are slow learners and proud of it.
Still ringing in our ears is the assurance from Health Minister Greg Hunt that the vaccine distribution will be “a marathon not a sprint”.
The head of his department, Brendan Murphy, scoffed at questions as to why we had not embarked earlier on a rollout like Britain and the United States.
Dr Murphy said on more than one occasion: “We’re not in a hurry in Australia. We don’t have a burning platform, as I’ve said on many occasions. We can take our time to do this vaccination properly.”
The tragedy is that the slow and fraught rollout was horribly botched.
Last month, to much fanfare, Greg Hunt proclaimed a “momentous day” with the beginning of the program to vaccinate everyone over 70 in “one of the largest logistical exercises ever undertaken in this country”.
Vaccines weren’t delivered, doctors were left in the dark, their clinics swamped by confused patients only to be turned away.
Former head of the federal health department, Professor Stephen Duckett, described the vaccine distribution as “overhyped and under delivered”.
Warnings from the Labor opposition, some state health authorities and experts that the government had put too many eggs in the AstraZeneca basket proved sadly prescient.
Not only is the Australian manufacturer CSL behind schedule, the product itself is now thought not safe enough for anyone under 50 – a sizeable chunk of the population.
The credibility of that vaccine was not helped by the Prime Minister’s panicked early evening news conference on Thursday night.
Now Morrison says he has “secured” another 20 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine by the end of the year, even if they all arrive by then, few expect the national inoculation target will be reached much before March or April next year.
“Secured” of course doesn’t mean delivered, and again we are relying on a product we are incapable of manufacturing and have to import.
The fact that Australia does not have the capacity to produce these modern mRNA vaccines is surely a disastrous example of our failure to invest in and keep up with vital technological innovation.
Monash University’s Professor Colin Pouton is calling on the federal government to fund a fast-tracking of a factory here to do the job.
Midweek, the premiers of New South Wales and Queensland washed their hands of any blame for the disaster Australia’s rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines had become.
Gladys Berejiklian and Annastacia Palaszcuk made it very clear the states were responsible for 30 per cent of the distribution, the Commonwealth for the rest – and completely responsible for the supply of the vaccine.
The states ignored Morrison’s pressure to curb lockdowns and keep borders open, and that saved the health of the nation and contributed in no small way to the incipient economic recovery.
But on the vaccine planning and delivery, the emperor in Canberra has no clothes and the nation will pay dearly for longer.
Paul Bongiorno AM is a veteran of the Canberra Press Gallery, with 40 years’ experience covering Australian politics
Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Mark,
Join me at this special briefing on the implications of the Omnibus Legislation at 2pm (Eastern time) on Thursday 8 April. You can register here.
The Morrison government’s Omnibus Bill was a severe attack on workers’ rights. Drawn directly from the wish list of the big employer groups it would have had a devastating effect on working people – especially the most vulnerable.
Once again, the government underestimated union members – and has paid the price.
Our campaign managed to stop four out of the five major elements of the bill. This was a testament to our dedicated opposition to these attacks on workers. But the changes that have been made will make sure that casual work will remain insecure, uncertain, and far too prevalent. The government also walked away from any action on wage theft – showing who it really works for.
These decisions have major implications for us as a movement. This briefing will unpack the details of what was passed and what this will mean for us. We will also discuss the next steps for us as a movement, and how we can make sure these issues follow the government to the next election.
Register for the briefing at this link.
I will see you there.
In Union,
Sally McManus
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
Spike Lee has again been asked to chair the Cannes Film Festival jury after last year's event
was cancelled because of the pandemic.
The Malcolm X and Do The Right Thing director will be the first black film-maker to take on the prestigious role.
Lee has premiered seven films at the festival.
"Cannes will always have a deep spot in my heart,"
he said in a video message.
This year's event is due to take place in July instead of its usual
May slot.
"Book my flight now. My wife Tonya and I, we're coming,"
the director added.
But with Covid-19 cases still at high levels in France, there
is a chance that the event could be called off again.
"Throughout the months of uncertainty we've just been through,
Spike Lee has never stopped encouraging us,"
festival president Pierre Lescure said in a statement.
"We could not have hoped for a more powerful personality
to chart our troubled times."
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Saturday, March 13, 2021
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear Human cost of the disaster remains immense
The Morning Star
AS we mark the tenth anniversary this week of the disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant,
where an earthquake and a tsunami led to a meltdown of nuclear reactors, the emission of huge amounts of
radiation and a continuing humanitarian disaster, the fact remains that only in a world with the political drive to rid itself of nuclear power can we be safe from nuclear disaster.
Even 10 years later, the human cost of the disaster remains immense.
The release of radioactive caesium and strontium isotopes over
a wide area poses as yet not understood risks to human health,
including the risk of cancers. Tens of thousands of people
remain displaced from their homes.
Towns like Iwaki and Iitate will likely never see human habitation again.
A vast “no go” zone some of some one thousand square kilometres surrounds
the remains of the plant. And as a recent report by Greenpeace pointed out,
many former residents have faced the unenviable choice between returning to their
radioactively contaminated homes or leaving their properties forever.
The response of the Japanese people, if not Japanese politicians, was a swift and enduring one.
In the two years immediately following the disaster, public support for nuclear power dropped
from over 85 per cent of the population to below a quarter.
Japan is decommissioning around half of its reactors completely
and only nine ever restarted after the events of 2011.
By way of contrast, targets for (cheaper and safer) renewable energy production
in Japan have been broken time again, with the country hitting its 2030 target
of around 23 per cent of energy from renewable sources nearly a
decade earlier than planned.
Yet in other regards, successive Japanese governments have been drawn in by the
seductive but ultimately false allure of nuclear power as a somehow “green”
energy source. The current government under Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is
aiming for around a fifth of the country’s energy in 2030 to be provided by nuclear.
Parallels can be clearly seen closer to home, where in a 10-point plan for a
Green Industrial Revolution unveiled by Boris Johnson and the then business secretary
Alok Sharma in November 2020, the government promised hundreds of millions of pounds of subsidies to develop and bring online small modular and advanced modular reactors.
As expounded by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, the case against civil nuclear
power remains a straightforward yet convincing one. Nuclear is hugely expensive,
even more so when compared to the alternatives.
Cost over-runs and crippling delays are frequent.
In Britain at least, nuclear only remains viable because of the vast public subsidies it receives.
One nuclear project alone, the reactor at Hinkley Point C, is expected to cost around £25 billion by the time of its completion and it is already four years late.
More fundamentally however, as the long nightmare of Fukushima demonstrates,
the cost of even a single nuclear disaster in human terms is unimaginably high. Even relatively minor nuclear safety breaches, which happen on a regular basis, can have serious unintended consequences.
This is compounded when, as was the case in Fukushima,
governments and corporations are unable or unwilling to provide
transparency to their people and other countries about the scale of nuclear accidents, in part to protect the wider legitimacy of their nuclear programmes.
Most frustrating of all, of course, is the fact that the
UK is in some regards perfectly placed to take advantage of the shift to renewable energy, with plentiful supplies of wave and wind power, both on and off shore.
Every pound invested in nuclear power is one that could be better spent on wind, wave or solar, with the much greater number of skilled and well-paid jobs they bring.
In the medium term we can expect no relief.
The dangers associated with nuclear will be further heightened as climate change drives the increasing frequency of extreme weather events in unexpected places.
On current projections of global warming, the unexpected snow storms which paralysed much of Texas’s electricity grid are merely a harbinger of things to come.
Other countries, particularly those in the Global South, will look at the renewed turn to nuclear
in the developed world and see a high-prestige and supposedly “green” power source, particularly as small
modular reactors technology continues to develop. For the right type of company, nuclear power remains a profitable business — and much like other big polluters, that profit will be fiercely defended.
Ever since the opening of Calder Hall at Sellafield in 1956,
billed by the government of the day as Britain’s first civil nuclear power plant (in actual fact, one of its key functions was the production of plutonium for weapons use), British civil nuclear has raised not only an environmental question but a political one.
The American philosopher George Santayana once said that “those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”
Governments across the planet seem determined to repeat the errors of nuclear power which led to Fukushima.
The best way for Morning Star readers to work for a clean, safe and sustainable future for people both here and across the world remains energetic democratic participation, including through the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, at 64 years old one of the oldest and most active campaigning groups in the country.
Dr Ian Fairlie is vice-president of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and a former official government adviser
on radiation biology.
The Independent UK
There is nothing wrong with a U-turn if it means that a government abandons the wrong policy and adopts the right one.
The case of the proposed coal mine in Cumbria has seen such zigzagging from both the local council and the national
government that a U-turn is too simple a description.
The important point is that Boris Johnson has ended up in the right position. This week’s
confirmation that the project will not go ahead came in the form of a letter from a planning
decision officer in Westminster to Cumbria County Council. Formally, Robert Jenrick, the
communities secretary, has “called in” the planning application and has not yet made a
Iconic 3801 Restoration
An iconic and widely adored steam locomotive from the 1940s has returned to the tracks today to the delight of rail lovers across NSW.
For the first time in almost 14 years Locomotive 3801 will run again, offering passengers a chance to return to a bygone era of rail travel.
The train is the last streamlined steam locomotive in the state and arguably the country's most famous as it's the only engine to have visited all mainland states and territories.
A steam train in front of the Central station clocktower
A class 38 train, most likely the 3801, passing Sydney's Central Station in 1980.(Supplied: City Of Sydney)
To mark its long-awaited return, the 3801 is taking 1,500 passengers on sold-out trips between Sydney and Hurstville today and tomorrow.
In the next few months 3801 will also make trips to the Southern Highlands, Albury, Wagga Wagga, Junee, the Blue Mountains and towns in western and northern NSW.
Passengers can choose to travel in the open saloon or a private compartment car.
The train has always attracted major public enthusiasm, says Transport Heritage
NSW CEO Andrew Moritz, and is the most asked about engine in their historical fleet.
"This engine has a following all of its own," he said.
"Being the 'glamour express' it has always been a crowd favourite and attracts crowds wherever it goes."
In 2013, when Transport Heritage NSW was established, Premier Gladys Berejiklian said the organisation should prioritise returning the 3801 to service.
The 3801 is an important piece of Australian rail history.(Supplied: Transport Heritage NSW Via SJB Photography)
When Locomotive 3801 first launched in 1943, it immediately changed the image of NSW railways and epitomised the romance of the steam era.
The 38 class was fast, powerful and streamlined, and only the best crews were rostered to work the trains.
"It is that iconic epitome of steam, it represents the best technology of the day," Mr Moritz said.
"The streamlining makes it so representative of that Art Deco era, and the modernity that the railways were trying to project."
In 1964 the train made the fastest journey at the time between Sydney and Newcastle in just over two hours and in 1970 it became the first steam locomotive to cross the continent to Western Australia.
However, the 3801 was marred by tragedy in 1990 when an inter-city train hit the locomotive while traveling to Cowan, NSW, killing six people on the steam train.
The impact completely destroyed the last carriage of the 3801 and a nine-month ban was introduced on steam trains in NSW.
Friday, March 12, 2021
Wendy Bacon Imagining an Independent Inquiry into Federal Attorney General Christian Porter By Wendy Bacon, 8 March 2021
Imagining an Independent Inquiry into Federal Attorney General Christian Porter
Many people, including senior lawyers, are calling for an independent Inquiry into whether Christian Porter is a fit and proper person to be the Federal Attorney-General of Australia. In Perth, a group of legal academics has referred Porter to the Legal Practice Board of Western Australia to see whether he is fit to practice law. Two academics from University of Melbourne Law School are taking similar steps.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Attorney General Christian Porter have asserted that an independent inquiry would bring the ‘rule of law’ in Australia to an end. Democracy itself would be threatened. In this piece, I discuss the issue of the rule of law and consider some of the evidence that could be relevant to an inquiry. Firstly, here’s a summary of events so far
.
Background
This week, Four Corners again probed the Canberra Bubble. Their program followed up on an earlier program in November 2020 and a further explosive report on February 26th by journalist Louise Milligan. She reported that a woman, who has not been named, reported to NSW police in February 2020 that as a 16 year old school student, she was raped by a man now serving as a Federal Cabinet minister. Milligan did not name the Minister. On March 3rd, the Federal Attorney-General Christian Porter called a media conference and publicly acknowledged that he is the Minister.
The woman alleged that she was forced to have oral sex and was anally raped in a bedroom at Sydney University’s Womens College at the end of a debating tournament in 1988. She was on the same national team as Porter and two other male students. He was then a 17 year old student from Perth’s exclusive private boys’ school Hale and she attended a private girls school in Adelaide.
Porter repeatedly denied the rape allegations during the media conference. The woman suicided last year in her home city of Adelaide. Porter is now on mental health leave but has said he will not step aside for an inquiry or resign. Morrison has also said Porter is ‘innocent’ and will continue as AG.
The women first disclosed the alleged rape in 2013 to a counsellor, who also has not been named. Subsequently she told a number of friends, journalist Tory Shepherd, former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and his partner Lucy Turnbull and Labor Senator Penny Wong about the alleged rape. After meeting with her in February last year, NSW Police Sexual Assault officers prepared a witness statement which was supposed to be signed in March 2020. The NSW police have said that the statement was not signed due to COVID 19 travel restrictions but have not explained why they did not arrange for it to be signed in Adelaide. According to her friends, the woman’s mental health deteriorated over the ensuing months. In June, she told police she did not wish to continue with the complaint. This was not because she did not stand by her account of the alleged rape but because of personal and health reasons. She died by her own hand two days later. .
As Milligan reported, the woman’s detailed statement was sent anonymously to the Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who instead of reading it himself sent it to the Federal police, who have no jurisdiction in this matter. After speaking with Porter, who denied the allegation, he confirmed his confidence in the Attorney-General and said he saw no need for him to take any further action.
Labor Senator Penny Wong and Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young also received a copy of the statement, which they also referred to the police. The NSW police last week said that they had decided not to proceed with an investigation on the grounds that there was insufficient admissible evidence to support a criminal case against Porter.
During the chaotic 20 minute media conference, Porter confirmed that he knew the woman and that he was in a national schools’ debating team with her. Asked whether he had been alone with the young woman, he said, “Look, I don’t think so. We did what normal teenagers would do. There were groups of people.” When told there is a photo of the two of them sitting together at a dinner, Porter said it did not surprise him.
Having said he didn’t think they had been alone together, Porter was asked:
Reporter: She’s more specific in her statement, she says that you and she and a group of others had been out for dinner. You’d then gone dancing at the Hard Rock Cafe, and then you walked her back to her room. Do you recall that and what’s your recollection?
Mr Porter: That may well be the case.
Reporter: You don’t remember that?
Mr Porter: It is 33 years ago. I remember two evenings that week. One was a night with – at one of the colleges with bowls of prawns, which sticks in my mind. I do remember a formal dinner, and going out dancing sounds about right.
Porter does remember the woman showing him and the other two male team members how to iron a shirt.
He agreed that it was not impossible that she was correct in remembering that he had said that “she would make a wonderful wife one day” as a joke. In her statement she described him as saying that apart from being smart and pretty she could do the things that housewives do.
Four Corners has not published much of the statement but it did quote these words: “I was drunk, and I trusted him, so I agreed. I had no real reason then not to. We went up to my room, and I let him inside … What did happen next was a total surprise to me.” Porter claims to remember little about the evening but says if the alleged rape had occurred, he would remember it.
Porter first heard rumours that the woman had made an allegation against him last year. Did he make any inquiries then about how he could lay the rumours to rest, particularly in the light of all the other allegations about his sexist and in appropriate behaviour aired in the first Canberra Bubble program? He now claims not to be able to answer questions about specific details because he hasn’t read the woman’s detailed statement. He was not asked at the conference whether he had asked for the statement.
On Tuesday, former Foreign Minister and Deputy Leader of the Liberal party, Julie Bishop, who is also a lawyer, said that she was surprised that Morrison and Porter had not read the statement. “I wonder why they haven’t,” Ms Bishop told 7.30. “I think in order to deny [an] allegation you would need to know the substance of the allegation, or at least the detail of the allegation,”she said.
The Four Corners’ team were aware of the rape allegation before they went to air with the first Canberra Bubble story in November 2020. They were not able to report the allegation, perhaps because there were no friends prepared to go on the record at that stage. Their subsequent actions were triggered by the recent revelation by Brittany Higgins that she was raped by a then fellow Liberal staffer in the office of the Minister for Defence Linda Reynolds. Questions relevant to other allegations of inappropriate and sexist behaviour both in Perth and Canberra were put to Porter but were not answered. Porter has not explained why he did not answer questions.
Porter also complained that ‘substantial’ questions had not been put to him before Milligan broke the recent alleged rape story . According to Media Watch, Milligan put questions to the Prime Minister and not to Porter because he was not being named. This practice is common. As Amanda Meade reported in The Guardian, Porter had not answered numerous questions put to him by a number of media outlets. His approach can be compared to ex-Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s preparedness in 2012 to wait until all questions had been asked at a media conference to respond to allegations that she had acted corruptly 17 years previously.
Porter would understand that by providing a denial, he made it easier for Four Corners to continue to report on the rape allegations and other issues about his treatment of women. By providing ample space for his ‘strenuous’ denials. the ABC was able to broadcast the second episode of the Canberra Bubble story. As well as providing a forum for friends of the woman to describe their friend’s outstanding qualities, their sorrow at her death and some of the information that she passed onto them, Four Corners interviewed senior barrister and past President of the Law Council Arthur Moses. He explained he was opposed to an inquiry into the allegations because the criminal investigation had been closed. But he acknowledged that some of his respected “closest friends and colleagues” disagree with him. None of those senior lawyers, including the current President of the Law Council Pauline Wright who supports an Inquiry, were interviewed.
If Porter was to sue, he would expose himself to even more scrutiny and questions about his past. The reports are clearly in the ‘public interest’ as they are relevant to whether he is ‘fit and proper’ to be the Attorney-General, which is not merely a political role but also one involving legal decisions to prosecute and responsibility for law reform including on matters of gender discrimination.
Morrison and Porter mislead the public about the ‘rule of law’
There is no doubt that Porter, who is fighting for his political life, was under enormous pressure at the press conference. But in defending himself, he spread misunderstandings about the ‘rule of law’ which other LNP MPs are now parroting in their attempts to lay the matter to rest. Since the ‘rule of law’ is a fundamental legal concept this raises further questions about his fitness for office
Mr Porter said it would be wrong for him to stand aside or quit his job. As he put it:
If that happens, anyone in public life is able to be removed simply by the printing of an allegation,” he said.
Every child we raise can have their lives destroyed by online reporting of accusations alone.
“My guess is that if I were to resign, and that set a new standard, well, there wouldn’t be much need for an attorney-general anyway, because there would be no rule of law left to protect in this country. So I will not be part of letting that happen.
In making this statement, he would have been very aware that those calling for an independent Inquiry would expect him to stand aside and not resign while the inquiry produced its findings.
Others have already provided strong arguments that the AG was misleading the public about the rule of law.
Former Editor and non-practising lawyer Jack Waterford wrote in the Canberra Times:
“Morrison is talking self-serving nonsense in claiming that the fundamentals of the rule of law in Australia would collapse if action were taken to investigate allegations of sexual assault by the Attorney-General, Christian Porter, even though the alleged victim is now dead. So is Porter, who is using the claim for refusing to resign.”
Adelaide barrister Clare O’Connor SC was interviewed on Radio National Breakfast and described the ‘rule of law’ allegation as a furphy aimed at avoiding an inquiry. She also posted on her facebook:
There’s a serious allegation against the chief legal officer.
It needs investigation. Inquiry? Inquest? Either. Both. Matters not. But an investigation.
That press conference of Mr Porter would never be enough.
Asking for an investigation of some sort is consistent with the rule of law.
Just outcomes can be achieved.
But she also warned those calling for an inquiry that Porter would have the right not to incriminate himself and that the victim would be vilified and that the easiest defence is to attack the credibility of the victim who suicided in 2020.
‘Rule of law’ as political spin
I agree that the ‘rule of law’ argument is a deliberate ploy or debating trick by Porter.
Two men, one the Australian PM and the other the AG or chief law officer didn’t bother reading the specific allegations before deciding that a ‘strenuous’ denial and political spin about the ‘rule of law’ were their best line of defence. The patriarchal symbolism of two men asserting that no inquiry is necessary and that we should accept that the Federal government needs to do nothing more than allow the Attorney-General to take a health break before resuming duties was not lost on many, especially during the week of International Women’s Day.
The rule of law is a broad concept about which there is a lot of debate in the fields of political and legal thought. It’s a principle that is supposed to guarantee the protection of other values, including democracy and basic rights such as equality before the law. It is not simply about procedures, although it does include protection from arbitrary punishment and a right to a fair hearing. Some prefer a narrow, more procedural notion of ‘rule of law’ but even they acknowledge that the rule of law applies to all spheres of law and public decisions that have consequences for citizens. In fact, I can’t remember anyone suggesting as Morrison has done that it only applies to the criminal justice system.
During the 20th century, human rights, anti-racism and feminist advocates critiqued narrow concepts of the rule of law and strengthened the notion that fairness in any legal system must depend on actual equal access to the law and just outcomes. Formal equality alone cannot deliver justice.
Christian Porter is extremely familiar with these ideas. I’d be surprised if he didn’t debate them at school and at university.
He would have been exposed to them in law school. In 1999, he was awarded a scholarship to the London School of Economics where he specialised in the history of political thought and theory in the 20th century, where debates about human rights and justice and the neo-liberal critiques of them would have been discussed in depth. Porter did well in the course so he understands that at the heart of feminist concerns about low levels of reporting of sexual assault and of convictions lie deeply ingrained gender biases in the legal system. A conservative in these debates, he disagrees with the substance of the arguments but he understands them. The same goes for the arguments that the high levels of incarceration of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people compared to other Australians can be seen as a failure in the rule of law. He also understand that freedom for journalism including investigative journalism and equal access to justice are considered by most lawyers, including Australian judges, to be part of the rule of law.
By resorting to false warnings about threats to the rule of law, Porter knowingly debases the very principle he claims to defend.
A independent inquiry into whether Christian Porter is fit for the position of first law officer
Porter has said it is up to others whether there is an inquiry. That really means Morrison – who is adamant that there will be no Inquiry. He has rejected a suggestion that he seeks advice from the current Solicitor-General from Justin Gleeson SC, who previously served in that role.
There is plenty of support for such an inquiry although some are arguing that an inquest conducted by the South Australian Coroner would be the best way forward.
If conducted in a broad way, an inquest could caste light on the woman’s circumstances before her death but it is hard to see how it can deal with all the serious issues raised about Porter in the two Canberra Bubble episodes.
It is in the context of a fact-finding inquiry into all the serious allegations about Porter’s behaviour towards women that the likelihood of his committing the rape, his denials and credibility can be fairly assessed. It is also possible that an inquiry might find that it is not possible to reach a finding on the balance of probabilities whether the rape and assault occurred or not but that in the light of evidence relevant to the totality of allegations, Porter is not fit and proper to be the first legal officer of Australia.
In any fact finding inquiry, much depends on the terms of reference.
At this point, it’s important to revisit the first Canberra Bubble program and the shocking allegations that it exposed. In this episode, Four Corners journalists reported that they had spoken to many who witnessed Porter’s sexist and misogynist behaviour over a number of years.
The material falls into a range of categories.
Barrister Katherine Foley was interviewed and provided an account of her experiences and observations of Porter’s behaviour from when she was 16 until when she was working as a solicitor during the period when Porter was a Crown Prosecutor in Western Australia. This period of more than a decade covers the years following the rape allegation incident. It provides an insight into the young Porter and how he might have behaved at 17. Porter later responded that he was “surprised” to hear Foley reflecting on his character so long after they knew each other. This was scarcely the issue. At the time, I was struck by the strength and clarity of Foley’s statements, knowing that as a barrister she would have fully understood the implications of making them
Foley told Four Corners that “Christian’s persona, particularly at UWA … was the sidelining of women in any kind of forum in which they wanted to be involved,” Ms Foley said. “They were treated as a joke; they were objects of ridicule. The only point to women, as far as I could tell from Christian’s way of treating women, was for him to hit on them, or for women to be made fun of, particularly for the way that they looked.” She could be called to give evidence of what she saw and heard during those years.
Four Corners reported that they had spoke to other former UWA students who described incidents of inappropriate behaviour. They included “sexualised comments about female students, and a gratuitous focus on violent and sexually graphic material in the legal cases he taught”. Some of these people might be available to give evidence before an inquiry.
Porter also wrote for law student publications and described how he intended to ‘slut’ he way through Law school.
He has said that he now regrets these statements but shouldn’t he be asked what they conveyed in terms of his actual practice during more than eight years as a student?
Louise Milligan, Lucy Carter and Peter Cronau also reported that they had spoken to many who “volunteered an example of what they believe is inappropriate conduct by Mr Porter” since his election as a Federal MP in 2013. Presumably, some of these people would come forward if there was an inquiry. If not, Four Corners could provide more details about these allegations while protecting the identity of sources, who may be too nervous to come forward. An Inquiry could also arrange to interview witnesses confidentially as occurred with the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Abuse.
There was also the allegation that Porter was seen in a public bar having an intimate drink with a young Liberal staffer and that a photo of this taken was deleted. There are witnesses to this incident. Porter later rejected that interpretation put on his behaviour. This incident would be further explored in an inquiry.
Former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull told Four Corners that he had heard rumours about Porter’s behaviour in Canberra and warned him that this could be a security risk. Porter has said he has a different memory of what occurred. Turnbull has contemporaneous notes. A further exploration of this could have bearing on an assessment of Porter’s truthfulness and credibility.
Sarah Hanson Young told Four Corners that she had spoken to a young Liberal staffer who was in a consensual relationship with Christian Porter but that she felt very uncomfortable. The staffer was distressed about what was going on in her office.
After watching the Canberra Bubble Episode One, I expected that all of these allegations might lead to an inquiry into Porter’s conduct . That proved to be naive. There was considerable media and political push back against the program. The old arguments about allegations being too old, and the private lives of public figures not being of public interest were raised. I could not help wondering if the issue had been one of race discrimination would the response have been different? I certainly hope so.
We need to question why the allegations in the first Canberra Bubble program could be so easily pushed aside.
Did we collectively “move on”? So long as we accept that discrimination and harassment of women can be tolerated.
appalling levels of domestic assaults of women and sexual assaults will continue. This lack of basic respect for the rights of women has always undermined the rule of law.
Porter’s career in Western Australia, in particular his attitudes to women and the rule of law, warrant further attention. After returning from London, Porter did a stint as a staffer for a Federal Liberal Minister and worked at the corporate law firm Clayton Utz. While Porter was teaching part-time at the UWA law school, he joined the WA Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) office and became a part-time Crown prosecutor. He continued in these two roles until he was preselected to stand for the state seat of Murdoch in 2008.
How DPP lawyer Porter advised against continuing with a sexual assault case.
At the media conference Porter referred to his knowledge and care for victims of sexual assault during his time at the DPP.
As a prosecutor Porter was required to exercise his discretion in many ways including whether sexual assault cases would go to trial or end up in the ‘too hard’ basket with many other rape prosecutions. This discretion had to be exercised fairly - or in other words according to the rule of law.
In order to find out more about how his discretion was exercised, I did a Factiva news database search and came across the following case.
In April 2005, The West Australian newspaper reported on a rape victim who was very upset that the man who allegedly raped her had been allowed to leave the country, rather than go to trial.
Mary, a social work student who was 19 when she was attacked in her home at Rockingham.
She told The West Australian that she was “devastated by the decision. “I don’t know how they can put a price on what he’s done,” she said. “For a long time I had to deal with the guilt of it, thinking I had brought it on myself. When the DPP won’t go after him it makes me wonder and brings it all back to me.”
The 23-year-old man had pleaded not guilty to three counts of indecent assault and one count of sexual penetration and was due to appear in the District Court next month. But because his student visa expired, the Director of Public Prosecutions needed to seek a ‘criminal justice stay visa’ which would have meant that his costs of staying in Australia would need to be covered.
The DPP lawyer was Christian Porter. He told that paper that a number of matters were considered including the prospects of conviction, seriousness of the case and the importance to the alleged victim. “In these circumstances the decision was made not to apply,” he said. “We advised her of the decision and she told our office and she told me that she was relieved with it.”
The idea that the Mary was relieved seems to have been a case of miscommunication. Mary said she was “completely terrified” when the man attacked her. “I absolutely froze, I was scared for my life,” she said.
She described how she has struggled to get her life back on track since, attempting suicide six months after the incident, and is undergoing counselling. “It’s destroyed me, so I want something done. I don’t want him to get off,” she said. “I want some form of justice. By him just being deported and going home, he’s not having to face up to his actions at all.”
This is only one case. Perhaps there were many other successful prosecutions. But it highlights a potential problems when a lawyer who exercises discretion is a person with a long record of misogynist and sexist behaviour to women is an appropriate person to be communicating with woman like ‘Mary’ and deciding on the fate of her complaints of assault.
Mary was certainly left feeling that in her case the ‘access to justice’ part of the ‘rule of law’ had been denied. This is why the independent inquiry needs to take on board all of the serious allegations against Porter to assess whether he is fit and proper for office.
In Part Two, I will update developments and examine other matters that could be relevant to Porter’s fitness for office and his understanding of the rule of law while he was an MP in WA.
I can be reached at wendybacon1@gmail.com. I am also on Twitter and Signal
For a well-researched article about Porter’s breaches of the law since he became Attorney General , read Elizabeth Minter’s article, first published on John Menadue’s Pearls and Irritations.
I highly recommend johnmenadue.com
Small editing changes have been made since publication
Thursday, March 11, 2021
Monday, March 08, 2021
MEAA, the union for Australian journalists, welcomes today’s decision by a British judge to prevent
the extradition to the United States of our member Julian Assange and calls on the US government to
now drop his prosecution.
The court ruled against extradition on health grounds, accepting medical evidence that
Assange would be at risk in US custody.
However, journalists everywhere should be concerned at the hostile manner in which the court dismissed
all defence arguments related to press freedom.
“Today’s court ruling is a huge relief for Julian, his partner and family, his legal team and his supporters around the world,” said MEAA Media Federal President Marcus Strom.
“Julian has suffered a 10-year ordeal for trying to bring information of public interest to the light of day, and it has had an immense impact on his mental and physical health.
“But we are dismayed that the judge showed no concern for press freedom in any of her
comments today, and effectively accepted the US arguments that journalists can be prosecuted
for exposing war crimes and other government secrets, and for protecting their sources.
“The stories for which he was being prosecuted were published by WikiLeaks a decade ago
and revealed war crimes and other shameful actions by the United States government.
They were clearly in the public interest.
“The case against Assange has always been politically motivated with the intent of curtailing free speech,
criminalising journalism and sending a clear message to future whistleblowers and publishers that they too will be punished if they step out of line.”
MEAA now calls on the US government to drop all charges against Julian Assange and for the Australian government to expedite his safe passage to Australia if that is his wish.
ACTU stands with NT gas plant workers fighting for fair pay
ACTU stands with NT gas plant workers fighting for fair pay
ACTU stands with NT gas plant workers fighting for fair pay
Maintenance workers at the Ichthys Gas Plant near Darwin have taken industrial action after their
employer Trace Broad Spectrum refused to come to the table on key issues like paid leave, breaks and allowances.
Workers at the Ichthys plant are highly skilled and doing technical and dangerous work, but are
paid 10-20 per cent less than equivalent workers on plants in Queensland and Western Australia.
Taking industrial action is a decision that no worker takes lightly and the decision was made in
Darwin only after 10 months of negotiations stalled with management refusing to provide reasonable pay and conditions,
in line with similar jobs elsewhere in the industry.
Quotes attributable to ACTU Secretary Sally McManus:
“The issues being faced by these workers in Darwin will be familiar
to any worker who has ever tried to negotiate a pay rise or decent
conditions in Australia. The odds are stacked against workers during
bargaining and employers have far too much power.
“The Morrison Government’s IR Omnibus legislation will make this even worse,
giving more power to employers to drive down wages and strip away conditions.
“These workers do hard work under difficult circumstances while their employers reap huge profits.
They deserve to be paid fairly for their work, and this is all they’re asking for.
“We stand with these workers and all other working people fighting for better pay and stronger conditions,
and that is why we are campaigning against the Morrison Government’s Bill. It will crush wage growth and
in turn hurt the economy.”
The Morning Star ON MARCH 5 2021, we celebrate the 150th anniversary of Rosa Luxemburg’s birth.
ON MARCH 5 2021, we celebrate the 150th anniversary of Rosa Luxemburg’s birth.
No-one who wishes to get a sense of Rosa Luxemburg as a person, both political and private,
will regret watching Margarethe von Trotta’s meticulously researched 1986 film of the same name.
It is available with English subtitles.
The film begins on December 7 1916 with Luxemburg in Vronke prison, cutting back to this location again and again.
Von Trotta uses Luxemburg’s prison letters to her good friend Sonja Liebknecht like a leitmotif right through the
film to paint a very sensitive and personal portrait of this Polish revolutionary. From this prison, the viewer relives many episodes of Rosa’s life in flashbacks.
Some of these sequences evoke the more personal aspects of her life, such as early childhood.
Some of them are in Polish, adding greatly to the authentic feel of the film. Indeed, throughout the film Luxemburg occasionally speaks in Polish, especially to Leo Jogiches, her close comrade and lover for many years.
It is also suggested she may have had polio, as Barbara Sukowa, the actor who plays her, limps noticeably during the film.
Luxemburg’s deep love for nature is emphasised in many ways — in her letters and in her tenderness for animals, her pet cat, and her “garden” in the prison.
This garden comes as a surprise but is true to history. Luxemburg enthusiastically wrote to Sonja Liebknecht on May 19 1917: “I can hardly believe my eyes, today I planted something for the first time in my life and everything has turned out so well right away!”
Luxemburg’s collection of dried plants was long considered lost and was only rediscovered in 2009 in a Warsaw archive, 23 years after this film was made.
Her herbarium and nature drawings are an impressive document of her resilience during imprisonment in various gaols including in Vronke, where she tended the prison garden.
Rosa’s tenderness and love of nature, of animals, so manifest in her letters, finds other expressions too, towards children and her close friends, creating the sense of a profoundly humane person.
Luxemburg the private person and the political activist are presented as inseparable.
Her uncompromising humanity motivates everything she does.
Von Trotta does a magnificent job in bringing together important stages in
Luxemburg’s political career, going back to earlier imprisonment in Poland for her involvement with the then strongest workers’ party in Europe, the German Social Democratic Party (SPD).
Von Trotta does not tell the story strictly sequentially, so the consistency of Luxemburg’s views emerges more clearly.
The main parts of the film focus on Luxemburg’s political activity in Berlin.
Considerable time is devoted to Luxemburg’s growing disillusionment with the SPD.
It shows her disgust with Eduard Bernstein, and her early alliance with Karl Kautsky.
Poignantly, the SPD leader Friedrich Ebert says to Luxemburg at a dinner party that events in Russia have ultra-radicalised her, and continues chillingly to say: “We will hang you.”
From early on, she senses and tackles the reformism of the SPD leadership.
The film shows her political break with Kautsky and other leaders of the SPD, although she remains a lifelong friend and correspondent of his wife Luise.
The complete betrayal of the social democratic leadership becomes shockingly clear in the scene where Karl Liebknecht emerges from the Reichstag to tell her that all SPD parliamentarians have voted in favour of the granting of war funds.
Liebknecht was the only member of parliament in 1914 to oppose these. National chauvinism as a direct result of this party’s reformism drives them into their disastrous support for WWI.
Luxemburg, keenly aware of the growing danger of war from very early on, unmasks the profoundly inhuman nature of war time and again, as the senseless slaughter of working people in the interests of power and profits.
She steps up her activities even more as the world war approaches, and increasingly the anti-war struggle becomes a central focus of the film.
All speeches quoted in the film are documented, and apply uncannily to our own times, over 100 years and two world wars later:
“Were we suddenly to lose sight of all these happenings and manoeuvres, …could we say, for instance, that for forty years we have had uninterrupted peace. This idea, which considers exclusively events on the European continent, ignores the very reason why we have had no war in Europe for decades is the fact that international antagonisms have grown infinitely beyond the narrow confines of the European continent.
“European problems and interests are now fought out on the world seas and in the by-corners of Europe. Hence the ‘United States of Europe’ is an idea which runs directly counter both economically and politically to the path of progress.”
Following her arrest for speaking at an anti-war rally in Berlin in 1913, she defended herself in the courtroom: “When the majority of working people realise … that wars are barbaric, deeply immoral, reactionary, and anti-people, then wars will have become impossible.”
Faced with the betrayal of the SPD leadership, Liebknecht, Luxemburg and Zetkin discuss the need for a new party, the Spartacus League, which went on to become the Communist Party.
Luxemburg is put in “protective custody,” imprisoned again on July 10 1916, first in Berlin, later in Vronke Fortress and finally in Wroclaw in Poland.
She was released on November 9 1918. During this time, she is allowed books and letters, and she secretly passes visitors her contributions to the “Spartacus Letters.”
On the day of Luxemburg’s release the Kaiser abdicates, and SPD politician Philipp Scheidemann proclaims Germany a republic, with SPD leader Ebert taking power.
He prevents the country from turning into a soviet, socialist republic, which Liebknecht proclaims on the same day.
The Communist Party of Germany is founded on New Year’s Day 1919. Uprisings in Berlin against the Ebert government follow in the second week of January.
Luxemburg and Liebknecht do not agree in their analysis of the rising and are now wanted persons.
They are betrayed, tracked to their hiding place on January 15 1919 — and the rest is history.
The film does not make clear Ebert’s final betrayal of his erstwhile comrades: General Staff Officer Captain Waldemar Pabst informed the Reich government at an early stage about the arrest of the two.
Pabst took the decision to have Liebknecht and Luxemburg murdered, considering the executions in the national interest.
Pabst lived until 1970 in West Germany and in old age maintained that the SPD leadership, in the person of Noske and in all likelihood Ebert, had agreed the killings.
Expressing her profound belief in the eventual and unstoppable liberation of humankind, Luxemburg declares:
“In Schiller’s drama, Wallenstein says on the night that was to be his last, as he gazes with inquiring eyes at the stars to unravel in them the course of things to come: ‘The day is near, and Mars rules the hour.’
“This also applies to today’s times. Mars, the bloody god of war, still rules the hour.
“Power is still with those who rely solely on a forest of murderous weapons to thwart the working people in their just struggle.
“Wars are still being prepared, parliament is still being controlled, and more and more military bills are passed, the people are still being sucked to the last drop by the gluttonous Moloch of Militarism.
“Mars still rules the hour. But, as Wallenstein said: ‘The day is near, the day that is ours.’
“So, too, the day approaches when we who are at the bottom will rise! Not to carry out that bloody fantasy of mutiny and slaughter that hovers before the terrified eyes of the prosecutors, no, we who will rise to power will be the first to realise a social order worthy of the human race, a society that knows no exploitation of one human by another, that knows no genocide, a society that will realise the ideals of both the oldest founders of religion and the greatest philosophers of humanity.
“In order to bring about this new day as quickly as possible we must use our utmost powers, without looking to any success, in defiance of all public prosecutors, in defiance of all military power. Our slogan will become reality: The people are with us, victory is with us!”
Friday, March 05, 2021
"Nuclear Risks" DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGIES
Senator “It’s Time to Wake Up” Whitehouse drops his climate change mic
A few weeks ago, Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse literally dropped the mic,
after a nearly eight-year streak of weekly speeches calling for action on climate change.
In this interview with Bulletin deputy editor Dan Drollette, Whitehouse gives his reading of the prospects for dealing with climate change in the Senate and elsewhere. Read more.
French report grapples with nuclear fallout from Algerian War
A January report commissioned by France's President Macron signaled that radioactive
fallout from the Algerian War has remained a thorn between France and Algeria. Here's a look at the countries' nuclear history — and possible steps toward reconciliation. Read more.
DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGIES
Regulating military AI will be difficult. Here’s a way forward
If the international community doesn’t properly manage the development, proliferation, and use of military AI, international peace and stability could be at stake. Read more.
"They keep growing back" design now available!
Nuclear Disaster Compensation: A Call for Action
Join Northwestern University and the Bulletin on March 9
for an event highlighting the human toll of nuclear catastrophes worldwide.
We'll discuss actions scientists, policymakers and citizens can take to prepare
for future nuclear accidents as the 10th anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear disaster approaches and the Doomsday Clock hits 100 seconds to midnight. Register here.
Wednesday, March 03, 2021
Paul Krugman
Where have all the unions gone?Unionstats.com
Why did this happen? You often hear assertions to the effect that globalization killed the labor movement, because unionized firms couldn’t cope with international competition.
But this story doesn’t hold up in the face of the facts. First, while unions have lost some ground in many countries, the collapse of organized labor in America is unique. Denmark is every bit as integrated with the global economy as we are, yet two-thirds of its workers are union members. A quarter of Canadian workers are unionized, which is only a modest decline from the proportion half a century ago.
Also, while a global competition story might seem to make sense for manufacturing firms, there’s no reason unions have to be restricted to manufacturing. These days America’s biggest private employers are Walmart, Amazon, Kroger and Home Depot. (Amazon may look to consumers like a virtual company that exists only in cyberspace, but those quick deliveries are made possible by more than a million workers, mainly employed in a vast network of warehouses, and a complex delivery system.)
And the services provided by today’s giant service-sector companies aren’t subject to global competition: You can’t get two-day delivery or fresh produce from a factory in Guangzhou. There is, in other words, no inherent economic reason for the implosion of the U.S. labor movement.
So what did happen? Politics. Unions could have remained an important force in American life, even as we transitioned from a manufacturing to a service economy. But to do so they would have had to organize workers in rapidly growing service companies like Walmart and now Amazon. And they generally failed to do so, because the transition to a service economy took place in an era of conservative political dominance.
Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou will return to the British Columbia Supreme Court
Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou will return to the British Columbia Supreme Court on March
1 for the next phase of extradition proceedings, said a statement from Huawei Canada on Saturday.
The next-phase extradition proceedings will revolve around "the four branches of abuse of process,"
including "political motivation, unlawful detention, material omissions and misstatements, and
violations of customary international law", said Huawei Canada.
The case against Meng violates customary international law and Meng's Charter rights, said the statement.
"The court will be seized with whether these constitute an abuse of the Canadian judicial process sufficient to order a stay of the extradition proceedings," it added.
"As the case enters its next phase, Huawei remains confident in Meng Wanzhou's innocence.
We will continue to support Ms. Meng's pursuit of justice and freedom," said the company.
Sunday, February 28, 2021
The world will heat by more than 1.5C unless nations produce tougher policies, a global stocktake has confirmed.
Governments must halve emissions by 2030 if they intend the Earth to stay within the 1.5C “safe” threshold.
But the latest set of national policies submitted to the UN shows emissions will merely be stabilised by 2030.
The UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, called it a red alert for our planet.
He said: "It shows governments are nowhere close to the level of ambition needed to limit climate change to
1.5 degrees and meet the goals of the Paris (Climate) Agreement.
"The major emitters must step up with much more ambitious emissions reductions targets."
Rejoining Paris sets ambitious climate goal for Biden
Chancellor 'must use Budget to make finance green'
West Antarctica's Getz glaciers flowing faster
Dr Niklas Hohne from the New Climate Institute told BBC News:
"There is a huge gap to fill if we are serious about 1.5C (the threshold nations have agreed not to pass).
"Global emissions have to be halved – but with current proposals they will only be stable. That’s really not good enough."
Some nations have not even submitted a climate plan, and some – such as Australia – are judged to have offered no substantial improvement on previous proposals.
China's first Ad5-nCoV COVID-19 vaccine was rolled out on Friday. One of the developers of the single-dose vaccine said that the annual production capacity can reach 500 million doses, which means 500 million people can be vaccinated in a year.
Phase-I clinical trials of the vaccine started on March 16, 2020, making it the world's first COVID-19 candidate vaccine that entered clinical trials.
The Ad5-nCoV vaccine is a recombinant adenovirus vector vaccine jointly developed by CanSino Biologics and researchers from the Institute of Military Medicine under the Academy of Military Sciences led by Chen Wei.
Chen is an infectious disease expert and a researcher at the Institute of Military Medicine under the Academy of Military Sciences.
Unlike inactivated vaccines, Ad5-nCoV is effective with a single dose and can bring dual protection ̶ humoral and cellular immunity ̶ at the same time.
It is the only single-dose COVID-19 vaccine that has been given a conditional approval to be rolled out in China, state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) reported on Friday.
People can get desirable protective effect after 14 days of inoculation.
The protective effect can last at least six months after a single-dose inoculation and it can increase immune response by 10 to 20 times if the second dose is taken half a year after the first one, Chen told CCTV in an exclusive interview on Friday.
"We have data for six months so far to prove the vaccine's efficacy People don't need to take another dose within the first six months after their first inoculation. What if the epidemic is not over after six months? We have also developed the vaccine so that its effect is strengthened even after six months," Chen said.
According to data, Chen and other researchers predicted that the vaccine's effect can last two years after two doses.
The most important feature of the vaccine is that it can be produced fast and on a large scale, Chen said.
The vaccine showed full protection against severe-illness morbidity in Pakistan, Chen said, noting that it can achieve more than 90 percent protection against severe-illness.
The vaccine showed 90.98 percent efficacy rate in preventing severe diseases in its interim analysis. And it's effective in preventing 65.7 percent of symptomatic diseases in clinical trials conducted in multiple countries including Pakistan, Faisal Sultan, special assistant to the Pakistani Minister on Health, announced in early February.
Chen said no serious adverse reactions associated with the vaccine have been reported in the vaccinated population so far, including those in extreme environments. And no specific adverse events have been reported that are different from those of other vaccines.
The Ad5-nCoV vaccine is actually mature and reliable. The vaccine with such technology has already been used for Ebola virus in 2014, Chen said.
People aged under 18 and over 60 are not allowed to take the other approved vaccines without conditional approval. However, the Ad5-nCoV vaccine is different.
Ad5-nCoV's Phase-II and Phase-III trials all involved elder participants as people aged over 55 or 60 have a higher morbidity of severe illness, Chen said.
The oldest volunteer was a man surnamed Xiong whose antibody tested positive after the clinical trial results were revealed, this gave researchers great confidence, Chen noted. She also said they have safety data of clinical trials for people aged 6-18 which are being reviewed by China's National Medical Products Administration.
A PhD volunteer took the vaccine on February 29, 2020, the same day as Chen. And she had given birth to a baby one week earlier. "She and her baby are healthy now," Chen said.
Since the vaccine can be transported and stored at 2C-8C, Chen hopes that the vaccine won't require cold-chain logistics. She also said they have finished the clinical trials around the world and will soon release the results.
In China there are two types of COVID-19 vaccines ̶ inactivated and Ad5-nCoV vaccines. When asked which one people should choose, Chen said those who want to take fewer doses and get faster immune response should choose the Ad5-nCoV.
As other variants of the virus have been found in other parts of the world, Chen said they will follow the safety of the vaccine over the long term after the rollout, and they will also track its effectiveness against the new variants. She also stated that they have started to develop a vaccine against the new variants.
When asked what the level of China's vaccine research and development is in the world, Chen said, "There is no doubt we are in the first group."
"There are few other countries that can reach the level that China has reached," she noted.
"We are neither arrogant nor condescending. We also learn more from others in order to produce safer vaccines. We must have confidence in our science and technology," she remarked.
Friday, February 26, 2021
Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare, Papua New Guinea's 'father of the nation'
Grand Chief Sir Michael Somare, Papua New Guinea's 'father of the nation'
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
JobSeeker boost of $3.57 a day is 'a heartless betrayal
JobSeeker boost of $3.57 a day is 'a heartless betrayal' of unemployed Australians,
welfare advocates say https://www.sbs.com.au/news/jobseeker-boost-of-3-57-a-day-is-a-
heartless-betrayal-of-unemployed-australians-welfare-advocates-say?cid=newsapp:socialshare:other
Sunday, February 21, 2021
Doug Cameron
Doug Cameron
@DougCameron51
·
5h
When The pompous NewsCorp mouthpiece Paul Kelly concedes that
Morrison’s handling of the rape allegation is “a significant political liability”.
When the key Murdoch strategist cannot bring himself to defend Morrison you know he is in trouble!
#auspol
Saturday, February 20, 2021
Friday, February 19, 2021
Acoss
Permanent JobSeeker increase must raise rate to at least $65 per day and ensure everyone has enough for the basics of their life
19 February 2021
New report shows progress made on homelessness in response to COVID-19 slipping away – tens of thousands face huge rental debts
11 February 2021
ACOSS plan to deliver a healthier, more caring Australia, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs
9 February 2021
Reserve Bank Governor restates support for permanent JobSeeker increase
3 February 2021
ACOSS calls on Government to do the right and smart thing on JobSeeker, ahead of expected decision
1 February 2021
Only two thirds of full-time jobs lost in recession restored
21 January 2021
Millions face a bleak New Year as Coronavirus payments are cut again
31 December 2020
MYEFO fails to provide hope or confidence for 2021 to millions on low incomes
17 December 2020
New report shows who is most impacted by inequality in Australia
17 December 2020
ACOSS welcomes new investment in home care packages
16 December 2020
COVID shines light on failure of energy system for people experiencing disadvantage
16 December 2020
Fundraising reform a welcome first step
15 December 2020
Millions left to dread 2021 thanks to Government’s Christmas cut to income support
11 December 2020
Community organisations slam decision to continue discriminatory and punitive Cashless Debit Card
10 December 2020
ACOSS delivers hundreds of Christmas messages from people on JobSeeker to Parliament
1 December 2020
Retirement Incomes Review highlights growing divide
20 November 2020
Thousands take action against Christmas-cut to income support as unemployment hits 7%
19 November 2020
ACOSS response to Robodebt Settlement
16 November 2020
Government decision to cut income support at Christmas is a cruel and damaging mistake
10 November 2020
ACOSS warns Government against a Christmas cut to income support
10 November 2020
Community sector urges Parliament to progress the Climate Change Bill 2020
9 November 2020
COVID Commission needs community input to minimise outbreaks
4 November 2020
ACOSS appearing at Senate Inquiry hearing today on JobMaker wage subsidy for people under 35
2 November 2020
Post-Budget Analysis in Anti-Poverty Week
12 October 2020
Post Budget Briefing Media Release
8 October 2020
Glimmer of hope for some, but millions still stranded
6 October 2020
PBO report signals older women at risk of long-term unemployment without Government action
30 September 2020
People on JobSeeker need financial security, not cuts, to rebuild from crisis
24 September 2020
Technology Roadmap needs to prioritise job creation and emissions reductions
22 September 2020
New survey shows impact of COVID-19 on community sector and those it helps
18 September 2020
More investment needed in job-rich energy efficiency for low-income homes
17 September 2020
Thursday, February 18, 2021
India’s trade union demands ‘serious action’ against Amazon after report alleges it worked to dodge country’s regulations
India’s trade union demands ‘serious action’ against Amazon after report alleges it worked to dodge country’s regulations
‘Wildly unfair’: UN boss says 10 nations used 75% of all vaccines
Al Jazeera
Antonio Guterres urges wealthy nations to lead global effort to ensure people in every country get inoculated for COVID as soon as possible.
The United Nations chief has sharply criticised the “wildly uneven and unfair” distribution of COVID-19 vaccines, pointing out that just 10 countries have administered 75 percent of all vaccinations.
Addressing a high-level meeting of the UN Security Council on Wednesday,
Antonio Guterres said 130 countries have not received a single dose of vaccine.
First COVID-19 vaccines enter Gaza after Israel hold up
Left out by EU, Balkan nations turn to Russia, China for vaccine
COVAX to send millions of AstraZeneca shots to Latin America
COVAX sets out plan for global distribution of 337m vaccines
“At this critical moment, vaccine equity is the biggest moral test before the global community,” he said.
Guterres called for an urgent Global Vaccination Plan to bring together those with the power to ensure fair
vaccine distribution – scientists, vaccine producers and those who can fund the effort – to ensure all
people in every nation get inoculated as soon as possible.
The secretary-general further called on the world’s leading economic powers in the Group of
20 to establish an emergency task force that should have the capacity to bring together “the pharmaceutical companies and key industry and logistics actors”.
Guterres said a meeting on Friday of the Group of Seven top industrialised nations
“can create the momentum to mobilise the necessary financial resources”.
Reporting from the UN headquarters, Al Jazeera’s diplomatic editor James
Bays said there was a broad agreement over the potential future problems in the
fight against the pandemic due to the uneven distribution of vaccines.
“Rich countries are vaccinating people but many other parts of the world are not.
You’re never going to get rid of COVID-19 if you have it spreading in some parts of
the world and potentially mutating, and potentially in the future making vaccines not work,” Bays said.
“Less than 1 percent of COVID-19 vaccines so far globally have been administered in the 32 countries currently facing the most severe humanitarian crises.”
Russia NAVALNY'S TEAM TARGETED
NAVALNY'S TEAM TARGETED
Navalny was jailed immediately after his Jan. 17 return from Germany — where he spent five months recovering
from the nerve-agent poisoning he blamed on the Kremlin. Since then, authorities have moved swiftly to
silence and isolate his allies.
Last week, a Moscow court put his brother, Oleg, top associate Lyubov Sobol, and several other key allies under house arrest — without access to the internet — for two months as part of a criminal probe into alleged violations of coronavirus regulations during protests. All across Russia, top members of Navalny's team in the regions also faced arrests.
Despite these moves, associates of Navalny who remain free have used social media platforms to organize the protests, designating assembly points and routes of marches and posting advice on how to bypass police cordons and avoid detention.
During the Jan. 31 protest in Moscow, authorities imposed an unprecedented lockdown of the city center, closing large swaths to pedestrian traffic, shutting several subway stations, and closing restaurants and stores.
The shutdown was aimed at preventing demonstrators from rallying near the main headquarters of the Federal Security Service and other government buildings.
A large majority of Britons are dissatisfied with Boris Johnson's Brexit deal and want it overhauled, a new study has found.
The report by think-tank the British Foreign Policy Group found just 24 per cent of the population believes the Brexit deal is the best framework for future relations with the EU.
The study, based on polling by Opinium, found that 27 per cent want the UK to pursue a much closer relationship with the bloc, eventually rejoining it.
A further 22 per cent want a closer relationship but to remain outside – a relationship resembling Norway or Switzerland's – bringing total support for closer integration to 49 per cent
New Caledonia has a pro-independence government for the first time since 1999 - SBS News
New Caledonia has a pro-independence government for the first time since 1999 - SBS News
Monday, February 15, 2021
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