273ca3 No.21755366 [Last50 Posts]
Welcome To Q Research AUSTRALIA
A new thread for research and discussion of Australia's role in The Great Awakening.
Previous thread
>>21251854 Q Research AUSTRALIA #37
Q's Posts made on Q Research AUSTRALIA threads
Wednesday 11.20.2019
>>7358352 ————————————–——– These people are stupid.
>>7358338 ————————————–——– All assets [F + D] being deployed.
>>7358318 ————————————–——– What happens when the PUBLIC discovers the TRUTH [magnitude] re: [D] party corruption?
Tuesday 11.19.2019
>>7357790 ————————————–——– FISA goes both ways.
Saturday 11.16.2019
>>7356270 ————————————–——– There is no escaping God.
>>7356265 ————————————–——– The Harvest [crop] has been prepared and soon will be delivered to the public for consumption.
Friday 11.15.2019
>>7356017 ————————————–——– "Whistle Blower Traps" [Mar 4 2018] 'Trap' keyword select provided.....
Thursday 03.28.2019
>>5945210 ————————————–——– Sometimes our 'sniffer' picks and pulls w/o applying credit file
>>5945074 ————————————–——– We LOVE you!
>>5944970 ————————————–——– USA v. LifeLog?
>>5944908 ————————————–——– It is an embarrassment to our Nation!
>>5944859 ————————————–——– 'Knowingly'
Q's Posts referencing Australia
https://qanon.pub/?q=AUS
https://qanon.pub/?q=australia
https://qanon.pub/?q=koala
https://qanon.pub/?q=HouseOfCards
https://qanon.pub/?q=boomerang
https://qanon.pub/?q=45HarisonHarold
https://qanon.pub/?q=6572656
https://qanon.pub/?q=RAT%20BAIT
https://qanon.pub/?q=VERY%20important
https://qanon.pub/?q=remain%20in%20the%20light
https://qanon.pub/?q=news.com.au
Q's Posts referencing Australian citizens
Malcolm Turnbull (X/AUS)
Former Prime Minister of Australia, 2015 to 2018
https://qanon.pub/?q=X%2FAUS
https://qanon.pub/?q=call%20details
https://qanon.pub/?q=Threat%20to%20AUS
https://qanon.pub/#819
Alexander Downer
Former Australian Liberal Party politician and former Australian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
https://qanon.pub/?q=Downer
Cardinal George Pell
Australian Cardinal of the Catholic Church and former Prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy
https://qanon.pub/?q=Pell
https://qanon.pub/?q=cardinal-george-pell
https://qanon.pub/?q=pecking
Julian Assange
Australian activist, founder, editor and publisher of WikiLeaks
https://qanon.pub/?q=assange
https://qanon.pub/?q=JA
https://qanon.pub/?q=Under%20protection
https://qanon.pub/?q=WL
https://qanon.pub/?q=wikileaks
https://qanon.pub/?q=crowdstrike
https://qanon.pub/?q=server
https://qanon.pub/?q=Seth
https://qanon.pub/?q=SR
https://qalerts.app/?q=snowden
https://qalerts.app/?q=roadmap
Virginia Roberts Giuffre
American-Australian survivor of the sex trafficking ring operated by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell
https://qanon.pub/#4568
https://qanon.pub/#4728
https://qanon.pub/#1054
https://qanon.pub/?q=chandler
https://qanon.pub/?q=epstein
https://qanon.pub/?q=island
https://qanon.pub/#1001
https://qanon.pub/#1861
https://qanon.pub/#3145
https://qanon.pub/#3147
https://qanon.pub/#4578
https://qanon.pub/#3432
https://qanon.pub/#3497
https://qanon.pub/#4727
https://qanon.pub/#4797
https://qanon.pub/?q=wexner
https://qanon.pub/#4576
https://qanon.pub/#4577
https://qanon.pub/?q=maxwell
https://qanon.pub/#4569
https://qanon.pub/?q=spacey
https://qanon.pub/#4570
https://qanon.pub/?q=normalize
https://qanon.pub/?q=Prince%20Andrew
https://qanon.pub/#4579
https://qanon.pub/#4907
https://qanon.pub/#4911
https://qanon.pub/#4921
https://qanon.pub/?q=Welcome%20aboard.
https://qanon.pub/?q=dershowitz
https://qanon.pub/?q=Dearest%20Virginia
Q's Posts referencing The Five Eyes intelligence alliance (FVEY)
An anglophone intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States
https://qanon.pub/?q=FVEY
https://qanon.pub/?q=Five%20Eyes
https://qanon.pub/?q=Interesting%2C
https://qanon.pub/?q=RAT%20BAIT
"Does AUS stand w/ the US or only select divisions within the US?"
Q
Nov 25 2018
https://qanon.pub/#2501
____________________________
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273ca3 No.21755376
#37 - Part 1
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 1
>>21265625 Albanese’s electorate office ‘unblocked’ as protester numbers dwindle - Pro-Palestine encampment protesters have “unblocked” Anthony Albanese’s electorate office, their dwindling numbers moving away from its entrance after discussions with the Australian Federal Police. Activists had blocked access for about five months, triggering safety concerns that forced closure of the Marrickville office, which had also been vandalised, including with red inverted triangles, the symbol used by terror group Hamas to signify targets it intended to attack. On Sunday, almost all the graffiti and placards had been removed and only a much smaller group of activists remained, slightly further from the office and not restricting access. The Australian understands NSW police have not issued any move-on directions to the protesters. Mr Albanese has previously criticised damage and protests at MPs’ electorate offices, and how they blocked constituents. His own office was tagged with Hamas’ red inverted triangles and shut for months, while Bill Shorten’s Moonee Ponds office has been vandalised and Macnamara MP Josh Burns’s was graffitied with the message “Zionism is fascism”.
>>21289111 Labor targets Israeli settlers for travel bans, financial sanctions - The Albanese government has slapped financial sanctions and travel bans on seven Israeli settlers and a Jewish youth group linked to beatings and sexual assault of Palestinians in the West Bank. Penny Wong announced the sanctions on Thursday morning, declaring settler violence was inflaming tensions within the country and undermining the prospect of a two-state solution. “The individuals sanctioned today have been involved in violent attacks on Palestinians,” the Foreign Minister said. “This includes beatings, sexual assault and torture of Palestinians resulting in serious injury and in some cases, death.” The following individuals will be banned from travelling to Australia and have any Australian assets frozen: Yinon Levi, Zvi Bar Yousef, Neria Ben Pazi, Elisha Yered, David Chai Chasdai, Einan Tanjil, and Meir Ettinger. The government also sanctioned Hilltop Youth, a religious youth group dedicated to establishing settler outposts throughout the West Bank. Senator Wong said: “We call on Israel to hold perpetrators of settler violence to account and to cease its ongoing settlement activity, which only inflames tensions and further undermines stability and prospects for a two-state solution.”
>>21289176 Video: AFP crackdown on activists wearing terrorist symbols at pro-Palestine rallies - Disturbing images of activists and children wearing clothing items emblazoned with terrorist insignia at pro-Palestine rallies across the country have been referred by Victoria Police to the Australian Federal Police. The Australian has obtained evidence of children wearing Hamas-style logos at a Melbourne protest led by prominent activist and restaurateur Hash Tayeh, who is being investigated for inciting hatred after declaring all Zionists were terrorists. Victoria Police said it had referred the images of terrorist symbols being worn in public rallies to the AFP. “Appropriate referrals have been made to AFP. We are unable to provide specific comments on every clothing item,” a police spokesperson said. The Australian understands printing business Free Palestine Printing was responsible for selling merchandise with Hamas emblems. One design appeared to feature a Hamas member wearing the terror group’s associated headband, while boycott-Israel stickers, signs reading “Zionism is Terrorism” and a colouring book for children with maps of Israel replaced with Palestine were also on display. They appear to be sold exclusively at rallies. It is illegal to purchase, display or distribute terrorist symbols under Australian law, with offenders facing up to one year in prison.
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273ca3 No.21755378
#37 - Part 2
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 2
>>21296615 Australia, Canada and NZ call for an immediate ceasefire to end catastrophic human suffering in Gaza - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has joined with his counterparts from Canada and New Zealand to urge Israel to implement an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, saying they remain committed to a two-state solution as the “only realistic solution” to a lasting peace in the region. As international frustration with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to grow, the three leaders implored him to allow extra aid into the area, where about 1.5 million Palestinians are sheltering. “The situation in Gaza is catastrophic. The human suffering is unacceptable. It cannot continue,” Albanese said in a joint statement with New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxton and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. We remain unequivocal in our condemnation of Hamas for the atrocities of October 7 and ongoing acts of terror. Hamas must lay down its arms and release all hostages. We see no role for Hamas in the future governance of Gaza. An immediate ceasefire is needed desperately. Civilians must be protected, and a sustained increase in the flow of assistance throughout Gaza is needed to address the humanitarian situation.” It is the third time the three leaders have come together to urge Israel to halt its operations in Gaza. In a statement released in February, the group of leaders warned Israel against launching a ground operation in Gaza. This followed the group’s first contribution in December in which they said they supported “urgent international efforts towards a sustainable ceasefire” and backed Israel’s right to defend itself in accordance with international law.
>>21296698 Daniel Andrews doesn’t support Palestinian statehood at the moment, calls out ‘evil’ anti-Semitism - A lead organiser of Labor Friends of Palestine claims former Victorian premier Daniel Andrews is “out of step” over a declaration he made at a Melbourne synagogue that he currently does not support Palestinian statehood. ALP member Peter Moss pointed to six motions relating to the war in Gaza that passed at the Victorian State Labor Conference in May to demonstrate how Mr Andrews was not representing the overwhelming view of the party. “He’s out on an extreme limb with these comments,” Mr Moss told The Australian. “It’s inconsistent with Labor values. Broadly we’re a party that stands up for certain values, respect for international law. “(Recognition) is the minimum that Australia could do. It’s party policy, it’s overwhelmingly supported by members and I don’t think Daniel Andrews in any way represents the views of any significant part of the Labor Party.” The former premier used the Melbourne launch of the Labor Friends of Israel at the Beth Israel synagogue in St Kilda on Thursday night to stress the importance of pushing back against “twisted logic” that brought legitimacy to terrorism. “I do not at this time support a recognition of a Palestinian state. That is not to say that recognition of a Palestinian state is something that should never occur,” Mr Andrews told the congregation. “But at this time, I do not believe that is a productive step forward. You can only have peace if you have a partner in this … there is an actively hostile opponent.”
>>21303501 NSW Labor call for Palestinian statehood as party gears for an early election - The NSW Labor conference has formally called on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to recognise Palestine as a sovereign and independent state “as a priority” amid the party appearing to gear itself toward a possible early election. It comes at the conclusion of the first day of its state conference at Sydney’s Town Hall, which had been on alert for activist disruption but ended amid party unity on Palestinian statehood. In a passionate almost five-minute long speech, NSW Minister Jihad Dib made the case to formally call on the Prime Minister to recognise Palestine “as a priority” after Mr Albanese himself earlier on Saturday told delegates Labor could “bring people together”. The conference has been dominated - outside and in - by Palestine, although amid heightened security and concerted efforts at party unity, it had not kicked off as previously feared. A pro-Palestine rally assembled outside while Mr Albanese gave his address - where a single delegate unfurled a Palestine flag from the upstairs gallery – before marching through the city.
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273ca3 No.21755381
#37 - Part 3
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 3
>>21322183 Australians told to leave Lebanon immediately as Dutton flies to Israel - The federal government has advised Australians not to travel to Lebanon and warned those in the country should “leave immediately” while commercial flights are still available as Opposition Leader Peter Dutton left on an official visit to Israel. Australia, along with the United States, UK, France and Germany have issued warnings to their citizens travelling in the region as tensions escalate between terrorist group Hezbollah and Israel over a rocket attack on the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights that struck a soccer field killing 12 children and teens. Flights in and out of Beirut-Rafic Hariri International Airport, Lebanon’s only airport, were cancelled and delayed on Monday. The airport has been targeted in the country’s civil war, and previous fighting with Israel, including in the last war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2006. “We continue to advise that Australians do not travel to Lebanon due to the volatile security situation and the risk of the security situation deteriorating further,” advice on the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade website Smartraveller said. Dutton left Australia on Monday for a four-day trip to Israel where he will meet with members of the Israeli government and people affected by the October 7 attack. “The connections between Australia and Israel are deep and abiding,” Dutton said in a statement. “Today, Australia and Israel have a strong bilateral relationship traversing trade, agriculture, technology, security and more. It’s a relationship which will only grow stronger built around our devotion to democracy in a world where our values and way of life faces old and new threats.”
>>21332328 Video: ‘Pro-Palestinian’ Officeworks staffer refuses to laminate Jewish newspaper for kippah-wearing man - Extraordinary footage of a ‘pro-Palestinian’ Officeworks staff member refusing to laminate a Jewish newspaper has emerged, with the Jewish customer taking Officeworks to an anti-discrimination tribunal over the confrontation. The footage has landed the Wesfarmers-owned nationwide office supply store in a Victorian tribunal, with the Jewish man - who has asked to remain anonymous due to fears of retribution - telling The Australian he is now seriously considering moving his family to Israel because of the ordeal. The video, filmed in a store on March 4, shows the man at a counter at the Elsternwick store presenting a copy of the Australian Jewish News, requesting for it to be laminated before an Officeworks staff member, who identified herself as a department manager, refuses him service because of her “pro-Palestinian” stance. “I’m pro-Palestine, and we have the right to deny jobs … it is an Officeworks position,” she said. A spokesperson for Officeworks told The Australian: “We want everyone to have an enjoyable shopping experience with us - whether it be shopping in store or online. We are disappointed that this did not occur with one of our customers at our Elsternwick store in March 2024. “We can confirm that we have taken this matter extremely seriously, and since the matter occurred, have investigated internally and taken the appropriate action to ensure this doesn’t take place again. In this particular incident, our policies were incorrectly applied and in accordance with our Officeworks’ policies, the laminating should have taken place.”
>>21332364 Video: Australians in Lebanon warned to leave immediately as tensions escalate between Israel and Hezbollah - The federal government is ramping up warnings to Australians in Lebanon, pleading with them to leave the country right now as the risk of a regional conflagration grows. On Wednesday night Foreign Minister Penny Wong issued a video message urging people in Lebanon to get out following the killing of a top Hezbollah commander in the country and the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran. "My message to Australian citizens and residents in Lebanon is: now is the time to leave. If you are in Australia and thinking of travelling to Lebanon - do not," the foreign minister said. "Some commercial flights are still operating. If you can leave, you should." The government expects Beirut airport will be shut down if a broader conflict breaks out, cutting the main route out of the country. If that happens the government may be able to use ferries to get people out of Lebanon by taking them to Cyprus, as it did when it evacuated more than 5,000 Australians during the 2006 Lebanon War. But officials are emphasising that there is no guarantee that they'll be able to pull off such a major rescue operation, particularly if a large-scale war breaks out.
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273ca3 No.21755383
#37 - Part 4
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 4
>>21338755 Video: 'No guarantee': Albanese's fresh warning to Australians in Lebanon as conflict fears grow - The federal government has renewed calls for Australians to leave Lebanon as soon as possible after an Israeli strike killed Hezbollah's top commander Fuad Shukr. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese warned on Thursday that conflict in the Middle East could escalate after the death of Shakur and the reported assassination of Ismail Haniyeh - the political leader of Palestinian militant group Hamas - in Iran. About 15,000 Australians live in Lebanon, according to Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade estimates, and Albanese warned it may become impossible for them to leave if commercial flights out of Lebanon's capital, Beirut, are halted. "Given the numbers of people who are there, there's no guarantee … people will be able to come home through other means if that airport is shut," Albanese told reporters in Sydney. His warning echoed an earlier statement from Foreign Minister Penny Wong, who on Wednesday night said "now is the time" for Australians in Lebanon to leave.
>>21338817 New visa to give Palestinians permanent home in Australia - Palestinian refugees will be able to call Australia home rather than being forced to return in a major Albanese government move to deal with the Gaza crisis as the opposition hardens its support for Israel and warns of risks posed by refugees. Senior federal government sources, who asked to remain anonymous as the policy was being finalised, revealed a new special visa pathway would be created for Palestinians in a move set to re-energise the political feud over Labor’s handling of the conflict. It follows months of lobbying by advocates who say those fleeing Gaza have struggled to put food on the table because the temporary visitor visas they were granted prevent them from working or accessing Medicare. Labor is working on the details of the humanitarian push as Opposition Leader Peter Dutton affirmed the Coalition’s support for Israel in a meeting with its prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, who is under pressure from Australia, the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and New Zealand to end the war. Dutton’s trip widened the gulf in attitudes over the war between the Coalition and Labor, which recently called in the Israeli ambassador to warn of the consequences of a war with Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.
>>21354042 Video: ASIO lifts terror threat level to 'probable' amid heightened tensions over war in Gaza - Australia's official terror alert level has been raised to "probable" amid heightened community tensions over the war in Gaza. Security authorities believe the chances of a violent extremist act are now more likely than when authorities lowered the alert level to "possible" in November 2022. ASIO's director-general Mike Burgess said Australia's security environment had become more volatile and unpredictable. "More Australians are being radicalised and being radicalised more quickly," Mr Burgess said. "More Australians are willing to use violence to advance their cause. Politically motivated violence now joins espionage and foreign interference as our principal security concerns." He also noted the conflict in Gaza was not the "cause" for raising the terror level, though it had been a "significant driver". Mr Burgess said, however, raising the threat level did not mean ASIO had intelligence about plans of a current attack or expectations of an imminent attack.
>>21360177 Iran ambassador’s ‘abhorrent’ comments ‘have no place’, Anthony Albanese says - Anthony Albanese has condemned “antisemitic comments” posted on social media by Iran’s ambassador to Australia. Ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi posted on X, formerly Twitter, that Israel is a “genocidal regime” and that he looked forward to the “Zionist plague” getting wiped out of the “holy lands of Palestine”. Speaking to media in Sydney on Tuesday, the Prime Minister said Mr Sadeghi’s comments were “abhorrent” and “have no place”. “We have called in the Iranian Ambassador to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, as is the protocol when something like this happens,” he said. “I make it clear - there’s no place for the sort of comments that were made on social media by the Iranian Ambassador. They’re abhorrent, and they are hateful, they are antisemitic, and they have no place.” Foreign Minister Penny Wong also earlier took aim at the ambassador, calling his words “repugnant”. “Those comments are inflammatory, and they are repugnant,” Ms Wong said. “They are inconsistent with Australia’s values.” She added that DFAT only maintained “a diplomatic relationship with Iran because we seek to further Australia’s interests.”
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273ca3 No.21755385
#37 - Part 5
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 5
>>21360182 Video: 'Repugnant': Penny Wong slams Iran Ambassador to Australia after tweet calling to wipe out the 'Zionist plague' - Foreign Minister Penny Wong has blasted the Iranian Ambassador to Australia's calls on social media supporting Hamas' bid to wipe Israel out of Palestine. In a post on X, Iran Ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi referred to Israel as a “Zionist plague” that should be wiped out of Palestine by Hamas, adding he was “looking forward to such a heavenly and divine promise”. The inflammatory post came after Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed "revenge" against Israel following the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran. He declared that Israel had provided grounds for "harsh punishment". Israel has not claimed responsibility for the assassination. Australia’s Foreign Minister Penny Wong faced questions about the ambassador's remarks on Monday while in Washington, DC. Speaking to the media ahead of the Australia United States Ministerial Consultation, Ms Wong said the comments did not align with Australian values. "Those comments are inflammatory, and they are repugnant,” Ms Wong said. “They are inconsistent with Australia's values." Ms Wong confirmed her department had addressed the issue with the ambassador. “More broadly, we maintain a diplomatic relationship with Iran because we seek to further Australia's interests," she said.
>>21360243 Video: ASIO 'stretched' as it faces terror threat that is more complex than a decade ago - The head of ASIO has conceded his organisation is "stretched" as it grapples with a growing number of unpredictable and complex violent extremist threats that have forced the country's official terror alert level to be lifted for the first time in a decade. On Monday the federal government announced Australia's national terrorism alert level was being lifted from "possible" to "probable". It was last elevated to "probable" in 2014 following the global emergence of the Islamic State organisation. ASIO director-general Mike Burgess said the most likely terrorist attack in 2024 would involve the threat of a "lone actor", usually a young male who has been radicalised quickly online over a "diversity of grievances and personal narratives". Speaking to the ABC's 7.30 program, Mr Burgess said several factors had changed over the past year, prompting a reassessment of the November 2022 ruling to lower the country's official alert level from "probable" to "possible" where it had sat for eight years. "Today … it's completely different to when it was raised in 2014. More people are being radicalised more quickly, more people think violence is permissible from a range of grievances and ideologies, not just what we saw when we raised it in 2014," he said. Asked on the 7.30 program whether ASIO needed more funding, Mr Burgess said: "We are stretched but you'd appreciate if I needed more, I'd ask that in private to government. "My job as director of security is to make sure I have the laws and the resources to do our job. We're stretched is probably all I'd want to say publicly."
>>21385788 Penny Wong condemns Israeli Minister Bezalel Smotrich comment that starving Palestinians may be justified - Foreign Minister Penny Wong has condemned comments by a senior Israeli minister after he suggested it "might be just and moral" to starve Palestinians in Gaza until hostages held by Hamas are returned. Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich made the statement at a conference in support of Jewish settlements on Monday, saying the country had no choice but to send humanitarian aid to Gaza. "It's not possible in today's global reality to manage a war --- no one will allow us to starve two million people, even though that might be just and moral until they return the hostages," he said in a speech. In a post to social media platform X on Saturday, Ms Wong said Australia joins international partners, including the UK, Germany and France, in condemning Mr Smotrich's comments. "The deliberate starvation of civilians is a war crime," she wrote. "There is no justification for it, ever. "An immediate ceasefire in Gaza has never been more urgent, to protect civilians, see hostages released, and enable aid to flow. "We repeat our call on all parties to agree to an immediate ceasefire."
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273ca3 No.21755386
#37 - Part 6
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 6
>>21404209 ‘Not a problem’: Spy boss says Hamas sympathy not a visa dealbreaker - The nation’s top spy says Palestinians who have expressed rhetorical support for listed terror group Hamas will not necessarily be blocked from entering Australia, as the federal government prepares to announce a new visa pathway to help those fleeing the war in Gaza. ASIO director-general Mike Burgess also urged politicians to moderate their language, warning that inflammatory rhetoric could encourage aggrieved individuals to turn to violence. Burgess, who last week raised the national terror threat level from “possible” to “probable”, said that providing financial support or material aid to Hamas may be a problem for Palestinians undergoing security checks as part of their visa application process. It is a different matter if people are expressing support for Hamas because they “want their homeland”, he said. “If it’s just rhetorical support, and they don’t have an ideology or support for a violent extremism ideology, then that’s not a problem,” Burgess told ABC’s Insiders program on Sunday. “If they have a support for that ideology, then that will be a problem.”
>>21404242 ‘Inviting radicalism’: ASIO, Coalition split over visas for Hamas supporters - A rare disagreement has erupted between the nation’s top spy and the Coalition over whether Hamas supporters should be allowed in Australia, as Palestinian advocates grow impatient with delays in establishing a permanent visa scheme for people fleeing the war in Gaza. Coalition MPs wrote to new Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke on Tuesday urging him to ensure no known supporters of Hamas, a listed terrorist organisation, were permitted to enter Australia. ASIO director-general Mike Burgess said on Sunday that anyone who had advocated violence would be ruled out and providing financial support or material aid to Hamas might be a problem for Palestinians undergoing security checks as part of their visa application process, but “just rhetorical support” for the group would not. In a letter to Burke signed by most members of the Coalition party room, opposition MPs said: “We implore you to provide the policy direction to the Department of Home Affairs to ensure that no visa is issued to a person found to support any terrorist organisation, including Hamas, and that those who are presently in Australia and who are known to have links to, or support Hamas, are urgently considered for visa cancellation.”
>>21409565 ‘ASIO’s not conducting checks’: Dutton says nobody from Gaza should come to Australia - Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has called for a stop to migration from Gaza, saying the arrival of people from a war zone to Australia was putting national security at risk, in comments that escalate the Coalition’s attack on Labor as it prepares to unveil a visa scheme for Palestinians. Muslim groups immediately condemned Dutton’s stance as discriminatory, saying they were once again being made political scapegoats while asking where people who had fled the war-torn enclave were supposed to go if they could not stay in Australia. The Coalition has piled pressure on Labor over what it argues are weak security checks for arrivals from Gaza, and its MPs have been alarmed by ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess’s assurances that rhetorical support for Hamas -- a listed terrorist group – would not necessarily preclude people from coming into the country. Seventy Coalition MPs wrote to new Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke on Tuesday, urging him to ensure no known Hamas supporters would be allowed into Australia, as he prepares new avenues to permanent residency for about 1300 Palestinians currently on temporary visas. But Dutton on Wednesday morning went much further, saying: “I don’t think people should be coming in from that war zone at all at the moment. It’s not prudent to do so and I think it puts our national security at risk. “I just think that every Australian would be shocked to think that the government’s bringing in people from a war zone, and that ASIO’s not conducting checks and searches on these people,” he said on Sky News.
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273ca3 No.21755390
#37 - Part 7
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 7
>>21415045 Video: Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young interrupts Nationals leader David Littleproud interview in Parliament corridor - Tensions usually reserved for the floor of the House and Senate have spilled out into the corridors as the domestic political contest over the Israel-Hamas war intensifies. While addressing the media at a doorstop on Thursday morning, Nationals leader David Littleproud was interrupted by Greens environment spokeswoman Sarah Hanson-Young who took issue with the Coalition’s stance on the conflict. “Why don’t you say something about the children being slaughtered?” Senator Hanson-Young said as she walked past interrupting Mr Littleproud’s media conference as he took questions from reporters. After Peter Dutton called for a blanket ban on arrivals from Gaza, arguing some may harbour sympathies for Hamas, Labor, the Greens and Muslim groups have hit back against the move which would prevent refugees from fleeing the war torn enclave. Speaking to the media earlier, Senator Hanson-Young accused the Opposition Leader of heading the “nasty party”. “It’s Trumpian, it’s despicable and it needs to be called out,” she said.
>>21415057 Video: ‘Stop being racist’: Row erupts in parliament over Dutton’s stance on Gaza visas - A fiery racism row erupted in federal parliament after independent MP Zali Steggall told Peter Dutton to “stop being racist” and dividing the country when the opposition leader continued to accuse Labor of making the country less safe by admitting migrants from Gaza. Dutton dismissed Steggall as a “Green with extreme views”, but hours later he was hammered in question time by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who gave his strongest rebuke yet of Dutton by accusing him of “20 years of form” in making divisive remarks about Lebanese and African migrants to Australia. On Thursday morning, Dutton claimed the issuing of visas from a war zone was “an egregious breach of what is in our country’s best interests”. “This is not against people of a particular religious belief. This is not against people of a particular political persuasion. This is about keeping our country safe, and Anthony Albanese has failed the Australian public,” he said in parliament, after bringing a motion to discuss the issue. Steggall rose afterwards to say Dutton’s commentary was “extremely concerning” and whipped up fear, in an emotional speech in which she shared the story of a Palestinian man from her electorate. Labor MPs, including Tanya Plibersek, arrived to sit next to her in the chamber during the speech. “These are families that you are seeking to paint that somehow they are all terrorists, that they should all be mistrusted and they are not worthy of humanitarian aid,” Steggall said. As Dutton interjected, she yelled out: “Stop being racist.” Dutton called for Steggall to withdraw the “offensive and unparliamentary remark”, which she did.
>>21439406 Steggall brands Dutton a ‘bully’ over Gaza racism row - Independent MP Zali Steggall has accused Opposition Leader Peter Dutton of bullying her amid reports he is seeking legal advice after she told him in parliament to “stop being racist”. But she has shifted her language to focus on his policy of banning Palestinian refugees from the country. Speaking to the ABC’s Radio National on Monday, Steggall said she did not regret her remarks, which Prime Minister Anthony Albanese declined to echo in an interview as the debate threatened to swamp a second week of parliament. Steggall, who made the racism comment during a tense session of question time last week, said it had been hard to keep her cool during the exchange. “But no, I don’t [regret my comments] because I think this needs to be called out,” she said. When asked about reports that Dutton was seeking legal advice, Steggall said it was “part of the playbook”. Dutton lost a defamation case in 2022 against refugee advocate Shane Bazzi over a tweet about medical transfers for people detained in Nauru. “I would view [reports he is seeking legal advice] as a true and tried part of the playbook of Mr Dutton, of bullying and intimidating people from calling out his policy and behaviour,” Steggall said.
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273ca3 No.21755392
#37 - Part 8
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 8
>>21446901 Fast lane out of Gaza: Australia among most generous for visas in world - Australia is one of the most generous nations in the developed world in accepting Palestinians from Gaza, new figures suggest, fuelling criticism of the Albanese government’s use of tourist visas for those fleeing the war zone. International data compiled by the opposition indicates Australia’s nearly 3000 approved visas for Gazans since Hamas’s October 7 terrorist attack on Israel far exceed the numbers accepted by the nation’s Five Eyes allies and like-minded countries such as France. Belgium is a rare outlier, approving 2506 Palestinian refugees since January and 3249 last year, while Greece and Turkey are also dealing with large numbers of Palestinian asylum seekers. As the government considers offering permanent visas to up to 1500 Gazans already in the country, opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said Australia was unique in its willingness to offer fast-tracked visas to thousands from the conflict zone. “The Albanese government must urgently explain why Australia appears to have accepted more people from Gaza than almost any other country in the developed world,” Senator Paterson said. “Our closest allies and friends - including Five Eyes members the US, UK, Canada and New Zealand – are all taking a much more cautious approach and have accepted only a fraction of the intake we have.” He said Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke needed to suspend plans to issue fresh visas to Gazans until he could assure Australians that “proper checks have been done”.
>>21459197 Iranian embassy defiant in wake of DFAT ‘polite chat’ - The Iranian embassy has defended its ambassador who posted about a “Zionist plague”, denying it was anti-Semitic and describing the Albanese government’s response as “conversations we had on how to manage the current conditions” in the Middle East rather than a dressing-down. When Iranian ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi posted his controversial tweet, hoping for the “Zionist plague” to be “wiped out” by 2027, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government had summoned him to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) “as a protocol”. In the post, which remains on his X platform, Mr Sadeghi called Israel a “genocidal regime” and said he looked forward to the only Jewish state being “wiped out of the holy lands of Palestine”. He also called the October 7 terrorist attack on Israel an act of resistance “in fighting the criminal Zionist enemy”. In the wake of the controversy following the August 3 post, Mr Sadeghi’s office claimed the call for Israel’s destruction had nothing to do with anti-Semitism or violence, saying it had copped “unjust” backlash. Mr Sadeghi declined multiple requests for an interview, but his embassy released a statement to The Australian this week, in which it vehemently rejected claims the content of his social media post was anti-Semitic, saying it was “not aimed at Jews around the world”. The foreign diplomat’s remarks on Israel triggered widespread outrage from both the Labor government and the Coalition, but the defiant embassy insists they were “unpleasant and unfair reactions”. The Australian asked the embassy whether Mr Sadeghi’s conversation with the DFAT was of disciplinary nature. A spokesperson for the ambassador said they were “in the vein of a range of bilateral, regional, and international subject matters”.
>>21459264 Jewish groups demand extremist influencer Candace Owens’ visa be cancelled - Jewish groups are demanding the government bar extremist US provocateur Candace Owens from holding a speaking tour across Australia because of her conspiracy-tinged attacks on Jews and trans people. Owens rose to prominence as a Donald Trump-aligned influencer and has claimed that Israel was founded by a “cult”, “secret Jewish gangs” operate in Hollywood and minimised Nazi atrocities. She told her 18 million online followers she is selling tickets to “electrifying evenings” in Australia in November. After questions from this masthead, the government said it could block her entry to Australia. Owens, who recently said Trump was too moderate, has also made claims about a range of minority groups including trans people who she falsely said suffered “clinical insanity” and suggested could be responsible for a rise in mass shootings. “There is no place in Australia for Candace Owens and her vile, divisive, and dangerous conspiracy theories,” wrote Zionist Federation of Australia leaders Jeremy Leibler and Alon Cassuto in a letter to Home Affairs and Immigration Minister Tony Burke seen by this masthead. “Your government has rightfully expressed concern about the increasing embrace of extreme ideologies by Australians. Extremism, racism, bigotry, and antisemitism are unacceptable in any form, regardless of whether they originate from the far left or right.”
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273ca3 No.21755393
#37 - Part 9
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 9
>>21473290 Home Affairs rejects three-quarters of Palestinian visa applications amid political furore - The Home Affairs Department rejected three out of four visa applications by Palestinians in the week the Coalition ramped up its political attack on Labor for letting people from war-torn Gaza come to Australia. The latest figures show 13 visas were granted and 39 rejected between August 12 and 19, demonstrating that federal agencies continue to knock back the majority of applicants with Palestinian documents. The data also shows no visas were cancelled over the seven days, suggesting the federal government has not changed its security approach despite Coalition demands. Children have made up 30 per cent of the 2935 visas now issued to people with Palestinian documents since the Israel-Hamas war began in October. Former deputy immigration secretary Abul Rizvi said neither political party had owned up to their mistakes as the issue dominated parliamentary question time all week. The Coalition has accused Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of compromising national security while Labor has painted Opposition Leader Peter Dutton as divisive and distracted from Australians’ cost-of-living concerns. Rizvi said the federal government had erred in issuing visitor visas to the majority of Palestinians rather than launching a humanitarian visa program as was typically done to assist people fleeing conflicts. “It was a bad way of doing it and I hope both parties learn that’s not how you do humanitarian assistance,” he said.
>>21499994 Muslim Votes Matter targets hung parliament in federal election push - Australian advocacy group Muslim Votes Matter (MVM) is prepared to back the Greens and teals over Labor in the next federal election, aiming to hold both the government and the Liberals accountable for what it calls a “failed” response to the Israel-Palestine conflict. MVM will launch a national campaign in Melbourne on Sunday, featuring high-profile speakers and drawing strategic insights from a UK expert who played a pivotal role in a similar movement during the recent British elections. Rather than fielding its own candidates, the group plans to back those whose values align with its priorities. The campaign’s agenda will include discussions on conditions of the war in Gaza, the recent successes of Muslim candidates in the UK, and the potential impact of a hung parliament on Australian policies. The Israel-Gaza conflict has been spruiked as a catalyst to launch the national campaign, which will operate on the ground in every state except for Darwin and Hobart. MVM national representative Ghaith Krayem told The Australian the campaign will not support any political party en masse, but instead, it will make recommendations to the community on how they should vote in each electorate across the country. “Our aim is to hold all those politicians who had an opportunity to speak up and do something to prevent the unfolding genocide to account,” Mr Krayem said.
>>21516429 ‘A bit of a scare’: New Muslim group to pressure Labor in a dozen Victorian seats - Nail Aykan is sick of politicians getting photo opportunities at a Turkish restaurant or speaking to one kebab shop owner and thinking they can rely on Muslim people for their votes. “It’s just your campaign propaganda. It’s window dressing. We want substance.” It’s why Aykan organised the Muslim Voices of Calwell group to engage with candidates in the electorate in Melbourne’s northern suburbs. And it’s why he will argue the merits of a hung parliament at the campaign launch of another group - Muslim Votes Matter – at Broadmeadows Town Hall. The group is looking closely at 12 federal seats in Victoria at the next election, which is due by May: Calwell, Wills, Bruce, Scullin, Holt, Lalor, Gorton, Gellibrand, Fraser, Isaacs, Cooper and Hawke. All of them are held by Labor. “With enough momentum we need to give every candidate a bit of a scare to say, ‘Do not take us for granted’,” Aykan said. Labor has been trying to contain anger over the war in Gaza in key electorates that have thousands of Muslim voters. At the 2021 census, such voters constituted about 24 per cent of people in Calwell and 10 per cent in the at-risk seat of Wills. “The unfortunate consequence … for the Labor Party is that most of our community resides in seats held by the Labor Party, so most of our advocacy work is going to be against Labor,” Muslim Votes Matter national representative Ghaith Krayem said. Krayem said the new group would not field candidates and was independent. But he said it would devise how-to-vote cards for a smaller list of target seats, with rankings more focused on the policies of parties than the individual views of candidates.
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273ca3 No.21755396
#37 - Part 10
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 10
>>21530642 ASIO boss Mike Burgess says his comments over Gaza visas were 'distorted', sparking political storm - Head of ASIO Mike Burgess says his comments on the vetting process for people fleeing Gaza were misrepresented, as a political storm raged over the issue of visas being offered to people trying to leave the war zone. "I've watched with interest over the last couple of weeks how people have chosen to distort what I said," the ASIO director-general told 7.30. "I said that if you support a Palestinian homeland that may not discount you [from entering Australia] because that by itself is not a problem. "But I also said if you have a violent extremist ideology, or you provide material or financial support to a terrorist organisation, that will be a problem." In an interview on Insiders last month, Mr Burgess said that if Palestinians fleeing the conflict expressed "just rhetorical support [for Hamas], and they don't have an ideology or support for a violent extremism ideology, then that's not a problem". He said support for Hamas ideology "will be a problem". Shadow Defence Minister Andrew Hastie told Sky News he disagreed with Mr Burgess. "I think anyone who supports Hamas should not be allowed into Australia. It's as simple as that … I've got a lot of respect for Mike Burgess and he's a pretty straight shooter, but on this question I disagree," Mr Hastie said.
>>21530676 Tehran summons Australian ambassador over 'norm-breaking' Instagram post, Iranian media reports - Iran summoned Australia's ambassador in Tehran over the publication of an Instagram post the government deemed "norm-breaking", Iran's semi-official ILNA news agency reported on Tuesday, a day after state media said the post had "promoted homosexuality". The post on the embassy's official Instagram account celebrated "Wear It Purple Day" and expressed dedication to creating "a supporting environment where everyone, especially LGBTQIA+ youth, can feel proud to be themselves". "Let's keep championing diversity and inclusion for a brighter, more inclusive future," it said. ILNA quoted Australia's ambassador to Iran, Ian McConville, as saying the post was not intended to insult the Iranian people and their values, and that the Islamic Republic was not mentioned in it. Iran's Mehr news agency, another semi-official government news agency headquartered in Tehran, quoted the director of the Regional Department at the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs as having "strongly condemned the action of the Australian embassy in posting such content that was against the accepted norms". "The content published by the Australian embassy is insulting and contrary to Iranian and Islamic tradition, customs and culture," the Iranian diplomat was quoted as saying, also suggesting that posting such content was violating international law.
>>21541915 Video: MPs say ‘no place in parliament’ for candidate who celebrated October 7 attacks - Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has called for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to refuse to direct preferences to any election candidate who celebrated the October 7 attacks after a doctor running against Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke was exposed for sharing social media posts glorifying the Hamas-led massacre. As teal MPs declared there was no place in parliament for someone such as western Sydney GP Ziad Basyouny, who is running for the western Sydney seat of Watson, Burke said that he condemned the October 7 attacks and anyone who celebrated the killing of an estimated 1200 people in Israel. This masthead revealed on Thursday that Basyouny shared a Facebook post five days after October 7 that portrayed the attacks as a dream come true and appeared to glorify Hamas’ use of paragliders to breach the Israel-Gaza border and launch its massacre. Basyouny broke his silence on the matter on Thursday afternoon to say that his sharing of the post should not be seen as an endorsement of violence against innocent people. “As a doctor, as a Muslim, as a human, killing civilians is never right,” he said. Basyouny, whose candidacy was officially endorsed just days ago by the newly formed The Muslim Vote organisation, declined to comment further. In a subsequent post on social media, Basyouny said: “I support the inherent right of Palestinians to defend their land, but I do not support the attacks on civilians … Palestinian resistance pre-dates Hamas, their struggle has been ongoing for decades and I support the freedom of the Palestinians.”
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273ca3 No.21755398
#37 - Part 11
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 11
>>21541961 Brisbane City Council critic faces pro-Palestine anger - Brisbane City Council’s deputy mayor Krista Adams has been forced to close her office amid fears of a snap protest from a pro-Palestinian group in the wake of a dispute over a “racist and offensive” newsletter distributed by a Greens member. The newsletter, which was released on Tuesday by Greens councillor Trina Massey and costing ratepayers $20,000, includes a story on “the ongoing Nakba (catastrophe)” that outlines “methods used to carry out ethnic cleansing, widespread massacres, systematic rape, and other terror-inducing tactics”. Ms Adams revealed on Wednesday that she had written to the council’s acting CEO asking for an investigation over possible breaches of community guidelines. She said the six-page newsletter risked fuelling division and directly conflicted with recent advice from the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, which last month implored politicians to temper their language in relation to the Middle East. It is understood the council passed a motion on Friday demanding Ms Massey pay back the $20,000 used to print and distribute the newsletter. The decision to close Ms Adams’ Holland Park Ward office follows advice from Queensland police that the Justice for Palestine group was planning a protest on Friday. “I stand by my decision to call out the Greens councillor for spreading hate and division in her ratepayer-funded newsletter,” Ms Adams said. She said Ms Massey had thumbed her nose at Australia’s security chief, who just weeks ago raised concerns about a rise in politically motivated violence. “Councillor Massey has once again demonstrated the Greens don’t care about local residents and are only interested in pushing their extreme ideological agenda,” Ms Adams said.
>>21556644 Holocaust survivor speaks out against Candace Owens Australian tour - The oldest living survivor of sick experiments conducted at Nazi death camp Auschwitz has called on the Australian government to block a controversial US commentator from entering the country. Candace Owens’ plans for a November tour have drawn vigorous backlash due to extreme views she has expressed, including conspiracy theories about Jewish people and the minimisation of Nazi Germany’s atrocities. Jewish groups and opposition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan have demanded Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke deny Ms Owens a visa on character grounds, accusing her of spreading “hateful messages”. Now 100-year-old Annetta Able has added her voice to the outcry, saying comments made by Ms Owens were “deeply offensive” and “a dangerous distortion of historical truth that I witnessed with my own eyes”. Ms Able and her identical twin Stephanie Heller were exposed to “horrific experiments” devised by Josef Mengele, dubbed the Angel of Death, while being held at Auschwitz. That included genetic testing procedures which left them seriously ill. The Melbourne-based Holocaust survivor said she felt compelled to speak after being made aware of Ms Owens labelling accounts of Mengele’s deadly work “bizarre propaganda”. “I still bear the physical and emotional scars of Mengele’s cruelty,” the great great grandmother said. “The pain, fear, and trauma I experienced were very real and to hear someone deny these atrocities is a fresh wound to my heart and an insult to the memory of those who perished. “I urge the Australian government to deny Candace Owens a visa.”
>>21561832 Radical protesters unite under the anti-Israel banner to oppose major military conference - Hard-left radical groups opposed to Israel and wars generally are planning a mass protest in Melbourne on Wednesday but face a so-called “ring of steel’’ formed by 1200 Victoria Police. The most extreme anti-Israel groups are planning to join the protest, creating another layer of uncertainty for police, which fear thousands will gather in central Melbourne for the Land Forces 2024 conference. Victoria Police has been gathering intelligence on the planned protests, with radical groups war-gaming how to respond to a large presence of police brought in from across the state. Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan said there would be low tolerance for any protests that affected people going about their daily lives. “Victorians coming into the city to go to work, to go to those important medical appointments, for other activities that they have planned to do so over the rest of this week in the CBD, they should do that, and they should be allowed to continue to undertake those activities unimpeded,’’ she said. Police are expecting as many as 25,000 protesters to be in Melbourne for the defence conference. The large number of people, many radical members of protest groups, have sparked concerns about any ensuing riots.
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273ca3 No.21755400
#37 - Part 12
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 12
>>21589729 Calls to outlaw Hamas symbol after Jewish-owned business targeted - The marking of a Jewish-owned small business with a symbol used by Hamas militants to identify targets to kill has prompted calls for police to use counter-terrorism laws to stamp out its use within Australia’s pro-Palestinian movement. Twice in two months, wine seller Tim Cohen found an inverted red triangle on the wall of his Brunswick East shop in Melbourne’s inner north. The first time, the symbol was accompanied by a threatening message warning people not to buy from his store. The second time, last Sunday, it reappeared without any words. Cohen, a 53-year-old retailer with a readily identifiable Jewish surname, informed Victoria Police, the local council and his state MP about the initial episode. He said his Jewish heritage was the only reason he could think of to explain why his store would be targeted by anti-Israel activists. “It really stunned me,” he said. “I haven’t been outspoken, and I am no Netanyahu cheerleader. “The October 7 attack and conflict that has come out of that has clearly woken up people’s dislike for Jews.” Opposition Leader Peter Dutton urged police to investigate the use of the Hamas symbol, which recently has been co-opted by the broader pro-Palestine movement into protest signs, social media content and messaging.
>>21589782 British Muslim Vote guides Australian stablemates amid challenging electoral map - On the back of its success at the British election, the masterminds behind the shock election of four “Gaza independents” are advising and guiding their Australian stablemates through a more challenging electoral map ahead of the next federal election. The move comes as Muslim Votes Matter, one of two major organisations in Australia, launched its national campaign ahead of the election, and after one movement-backed candidate scrambled to contain fallout from Facebook posts he made appearing to celebrate Hamas’s October 7 atrocities in Israel. The Muslim Vote UK masterminded the election of four Gaza independents -- the group dislikes the label – in the Labour Party’s heartlands in the British election in July, with another campaign-backed candidate coming within 500 votes of ousting the now Health Secretary, Wes Streeting. The group’s national co-ordinator, Abubakr Nanabawa, told The Australian that the success would be harder to replicate in Australia’s preferential system, but that the community’s political mobilisation would be permanent. “It’s a very different electoral system,” he said. “But the main advice has been to go local, understand what’s happening on the ground.” Another leader, Wajid Akhter, provided a video message to the MVM’s national launch. Its national representative, Ghaith Krayem, previously told The Australian it would aim for a hung parliament, and could back Greens or teal candidates over Labor.
>>21621214 Australia abstains on controversial UN Israel vote drafted by Palestinian Authority - Penny Wong says the government is “disappointed” it could not support a controversial UN motion drafted by the Palestinian Authority demanding an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and the West Bank, after Australian negotiators were unable to soften the resolution. Australia was one of 43 countries that abstained from casting a vote on the non-binding motion, which was carried by 124 votes to 14 in the UN General Assembly on Thursday morning. Jewish groups are outraged the government refused to join with the US and Israel to reject the resolution, while its failure to support the motion will anger pro-Palestine supporters on Labor’s left flank. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Australia had wanted to amend the resolution to more accurately reflect a recent International Court of Justice opinion that Israel’s occupation of Gaza and West Bank was illegal. “We worked very hard in New York with others, including the Palestinian delegation, to seek amendments that would enable us to support it, as we did the recognition vote and the ceasefire vote, where the text enabled Australia to support it,” she told The ABC. “We were disappointed that the amendments that we and many others supported were not accepted. For that reason, we abstained.” The UK, Canada and Germany also abstained, while Australia’s closest Pacific partners including Papua New Guinea and Fiji opposed the resolution. New Zealand, Japan, Indonesia and France supported the motion, along with most of Asia and the developing world.
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273ca3 No.21755401
#37 - Part 13
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 13
>>21648207 Video: Australians in Lebanon warned it is 'beyond' government's capacity to help everyone evacuate as tensions in region escalate - Australians living in Lebanon have been warned that the government may not be able to assist everyone seeking a swift exit from the region as tensions escalate in the conflict between Hezbollah and Israel. Thousands have fled southern Lebanon after Israel launched hundreds of air strikes, resulting in 492 deaths - the deadliest day of the cross-border conflict since the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war, according to Lebanon's health ministry. On Tuesday morning, Foreign Minister Penny Wong reinforced her warnings, urging Australians in the region to leave while commercial flights remain available. "The numbers of Australians in Lebanon are beyond the capacity of the government to provide assistance to all," Senator Wong said. "We again say to any Australian who is in Lebanon, what we've been saying for months, you should return home while commercial options are still available if they are." Almost half of the scheduled flights from Beirut’s international airport were cancelled on Tuesday. At last estimate the government believed there were at least 15,000 Australians in Lebanon, but the real figure could be as high as 30,000 as many regular visitors don't notify the Australian government.
>>21648212 Australia to push UN General Assembly for stronger protections for aid workers following death of Zomi Frankcom - Australia will push for tougher protection for aid workers following the death of Melbourne woman Zomi Frankcom, who died in Gaza after an Israeli air strike in Gaza. At the time she was working with World Central Kitchen and delivering food to the besieged neighbourhood of Deir al-Balah, and died alongside six international and Palestinian colleagues. Israel has since claimed the attack was a “grave mistake” and a result of “misidentification”. Currently in New York attending the United Nation General Assembly High Level Week, Foreign Minister Penny Wong will call for a new Declaration for the Protection of Humanitarian Personnel. The declaration will be drafted with humanitarian organisations, who she will meet on Monday New York time, cross regional ministers and the UN Secretary-General António Guterres. Following negotiations, the global initiative will be drafted to reaffirm existing humanitarian law, and include actionable steps to better protect aid workers in conflict zones. All General Assembly members, which includes Israel, will be invited to pledge their support. While more aid workers were killed in 2023 than any other year, with 280 killed and more wounded and kidnapped, the sobering figures are set to increase in 2024. Ms Wong said this was evidence “signifies that the rules and norms that protect humanitarian personnel” were at risk, which would set a dangerous precedent for current and future conflicts. “You can’t protect civilians if you don’t protect the aid workers who are delivering the food, water and medicine they need to survive,” she said.
>>21653809 Penny Wong: ‘Lebanon cannot become the next Gaza’ - Foreign Minister Penny Wong has decried the Israeli air strikes for killing Lebanese women and children, warning that the world cannot allow Lebanon to become the next Gaza. The Israeli military said it killed a top Hezbollah commander as part of a two-day barrage that has left more than 560 people dead and prompted thousands of people in southern Lebanon to seek refuge in the north of the country. In a significant strengthening of her previous language, Wong said: “Civilians are being killed by Israeli strikes and it is women and children who are paying the highest price. “The global community is clear, this destructive cycle must stop. All parties must show restraint and de-escalate … Lebanon cannot become the next Gaza.” Wong, who is representing Australia at a gathering of global leaders in New York, said that the escalation of the conflict between Israel and the Islamic militant group Hezbollah made the case for “an immediate ceasefire in Gaza even more urgent”. “Hostages must be released and aid must flow,” she said. At least 41,467 people have been killed in the war between Israel and Hamas, according to the Gazan health ministry, while Israel reports 1200 people killed in the Hamas massacre of October 7, 2023.
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273ca3 No.21755403
#37 - Part 14
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 14
>>21672827 Penny Wong delivers deadline for UN on Palestine - Foreign Minister Penny Wong has declared a timeline should be set for the international declaration of a Palestinian state and is pushing the UN Security Council to play a more significant role in advancing a two-state solution to break the “endless cycle of violence” gripping the Middle East. In comments that were blasted as reflecting an “anti-Israel” slant and being “divorced from reality”, Senator Wong told the UN General Assembly in New York overnight that recognition of a Palestinian state was no longer the “destination of a peace process” but should be imposed by the international community to build “momentum towards peace”. Speaking 10 days before the one-year anniversary of the October 7 attacks in which Hamas massacred 1200 Israelis and as the region totters on the brink of a broader conflict triggered by hostilities across the Israel-Lebanon border, Senator Wong said: “The world cannot wait. Australia wants to engage on new ways to build momentum, including the role of the UN Security Council in setting a pathway for two states, with a clear timeline for the international declaration of Palestinian statehood. The world cannot keep hoping the parties will do this themselves; we cannot allow any party to obstruct the prospect of peace.” Hours after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave a pivotal speech to UN delegates, Senator Wong said Australia was ready to play its part in helping the Palestinian Authority reform and declared “Israel must stop establishing settlements, which are illegal under international law and a major obstacle to peace”. “We believe it is in Israel’s own interest that the Netanyahu government respond to the demands of the international community,” the Foreign Minister said.
>>21677496 Protesters in Melbourne wave Hezbollah flags, Tony Burke warns of visa cancellations - Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has warned he will consider cancelling the visas of anyone who incites “discord” in Australia, as protesters in Sydney and Melbourne waved Hezbollah flags and carried framed pictures of dead terrorist chief Hassan Nasrallah. Pictures and video from the thousands-strong protests for Gaza and Lebanon in Melbourne showed more than a dozen masked and unmasked men walking together through the Melbourne CBD streets commemorating Nasrallah, whose death was confirmed by the Israeli Defence Forces and the Iran-backed militant group on Saturday in a massive air strike on Beirut. The group of mostly young men were filmed chanting “labayka ya Nasrallah” in Arabic, which translates to ‘at your service, Nasrallah’ or ‘here I am, Nasrallah’. The slogan expresses the willingness to dedicate the life of the individual and the community to defend the leader of the group, who is typically both a religious and political figure that must be obeyed, even to the point of death. Many of the protesters were seen wearing Hezbollah emblems while waving the terror groups’ flag, which translates to ‘Hezbollah will be victorious’. Some were carrying frames of Nasrallah that reads, ‘we belong to Allah and to him we shall return.’
>>21677518 Thousands gather in city centres in show of solidarity for Gaza and Lebanon, amid increased violence in Middle East - Thousands have collectively rallied in cities and towns around Australia, calling for a ceasefire to conflicts in both Gaza and Lebanon. The protests were organised as part of a "National Day of Action for Gaza" by pro-Palestine groups around the country. It comes following continued Israeli strikes into Lebanon over the past week which killed much of Hezbollah's senior leadership, including leader Hassan Nasrallah. While the majority of protesters across Australia brought Lebanese and Palestinian flags to the protests, flags representing Hezbollah were also seen at the rallies. The yellow flag depicts a green arm reaching up towards an assault rifle. Their appearance was sharply criticised by Shadow Minister for Home Affairs James Paterson in a post on X (formerly Twitter), where he said authorities should clamp down on those displaying the flag. Hezbollah, along with Hamas, is considered a terrorist organisation by the governments of Australia, the US and the UK along with the EU.
>>21677530 Video: Thousands rally in major cities across Australia against Israeli aggression - Thousands of people have gathered in major cities across Australia to protest Israeli attacks on Lebanon and the Palestinian territories. ABC reporter Brianna Parkins says many in the ‘passionate’ Sydney rally are concerned about the safety of family members living in Lebanon. - ABC News (Australia)
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273ca3 No.21755406
#37 - Part 15
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 15
>>21682607 Video: Police investigate potential crimes after Hezbollah flag appears at Gaza and Lebanon ceasefire rally in Melbourne - Federal police expect to investigate at least six reports of crime involving prohibited symbols and chants, after Hezbollah flags were waved at a Melbourne rally calling for ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon. Thousands of people rallied at cities and towns across Australia on Sunday as part of a national day of protest organised by pro-Palestinian groups around the country. While the majority of protesters brought Lebanese and Palestinian flags to the demonstrations, some flags representing the militant group Hezbollah were also seen in Melbourne. The yellow flag shows an arm reaching up towards an assault rifle. Hezbollah, along with Hamas, is considered a terrorist organisation by the governments of Australia, along with the US, UK and EU. A small number of protesters also held photos of Hassan Nasrallah, reflecting the death of the longtime militia leader in an Israeli attack. Under Australian laws, the public display of prohibited terrorist organisation symbols is an offence in some circumstances, including if the display is likely to offend, humiliate or insult "a member of a group of persons distinguished by race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion or national or social origin". The penalty under the legislation is 12 months of imprisonment.
>>21682618 AFP says waving Hezbollah flag at protest not enough for arrest - The Australian Federal Police has said the display of terrorist symbols was not enough for an arrest after protesters gatecrashed a pro-Palestine rally waving Hezbollah flags and holding up photos of the terror group’s slain leader. The Sunday rally formed part of a national day of action for Gaza, with thousands of people also taking to the streets in Sydney and other cities around the world in renewed opposition to Israel’s bombing campaign. A small group with Hezbollah flags - some holding what appeared to be framed photographs of the terror group’s slain leader Hassan Nasrallah - joined the event at the State Library in Melbourne’s CBD as speeches ended and people began to march. Victoria Police said the public display of terrorist symbols was a Commonwealth offence and that there were no arrests from the protest, which drew an estimated 600 people. “Appropriate referrals will be made to Australian Federal Police as the lead agency concerning prohibited symbols,” a Victoria Police spokesperson said. However, an Australian Federal Police spokesman on Monday morning said: “The mere public display of a prohibited symbol on its own does not meet the threshold of a Commonwealth offence.” To be considered an offence, the prohibited symbol had to be displayed in circumstances where the conduct involved spreading ideas based on racial superiority or hatred, inciting others to intimidate or offend a person, or advocating or inciting others to offend, the spokesman said.
>>21682628 AFP investigating Hezbollah flag displays at Sunday protests - Federal police are investigating whether protesters at a pro-Palestinian rally broke new anti-terror laws for glorifying slain terror chief Hassan Nasrallah and displaying Hezbollah flags after a political firestorm erupted over the limits of free speech at local demonstrations. Australian Federal Police confirmed on Monday afternoon it was expecting Victoria Police to pass on details of at least six alleged crimes after protesters in Melbourne on Sunday chanted about a historic massacre of Jews while holding up a significant number of the flags of Hezbollah, which Australia has designated as a terrorist organisation since 2003. The AFP also said it would be asking major news outlets for video of protests over the weekend to assist the investigations. Earlier on Monday, the federal police released a statement suggesting display of terrorist insignia did not necessarily break the law if other criteria, such as inciting violence, were not met. However, later in the day the AFP released another statement saying they would be investigating “at least six reports of crime from Victoria Police”. The Hezbollah flag was brandished by protesters in both Melbourne and Sydney. It has been a federal offence since January this year to display the symbol of a terrorist organisation in public, after new laws were passed to crack down on the display of Nazi swastikas, ISIS flags and other symbols and flags of prohibited organisations. The AFP has not charged anyone under the laws, but charges have been laid against two people by state police since the introduction of the laws.
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273ca3 No.21755409
#37 - Part 16
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 16
>>21687958 Hezbollah flags at protests shape as test of new hate-symbol laws - Federal police are investigating a Melbourne protest where Hezbollah flags were displayed in what shapes as an early test of hate-symbol laws passed late last year. It comes as Immigration Minister Tony Burke told the ABC on Tuesday he had asked police to make him aware of any non-citizens caught up in investigations so he could cancel their visas, saying visitors would fail their character test if they were "inciting discord". "We don't know whether they are actually on visas … [but] we do have a higher standard if you're on a visa," he said. "The normal principles that might be there where people will have arguments about freedom of speech - when you're a guest in someone's country, you're there as a guest." AFP Deputy Commissioner Krissy Barrett said the investigations were to determine whether the flags displayed at the protest, which called for ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon, violated laws prohibiting the display of hate symbols. Those laws were passed in January primarily in response to the display of Nazi symbols, but they also cover the symbols of listed terrorist organisations such as Hezbollah. Deputy Commissioner Barrett said the law laid out several conditions which would need to be met to secure a conviction, and these had not been tested in court. "[It's] not just merely the display of the symbol; there are a number of elements that need to go alongside the display," she said. "It's got to be done in circumstances in which a reasonable person would consider that the conduct either advocates inciting others to use violence or use force [or] could incite others to humiliate or intimidate based on religion … "The context around the conduct is extremely important … If they're holding the flag, what are they saying? What are they chanting? What are they wearing? What sort of physical behaviour are they demonstrating?"
>>21687970 Video: ‘Ask that question again’: Dutton rebukes ABC reporter for Hezbollah question - Peter Dutton has accused the national broadcaster of failing to understand why the Lebanese militant group, Hezbollah, is listed by Australia as a terrorist organisation in a terse press conference where the opposition leader rebuked an ABC reporter for her questions. Melbourne and Sydney protesters at weekend rallies held Hezbollah flags and portraits of its assassinated leader, Hassan Nasrallah, prompting Dutton to demand prosecutions of those displaying terrorist symbols. At the press conference, ABC reporter Anushri Sood put to Dutton that some groups considered the laws hypocritical because, she said, Israel’s actions had resulted in 45,000 deaths and its flag was still allowed. Dutton responded: “Israel is a democracy. It’s not run by a terrorist organisation. Hezbollah is a terrorist organisation. They’re a listed terrorist organisation. And if people are in favour of a terrorist organisation, they should declare it, and authorities should deal with them.” In a question only partly audible, Sood then appeared to ask why Hezbollah was listed as a terrorist organisation. Dutton asked Sood which organisation she was from. The ABC, Sood replied. “You asked about the listing of the organisation. I just didn’t understand that question, is this a question from Canberra [federal politics reporters]?” Dutton said. Sood said it was not. Sood said her question was: “If you could just explain what determines something is a terrorist organisation?” Dutton then slammed the ABC, saying the broadcaster appeared not to support parliament’s bipartisan decision to list Hezbollah as a terrorist group. “Now, if the ABC doesn’t support that, they should be very clear about it, because I think that’s quite a departure,” Dutton said. Sood interjected to say that was not her claim, but Dutton continued. “You asked me why our country has listed Hezbollah - they’re a terrorist organisation that organises terrorist attacks,” he said. “If that is not clear to the ABC, then I think the ABC is in greater trouble than even I first imagined.”
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273ca3 No.21755411
#37 - Part 17
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 17
>>21695224 Police move to ban October 7 anniversary protests over Hezbollah flags - Federal authorities have vowed action against people flying outlawed Hezbollah and Hamas flags at protests this weekend to mark the anniversary of the October 7 attacks, as NSW Police started court action to stop the demonstrations going ahead in Sydney. Politicians, police and community leaders have clashed over the lines between free speech and illegal action, as Australia’s Muslim community seeks to protest against the escalation of war in the Middle East, while others condemn the glorification of slain Hezbollah spiritual leader Hassan Nasrallah and the display of the symbols associated with listed terrorist organisations. Australian Federal Police boss Reece Kershaw told 2GB’s Ray Hadley on Tuesday that the Hezbollah flag waving at last weekend’s protests in Sydney and Melbourne had been “un-Australian” and against the law, and that officers would take action against demonstrators if they did the same at protests planned for next weekend. NSW Police then late on Tuesday applied to the Supreme Court to stop two protests planned for Sydney on Sunday and Monday. They said they had negotiated with organisers but were not satisfied the events could take place safely. Organisers had promised mass attendance at rallies on Sunday, a day before October 7, when Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton will attend vigils to mark the day Hamas militants killed 1200 people and took another 250 hostage in southern Israel last year. “If they are flying those flags, in particular the Hezbollah and Hamas flags, action will be taken,” Kershaw said.
>>21695254 Teenager Sarah Mouhanna charged for displaying ‘prohibited terrorist symbol’ - A Sydney teenager has been charged with displaying a terrorist organisation’s symbol at protests on Sunday commemorating slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. Sarah Mouhanna, 19, was on Wednesday afternoon charged with “cause public display of prohibited terrorists organisation symbol” after she presented to Kogarah Police Station following a public appeal. She was granted strict conditional bail, and will face the Downing Centre local court on October 23. Ms Mouhanna is understood to be the first person to have been formally charged by police following huge rallies across Sydney and Melbourne on the weekend. Thousands of protestors gathered in the city CBDs to commemorate Nasrallah, whose death was confirmed by the Israeli Defence Forces and the Iran-backed militant group on Saturday in a massive air strike on Beirut. The protestors, who were mostly young men, were filmed in Melbourne waving Hezbollah flags, wearing the group’s emblem and chanting “labayka ya Nasrallah” in Arabic, which translates to ‘at your service, Nasrallah’ or ‘here I am, Nasrallah’. Other chants heard include ‘no more USA, no more Israel, no more Saudi Arabia’. In Sydney, both adults and children carried posters of the late Hezbollah leader. A couple of others were seen holding and wearing Hezbollah flags. One woman held a poster showing assassinated Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh and Hezbollah leader Nasrallah under the words “A nation led by martyrs will triumph”.
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273ca3 No.21755412
#37 - Part 18
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 18
>>21695284 Jewish group launches campaign against Greens ahead of Queensland election - A grassroots Queensland Jewish group has accused the Greens of stoking anti-Semitism and hatred in the wake of the October 7 attacks in Israel, launching a billboard and letterbox campaign against the minor party in key seats ahead of the state election. The Australian can reveal the Queensland Jewish Collective has registered as a third party for the October 26 election, and has already raised more than $20,000 in community donations to fund 12,000 pamphlets and erect billboards in Brisbane electorates targeted by the Greens. A first wave of advertisements compares the Greens protesting dams in the 1980s to today’s pro-Palestine movement, accusing the party of abandoning its core environmental message to support terror, indoctrinate children to hate, and undermine Australian values. This week, the QJC will launch another series of billboards in partnership with the Australian Hindu Association and local Iranian community to take a stand for marginalised groups. “They no longer stand for all minorities,” reads one of the QJC flyers. “They support our persecutors and terrorisers here and overseas. We’re putting them last.” One of the QJC’s three organisers Hava Mendelle said Queensland had become increasingly unsafe for Jewish Australians since October 7, and that danger had been exacerbated by Greens politicians appearing at pro-Palestine rallies. “I’ve been living here for 25 years, and (being Jewish) was never something that I had to fear, because I knew that my government was behind me,” Ms Mendelle said. “The rhetoric that has been coming out of the Greens, not just candidates, but the members, has been so one-sided with no nuance … it’s actually making Jews scared. Over the last 12 months, it has been so pro-hate and divisive that we couldn’t just sit here and not do anything.”
>>21700762 Victoria Police get extra resources for anniversary protests as Allan rejects calls for new laws - Victoria Police will deploy more officers over the weekend and be given extra resources throughout October, as political leaders urged against timing pro-Palestinian vigils and protests with Monday’s anniversary of the October 7 attacks. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Premier Jacinta Allan on Wednesday asked pro-Palestinian protesters not to demonstrate around the anniversary of the attacks saying it would be divisive. But Allan rejected calls from the state opposition calling for the introduction of a permit scheme similar to NSW, which could prevent such protests from being organised. Police in NSW have taken court action to prevent pro-Palestine rallies from going ahead in Sydney this weekend, arguing their applications for protest permits should be rejected on public safety grounds. Free Palestine Melbourne will hold a rally outside the State Library of Victoria on Sunday, October 6, to protest against “the ongoing Israeli occupation, genocide and crimes against humanity being committed against the Palestinian people for over 76 years”. The protest marks almost one year since Hamas launched the October 7 attacks, which saw 1200 people killed in Israel and sparking the war in Gaza, where more than 40,000 people have been killed.
>>21700810 Damn your ban: October 7 rally organisers to ignore court orders - Sydney pro-Palestine protest organisation Josh Lees says a court order will not deter demonstrations on Sunday and Monday, the day before and of the one-year anniversary of the October 7 terrorist attacks. NSW Police has put in a court bid to stop the demonstrations. The Coalition has called on the Victorian Police to do the same. The NSW Supreme Court on Thursday will hear the state police’s argument to stop the two events - and to deem both as “unauthorised” – which would be contested in the same court by the organisers, the Palestinian Action Group. Mr Lees said he and fellow protest organisers were asking people not to bring Hezbollah flags “because they could be deemed illegal” but they would otherwise “defend people’s right to hold pieces of cloth”. “We’ll be going ahead with our protests on Sunday, the 6th of October, regardless of what happens in the court,” Mr Lees told ABC RN. “We are determined that we’ve been protesting for 51 consecutive weeks now. We’re certainly not going to stop now, especially as Israel’s genocide in Gaza continues, and now they are starting an invasion of Lebanon.” He said the group was also planning a candlelight vigil at Town Hall on Monday. “It’s a chance for Palestinian and Lebanese people to come and grieve for the thousands of people who have died and for their loved ones,” he said.
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273ca3 No.21755414
#37 - Part 19
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 19
>>21700824 Pro-Palestinian events in Sydney's CBD to go ahead after police withdraw NSW Supreme Court application - NSW Police have reached an 11th-hour agreement with the organisers of pro-Palestinian events in Sydney's CBD after negotiations continued in the background of a Supreme Court hearing. Thousands are expected to rally through the city this weekend to mark the one-year anniversary of the Israel-Gaza conflict, but organisers had also put in paperwork to NSW Police seeking to hold a vigil on Monday. At a hearing before Justice Jeremy Kirk on Thursday afternoon, organisers withdrew their application to police for Monday's vigil to be an authorised event. The Palestine Action Group also sought to amend their plans for Sunday, which was initially intended to begin at Town Hall, and suggested it could instead begin at Hyde Park before a march. But the sticking point appeared to be that the new proposed march route would bring participants close to The Great Synagogue on their way back to Hyde Park, with police expressing concerns it would be "provocative". Outside court, organiser Amal Naser said police chose to withdraw their application to prohibit the protest. Another organiser, Josh Lees, said Sunday's rally would proceed along the same route the group had used many times before and denied it came into close proximity to the synagogue. "What happened today was that the police and the government, under political pressure, tried to ban our protest effectively, or try to make it very hard for us to protest. We've resisted that."
>>21706936 Iran’s ambassador to Australia Ahmad Sadeghi praises Hassan Nasrallah as ‘remarkable leader’ - The Iranian ambassador to Australia Ahmad Sadeghi has remembered slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah as a “remarkable leader” and a “prominent standard-bearer”, despite his decades-long reign of terror in the Middle East. In a social media post on Sunday, the day Nasrallah was killed, Mr Sadeghi said the “blessed martyr”, who was a designated terrorist around the world had a dignified path to heaven and described his leadership as an ongoing struggle against “the vile entity of the Zionist regime”. “Following the martyrdom of Sayyed (sir) Hassan Nasrallah, the honourable Secretary-General of Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Islamic Resistance Front and the Muslim world have lost a great personality, a prominent standard-bearer, and a remarkable leader,” Mr Sadeghi wrote. “However, his path in the struggle against the oppression and occupation of the criminal Zionist regime will continue to have many followers. “Undoubtedly, the path of this blessed martyr in the struggle against the tyrants and oppressors of the time will endure and bear fruit, and the vile entity of the Zionist regime will not remain triumphant or complacent from this crime. “Martyrdom is the dignified path of such great men, and nothing else can be expected from them,” he said. A spokesperson for Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong has condemned the comments of the Iranian top diplomat, while the Coalition called for him to be expelled. Ms Wong’s office said Australia had maintained a diplomatic relationship with Iran “continuously since 1968” and that this was not an endorsement of the nation’s regime but because it was in Australia’s national interest to do so. “In all of that time, it has never been an endorsement of the regime, it is a channel to protect Australia’s interests and to communicate the views of Australia and our close partners,” the spokesperson said. Despite this, Senator Wong hit back against Mr Sadeghi’s comments. “The Prime Minister and Foreign Minister have made clear that the government condemns any support for terrorist organisations such as Hezbollah,“ the spokesperson said. “We condemn the Ambassador’s comments.“
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273ca3 No.21755417
#37 - Part 20
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 20
>>21706984 Peter Dutton calls for Iranian ambassador to be expelled after tweet praising slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah - Iran's ambassador to Australia should be expelled from the country over his comments praising Hezbollah's slain leader, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton says. Mr Dutton this morning called for Iranian ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi's expulsion following his comments on social media labelling assassinated Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah a martyr and "unparalleled leader". He made the remarks late last month, the day Nasrallah was killed in an Israeli air strike. Mr Dutton said Mr Sadeghi should not remain in Australia. "I think the comments from the Iranian ambassador are completely and utterly at odds with what is in our country's best interests and the prime minister and the foreign minister should show the strength of character and expel him from our country," Mr Dutton said. The ABC understands the Iranian ambassador has been called into the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade over the social media post. It is understood Mr Sadeghi was spoken to by government officials today, and reminded of his obligation to respect Australian law and to stay out of domestic affairs.
>>21707039 Video: Iran’s ambassador to Australia Ahmad Sadeghi given dressing down over inflammatory posts about Hassan Nasrallah - 7NEWS can reveal Iran’s Ambassador to Australia has been hauled in by the government for a dressing down over inflammatory comments praising the slain leader of terrorist organisation, Hezbollah, but Anthony Albanese is refusing to expel the diplomat. Tehran’s top diplomat, Ahmad Sadeghi, was called into the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Canberra on Friday over his social media posts on X, where he called dead terrorist leader, Hassan Nasrallah, an “outstanding standard-bearer”, “unparalleled leader”, and a “blessed martyr”. 7NEWS understands the meeting with senior foreign affairs officials was blunt, with the ambassador reminded of his obligations to respect Australian law and stay out of our domestic politics. Sadeghi has also labelled Israel a “criminal Zionist state”, comments that have enraged Opposition leader Peter Dutton, who has called for his immediate expulsion from Australia. “I think the comments by the Iranian ambassador are completely and utterly at odds with what is in our country’s best interest,” Dutton said at a press conference on the Queensland election campaign trail. “The prime minister and foreign minister should show strength of character and expel him from our country.” Albanese has condemned the comments but will not go as far as Dutton is asking, as the government wants to keep diplomatic channels open with Tehran during this period of conflict in the Middle East.
>>21710722 Video: Revealed - Iranian Arashi Rahbari behind pro-Hezbollah rally calls Australia ‘a tyrannical terrorist regime’ - A pro-Hezbollah activist who led a march through Melbourne last weekend waving the terrorist group’s flag and chanting pro-Hamas and pro-Houthi slogans can be identified as an Iranian national who believes Australia is a pathetic “tyrannical terrorist regime”. The Australian has confirmed Arashi Rahbari was one of the leaders of the provocative pro-Hezbollah rally staged to mourn the loss of slain terrorist Hassan Nasrallah. Mr Rahbari, who lives in Melbourne and is an Iranian national, was spotted on Sunday wearing a shirt with Hezbollah’s paraphernalia while waving the terrorist flag, strapped to another Iranian flag. The emergence of an Iranian national as a local pro-Hezbollah leader underlines the challenge facing Australia in dealing with the fallout from the October 7 terrorist attack in Israel and the war that has since erupted. As Mr Rahbari was identified, the Australian Federal Police’s Counter Terrorism and Special Investigations Command Centre established Operation Ardvarna to look into the prohibited display of symbols in public spaces by nine individuals in Melbourne at the weekend rally.
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273ca3 No.21755420
#37 - Part 21
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 21
>>21710776 NSW Police abandon bid to stop October 6 protest in Sydney despite ‘tinder box’ warning - Police have dropped a bid to stop a rally in Sydney’s CBD on Sunday - the eve of the anniversary of Hamas’s attack on Israel – after the route of the march was changed, while a pro-Palestinian candlelight vigil on October 7 will also go ahead. It followed three hours of hearings in the NSW Supreme Court on Thursday, and backroom discussions between the Commissioner of NSW Police and pro-Palestine protest organiser Palestine Action Group about the route of the march. After initiating the proceedings in the Supreme Court to put an end to the planned protest ending at Hyde Park, NSW police indicated they did not object to a new path, submitted late in the day by PAG, that would avoid the Great Synagogue between Elizabeth and Castlereagh streets by an extra block. PAG said they expected 5000 people to attend Sunday’s protest but police estimate numbers closer to 15,000 given escalating tensions in Lebanon. The group has held protests each week for 51 weeks.
>>21710825 Anthony Albanese and NSW Police at odds as October 7 ‘outrage’ rally gets green light - Anthony Albanese and NSW Police have become divided over whether an “outrage” rally orchestrated by extremist group Hizb ut-Tahrir should be allowed to go ahead on the anniversary of Hamas’ October 7 attacks. The state’s police force confirmed on Friday it had green-lit the rally in southwest Sydney, confirming officers were working with the organiser and saying the force “respected the right” of peaceful and lawful assembly. This came in spite of the Prime Minister publicly condemning Hizb ut-Tahrir and criticising pro-Palestine protests planned to coincide with the anniversary of the horrific terror event. The prospect of Hizb ut-Tahrir’s rally comes after a protracted negotiation and court process between police and the Palestine Action Group, who will host a separate Sydney CBD rally on Sunday and forge ahead with an unauthorised vigil on Monday. Although Hizb ut-Tahrir are not banned in Australia, unlike in the United Kingdom, the organisation has been heavily criticised for promoting extremism and celebrating Hamas’ October 7 attacks. On Friday, Mr Albanese “condemned” Hizb ut-Tahrir, saying Monday should be a “solemn day” to recognise the anniversary’s “horrors”, believing any rally with their involvement should be cancelled.
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273ca3 No.21755422
#37 - Part 22
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 22
>>21718353 Thousands gather at pro-Palestine demonstrations around the country as October 7 anniversary approaches - Thousands of Pro-Palestine demonstrators have taken to the streets in cities across Australia on the eve of the anniversary of the October 7 attacks, repeating calls for ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon. The protests come as the war in Middle East intensifies and concerns continue to grow over a wider conflict in the region. Demonstrators on Sunday gathered at the State Library of Victoria in Melbourne's CBD, waving flags and joining together in chants. At the start of the rally, protesters laid thousands of small paper kites in front of the library. They said each one represented the life of a child killed in Gaza during the war. "We just want to show that enough is enough, and also just to mourn the dead like we are," youth worker Lucas Li, who organised the kite display, said. "These were children. They were playful. They were bright, they were curious. We want people to understand that this child in Gaza is just like a child anywhere else in the world." In Sydney, demonstrators gathered at Hyde Park before marching through the city. Josh Lees from Palestine Action Group Sydney said protesters were taking a stand against the "ongoing genocide" in Gaza. Israel has strenuously denied allegations of genocide. Mr Lees said the demonstrations being held today were more crucial than ever. "This war on Lebanon that Israel is beginning, now they're threatening a regional war with Iran potentially too, so there's more reason than ever we need to get out and protest," he said.
>>21718392 Video: Australia starts evacuating nationals from Lebanon via Cyprus - Australia started evacuating its nationals from Lebanon via Cyprus on Saturday, in the first large-scale operation to get citizens out of the country amid an Israeli onslaught on Iran-backed Hezbollah. Some 229 people arrived on the east Mediterranean island, which lies a 40 minute flight time from Beirut, on a commercial airline chartered by Australia. A second flight is scheduled later in the day. More evacuation flights could be expected based on demand, Australian and Cypriot officials said. At Cyprus's Larnaca airport, civilians of all ages transferred from the aircraft into a terminal and then escorted onto waiting coaches. Children helped themselves to red apples and water provided by Australian military staff. "They are exhausted, exceptionally happy to be here but heartbroken because they left family behind," said Fiona McKergow, the Australian High Commissioner (Ambassador) to Cyprus. Some of those evacuated on Saturday said they did not think they would ever return to Lebanon. "Never, ever. I was traumatised, my kids were traumatised. Its not a safe country, I wont be back," said Dana Hameh, 34. She added: "I feel very sad leaving my country but I'm very happy to start a new life in Sydney. Life goes on. I wish the best for everyone."
>>21723584 Hezbollah expresses support for Australian protesters on the anniversary of October 7 Hamas attacks - Hezbollah has applauded Australian protesters following large demonstrations across the country on the eve of the October 7 Hamas attacks. Despite criticism from political leaders, thousands of people rallied in multiple capital cities on Sunday with further events to take place on Monday evening. Authorities arrested four people in Melbourne for “public order related matters” and a man in Sydney was arrested and charged for the display of a swastika. The controversial protesters have since been praised by the Iran-backed terrorist organisation Hezbollah. Hezbollah’s news website Al-Ahed News posted pictures of the rallies in Australia to its account on the social media platform Telegram. “From Australia to the world: Stop the 'Israeli' aggression on Lebanon,” Hezbollah declared in the post. The caption was accompanied by images of protest marches in Sydney and Melbourne depicting people waving Palestinian and Lebanese flags. Many protesters voiced outspoken support for Hezbollah while some have also displayed signs depicting elements of banned terrorist symbols. Previous protests in September saw at least six individuals investigated for the display of banned terror symbols - including the Hezbollah flag. While the flag has been banned under counter-terrorism laws, at least one person displayed a modified Hezbollah banner, featuring Ned Kelly, on Sunday. Another man in Sydney was arrested and charged for displaying a placard bearing a swastika which said, “Stop Nazi Israel”.
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273ca3 No.21755424
#37 - Part 23
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 23
>>21723594 Labor powerless amid pro-Palestine tide as Muslim Vote predicts ‘horse has bolted’ - Labor operatives are concerned the ALP may be heading towards election defeat given the anger over Palestine, as leaders behind the Muslim vote movements said politics would “never be the same again”. It comes as hundreds of protesters chanted “f..k you Albo (and) Tony Burke” at Sunday’s Sydney rally, and The Muslim Vote and Muslim Votes Matter told The Australian that Labor should be prepared for a “long-lasting” political shift. “The horse has bolted … things (politics) will never be the same again,” Sheik Wesam Charkawi, The Muslim Vote’s convener, said. About 10,000 people descended onto the Sydney CBD in pro-Palestine rallies replicated across state capitals, ahead of more protests planned for the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s October 7 attacks on Monday. Hezbollah praised the protests, posting pictures from the rallies on its Telegram channel with the caption: “From Australia to the world.” Labor figures, present at Sydney’s rally, said the palpable anger was striking, with many now believing that the party was heading for federal election defeat next year, such was the visceral vexation with the government’s stance and handling of the conflict. The Muslim Vote is supporting candidates in “key electorates” it hopes to topple Labor, particularly in Mr Burke’s Western Sydney seat of Watson, where the organisation is co-ordinating independent Ziad Basyouny’s campaign. Sheik Charkawi said there had been “emphatic” support for Mr Basyouny’s candidacy, saying it provided an opportunity to “challenge” Labor, who had “let down” the community.
>>21723603 Iran Summons Australian Envoy over Canberra’s ‘Biased’ Stances - "The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran summoned the Australian Ambassador to Tehran in protest at his government’s unjustified and biased positions on the regional situation. Following the repeated biased positions of the Australian government, which are deemed to be contrary to the principles of international law regarding the recent regional developments, Ian McConville, the Australian ambassador to Tehran, was summoned to the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs by the Director General for Asia and Oceania of the ministry. The Iranian official expressed strong objection to the unjustified and biased positions of the Australian government regarding regional developments and the adventurism of the Zionist regime in escalating regional tensions -including the assassination of the political bureau chief of the Hamas movement in Tehran, the secretary general of Hezbollah in Lebanon, and IRGC General Nilforoushan who was a senior Iranian military advisor in Beirut. Mohammadi condemned Australia’s double standards concerning regional developments and its silence regarding the repeated aggressions of the Zionist regime against Gaza and Lebanon, the Foreign Ministry’s website reported. He referred to the inherent right of Iran to legitimate self-defense in response to the repeated aggressions of the Zionist regime against the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of Iran, as well as the attacks on Iranian nationals and interests. Mohammadi described the missile operations by the armed forces of Iran as a lawful and responsible action, essential for safeguarding the national security of the Iranian people and the stability of the region." - tasnimnews.com
>>21723608 Government 'makes no apology' for its views on Iran missile strikes after Australian ambassador summoned - The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) says it "makes no apology" for Australia's comments on Iran's "reckless" missile strikes on Israel, after the Australian ambassador was summoned for a meeting with the Iranian government. Iranian news agency Tasnim on Monday, local time, reported that ambassador Ian McConville was called in by the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs over what it described as the "unjustified and biased positions of the Australian government". In response, a DFAT spokesperson said in a statement that "Australia makes no apology for the views it has expressed about Iran's actions or the actions of its Ambassador to Australia". The spokesperson also condemned Iran's strikes on Israel, describing them as "reckless" and "a dangerous escalation" that "increased the risks of a wider regional war". It is the second time in just over a month Mr McConville has been summoned by the Iranian government. In September the ambassador was called in over an Instagram post on the embassy's official page marking "Wear It Purple Day", which celebrates LGBTQ+ young people.
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273ca3 No.21755426
#37 - Part 24
Israel / Hamas Conflict - The Australian Perspective - Part 24
>>21729793 ‘Professional protester’: Chris Minns hits out at serial activist as costs pass $5m - Police could soon have the power to reject protests that stretch over months, as a clearly frustrated NSW Premier Chris Minns decried the more than $5m spent on controlling pro-Palestine rallies and attacked the leader of the protest movement as a “professional demonstrator”. The move came after hundreds of police were deployed at rallies and vigils in Sydney on Sunday and Monday on the anniversary of the October 7 Hamas atrocities in Israel. The protests were largely peaceful after police issued strong warnings not to bring the flag of the Hezbollah terrorist group, but two men were arrested for displaying swastikas superimposed on the Israeli flag. The Premier hit out at Josh Lees, a leading member of the Palestine Action Group who has lodged weekly applications for the past year to march in Sydney since the October 7 Hamas atrocities in Israel, agreeing with the description of the activist as a “professional protester”. Mr Lees writes for Red Flag, the outlet of Socialist Alternative, which declares itself “Australia’s largest Marxist group”, and regularly calls for the overthrow of capitalism. He was also a leader of the Lockdown to Zero movement, demanding that the then- Berejiklian government maintain strict Covid-19 lockdowns and branding the loosening of restrictions as “an offensive against the working class” by “the rich and powerful”. Mr Lees has also been spokesperson for the Refugee Action Coalition, organising protests at the 2011 ALP National Conference against then-prime minister Julia Gillard’s asylum-seeker policies. The former University of Sydney tutor was arrested during the “Occupy Sydney” movement that camped outside the Reserve Bank in Martin Place in 2011, clashing with police during a Hyde Park rally and at the Martin Place encampment.
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273ca3 No.21755428
#37 - Part 25
Australian Politics and Society - Part 1
>>21252406 Australians warned to expect lingering issues after worldwide IT outage recovery - Australians have been warned to expect “teething issues” following a worldwide cyber crash which brought down computer systems and grounded planes across the country. The outage struck just after 3pm (AEST) on Friday and hampered banking services, airport check-ins and supermarkets across the world, and forced laptops to shut down. Cyber Security Minister Clare O’Neil said while the country was now in the “recovery phase” of responding to the issue, the outage was a “serious incident” for the Australian economy. O’Neil said while most technical issues were resolved on Friday night, Australians would still notice some “teething issues” at places like supermarkets and airports on Saturday. “Shelves are fully stocked. We don’t have any food shortages … but some of the tellers and some of the checkouts may not be open in all the supermarkets around the country,” she said. “We’ve seen our major airlines are back online, but there might be internal technical difficulties, for example, with baggage handler systems communicating with the front of the terminal.”
>>21252868 Australia urged to prepare for second Trump presidency - Australia should prepare for a second Donald Trump administration as it will put the nation in good stead regardless of who wins the US election, an expert says. Donald Trump on Friday accepted the Republican Party's presidential nomination for the third time, while senior Democrats urge Joe Biden to step down from his re-election bid for the presidential race in November. The best thing Australia could do in anticipation of the election result is to prepare for a Trump administration, the United States Studies Centre's research director Jared Mondschein said. "I don't say that because I think Trump is a sure-fire win," he told AAP. "The very steps you would take to address an incoming Trump administration would put you in a great position with a Democratic administration as well."
>>21265537 Video: Australia preparing for a post-Biden world - Australia is getting ready to work with either Donald Trump or Kamala Harris after US President Joe Biden revealed he was withdrawing from the race. The 81-year-old has nominated his vice president to replace him in the November contest against second-time presidential hopeful Mr Trump, and will remain in his role until his term officially ends in January. To ensure Australia's interests are well served in the US, former Washington-based US ambassador Arthur Sinodinos has urged the government to respond carefully. "It's not about whether we like a particular candidate or a particular president - these relationships transcend countries, transcend personalities, they transcend parties," he told ABC radio. The prime minister described Ms Harris as a "good friend of Australia" while noting that the outcome of the Democratic convention in August is a matter for the US.
>>21265571 Video: ‘Great friend of Australia’: PM praises outgoing US President Joe Biden - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has paid tribute to the service of outgoing US President Joe Biden, declaring him a “great friend of Australia” who championed the historic AUKUS partnership, fought against Russian aggression and campaigned for climate change action. The 81-year-old announced that he would withdraw from the US presidential race in a letter he posted to social media before later endorsing vice president Kamala Harris as the Democratic Party’s candidate. The US president should be praised for his role in stabilising the American economy following the global pandemic and international conflicts, Mr Albanese said. “In President Biden (there is a) legacy of support for the international rule of law, support for international human rights, support for the people of Ukraine in their struggle against aggression from Russia with its illegal and immoral invasion,” he said. “But also President Biden has presided over the recovery of the United States’ economy after the long legacy that Covid has left. He’s presided over an economy that’s seen jobs grow, wages increase and the transition proceed as the world moves toward net-zero. President Biden has been a great friend of Australia and I look forward to meeting him at the G20 and APEC summits that will be held later this year.”
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273ca3 No.21755431
#37 - Part 26
Australian Politics and Society - Part 2
>>21281231 Video‘False gods’: preaching against our democracy - Radical preachers and extremist organisation Hizb ut-Tahrir have attacked Australia’s democracy and The Muslim Vote campaign, calling it a “shirk” and an insult to Allah, at sermons in southwest Sydney, the geographical heart of a community-led Muslim political movement. Abu Ousayd, also known as Wissam Haddad, and Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Australian branch took to pulpits in Sydney’s Canterbury-Bankstown area on Friday to call Muslims in parliament “apostates” and order their followers to boycott elections. They also criticised the Muslim Vote’s leadership for its historical deradicalisation efforts and current political participation, with Mr Ousayd signalling he wanted an alternative route to power where Muslims could make sharia the dominant form of law in Australia. “The system is always going to fail if it is not Allah’s,” Mr Ousayd said. “We want to get to a position where Muslims have power (so that) we can implement more of the (way) in sharia.”
>>21281263 Paris Olympics 2024: Nine’s Olympic staff attacked in Paris during attempted robbery; police investigate alleged gang rape - Two members of Nine’s Olympics broadcast team have escaped serious injury after they were attacked during an attempted robbery on the outskirts of Paris on Monday. The pair were walking to their accommodation in the municipality of Le Bourget, north-east of Paris, when a group of people attempted to snatch one of their backpacks late on Monday afternoon, Paris time. The tech workers were allegedly assaulted in the scuffle that ensued but managed to pull themselves to safety. The alleged attack has been reported to the police. Nine, owner of this masthead, has about 200 staff in Paris working on its Olympic Games coverage across television, radio and publishing. The incident, which was confirmed by two sources familiar with the assault who asked not to be named, is the second violent attack against Australians in 48 hours after a woman was allegedly gang-raped in a popular Parisian nightlife district in the early hours of Sunday morning, Paris time. News of the alleged sexual assault prompted security advisers for the Australian Olympic Committee to reiterate their advice to athletes against travelling alone and wearing their Olympic uniforms while out in Paris.
>>21281339 Video: Major Labor backflip as ASIO chief Mike Burgess is reinstated as a permanent member of the National Security Committee less than two years after his removal - Australian spy chief Mike Burgess has been reinstated as a permanent member of the National Security Committee after initially being removed just six months into the Albanese government’s first term. Sky News can reveal Labor has backflipped on its decision for the ASIO Director-General to only consult on national security matters on a case-by case-basis, restoring his permanent position. It’s understood this change was made only recently and comes amid an explosion in espionage and foreign interference in Australia. The Albanese government was roundly criticized for initially diluting Mr Burgess’ contribution to the grouping, which makes decisions on the most urgent and highest risk national security matters, although it never publicly confirmed the change after it was revealed by Sky News host Sharri Markson. A heavily redacted freedom of information request, obtained by Sky News, shows the change happened as early as January of last year.
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273ca3 No.21755433
#37 - Part 27
Australian Politics and Society - Part 3
>>21289210 No terror listing for Hizb ut-Tahrir - The Albanese government is not considering listing Hizb ut-Tahrir as a terrorist organisation despite the extremist group having praised Hamas for the October 7 attack and revelations its leaders are calling for sharia law to be introduced across Australia. Radical preachers and Hizb ut-Tahrir attacked Australia’s democracy and The Muslim Vote campaign at sermons in southwest Sydney last week, where they told attendees “we want to get to a position where Muslims have power” so that sharia law could be implemented. The Australian revealed Abu Ousayd told a congregation “prime ministers are false gods … (and we should) not join and not vote”, while prominent Hizb ut-Tahrir member Wassim Doureihi said democracy could “not be an option” for the Muslim community. The comments follow the group expressing support for Hamas and openly backing the killing of ex-Muslims. A spokesman for Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil said the government would await advice from security agencies and did not commit to listing Hizb ut-Tahrir as a terror organisation. “Our intelligence and security agencies are constantly monitoring all threats to safety in our country and if they make a recommendation about listing a group or taking any other kind of action our government will take advice on those recommendations,” the spokesman said. Despite not moving to list the group as a terror organisation, the government spokesman said Hizb ut-Tahrir represented “fringe views” that did not reflect those of the wider Muslim community.
>>21289280 Trump or Harris, the US-Australian relationship will be strong, says visiting governor - The US state of Indiana’s Republican governor, Eric Holcomb, says the Australia-US business relationship will “stand the test of time” regardless of which party wins power in the November election. Mr Holcomb is visiting Australia to pitch Indiana to governments and businesses. “I think that we all should have a high level of confidence that, regardless of any election outcome, the American-Australian relationship is going to be strong,” he told The Australian at the University of Sydney’s United States Studies Centre. “And Indiana has a role in helping that along the way -- by businesses investing here, and Australian businesses investing in America and in Indiana. “And so part of my role is government to government, business to business, and people to people - those cultural exchanges, those strengthen that relationship along the way.”
>>21308666 Video: Anthony Albanese moves Clare O'Neil, Andrew Giles and promotes Malarndirri McCarthy in cabinet reshuffle - Clare O'Neil and Andrew Giles have been dumped from the home affairs and immigration portfolios but escaped exile as the prime minister seeks to refresh his frontbench. After months of speculation the pair would be shifted following the release of more than 150 immigration detainees after a High Court ruling in November, Anthony Albanese used a trio of cabinet resignations as cover to shuffle the deck. But he stressed it shouldn't be construed as a failure on their part and rejected suggestions the reshuffle was linked to criticism over the government's handling of the saga. "What Clare O'Neill and Andrew Giles have had to do is to repair the damage which has been done," the prime minister said. Ms O'Neil will move into the role of housing minister, where the government continues to face pressure from the Greens, while Mr Giles will remain in the outer ministry and take on the skills and training portfolio. Tony Burke will step into the home affairs role and also take on the role of immigration minister, elevating the portfolio to cabinet. Mr Burke previously served as immigration minister in 2013 under the Rudd government.
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273ca3 No.21755436
#37 - Part 28
Australian Politics and Society - Part 4
>>21308692 Police arrest man after a Nazi demonstration in Melbourne - A 24-year-old man has been arrested after a “grossly offensive” Nazi demonstration in Melbourne on Saturday, where it’s alleged he performed an outlawed Hitler salute in front of the public. Around 30 people from the National Socialist Network (NSN) paraded from Melbourne’s Federal Square to Flinders Street Station, dressed in all black with a large “mass deportation now” banner. Victoria Police will investigate the actions of the man after he allegedly performed the Nazi salute at the steps of Flinders Street Station during an unplanned protest on Saturday. A Victoria Police spokesperson said the group quickly dispersed as officers responded. “A 24-year-old North Melbourne man was arrested at the scene and was interviewed for grossly offensive public conduct,” the spokesperson said. He was released with intent to summons and will appear in court at a later stage. Eight other males were also spoken to by police at the scene for offensive behaviour in a public place. They were released with intent to summons. Officers seized the banner, as well as a flag.
>>21308833 Video - Paris Olympics 2024:Opening ceremony organisers face backlash over ‘Last Supper’ drag show- The organisers of the Paris Olympics are facing a backlash from Christian groups after a drag queen parody of Leonardo Da Vinci’s Last Supper featured in Saturday morning’s opening ceremony. They recreated the famous biblical scene of Jesus Christ and his 12 apostles sharing a last meal before crucifixion, but with a group of drag queens, a transgender model and a near-naked singer made up as the Greek god of wine Dionysus. It was set to music by lesbian activist DJ Barbara Butch. The controversy went viral online within minutes, with Tesla billionaire Elon Musk, the owner of social media site X, saying the performance was “extremely disrespectful to Christians”. Organisers had worked with the International Olympic Committee on the topics they wanted to reflect in the show -- including promoting LGBT and women’s rights. Wendy Francis, national director of politics for the Australian Christian Lobby, said the Games had “disgracefully besmirched” the last supper with “sexualised men pretending to be women parodying it”. “Christians participating in the Games must feel absolutely betrayed by this crude display, ridiculing the greatest event in history - the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ in Holy Communion, or the Lord’s Supper,” she said.
>>21308864 Video - Paris Olympics 2024:‘Mockery of Christianity’: Outrage over France’s Olympics opening ceremony Last Supper- The opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics has been labelled a “mockery” and condemned by the Christian community after drag queens and dancers appeared in a section that resembled The Last Supper. The scene included French actor Philippe Katerine, who was painted blue and wearing little more than a bunch of flowers. The scene quickly went viral, with social media users around the world unleashing over the decision to insult Christians around the world. Australia’s former deputy prime minister Michael McCormack accused the ceremony’s artistic director, Thomas Jolly, of undermining Australian Christians who sacrificed their life to defend France. “The Olympics opening ceremony ‘artistic’ director who felt the need to mock The Last Supper & thereby Christianity should be reminded of the great sacrifice of Christian soldiers, including tens upon tens of 1000s of Australians buried in (French) soil who died to save that country,” Mr McCormack said on social media.
>>21308877 Q Post #4467 - Symbolism will be their downfall. They are fighting to regain control. You stand in their way. You awake is their greatest fear. Q - https://qanon.pub/#4467
>>21308877 Q Post #3931 - ...The credibility of our institutions [Constitutional Law that governs our Great Land [Our Republic]], and our ability to regain the trust and faith of the American people, all depends on our ability to restore [EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER THE LAW] by prosecuting those responsible [Blind-Justice]. Treasonous acts [sedition] against the Republic [the 'People'] of the United States [START - LEAD-IN]. Infiltration [rogue] at the highest levels of our gov, media, corps, etc. Planned & coordinated [D/ F]. This is not about politics. Something far more sinister [evil] has been allowed to flourish through all parts of our society. It has been protected and safeguarded. It has been camouflaged to appear as trusted. It has been projected [normalized] by stars. [CLAS 1-99] One must only look to see. [Symbolism will be their downfall] - This is not another [4] year election. "Be on your guard; stand firm in the faith; be courageous; be strong." You are not alone. We stand together. Q - https://qanon.pub/#3931
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273ca3 No.21755439
#37 - Part 29
Australian Politics and Society - Part 5
>>21314105 Video: PM calls for Barnaby Joyce to be sacked over 'bullet' comment at wind farm protest rally - Anthony Albanese has called for Barnaby Joyce to be sacked from the shadow frontbench after insinuating voters should use their ballot papers as bullets to "say goodbye" to the prime minister and other senior Labor figures. The Nationals' frontbencher told protesters attending an anti-wind farm rally to "get ready to load that magazine" and vote out the prime minister, federal Energy Minister Chris Bowen and local MP Stephen Jones. "The bullet you have is this little piece of paper, it goes in the magazine called the voting box and it's coming up," he said. "Get ready to load that magazine. Go, goodbye Chris. Goodbye, Stephen. Goodbye, Albo," he said. Mr Albanese said the gun analogy, which was made just two weeks after an assassination attempt on former US president Donald Trump and amid concerns about increasing harassment and violent acts targeting MPs, was "completely unacceptable". The prime minister said he was concerned the language could incite violent behaviour.
>>21314238 Paris Olympics organisers apologise for opening ceremony’s ‘Last Supper’ scene - The organisers of the Paris Olympics issued a brief apology on Sunday after coming under heavy criticism from religious groups and conservative politicians for including a bawdy scene in Friday night’s Opening Ceremony that resembled Leonardo da Vinci’s “Last Supper.” The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of France had decried it as a “mockery.” “There was never an intention to show disrespect to a religious group,” a Paris 2024 spokeswoman said. “If people have taken any offence, we are, of course, really sorry.” The tableau in question, on the Debilly Footbridge across the Seine, involved a group of dancers and drag queens arrayed along one side of a banquets table, including DJ Barbara Butch - described by organisers as an “LGBT icon.” The scene continued with a mostly naked figure, painted blue and portrayed by performer Philippe Katerine, singing a raunchy song in character as Dionysus, the Greek god of wine. Thomas Jolly, the creative director behind the extravaganza, stood by his vision for Friday’s lavish festivities, which drew NBC’s highest television ratings since London 2012. He had been given a free hand by Paris 2024 to create an unprecedented public spectacle as athletes paraded down the Seine on boats. His other vignettes for the ceremony included a cabaret performance by Lady Gaga, a tableau of decapitated Marie-Antoinettes set to heavy metal music, and the closing solo by Celine Dion on the Eiffel Tower. “The idea was not to be subversive - I wanted to send a message of love, of inclusion,” Jolly said. “We wanted to include everyone, as simple as that.”
>>21314271 Video: Paris Olympics organisers apologise for opening ceremony's Last Supper parody - Paris 2024 organisers have apologised to Catholics and Christian groups angered by a kitsch tableau in the Olympic Games opening ceremony that parodied Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper painting. The segment, which resembled the biblical scene of Jesus Christ and his apostles sharing a last meal before his crucifixion, featured drag queens and a singer made up as the Greek god of wine, Dionysus. This drew dismay from the Catholic church and the religious right in US. The creative director of the opening ceremony, Thomas Jolly, said: 'I did not intend to be subversive or to mock or shock … In France we can believe or not believe, in France we have a lot of rights and I wanted to convey those values throughout the ceremony.' - Guardian Sport
>>21314281 Q Post #4461 - Only when evil is forced into the light can we defeat it. Only when they can no longer operate in the [shadows] can people see the truth for themselves. Only when people see the truth [for themselves] will people understand the true nature of their deception. Seeing is Believing. Sometimes you can't tell the public the truth. YOU MUST SHOW THEM. ONLY THEN WILL PEOPLE FIND THE WILL TO CHANGE. It had to be this way. This is not another 4-year election. GOD WINS. Q - https://qanon.pub/#4461
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273ca3 No.21755441
#37 - Part 30
Australian Politics and Society - Part 6
>>21326161 Video: Federal government responds to disability royal commission, disability advocates 'devastated' - The federal government has revealed its response to the landmark disability royal commission, but not committed to a number of the most contentious recommendations, including phasing out special schools, group homes and segregated employment. In responding to 172 of the recommendations it has primary or shared responsibility for, the Commonwealth has not committed to introducing a disability rights act or creating a federal disability department. Wednesday's initial response to the Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability, which cost almost $600 million, came 10 months after the final report was released, and four months after the commissioners' recommended response deadline. The Commonwealth said it would continue to work closely with state and territory governments, as well as people with disability, to implement the reforms. Marayke Jonkers, president of People with Disability Australia, said the response did not fully address the majority of the recommendations. "Today us and our members are devastated, disappointed and completely caught off guard," she told reporters in Brisbane. El Gibbs, Disability Advocacy Network Australia's Director, Policy and Advocacy, said while there were "some good things" in the initial response, overall she was "just not seeing the scale of response that we needed". "Governments have had [more than] nine months to respond and we needed to see far more detail and commitment to stopping this terrible scourge of harm against disabled people," she told the ABC.
>>21326176 Afghanistan medal decision before election, says Deputy Prime Minister - Australian Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles has confirmed a decision will be made about stripping medals from Australian Defence Force personnel, before the next election. The Ministry for Defence confirmed that a decision regarding those accused of conducting war crimes in Afghanistan would be made ‘before the election’ and ‘soon’, earlier this week. The date of the next Federal Election has not been confirmed, but is expected before May next year. The discussion follows the release findings from the 2020 Brereton inquiry, which investigated alleged war crimes committed by Australian Defence Force during the War in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2016. Former Chief of the Australian Defence Force Angus Campbell had also reportedly written to current and former ADF members notifying that honours for distinguished and conspicuous service on warlike operations could be withdrawn. “I will be making the decision before the election, I can tell you that. I'll be making that decision soon,” Deputy PM Marles said during an interview with Sky News on July 28.
>>21344294 NT police commissioner delivers apology to First Nations people at Garma and pledges to 'eliminate racism' - The Northern Territory's police commissioner has delivered an apology to First Nations people for pain the NT Police Force has caused since it was founded in 1870. Speaking at a Yolngu ceremony area at the Garma Festival on Saturday afternoon, Commissioner Michael Murphy said: "I am deeply sorry to all Aboriginal Territorians for the past harms and the injustices caused by members of the Northern Territory Police." Commissioner Murphy said although the NT Police Force had aimed to work effectively with Aboriginal people over its 154 years of policing, "we acknowledge …we have made mistakes". He addressed the harms caused by police during Australia's colonial era, saying officers often "saw themselves as duty bound to protect settlers and their property when Aboriginal people resisted their incursions". "I know that I can't change or undo the past, but as police commissioner alongside our police officers, we can commit to not repeating the mistakes and injustices of the past," he said.
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273ca3 No.21755443
#37 - Part 31
Australian Politics and Society - Part 7
>>21354106 Video: PM discards commitment to set up Makarrata body despite millions in funding - The federal government does not intend to create a national commission to lead "truth-telling" about First Nations history, departing from its pre-election promise to do so. A Makarrata commission, named after a Yolngu word for coming together after a struggle, is the "culmination" of the Uluru Statement from the Heart. Its intended purpose is to oversee both truth-telling and treaty-making between governments and First Nations. But despite an election night promise to enact the statement in "full", and budget funding to establish a Makarrata commission, the government's enthusiasm for a commission had cooled by the time of the failed Voice referendum and its status has been unclear. On Saturday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese appeared to drop the commitment to the commission by denying it had ever been made. "That's not what we have proposed," he told the ABC's Insiders program during an interview at the Garma Festival. "What we've proposed is Makarrata just being the idea of coming together." But a standalone Makarrata commission was part of Labor's costed policy platform prior to the federal election, and in its first budget the Albanese government allocated $5.8 million to its establishment. That funding was meant "to commence work on establishing an independent Makarrata commission to oversee processes for agreement making and truth-telling".
>>21354122 ‘Lost in translation’: Minister Malarndirri McCarthy denies PM ditched Makarrata vow - Newly minted Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy does not believe Anthony Albanese ditched his election promise to implement a Makarrata Commision and says ideals behind the Uluru statement are still guiding the federal government. In a 2017 election promise, the Prime Minister pledged that his government would implement the Uluru Statement from the Heart in full, which included a promise for a formal process for agreement-making and truth-telling. But at the Garma Festival this weekend, Mr Albanese appeared to back away from that commitment, saying that was not what his government was proposing, leading to one of his closest Indigenous allies accusing him of breaking a clear election promise. Uluru Dialogue co-chair Pat Anderson on Sunday night condemned the Prime Minister’s comments as confusing. She also criticised Mr Albanese’s repeated comments on Sunday that his past references to “Makarrata” were in relation to the Yolngu word for “coming together”, and not the truth-telling body outlined in the Uluru Statement from the Heart. “Is he rolling back on the Labor election commitment to the Makarrata commission?” Ms Anderson said. “We understand that a constitutional voice didn’t get up, but the Australian people didn’t vote on truth or treaty. Makarrata is not a vague vibe or a series of casual conversations. The Makarrata called for in the Uluru Statement is a bricks-and-mortar body and it was a clear election promise.”
>>21354217 Leading internet expert Robert Epstein believes Google meddles in Australian politics - Leading American behavioural psychologist Dr Robert Epstein says he has “no doubt” Google is manipulating Australia’s elections by subtly biasing search engine results to encourage support for the tech giant’s favoured -- usually left-wing – political parties The Harvard educated Dr Epstein, speaking to Liberal Senator Alex Antic on his podcast ‘Based’, urged all nations to set up “monitoring systems” so governments could track how tech giants were seeking to surreptitiously influence public opinion. “Australia has no monitoring system, the European Union has no monitoring system; if anyone at Google in Australia has any political interests in Australia … I have no doubt, absolutely no doubt, that they are manipulating your elections,” he told Senator Antic in comments to be uploaded Tuesday. In 2018 the Wall Street Journal published leaked emails among Google staff, revealing them discussing how to discreetly turn voters against then president Donald Trump’s 2017 travel ban on nationals from certain Muslim countries from coming to the US. “Unless you have a monitoring system in place, you don’t actually know what’s happening, you don’t know how they might be indoctrinating your children, you don’t know how they might be undermining your democracy,” Dr Epstein added.
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273ca3 No.21755447
#37 - Part 32
Australian Politics and Society - Part 8
>>21354236 Court approves puberty blockers for child, 12, despite father not being consulted - A Victorian court has granted permission for a 12-year-old child to be prescribed treatment to block the onset of puberty, despite a hospital raising concerns that the father had not been consulted, and pointing to “ongoing uncertainty” about approvals for the treatment of children with gender dysphoria. Judge Melinda Richards last week ruled that the mother’s consent alone is enough to allow the hospital to prescribe puberty blockers to the biologically male child, who first presented as a girl aged seven when she told her mother she was “no longer her son, she was her daughter”. The court heard that the father had not had contact with the child since she was a baby, and had not been given the opportunity to provide his views on the administration of treatment. “The question at the heart of the hospital’s application is whether (the mother’s) consent to stage 1 treatment for her daughter is proper consent, in circumstances where (the child’s) father is absent and his views are not known,” the judgment reads. “For the reasons that follow, I have concluded that it is.” The child has chosen to go by a feminine name, presents as a girl, wears girls’ clothing and shows a preference for female colours. At the age of eight, the child attended the Melbourne Royal Children’s Hospital and was diagnosed with “gender incongruence of adolescence and gender dysphoria in adolescents”. The child’s mother is supportive of the child taking puberty blockers, but the hospital raised concerns with the Victorian Supreme Court over whether they could do so without the father’s consent.
>>21360221 Travel alert for Australians visiting United Kingdom amid ongoing riots after Southport stabbing attack - Australians have been urged to exercise a high degree of caution when travelling to the United Kingdom due to potential violence stemming from ongoing protests and rioting. Violence broke out in cities across the nation over the past week following a stabbing attack at a Southport dance class which left three girls dead and more injured. Three children aged six, seven and nine were killed at a Taylor Swift-themed dance workshop taking place during England's summer school holidays. At least six other children and two adults were hospitalised following the incident. A 17-year-old boy has since been charged with three counts of murder and 10 counts of attempted murder. Online misinformation in the wake of the attack claimed the suspect was Muslim and an asylum seeker, setting off a string of suspected far-right groups launching attacks on immigrant communities. The latest update to the Australian federal government's Smart Traveller website advised visitors to "avoid areas where protests are occurring due to the potential for disruption and violence". "Public protests and events that draw large groups of people can turn violent, and can evolve into riots," the website said. Australians travelling in the UK should "avoid all protests", "monitor the media for the latest information" and "follow instructions of local authorities" to stay safe.
>>21360344 Tom Pritchard, World War II veteran and Australia's last Rat of Tobruk, dies aged 102 - Tom Pritchard, Australia's last Rat of Tobruk, has died aged 102. The World War II veteran was the last direct link with the 14,000 Australian servicemen who held the Libyan port of Tobruk against the German Africa Corps in 1941 during the Siege of Tobruk, a vital battle for the Allied forces. He died on Saturday, just shy of his 103rd birthday. Born in Victoria in 1921, Pritchard enlisted in the army in 1940 despite lying about his age, and was assigned to the 2/5th Field Ambulance, which was eventually attached to the 18th Infantry Brigade. He served as an ambulance attendant during the eight-month-long Siege of Tobruk, which is regarded as a stand-out battle for Australia's soldiers. The efforts of the Australian soldiers holding down the Tobruk harbour during the Siege of Tobruk was pivotal to the Allied victory in North Africa. "The important part of the siege was that if you didn't hold that harbour at Tobruk, you couldn't control the Mediterranean or Middle East," said secretary of the Rats of Tobruk Association Lachlan Gaylard. "So really, it was the linchpin for that whole conflict, down to 14,000 Australians," he said. "It is extraordinary." The association said they were extremely grateful "to have had Tommy for so long", in a post on Facebook confirming his death. "Tommy was a stalwart member of our association and a most humble veteran," they wrote. "We mourn his loss and the last direct linkage with some 14,000 Australian servicemen who served in Tobruk. We should always remember that those men in Tobruk gave us their today for our tomorrow."
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273ca3 No.21755449
#37 - Part 33
Australian Politics and Society - Part 9
>>21360391 ‘This country is better than that’: Caroline Kennedy on Trump shooting - Caroline Kennedy, the only remaining child of assassinated Democratic president John F. Kennedy, says she was “horrified” by the recent attempt on Donald Trump’s life, as she made a personal plea for politicians and their supporters around the world to tone down the violent rhetoric. In a wide-ranging interview with The Australian Financial Review in Washington on Monday (Tuesday AEST), Ms Kennedy, who is the US ambassador to Australia, said she was ashamed there were still Americans prepared to resort to extreme violence because of political differences. “With all the tragedies that our family has been through, I think this country is better than that,” she said of the assassination attempt on Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, “and we need to do more to never let that happen again, and to stop encouraging any kind of violence.” “Like so many people, I was horrified. I’m so glad that he’s OK.”
>>21360397 Q Post #703“ - Rest in peace Mr. President (JFK), through your wisdom and strength, since your tragic death, Patriots have planned, installed, and by the grace of God, activated, the beam of LIGHT. We will forever remember your sacrifice. May you look down from above and continue to guide us as we ring the bell of FREEDOM and destroy those who wish to sacrifice our children, our way of life, and our world. We, the PEOPLE.” Prayer said every single day in the OO. JFK - Secret Socities. Where we go one, we go all. Q - https://qanon.pub/#703
>>21372270 Pacific Marines, U.S. Ambassador Commemorate 82nd Anniversary of the Battle of Guadalcanal - Pacific Marines with Marine Rotational Force - Darwin, as well as the U.S. Ambassador to Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea, and Vanuatu, hosted the 82nd Anniversary Commemoration Ceremony of the Battle of Guadalcanal at the American War Memorial, Aug. 7, 2024. “Today, as we gather to honor the 82nd anniversary of the Battle of Guadalcanal, we pay tribute to the courage and sacrifice of those who fought bravely in this crucial campaign,” reflected U.S. Marine Corps Col. Brian Mulvihill, commanding officer, Marine Rotational Force - Darwin. “Their legacy continues to inspire our commitment to peace and collaboration in the Pacific. We are privileged to stand alongside our Allies and friends to remember and celebrate their enduring heroism.” The U.S. and its Allies commemorate the Battle of Guadalcanal annually, honoring the bravery and sacrifices of those who served, and highlighting the enduring legacy of their victory. This year’s event began with a sunrise ceremony at the American Memorial in Honiara which included keynote speakers, a wreath laying, and a moment of silence for the fallen. “This commemoration is a powerful reminder of the deep bonds between the people of the United States and the Solomon Islands,” said Ann Marie Yastishock, U.S. Ambassador to the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and Republic of Vanuatu. “The Battle of Guadalcanal represents not only a turning point in World War II but also the strength of our enduring partnership.”
>>21385660 Australia set to sign a new defence pact with Indonesia by end of the month - Australia is poised to sign a new upgraded defence pact with Indonesia by the end of this month as the federal government prepares to welcome the incoming Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto to Canberra. The government has framed it as the most strategically significant bilateral agreement with Indonesia since at least 2006, when the two countries reset security ties by signing the Lombok Treaty. Australia and Indonesia confirmed in February they would upgrade their 2012 defence pact to a new binding agreement, with Defence Minister Richard Marles aiming to complete "lightning-fast" negotiations within three months. The negotiations haven't gone quite that quickly, but the ABC has been told that discussions are now in their final phase and that Mr Marles is planning to travel to Indonesia near the end of this month to sign the agreement with Mr Prabowo. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese also confirmed yesterday that Mr Prabowo - who is continuing to serve as defence minister ahead of being sworn in this October - will make a separate visit to Canberra in the coming two weeks. "I will welcome the Indonesian defence minister in the next fortnight, who is coming to Canberra, and he'll have meetings with my cabinet," he said. "In a matter of weeks, I will attend his inauguration. And the cooperation that we have with Indonesia is very strong indeed." One Australian government source told the ABC that both countries were now "very close" to finalising the upgraded agreement, but the signing ceremony would likely be held in Indonesia rather in Australia.
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273ca3 No.21755450
#37 - Part 34
Australian Politics and Society - Part 10
>>21385938 Video: Battle of Guadalcanal: 82nd Anniversary of Operation Watchtower - Multinational servicemembers, veterans, leaders of Solomon Islands’ government, members of the diplomatic community, and civilians, attend the 82nd Anniversary of the Battle of Guadalcanal Ceremony at the Guadalcanal American Memorial in Honiara, Solomon Islands, Aug. 7, 2024. The ceremony commemorated the 82nd anniversary of the battle, and served to honor the fallen and strengthen the U.S. relationship with the Solomon Islands and other Pacific allies and partners. The historic battle was codenamed Operation Watchtower and was the first major offensive and decisive victory for the allied forces in the Pacific theater.
>>21390233 Video: ASIO boss Mike Burgess warns friendly nations among countries interfering in Australian communities - Australia's domestic spy chief says people would be shocked to learn the identity of the countries his agency has caught actively interfering in diaspora communities. ASIO director-general Mike Burgess said friendly nations were among the "three to four" nations detected actively working within Australian communities. It prompted him to warn that he'll name them if the threat poses a significant risk to Australians. "I can think of at least three or four that we have actually actively found involved in foreign interference in Australian diaspora communities," he told the ABC's Insiders program. "Some of them would surprise you, some of them are also our friends." Last month, the federal government unveiled plans to introduce several new measures to fight the growing threat of foreign interference. The plans included making the Counter Foreign Interference Taskforce, which was established in 2020, permanent and expanded to include agencies such as the Australian Taxation Office.
>>21415073 Video: DFAT confirm London stabbing victim was 11-year-old Australian girl - The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) has confirmed an 11-year-old child stabbed in Leicester Square in London on Monday is an Australian. The ABC understands the family is from New South Wales. London's Metropolitan Police said the girl was seriously injured though her injuries are not life-threatening, and she has since been discharged from hospital. A 32-year-old man, Ioan Pintaru, appeared in court on Tuesday charged with the attempted murder. Prosecutor David Burns said the girl and her mother, who were tourists, were in the Leicester Square area just before the incident, which he said was a "random attack on a child". "The defendant has approached the 11-year-old girl, placed her into a headlock and he has then stabbed her eight times to the body," Burns said. Pintaru was not asked to enter any pleas and was remanded in custody ahead of his next court hearing at the Old Bailey on September 10. Police do not believe the stabbing was terror-related.
>>21415079 ‘I just ran toward the guy’: Security guard who saved 11-year-old Australian speaks out - A security guard has recounted the moment he leapt into action when he saw an 11-year-old Australian girl allegedly being stabbed in London’s tourist district. The child was visiting Leicester Square with her mother when she was allegedly grabbed by a man, placed in a headlock, and stabbed eight times in her face, neck and torso at about 11.30am (8.30pm AEST) on Monday. The girl is understood to be from NSW, the ABC reported. Abdullah, who was working as a security guard for the TWG Tea store, recounted his heroic action in an address to the Pakistani High Commission in London for a celebration of Pakistan’s Independence Day on Tuesday. “I was on my duty. It was half past 11. I heard a scream and I looked and there was a guy that was stabbing a kid that was 11 years old. I didn’t think anything, I just ran toward the guy, I jumped on him, grabbed his hand in which he was carrying a knife,” he said as the audience broke out into applause. “The second [the knife] fell on the floor … I kicked the knife away from him. In the meantime a couple more guys came … we held him on the floor for four to five minutes, I shouted around ‘please call the police, call the ambulance services’.” Abdullah said he was inspired by the actions of the Pakistani military he’d seen as a child in his home country and called on his community to be courageous in the face of adversity.
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273ca3 No.21755452
#37 - Part 35
Australian Politics and Society - Part 11
>>21422082 Anti-Semitism festers in Victoria, says envoy Jillian Segal - Australia’s inaugural anti-Semitism envoy, Jillian Segal, has revealed Victoria is our worst state for anti-Semitism and that since the October 7 attacks there have been more than 800 anti-Semitic incidents recorded. In her first public address since Anthony Albanese appointed her to the role last month, Ms Segal told the audience at the Fight Against anti-Semitism event at the Melbourne Hebrew Congregation that anti-Semitism is the greatest fight the Jewish community has faced through the centuries. She said that from October 2023 to July, there had been more than 800 anti-Semitic incidents in Victoria compared to 200 recorded incidents in the previous 12 months. “The golden age has come to an end, and this is our reality. We will rise to the occasion,” Ms Segal said. “I do not want to promise that there is one silver bullet, but I think there are a series of things that will happen here in Australia and around the rest of the world … but that is going to be a struggle.” Ms Segal said difficult times, such as during Covid and times of economic challenges, had triggered resentment and caused people to blame others for life’s unfairness. “Anti-Semitism, as we know, erodes everything that’s good in society. It poses a threat not just to us as a Jewish community, but to the whole of society,” she said.
>>21428274 Women’s rights rally sparks pro-trans counter protest in Melbourne - One woman has been arrested for allegedly assaulting a police officer and several members of a pro-trans counter rally have thrown eggs and water balloons at speakers at a women’s rights demonstration in Melbourne on Saturday. Activist organisation Women’s Action Group planned a ‘Women Will Speak’ event to take place at Victoria’s state parliament on the weekend, which was met with a pro-trans protest. A police barricade was formed to separate the Women’s Action Group event and the pro-trans demonstration organised by Trans Queer Solidarity. A large police presence, included mounted officers, was stationed at Spring St and Bourke St. Details of the Women’s Action Group were shared online, and in response a ‘Trans Liberation’ rally was scheduled to take place at the same location. The group was formed in 2019 and the organisation state their motivation is to fight against “the ongoing erosion of women’s rights in Victoria and in all of Australia”. “Humans cannot change sex. Men can never be women,” a speaker said at the Women’s Action Group event told the crowd on Saturday. “It is our inherent right to exercise freedom of expression … and policy and legislation must reflect reality not ideology.” Most of the speeches were barely audible as members of the Trans Liberation gathering blared loud music, banged drums and shouted cries such as “f*ck off fascist”.
>>21428353 'Deeply concerned': Gallipoli fire threatens ANZAC war graves - Wildfires that threatened the graves of Australian soldiers at ANZAC Cove in Gallipoli, Turkey, have been brought under control, though the threat remains. Dry, hot, and windy weather conditions sparked a series of fires that quickly spread across the Gallipoli Peninsula, affecting several commemorative and operational sites. It has not yet been confirmed whether Australian war graves and memorials have been damaged. The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC), which maintains graves and memorials to the dead from Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and India among many others, said staff had evacuated from the peninsula and were safe. The CWGC cares for more than 30 cemeteries on the Gallipoli Peninsula. The CWGC thanked those fighting to keep local people and villages safe, and to limit damage to commemorative sites of all nations. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Gallipoli was "sacred ground to both of our countries" while speaking at a press conference yesterday. "Our thoughts today are also with our friends in Türkiye. We understand there are efforts underway to control fires that are burning on the Gallipoli Peninsula," Albanese said. "So our thoughts today are with those who continue to care for those cemeteries, and welcome thousands of Australians who visit ANZAC headstones each year, as they endure these difficult times. "Gallipoli is, of course, sacred ground to both of our countries."
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273ca3 No.21755455
#37 - Part 36
Australian Politics and Society - Part 12
>>21432042 ‘National disgrace’: Victoria Cross winner Samuel Pearse’s body languishing in Russian morgue - The lifeless body of one of Australia’s most highly decorated war heroes is wasting away in a plastic storage crate in a remote morgue in the Russian city of Archangel. Private Samuel Pearse is one of Australia’s 101 Victoria Cross winners and was recognised posthumously after being killed in the little-known Anzac volunteer campaign against the Bolsheviks in 1919 where he fought under the British flag. He was originally buried where he died in the town of Obozersky but his grave was later lost and his body moved. It was found only six years ago in a scrapyard after an exhaustive search effort involving a Russian military archaeologist and an Australian military historian. Pearse had served previously at Gallipoli and on the Western Front where he sustained an injury to his toe, with the body found in Russia having the same toe injury and also wearing the same slouch hat in which the fallen soldier was buried. In what’s been labelled a national disgrace, Private Pearse now finds himself in a literal and metaphorical no man’s land, with neither the British nor Australian governments prepared to claim and repatriate his body. A major campaign is now being launched to pressure the Australian government into repatriating Pearse, who has relatives in Adelaide who can prove the remains are his. The campaign is being supported by the RSL and led by Adelaide historian Damien Wright, whose new book Australia’s Lost Heroes: Anzacs in the Russia Civil War 1919 unearths the story of Pearse and other fallen Anzac soldiers from this largely forgotten military campaign. Wright travelled to Russia with Pearse’s grandson and worked with the Russian military archaeologist Alexey Suhanovsky to find and identify Pearse, the evidence overwhelmingly indicating the body is indeed his.
>>21446910 Australia and Indonesia finalise upgraded defence agreement during incoming president's visit - Australia and Indonesia have finalised negotiations on an upgraded defence agreement which the federal government is hailing as the "most significant" pact the two countries have ever signed. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese made the announcement after sitting down with Indonesia's Defence Minister and incoming president Prabowo Subianto in Canberra. The new agreement is expected to facilitate more ambitious joint military exercises between the two countries, and will be signed by Mr Prabowo and Defence Minister Richard Marles in Jakarta later this month. Mr Albanese said the "treaty-level" agreement would "bolster our strong defence cooperation by deepening dialogue, strengthening interoperability and enhancing practical arrangements". "It will be a vital plank for our two countries to support each other's security, which is vital to both countries, but also to the stability of the region that we share," he said. Mr Marles called the agreement "profoundly historic" and the "most significant agreement that our two countries have ever made". "What this agreement will do is provide for much greater interoperability between our defence forces," he said. "It will provide for much more exercises between our defence forces, it will see us working together in the global commons to support the rules-based order and, importantly, it will allow us to operate from each other's countries."
>>21453375 Australian Bushmaster reportedly destroyed during Ukrainian incursion into Russia - Ukrainian forces are believed to have used Australian-supplied Bushmasters as part of their recent surprise incursion into Russia, with evidence emerging of at least one of the armoured vehicles apparently destroyed inside the western border region of Kursk. Just days after British-supplied tanks were reported to have crossed over the Russian border, video has been broadcast on Ukrainian television showing the wreckage of a Victorian-made Bushmaster on the side of a road. Moscow declared a state of emergency after Ukraine's daring military incursion launched on August 6, which President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says was aimed at creating a buffer zone to prevent further Russian attacks across the border. Retired Australian Army General Mick Ryan says he's confirmed that Australian-supplied Bushmasters took part in the Ukrainian operation, which has forced more than 100,000 locals to flee. "The Australian Bushmasters serve with one of the brigades that has apparently taken part in at least the initial phases, probably follow up phases of the Ukrainian operation in Kursk," he told the ABC's Afternoon Briefing program. "These are excellent vehicles. There's a reason why the Ukrainians like them and use them because they protect their soldiers. They've lost at least one, potentially two or three so far in this operation, it would be nice to see some replacements on their way."
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273ca3 No.21755456
#37 - Part 37
Australian Politics and Society - Part 13
>>21446927 Video:‘Happy to comfort babies born alive after abortion’, midwife tells inquiry- An Australian midwife has spoken publicly for the first time about her experiences of babies being born alive following abortions and, in some cases, surviving for up to five hours before dying after gasping for air and fighting to stay alive. Louise Adsett, a clinical midwife who has worked in maternity and birthing units for about 14 years, told a parliamentary hearing in Queensland that some babies born alive after an abortion were never held by their parents but instead placed in witches hats, taken out of the room and left to die. Ms Adsett, who works at a public hospital south of Brisbane, was providing evidence to a Queensland parliamentary inquiry into the Termination of Pregnancy (Live Births) Amendment Bill 2024 introduced by Robbie Katter aimed at enshrining legislated protections for babies born as a result of a termination of pregnancy procedure. In an emotional statement to the hearing, Ms Adsett said some midwives were distressed because they were “unable to provide any medical care for the baby” but were “limited to providing comfort care only, which is merely wrapping and holding the baby”. “To give you a first example, a mother made a decision to abort a baby at 21-plus weeks’ gestation. The process began in the morning with misoprostol given throughout the day. The process took all day, and the baby was only delivered during the early hours of a night shift where skeleton staff was on duty,” Ms Adsett told the inquiry. “This baby moved vigorously, gasped for breath and had a palpable heart rate to make it clear this baby was alive. It was over 400 grams, but the baby was a good weight. “The parents of this baby did not desire to see or hold this baby. Midwives and doctors were left holding this little life while they continued to provide cares for other women who were birthing and welcoming their babies into the world. “This baby boy fought for his life for five hours before taking his final breath. This is not an uncommon occurrence.” Ms Adsett told the inquiry that she was a “conscientious objector when it comes to providing care for women aborting their babies”, but said she was “happy to make myself available to hold a baby who was born alive after an abortion”. “These babies deserve better. They deserve to have the same rights that all of us human beings have,” she said.
>>21446941 Video:QLD midwife lifts the lid on newborns left to die- "Today at the public inquiry in the Queensland parliament into the Termination of Pregnancy (Live Births) Amendment Bill 2024 introduced by MP Robbie Katter, a courageous midwife, Lou Adsett gave harrowing oral evidence of her experience of babies born alive and left to die at her hospital. There is evidence of increasing numbers of live births following abortion at both pre- and post-viable gestations in Queensland. In 2018, the year before abortion up to birth was legalised in Queensland, there were 28 babies born alive and left to die and in 2022 this had grown to 49 babies in this plight. In fact, between 2019 and 2022 there were 179 babies born alive in Queensland hospitals and left to die without a legal right to care. The Bill does not seek to prevent an abortion from happening. It merely provides a right to equal protection for all babies born alive in Queensland, irrespective of the circumstances of their birth. This means that if a live birth occurs after an abortion, the baby would be provided with either life-saving treatment or palliative care, whichever is the most appropriate given the clinical circumstances. We are fighting for birth equality: the simple notion that every child born in Australia deserves an equal right to medical care and the protection of the law. Please share this video so that all Australians may know the truth and sign the birth equality petition to join Lou in calling out this horror." - Dr Joanna Howe, Aug 19, 2024 - https://www.drjoannahowe.com/
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273ca3 No.21755457
#37 - Part 38
Australian Politics and Society - Part 14
>>21459189 Australia to build cruise missiles with Norway's Kongsberg - Australia said it would jointly manufacture long-range Naval Strike Missiles and Joint Strike Missiles with Norway's Kongsberg Defence in the city of Newcastle on Australia's eastern coast, the only site outside of Norway. Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy said the Australian government will contribute A$850 million ($574 million) to establish a manufacturing facility with Kongsberg at the Newcastle Airport precinct later this year, with production to start in 2027. The anti-ship cruise missiles would be used by the Australian Defence Force and also exported by the U.S. security ally, he said. It will be one of only two facilities in the world capable of producing the missiles, and the only site outside Kongsberg, Norway. Australia has said it will establish guided weapons manufacturing under a defence overhaul to boost the Australian Defence Force's long-range precision strike ability, amid rising tensions in the Indo-Pacific. There is huge global demand and constraints on the supply chain around the world. So not only is it cost-competitive to build them here, it will actually deliver the missiles faster than if we were relying on a production line overseas," Conroy said at a press conference in Newcastle. "There is huge export opportunities for these missiles as well."
>>21466382 Ukraine urges against repeat of Taipan helicopter farce - A decorated Ukrainian commander has pleaded with the Albanese government to donate the army’s soon-to-be retired M1A1 Abrams tanks to his country’s fight against Russia, saying they could play a “crucial role” in turning the tide against Vladimir Putin’s forces. Major Andrii Berezovskyi urged the government to avoid a repeat of its decision to junk 45 military helicopters rather than provide them to Kyiv, as new footage emerged online revealing Australian Bushmaster vehicles were used by Ukraine in its retaliatory invasion of Russia. The 28-year-old veteran of some of the bloodiest battles of the war said the US-made tanks were far superior to those operated by Russia. “They are more manoeuvrable and have new technologies for protection against antitank missile systems, which provides better protection for both personnel and the equipment itself,” Major Berezovskyi told The Australian. He lamented the Albanese government’s 2023 refusal to donate the army’s MRH-90 Taipan helicopters as “not wise and not acceptable”. “If Australia had made a positive decision for us regarding those helicopters, they would have been extremely valuable and would have greatly assisted us in conducting medevacs for wounded soldiers,” Major Berezovskyi said. “I would like to emphasise for the Australian government that today Ukraine is fighting for democracy and freedom, not only for Ukraine but for the rest of the civilised world.” Major Berezovskyi, who is in Australia to raise money for Ukraine’s war effort, lauded the Bushmaster protected vehicles provided by Australia under successive aid packages as “great and powerful support”.
>>21466485 Transgender woman Roxanne Tickle wins novel gender discrimination case - A transgender woman has won a landmark ruling against a women’s-only social media app after a judge found her exclusion from the app amounted to indirect discrimination, in what lawyers say could have widespread implications for the workplace. Transgender woman Roxanne Tickle sued Giggle for Girls and its owner Sall Grover for excluding her from the app, claiming unlawful discrimination under the Sex Discrimination Act. In his ruling on Friday, Federal Court Justice Robert Bromwich found that “sex is changeable” and non-binary, saying the “concept of sex has broadened over the 30 years since the SDA”. He found that Ms Grover had indirectly, but not directly, discriminated against Ms Tickle when she removed her from the app because she did not look sufficiently female, and ordered her to pay the applicant $10,000, as well as her legal costs. Monash University Faculty of Law professor Paula Gerber welcomed the judgment, saying it was now “clear cut that you cannot have spaces designated as women-only, where what you mean is cisgender women-only”. Ms Tickle underwent gender-affirming surgery in 2019 and is now designated as female on her Queensland birth certificate. She was accepted into the app in February 2021 after an analysis of a “selfie” by Giggle’s third-party artificial intelligence tool but later blocked when Ms Grover surveyed the image herself. Lawyers disappointed by the polarising judgment said discrimination law no longer offered women the protection it was once legislated to guarantee. “It’s clear now that discrimination laws intended to protect women are now preventing them from having safe spaces to meet,” Feminist Legal Clinic principal solicitor Anna Kerr said.
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273ca3 No.21755460
#37 - Part 39
Australian Politics and Society - Part 15
>>21473238 The Facebook problem that only hurts Australians - Rampant celebrity cryptocurrency scam ads are as Australian as Tim Tams, koalas or the Great Barrier Reef, according to American Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen, who says the tech giant’s lack of focus on Australia has let scams run wild on its platform compared with other markets. Local public figures, including Andrew Forrest, Dick Smith and Waleed Aly, have had their likenesses falsely used to promote cryptocurrency scams, an issue the consumer watchdog estimates has cost Australians more than $13 million in 2024 so far and has made an undetermined amount of profit for Facebook. Social media scams are a global issue but one that is acute in Australia, according to Haugen. Haugen formerly served as a senior product manager at Facebook before quitting in May 2021 to become a whistleblower, leaking tens of thousands of internal documents that exposed how much Facebook knew about the harm it was causing, including knowingly promoting misinformation and hate speech, and pro-eating-disorder content to teenage girls. Haugen is now focused on improving transparency and accountability for social media platforms, including in Australia, where she’s spent an extended visit meeting local parliamentarians, policy groups including Reset Australia, and regulators such as the eSafety Commissioner. She has also taken up a role as a fellow at the Australian National University’s Tech Policy Design Centre. Speaking in a wide-ranging interview in Melbourne, Haugen said that during her time working at Facebook, the company’s safety teams had largely turned a blind eye to the Australian market. “In the United States, we don’t have a problem with celebrity scam ads the way you do,” she said. “I was shocked when I came here and saw the extent of it.”
>>21473450 US Air Force stealth bombers deploy to Amberley in Queensland - The skies of southeast Queensland have seen some distinctly alien shapes flying around over the past few days, with the deployment of three US Air Force Northrop Grumman B-2A Spirit stealth bombers to RAAF Base Amberley. The distinctive ‘flying wing’-shaped B-2 is designed to penetrate enemy air defence networks to attack targets of high value and is one of the stealthiest aircraft ever to fly. The US Air Force operates just 20 B-2s from Whiteman AFB in Missouri, and these aircraft are frequently deployed in small groups across the world as Bomber Task Force (BTF) deployments. The last time the B-2s deployed to Australia was in 2022, when they participated in a number of exercises. BTF deployments typically last two to three weeks, while other deployment destinations include Fairford in the UK, the remote Diego Garcia atoll in the Indian Ocean, and Guam in the western Pacific. The AUKUS agreement between Australia, the UK and US, and the development and expansion of RAAF bases in the north to accommodate US Air Force bombers means these deployments will likely become more frequent. RAAF Tindal near Katherine in the Northern Territory is building a new ramp which is capable of accommodating up to six B-2 or B-52 bombers, as well as support aircraft including aerial tankers. Two of the three B-2s arrived at Amberley on Friday night (16 August) using the callsigns ‘Clone 11’ and ‘Clone 13’, with the third joining them on Saturday night as ‘Clone 12’. The aircraft were supported by US Air Force KC-135 aerial tankers.
>>21473553 Video: Three B-2 Bombers Land in Australia for First Rotation There in Two Years - Three B-2 stealth bombers landed at Royal Australian Air Force Base Amberley this weekend to begin a Bomber Task Force deployment - showcasing U.S. presence in the region and conducting exercises with allied nations. The bombers were accompanied by two KC-135R tankers from the Illinois National Guard. The last time B-2s were in Australia was in the summer of 2022. More recently, the stealth bomber deployed to the Indo-Pacific earlier this summer, landing in Guam for the first time in five years. Neither Air Force Global Strike Command nor Pacific Air Forces announced how long the trio of B-2s will stay in Australia, but Bomber Task Forces typically last two to three weeks, with training events with allies in the area to practice interoperability and secondary deployments to other locations to gain experience operating from airfields unaccustomed to supporting a bomber presence. The B-2 deployment is just the latest display of U.S. airpower in the region. Last week, Air Force F-22 stealth fighters deployed to Brunei, Indonesia and the Philippines, making a similar show-of-force in the region. All three countries have long-simmering disputes with China over boundaries in the South China Sea
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273ca3 No.21755462
#37 - Part 40
Australian Politics and Society - Part 16
>>21473648 Video: Stealth Bombers at RAAF Base Amberley - 131st Bomb Wing along with 509th Bomb Wing detachment from Whiteman Air Force Base are at Royal Australian Air Force base Amberley for Bomber Task Force Pacific deployment. The BTF is apart of the U.S. Pacific Air Forces Enhanced Air Cooperation between RAAF and USAF, we'll bring you more from the deployment to Amberley but here is some on base action from the week. - Aviation Photography Digest
>>21478220 CLP wins decisive victory in 2024 NT election, as Greens close in on first NT seat - After eight years in the political wilderness, the Country Liberal Party (CLP) has been delivered to government with a resounding landslide victory in the Northern Territory election. By the end of Saturday night's count, the ABC had predicted the CLP winning 15 seats across the jurisdiction, including electorates that had been Territory Labor strongholds for decades in Darwin's northern suburbs. It marks a huge turnaround in the CLP's fortunes, after they were decimated to just two seats in an electoral wipe-out in 2016. Since then, the party has been steadily rebuilt under the leadership of Lia Finocchiaro, a born-and-bred territory woman and former lawyer who will become the NT's 14th chief minister. The CLP ran hard on a campaign promising to stamp out crime and "restore the territory lifestyle" after a long period of high crime rates and a flatlining economy under Labor, with the party amassing more than $11 billion in debt. Voters have delivered substantial victories to the CLP in seats across the Darwin city, suburbs and rural area, as well as Palmerston, Alice Springs, Katherine and the Barkly in the territory outback. On Saturday night, Ms Finocchiaro described the win as "an honour and a privilege". "We've heard loud and clear that territorians want change, and the work starts [today] to deliver that," she said. The election has also seen a fierce rejection of Labor and its former cabinet, including the loss of its outgoing chief minister Eva Lawler, in her Palmerston seat of Drysdale. Other key predicted Labor losses include the party's former police minister Brent Potter, environment minister Kate Worden and education and mining minister Mark Monaghan.
>>21478255 Northern Territory election: Country Liberals promise crime crackdown after historic win - Country Liberal Party leader Lia Finocchiaro has emphatically declared law and order is her “number one priority”, as the CLP becomes the first Coalition equivalent to oust a Labor government since 2018. “It’s amazing to now have the opportunity to do something different for the Territory,” Ms Finocchiaro, 39, told The Australian following an overwhelming election win. “We know Labor have been in power for a very long time, and this is a new chapter for the Territory. We really are focused on making sure we deliver on all of our commitments, because they are what Territorians have been talking to us about. Ms Finocchiaro said her first priority to address youth crime in places such as Alice Springs would be “backing in our police” and holding parents responsible. “It starts with backing in our police, passing laws that meet our community’s expectations, it also then is about getting kids to school,” Ms Finocchiaro told The Australian. “This is something we are very focused on, giving every single Territory child a better future and so we will hold parents accountable. “We will put in place measures to get kids to school, we want healthy kids, healthy families, living healthy lives,” she said. “That’s that’s the work we’ve got to do now, and it starts with law reform in the first week of parliament.” She said she would bring back truancy officers to keep students in school. “If parents and families can’t, then we will,” she said. “We don’t think it’s an option to let kids not have access to education, and we’ll do everything we can to protect their right to have an education. “Territorians have spoken loud and clear that Labor has ignored them for too long and we take this responsibility very seriously, and we will not let Territorians down,” she said.
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273ca3 No.21755463
#37 - Part 41
Australian Politics and Society - Part 17
>>21478287 Northern Territory elections: Lia Finocchiaro and the Country Liberals inherit a wicked problem after defeating Labor - "The Northern Territory government’s most high-profile challenge is crime but behind the scenes the deeper crisis is debt. Lia Finocchiaro is poised to inherit a wicked problem decades in the making. Her ability to address the crime and social dysfunction in Alice Springs and beyond is severely impaired by the fact the territory of 233,000 people is a financial basket case. It is beyond a commonwealth bail out. The NT has a net debt $10.82bn. By contrast there is sheer panic in Tasmania over a $3.5bn debt on an island of 541,000 people. Keep in mind, Tasmania does not have the social problems that the NT has. Its residents are in relative good health. Tasmania has also got 12 senators advocating for its interests in the federal parliament, thanks to a requirement in the constitution that gives every state 12 senators regardless of population and size. The top end has just two senators. And the hard work facing Ms Finocchiaro is unique Australia-wide because 30.8 per cent of NT residents are Indigenous. Central Australia is a global diabetes capital. NT hospitals are overwhelmed with diabetes admissions and required amputations on younger and younger Indigenous people. In the northwest corner of the NT in Arnhem Land, men die -- on average – aged 54. All manner of chronic and preventable illnesses hit the top end’s Indigenous residents at shocking rates. In responding to violence, alcohol-fuelled chaos and family dysfunction in Alice Springs earlier this year, Anthony Albanese called these “complex problems”. These are also expensive problems." - Paige Taylor - theaustralian.com.au
>>21483139 New NT chief minister Lia Finocchiaro lays down the law - Lia Finocchiaro, the first political leader to topple a Labor government in six years, immediately marshalled crime-fighting resources to deal with the Top End’s law and order crisis as she predicted her party’s victory could be a template for conservative oppositions across the nation. The gravity of the crisis in Alice Springs that helped end eight years of Labor rule in the Northern Territory was evident after polls closed on Saturday, when police were called to deal with what one described as “one of the worst nights of carnage”. Roaming vandals damaged more than 60 cars, smashed hundreds of windows and attacked at least eight businesses in the small Central Australian town. On Sunday, more violence spilled on to the streets after a football match where people fought with weapons, including a hatchet, a baseball bat and sticks Ms Finocchiaro on Sunday met with police commissioner Michael Murphy and the head of the Department of Chief Minister Ken Davies during which she and Mr Murphy had “a lengthy discussion about my expectations on law and order”. “Community safety is the No 1 focus for my government and we talked in great detail as to how we can take a whole of government approach to deliver on that,” Ms Finocchiaro told The Australian. The Country Liberal Party will form majority government after a resounding victory, leaving Labor with just four or five seats. Eight years ago, the CLP was reduced to two seats but on Saturday it won 48 per cent of the primary vote. Labor won 30 per cent.
>>21483169 Video: Alice Springs’ ‘weekend of carnage’ in Northern Territory election aftermath - The change in Territory government did nothing to stop rogue youths in Alice Springs leaving locals fearing for their lives, with dozens of vehicles smashed, businesses ransacked and Aboriginal Police Liaison Officers outnumbered when weapons were brandished during a dispute at a community footy game over the weekend. Chief minister elect Lia Finocchiaro has vowed to tackle the issues of youth crime and ‘reset the agenda’ for law and order after meeting with the NT police commissioner on Sunday. The Australian has obtained dozens of photographs and video footage of the weekend carnage in the red centre, where roaming youth vandals damaged more than 60 cars, with many of the vehicles dedicated to helping improve the lives of young Indigenous Australians. On Sunday afternoon Aboriginal Community Liaison Officers were outnumbered when violence spilled on to the streets after a football match where people wielded weapons, including a hatchet, a baseball bat and sticks. One witness who called police said they were “terrified” and that police were “unprepared” and nowhere to be seen. “There were people with hatchets, a bright blue baseball bat, massive sticks, a female pulled a garden mattock out of her car and hid it under her long dress and walked towards the entry and it was on. It is just madness, absolute f.cking chaos” they said.
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273ca3 No.21755465
#37 - Part 42
Australian Politics and Society - Part 18
>>21483198 Australia to take command of international taskforce protecting Red Sea shipping lanes - A Royal Australian Navy captain will soon assume command of an international effort to protect shipping lanes in the Red Sea, but the Albanese government will not deploy any additional military resources for the mission. On Friday, Australia will confirm it is assuming command of Combined Task Force 153 (CTF 153) for the first time, just weeks after Defence initially denied an ABC report foreshadowing the move. From October, several Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel already stationed in the Middle East under the US-led Combined Maritime Forces (CMF) will be reassigned to the CTF 153, which is also based in Bahrain. CTF 153 is one of five taskforces that make up CMF and is currently dedicated to protecting commercial vessels from Houthi rebel attacks in the Red Sea and around the Gulf of Aden. Last year the Albanese government faced intense criticism for not responding to an international request from the US for warships to be deployed to protect maritime trading lanes in the Middle East. At present, Australia maintains a contribution of up to 16 personnel to the CMF, which was bolstered in December last year in response to the escalating Houthi attacks on shipping and maritime traffic in the Red Sea. During their six-month mission, ADF personnel will direct CTF 153 operations utilising warships and other military assets provided by various nations, which are currently commanded by Italy's armed forces.
>>21483228 New Australian Signals Directorate boss appointed - Abigail Bradshaw is the new Director-General of the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD), promoted from the deputy’s role to replace Rachel Noble, who has left the top job after almost five years. Ms Bradshaw has served as Deputy Director-General of ASD and Head of ASD’s Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC) since March 2020. The ACSC is the Australian Government’s technical authority on cyber security. It provides an avenue for organisations large and small to partner with the government and adopt a security framework to protect their information technology and operational technology systems, applications and data from cyber threats. Anthony Albanese announced the appointment on Monday (26 August), saying the changeover will take effect on 6 September this year. “I congratulate Abigail Bradshaw on her appointment as Director-General of the Australian Signals Directorate,” the Prime Minister said. “Ms Bradshaw brings with her a wealth of experience in cyber security, intelligence and Australia’s national security, including roles in the Royal Australian Navy, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, Department of Home Affairs and Department of Immigration and Border Protection,” Mr Albanese said. “At a time of increasingly complex geostrategic challenges, Ms Bradshaw’s expertise in both cyber and national security matters will be critically important in leading ASD to continue protecting our nation.” Mr Albanese said Ms Bradshaw has played a pivotal role in developing partnerships between government and industries domestically and internationally. She has led ASD’s response to nationally significant cyber security incidents and has spearheaded the government’s cyber security partnership with industry, forging critical partnerships that underpin Australia’s national resilience.
>>21483247 Candace Owens defies calls to cancel Australian tour - Far-right US commentator Candace Owens is on a collision course with Immigration Minister Tony Burke, vowing to push on with her Australian tour in defiance of calls to reject her visa application. Burke last week indicated he would block Owens’ expected visa application, telling this masthead: “Tickets to these events are selling for $100. I hope she has a good refunds policy.” Owens has not yet applied for a visa. Burke’s comments came after this masthead reported that Jewish groups and the federal Coalition oppose her travel to Australia because of her conspiracy-tinged attacks on Jews, Muslims and trans people. Speaking on Sydney radio station 2GB on Monday, the far-right influencer - who thinks Trump has become too moderate – said she was excited to travel to Australia for her November tour, VIP tickets for which are selling at $1500. “It’s kind of incredible to think people could be so fearful of just speech and conversation,” she said. “I was quite surprised to see that: they were like ‘don’t give her a visa, she’s a bad person’. But I promise you it is not going to harm you to hear different ideas.” Owens, who has 18 million followers on her social platforms, has previously made mendacious claims that Israel was founded by a “cult”, spread misinformation about “secret Jewish gangs” operating in Hollywood, and minimised Nazi atrocities.
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273ca3 No.21755467
#37 - Part 43
Australian Politics and Society - Part 19
>>21483267 Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke to personally review visa of far-right commentator Candace Owens - Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has committed to personally reviewing the visa application of far-right, anti-Semitic speaker Candice Owens, who is scheduled to come to Australia in November for a speaking tour. Tickets for her Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Brisbane shows, Candace Owens Live, are currently selling at $95 for reserved seating and extend to $1500 for a pre-show VIP dinner with Owens herself. A fifth show is slated for Adelaide on November 22, with VIP Meet and Greet tickets costing $295. Mr Burke, who has discretionary ministerial powers to block or refuse a visa, said it appeared Owens had yet to make an application three months out from the shows. “Tickets to these events are selling for $100. I hope she has a good refunds policy,” Mr Burke said. “There hasn’t been an application for a visa but if there is the brief will come to me personally. “My opposition to anti-Semitism and Islamophobia has always been on the record. I have clear legal powers to knock back a visa to anyone who would incite discord.” His strong stance has been welcomed by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Peter Wertheim. “At a time of unprecedented strains on the cohesiveness of Australian society, which is very largely the outcome of ignorant and malicious comment on social media, the last thing we need to be importing into our country is yet another so-called celebrity who has made racist and bigoted comments about Jews and other vulnerable groups,” he said. Mr Wertheim said Owens’ publicly-held views means she should fail the character test under the Migration Act, and preclude her from a visitor’s visa.
>>21492994 Marine Rotational Force - Darwin Facebook Post - 27 August 2024 - Never forgotten - Last year's incident involving the deaths of Cpl. Spencer Collart, Capt. Eleanor LeBeau, and Maj. Tobin Lewis is still fresh in our hearts and minds. We offer our deepest condolences to the families and friends of the Marines who died in the MV-22B Osprey crash on Melville Island, north of Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia, on August 27, 2023. The MRF-D MAGTF is planning a private memorial service for the families of the fallen Marines in coordination with the Tiwi Land Council and Traditional Owners to be held on Melville Island next month. This event will be closed to media and the public. This truly puts into perspective what it means to be part of not only a great community, but also how strong the bond is between the U.S. and our Australian Allies. The Marines and Sailors are very appreciative of all of the support we have received along the way. We continue to extend our gratitude and condolences to the families, friends, and service members that were affected by this event.
>>21507196 PM backflips on census sexuality question, under fire for trans exclusion - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is under attack for excluding trans and gender-diverse people from the next census count, despite a government backflip to allow gay, lesbian and bisexual people to be included. An internal Labor revolt forced Albanese to on Friday reverse his government’s decision to block new questions in the survey so it could avoid a divisive debate. But he opened another fraught dispute for minority groups when he maintained the call to exclude planned questions about trans and intersex Australians. The Greens will seek to wedge Labor’s progressive MPs on the issue and accused Albanese of trying to “split the queer community down the middle”, while Opposition Leader Peter Dutton seized on the disunity in the Labor ranks and said, “the wheels are falling off the government”. Albanese set off a new round of political attack on Friday when he backtracked from the government’s unpopular stance and said there would be one new question on sexual orientation in the 2026 census if testing by the Australian Bureau of Statistics was successful. “They’re going to test for a new question, one question about sexuality, sexual preference,” Albanese said. He did not commit to resume testing for other planned questions on gender and sex characteristics. The government scrapped plans for new LGBT questions just a week ago, and Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles and Treasurer Jim Chalmers then said it would have triggered a divisive culture war. That prompted six Labor MPs, including Assistant Health Minister Ged Kearney, to break ranks and tell Albanese to reverse the decision.
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273ca3 No.21755468
#37 - Part 44
Australian Politics and Society - Part 20
>>21519950 Maersk vessel takes out tall ship and hits museum while entering Fremantle - Australia’s largest sail-training tall ship was badly damaged this morning as it was struck by the 8,814 teu Maersk Shekou. The boxship also hit the Western Australian Maritime Museum while entering the inner harbour of Fremantle port this morning. The 1986-built STS Leeuwin II tall ship was dismasted in the accident, with two of its crew injured. The hull of the 55 m long sailing vessel remains intact. An investigation into the accident is set to get underway.
>>21520925 Children to be asked pronouns at libraries under new taxpayer-funded guidelines - Children as young as five will be asked if they identify as a she, he or they as part of new taxpayer funded guidelines rolled out to public libraries across the state. Library staff are being told to ask children what their preferred pronouns are, avoid “gendered-language” and to offer pronoun badges, pins or lanyards for patrons in a new government funded ‘Rainbow Toolkit’. Staff at public libraries across Victoria have been given new guidelines on how to be LGBTQIA+ friendly, including adding books on gender diversity to their collections, promoting drag story time events and not assuming the gender or sexuality of children, teenagers and adults. The ‘Rainbow Toolkit’ was launched by the state government on Friday to celebrate LGBTQIA+ awareness day. One section, labelled ‘Non-Gendered Interactions’, proposes that staff ask primary school aged children what their pronouns are. “It is also important to recognise that, especially for young people, gender identity and sexuality can shift or evolve over time,” it reads. “Even if you are familiar with a child, teenager, parent or other individual, leave room for them to express a change in their identity. “Checking in casually about their pronouns (‘Do you still prefer he/him pronouns?’; ‘Do you still go by Sam, or is there something else you’d like me to use?’) can let a young person in particular know that you are safe, accepting and flexible and that, by extension, so is the library.”
>>21536076 Video: NDIS Minister and former Labor leader Bill Shorten announces his retirement - Former Labor leader Bill Shorten is retiring from politics. The announcement was made at a press conference in Canberra on Thursday morning by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. “My friend Bill Shorten has decided that he will not be contesting the next election,” he said. “It’s a big decision for him … Bill and I have had a number of conversations over this, about this, over a period of time. “It’s a credit to Bill that this news will come as a surprise, because at no point over the past two years would an observer of Australian politics think that Bill Shorten was taking it easy or slowing down.” Albanese has asked Shorten to stay in cabinet until he leaves in February to continue his work overhauling the NDIS. Shorten was first elected as the member for the Victorian seat of Maribyrnong in 2007 and led the Labor Party between 2013 and 2019. However he stepped down after the party was defeated by the Coalition in 2019 and was replaced by Albanese. When Labor won government in 2022, Shorten became NDIS minister has focused on reforming the scheme that he championed and helped create when he was a parliamentary secretary and then a junior minister in the Gillard and Rudd Labor governments.
>>21551347 Pope Francis delivers medical supplies in visit to remote jungle town - Pope Francis flew deep into the jungle of the Southwestern Pacific island nation of Papua New Guinea on Sunday to visit Catholics living in one of the most remote areas of the world and deliver medical supplies and other aid. Travelling 1,000 km (620 miles) in a C-130 cargo aircraft provided by the Royal Australian Air Force, Francis arrived with a small entourage in Vanimo, a township of some 12,000 people in the northwestern corner of PNG's main island, with no running water and scarce electricity. The 87-year-old pope brought hundreds of kilograms of items to help support the local population, said Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni. They included various medicines and clothing, as well said toys and musical instruments for school children, Bruni said. The pope is visiting the nation of 600 islands as part of his ambitious 12-day, four-country tour of Southeast Asia and Oceania, the longest of his 11-year-old papacy. He came to Vanimo at the invitation of local missionaries with the Catholic Institute of the Incarnate Word. They, like Francis, the first pope from the Americas, are from Argentina.
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273ca3 No.21755469
#37 - Part 45
Australian Politics and Society - Part 21
>>21551364 Video: Jim Chalmers confirms census will include questions on sexual orientation and gender - Questions on both sexual orientation and gender will feature in Australia's next census, as the federal government seeks to repair the fallout from earlier efforts to abandon questions about LGBTIQ+ identity. Treasurer Jim Chalmers confirmed on the ABC's Insiders that the next census will include a new topic, which will canvass sexual orientation and gender, with the Australian Bureau of Statistics to determine the questions. "LGBTIQ+ Australians matter, they have been heard and they will count in the 2026 census," he said. The government has faced backlash from the LGBTQI+ community and the Labor caucus after it quietly confirmed it would not include the questions in the next census, despite it forming part of Labor's national platform. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reversed that and said one question on sexuality would be included. But now Mr Chalmers, who oversees the census, has confirmed a whole new topic would be added, which would allow for multiple questions to be canvassed. "We had good intentions and we listened to the community and we worked with the ABS and we said that we would find the best way through and I believe that we have," he told the ABC. "The government's role here is the topics. The ABS does the questions. They will continue to work in a professional and diligent and sensitive way with the community to make sure we get this right. I'm confident that we will."
>>21556683 Video: Inside the ASIO exhibition no one is invited to, except for former ASIO officers - Mike Burgess wants Australia's secret intelligence agency to take a few steps out of the shadows. For him, that means more communication with the outside world. He invited 7.30 into the usually hidden parts of ASIO HQ as they prepared for an important milestone. - ABC News In-depth
>>21558954 Food Standards in Australia and New Zealand are being changed so real food can be replaced with fake “food” - here’s what you can do - "The global mafia is trying to replace our real food with a fake gene-edited variety, without even telling us it is doing so. It wants to change regulations so that natural food and genetically modified (“GM”) laboratory food are legally regarded as the same thing! This is not some “conspiracy theory,” but a very real proposal currently being pushed through by corporate-controlled authorities. It is happening in Australia and New Zealand - longstanding colonies of the dark enslaving empire which are often used as testbeds for new forms of oppression. But you can be sure that, if they get away with it, this will then be rolled out everywhere." - expose-news.com
>>21561766 Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide: ADF brass, governments and bureaucrats fatally failed our Diggers - A landmark Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide has proposed a new agency to transition former defence personnel into civilian life, sounded the alarm on the high rates of military sexual violence and backed a more ambitious processing time for veterans’ entitlements claims. After a three-year inquiry, the royal commission concluded that the Department of Veterans’ Affairs was not, in its current form, capable of delivering optimal wellbeing support to the veteran community or of addressing the risks of suicide. It found successive governments, the Australian Defence Force, the Defence Department and DVA had all failed to provide adequate support to those who had served their country, with veterans telling the royal commission they felt betrayed. Containing seven volumes and making 122 recommendations, the royal commission report noted that 1677 serving and former serving defence personnel had died by suicide between 1997 and 2021 -- more than 20-times the number killed in active duty over the same period. Receiving the report on Monday, the government pledged to respond “shortly”, with Defence Minister Richard Marles saying it would do so “with complete thoroughness because those who wear our nation’s uniform deserve nothing less”. Mr Marles dedicated the final report to David Finney, a Royal Australian Navy petty officer whose 2019 suicide and treatment by Defence prompted his mother, Julie-Ann, to spearhead the campaign for a royal commission, with the Morrison government establishing the inquiry in July 2021.
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273ca3 No.21755471
#37 - Part 46
Australian Politics and Society - Part 22
>>21561794 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese proposes to legislate minimum age for social media use during current term of parliament - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has pledged to legislate a minimum age for social media use in a bid to “keep children safe” from the many dangers online. Mr Albanese made the announcement on Monday night, publishing a short message to his official social media channels. He revealed Labor was intent on putting forward the changes during this term of parliament. “We’ll legislate a minimum age for social media to keep children safe,” he wrote on X. “Parents tell me they’re worried about what age their kids should be on social media. “We’ll introduce legislation in this term of Parliament to enforce a minimum age for social media and other digital platforms. “It's about supporting parents and keeping kids safe.” It comes after Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan announced a similar initiative the same day. The South Australian government has also been pushing for a ban in recent days, pointing to various studies suggesting excessive use of social media can be harmful.
>>21561819 Video: Social media ban for children to be introduced this year, but age limit undetermined - Children aged up to 16 could be banned from social media, as the federal government promises legislation to impose a minimum age to use platforms like Facebook and Instagram by the end of this year. But the cut-off age won't be revealed until the government's trial of age verification technology is completed. It follows changes proposed by the South Australian government earlier this week, which would force social media companies to ban children 13 years old or younger or face fines. The push to ban children from using social media is now the formal policy of both major parties, after the Coalition said in June it would seek a bipartisan deal to do so. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government was looking at the age range between 14 and 16, but he personally preferred a "higher limit". "What we're looking at is how you deliver it," Mr Albanese told ABC News Breakfast. "We know that it's not simple and it's not easy. Otherwise, governments would have responded before." The prime minister said a ban should be coordinated at a national level. "We want to make sure there's a national response rather than eight different states responses," Mr Albanese said. He said social media was taking children away from real-life experiences with friends and family.
>>21569718 Police pelted with poo, deploy stun grenades as Melbourne protests turn ugly - Police have fired rubber bullets at protesters and deployed stun grenades into crowds during ugly clashes in Melbourne outside a major weapons expo. City roads were locked down, tram routes disrupted and police forced to escort delegates into the Melbourne Exhibition and Convention Centre on day one of the Land Forces International Land Defence Exposition, a three-day conference which bills itself as Australia’s largest defence industry exhibition. Police officers were pelted with horse poo, rocks, eggs and rotten tomatoes, fires were lit in bins on the streets and anti-war protesters doused with pepper spray and tear gas. The Age reporters witnessed at least eight arrests, including one woman for allegedly spitting at police. Victoria Police are yet to confirm the number of arrests. Demonstrators began gathering outside the convention centre about 6am on Wednesday while others met in small groups around the CBD and marched towards the site from all sides. Drums were banged, protesters chanted “free, free Palestine”, and some waved Palestinian flags as the sun rose over Melbourne’s CBD. Hundreds later surrounded the entry to the convention centre, chanting “show me what democracy looks like, this is what democracy looks like” and “land forces you can’t hide. You’re supporting genocide.” Those attempting to enter the international defence military expo were met with screams of “shame”. Anti-war activists say they are protesting against the Gaza war, and standing against the death and destruction brought by weapons of war. Hundreds of regional and interstate police officers were called in to bolster security ahead of a protest expected to be Victoria’s largest since the World Economic Forum protests in 2000.
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273ca3 No.21755473
#37 - Part 47
Australian Politics and Society - Part 23
>>21569755 Video: Police sprayed with acid by ‘anti-war protesters’ in Melbourne - More than 30 people have been charged after police were sprayed with acid by “anti-war protesters” in heated scenes outside a Melbourne weapons expo. As thousands gathered in the city CBD on Wednesday morning, a major street was blocked off, riot police were called in and journalists were harassed live on camera. Protesters clashed with police outside the exhibition, throwing horse manure and rocks, while officers made arrests and swung batons in efforts to subdue tensions. Chief Commissioner Patton said police were attacked by the protesters. He said 24 officers had been treated for a range of injuries including sprains, strains, irritants and substances thrown at them requiring decontamination. Police horses were also targeted. “I do say targeted because I’m told a number were punched,” he said. “The protesters did try and distract the horses, and there was some officers have said they actually had feces thrown at them. “This is the type of disgusting behavior that we saw today from a group who are intent on confronting us at this stage.” “Some police have been spat at by protesters, whilst other officers have been sprayed with a liquid irritant, some of which has been identified as acid,” Victoria Police said.
>>21569779 Video: Violent turn by pro-Palestinian movement using acid and projectiles a strategic mistake - "The use of acid, projectiles and the targeting of police horses by anti-war protesters is a disgusting low among a group of demonstrators who have lost their moral compass. Victoria Police was right to fight back, sending the clearest possible message to pro-Palestinian and anti-war protesters that it won’t idly stand by and accept such criminal behaviour. Anti-riot officers hit back with a series of deafening blasts and front-foot policing designed to contain violent extremism. For the first time since the pandemic unrest, police pulled out the rubber bullets, batons, teargas and stun grenades to put protesters back in their collective box. They deserved what they got. By going so hard, police are flagging to protesters that violence against officers and their horses will not be tolerated, regardless of the cause. While the Land Forces 24 conference was the purported target of the protesters, the 2000 or so people who marched were united under the banner of supporting Gaza. However, the strategy, fuelled by hard core socialists, relied heavily on violent resistance. This was a mistake. Throwing acid, tearing down security walls, hurling stones and horse manure at police and their horses triggered the firmest anti-riot response in years. The decision to adopt violent protest tactics was a sharp shift from the past 11 months, when most of the public pro-Palestine rallies have erred on the side of peace. Wednesday’s rally changes this dynamic." - John Ferguson, Associate Editor - theaustralian.com.au
>>21569783 King Charles and Queen Camilla’s three day royal visit to Sydney and Canberra - King Charles will have a distinctly short and focused visit to Australia next month in recognition of his ongoing battle with cancer. In a sharp contrast to the weeks-long royal tours and popular walk about of previous visits, this longed for trip by Charles is confined to engagements in Sydney and Canberra over three days and factors in extra rest periods. One of the last engagements is for Charles to learn about the groundbreaking cancer research led by Australians of the Year, Professor Georgina Long and Professor Richard Scolyer. Courtiers have been at pains to ensure the royal trip, starting on the evening of Friday October 18, will not fatigue the King who has had to modify his exacting and long working hours while undergoing cancer treatment. Earlier pre-cancer plans for an extensive tour including all states of Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific were ripped up when his health deteriorated at the beginning of the year. He last visited Australia in 2018 for the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games, but this is Charles’ first visit here since becoming King two years ago. After their arrival the King will rest for a day before being involved in a Sydney engagement on the Sunday. Then on Monday they will be welcomed to Parliament House by Prime Minister Albanese at a reception for politicians, community leaders and those who have excelled in the fields of health, arts, culture and sport.
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273ca3 No.21755475
#37 - Part 48
Australian Politics and Society - Part 24
>>21569791 Parents celebrate restricting children’s access to a habit akin to ‘kiddie cocaine’ - As a Generation X father, Michael Murray is happy a government is proposing laws that “are on our side” in many parents’ fight to keep their children safe from the harmful effects of social media. Age requirements keeping young people off apps are very welcome for parents such as Murray, who finished school before the communication revolution began. Many in his demographic say they struggle to contain the influence of social media, the heavy use of which has been linked in research to poor mental health among young people. “We’ve dealt with so many little spot fires that have popped up here and there [through behaviour on social apps], so when I hear of a law that at the bare minimum limits social media use, it’s fantastic,” Murray says. “My daughter, Zoe, may have a different view.” He is right. Zoe, 13, believes being able to talk to friends on apps such as Snapchat and TikTok makes social media a positive addition to young people’s lives. “I mostly use it to message my friends,” she says. “Mainly since the start of COVID, we didn’t really have the option to meet one another, so it mainly started then. “I feel like it’s pretty cool because I can see what people are up to.” However, Zoe is aware of a downside: it is easy to get bullied on social media. But parents on platforms used by older generations, such as Facebook and Instagram, may not understand how young people use newer apps, she says.
>>21572228 Video: Facebook admits to scraping every Australian adult user's public photos and posts to train AI, with no opt-out option - Facebook is scraping the public data of all Australian adults on the platform, it has acknowledged in an inquiry. Facebook has admitted that it scrapes the public photos, posts and other data of Australian adult users to train its AI models and provides no opt-out option, even though it allows people in the European Union to refuse consent. Meta's global privacy director Melinda Claybaugh was pressed at an inquiry as to whether the social media giant was hoovering up the data of all Australians in order to build its generative artificial intelligence tools, and initially rejected that claim. Labor senator Tony Sheldon asked whether Meta had used Australian posts from as far back as 2007 to feed its AI products, to which Ms Claybaugh responded "we have not done that". But that was quickly challenged by Greens senator David Shoebridge. Shoebridge: "The truth of the matter is that unless you have consciously set those posts to private since 2007, Meta has just decided that you will scrape all of the photos and all of the texts from every public post on Instagram or Facebook since 2007, unless there was a conscious decision to set them on private. That's the reality, isn't it? - Claybaugh: "Correct." Ms Claybaugh added that accounts of people under 18 were not scraped, but when asked by Senator Sheldon whether public photos of his own children on his account would be scraped, Ms Claybaugh acknowledged they would.
>>21575721 Guns, sandwiches and a 60-tonne tank: Inside the Land Forces expo - Even as anti-war protesters battled with police outside the Melbourne Convention Centre on Wednesday, a sense of cool, corporate calm prevailed on the other side of Victoria Police’s ring of steel. Inside the vast building, after negotiating layers of security checks, military officials, lobbyists and weapons makers had gathered for one of the world’s biggest defence exhibitions. The three-day event, staged with support of the Australian Defence Force and the state government, and a decent dollop of corporate sponsorship topped-up by ticket sales, is closed to the public. Land Forces is billed as a chance to bring much of the defence world together, from the US military to manufacturers in the Czech Republic, to show off its latest technology. When The Age visited on Wednesday, there were exhibits boasting new tech like quantum sensors, or geared to humanitarian aims: bringing clean water (and portable loos) to war zones, or developing armour for dogs at the front line. But throughout, guns, drones, armoured vehicles and missiles were on display, some of them from companies like Elbit Systems and Israel Aerospace Industries, targeted by protesters for their direct ties to the Israeli Defence Forces and the war in Gaza. The biggest pieces of matériel were at the back of the expo hall. If you build up enough speed in a 60-tonne tank, you can jump a trench or a stream, said Bernie Maus, who commands Abrams tanks for the ADF. “It’s just not much fun if you’re inside it.”
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273ca3 No.21755477
#37 - Part 49
Australian Politics and Society - Part 25
>>21575731 Military is happy to buy arms off Israel, says Chief of Army - Israel’s top arms companies have defied protesters and rising international criticism over the war in Gaza to spruik cutting-edge capabilities at the Land Forces expo in Melbourne, as Australia’s Chief of Army declared he had no problem buying weapons from the Jewish state. As pro-Palestine protests turned violent outside the biennial weapons fair, Israel’s biggest weapons manufacturer IAI said it was ready to provide the ADF with “whatever they need” at a “competitive price” to deal with advanced threats. Another Israeli company, Rafael, said its air defence systems offered “amazing interception rates”, pointing to the country’s almost complete success in taking out more than 300 Iranian drones and missiles in April. Chief of Army Lieutenant General Simon Stuart said he saw no obstacle to the service purchasing more Israeli equipment if it could protect Australian personnel. “We’ve certainly purchased a range of (Israeli) equipment over the years,” he told The Australian. “What we want to do is ensure we’ve got the best possible equipment we can possibly get our hands on to ensure that our people have the best chance of fulfilling their mission … and coming home to their families.” The West’s biggest weapons companies, including the US’s Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Northrop Grumman, and Britain’s BAE Systems, are among hundreds of exhibitors at the three-day Land Forces expo.
>>21575759 ‘National shame’: Richard Marles strips medals from Afghanistan war commanders - Defence Minister Richard Marles has stripped distinguished service medals from commanding officers who held senior roles during the war in Afghanistan, taking up the key remaining recommendation of the Brereton inquiry into alleged war crimes by Australian troops. Marles’ long-awaited move, which comes just days after the release of the final royal commission report into veteran suicide, has infuriated veterans groups who say the officers involved are being unfairly punished for others’ alleged wrongdoing. The decision does not affect those accused of war crimes themselves, such as Victoria Cross recipient Ben Roberts-Smith. A Federal Court judge, applying the civil standard of the balance of probabilities, found that Roberts-Smith was complicit in the murder of four unarmed civilians in Afghanistan during a defamation case against this masthead last year. He has not been charged with any crime and maintains his innocence. A government source said the Brereton report did not deal with bravery medals such as the Victoria Cross, and that Marles’ response was limited to responding to that inquiry. The honours issue has been sitting on Marles’ desk since May 2023, when then-Defence Force chief Angus Campbell wrote to a small group of Afghan veterans to inform them he had recommended the minister terminate their awards for distinguished and conspicuous service on warlike operations. The government has declined to identify the names of the officers who have been stripped of their medals, and has not revealed exactly how many people received letters from Marles informing them of his decision. Government sources who were not authorised to speak publicly said that up to nine people had been stripped of their awards and fewer than 15 people received letters from Marles. This suggests Marles rejected Campbell’s recommendation for a handful of officers, allowing them to retain their honours. Most are understood to have left the Defence Force.
>>21575904 U.S. Embassy Australia Tweet: Chargé d’Affaires Erika Olson joined Chief of @AustralianArmy Lieutenant Stuart and @USARPAC General Flynn in Melbourne to remember the 2,977 lives lost - including the lives of 10 Australians — on September 11, 2001.
>>21575909 General Charles A. Flynn Tweet: Lest we forget… Honored to join LTGEN Stuart, CdA Erika Olson, GEN Rainey and LtGen Turner at the 9/11 memorial service at the Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne, Australia. “We will remember them” with our @AustralianArmy allies. #ArmyinthePacific #AlliesandPartners
>>21575913 U.S. Embassy Australia Tweet: Today, we remember the 2,977 lives lost - including 10 Australians - on September 11, 2001. To honor them, our embassy community gathered for a moment of reflection.
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273ca3 No.21755479
#37 - Part 50
Australian Politics and Society - Part 26
>>21582732 Peter Dutton goes into battle for Diggers - Peter Dutton has accused the government of throwing lower-ranked officers “under the bus” amid an escalating political brawl over Labor’s decision to shield senior commanders from the fallout from the Brereton war crimes inquiry. Richard Marles stripped distinguished service medals from up to nine mid-ranking officers this week for dozens of war crimes by troops under their command in Afghanistan, while allowing top commanders, including former defence chief Angus Campbell, to keep their leadership awards. Amid a growing backlash, the Opposition Leader suggested the penalty should have extended to the top of the chain of command. “Why is it OK to throw lower-ranked Diggers under the bus, but those who are higher up the chain avoid any scrutiny?” the former defence minister told the Today Show. “And the Chief of the Army, the Chief of the Defence Force and people in between those ranks … why is there no accountability there? I think that’s why the average Digger is asking a lot of questions.” The Defence Minister hit back, accusing Mr Dutton of failing to hold any commanders to account for the crimes identified in the Brereton report, which the Coalition received 18 months before Labor was returned to office. “When he was the defence minister, he actively suspended making a decision in relation to command accountability,” Mr Marles said. “Difficult decisions require leadership. That’s what I’ve done as the Minister for Defence so that we can close out the Brereton report.” Mr Marles said the government had followed to the report’s findings “to the letter”.
>>21582936 Elon Musk calls Australian government ‘fascists’ over move to regulate online misinformation - Elon Musk has called the Australian government “fascists” over new legislation aimed at tackling deliberate lies spread on social media. Social media companies could be fined up to 5% of their annual turnover under the commonwealth’s proposed laws. Musk, the US billionaire who owns the social media platform X, formerly Twitter, responded to a post about Australia’s measures with one word. “Fascists,” he wrote. But the federal minister Bill Shorten said Musk was inconsistent on free speech. “When it’s in his commercial interests, he is the champion of free speech; when he doesn’t like it, he’s going to shut it all down,” he said on Channel Nine’s breakfast show on Friday. The assistant treasurer, Stephen Jones, said Musk’s comment was “crackpot stuff”. Jones told ABC TV that the government’s new bill on misinformation and disinformation was a matter of “sovereignty”. “Whether it’s the Australian government or any other government around the world, we assert our right to pass laws which will keep Australians safe -- safe from scammers, safe from criminals,” he said. “For the life of me, I can’t see how Elon Musk or anyone else, in the name of free speech, thinks it is OK to have social media platforms publishing scam content, which is robbing Australians of billions of dollars every year. Publishing deepfake material, publishing child pornography. Livestreaming murder scenes. I mean, is this what he thinks free speech is all about?”
>>21582990 Video: Australia threatens fines for social media giants enabling misinformation - Australia said it will fine internet platforms up to 5% of their global revenue for failing to prevent the spread of misinformation online, joining a worldwide push to rein in borderless tech giants but angering free speech advocates. The government said it would make tech platforms set codes of conduct governing how they stop dangerous falsehoods spreading, to be approved by a regulator. The regulator would set its own standard if a platform failed to do so, then fine companies for non-compliance. The legislation, to be introduced in parliament on Thursday, targets false content that hurts election integrity or public health, calls for denouncing a group or injuring a person, or risks disrupting key infrastructure or emergency services. The bill is part of a wide-ranging regulatory crackdown by Australia, where leaders have complained that foreign-domiciled tech platforms are overriding the country's sovereignty, and comes ahead of a federal election due within a year. Already Facebook owner Meta has said it may block professional news content if it is forced to pay royalties, while X, formerly Twitter, has removed most content moderation since being bought by billionaire Elon Musk in 2022. "Misinformation and disinformation pose a serious threat to the safety and wellbeing of Australians, as well as to our democracy, society and economy," said Communications Minister Michelle Rowland in a statement. "Doing nothing and allowing this problem to fester is not an option."
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273ca3 No.21755480
#37 - Part 51
Australian Politics and Society - Part 27
>>21589813 Australian PM hits back at Musk after 'fascists' quip - Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese hit back at Elon Musk on Saturday after the tech mogul called his government "fascists" for proposing laws that would fine social media giants for spreading misinformation. Australia introduced a "combating misinformation" bill earlier this week, which includes sweeping powers to fine tech giants up to five percent of their annual turnover for breaching online safety obligations. "Fascists," Musk posted Thursday on his social media platform X. But Albanese fired back at Musk on Saturday, saying social media "has a social responsibility". "If Mr Musk doesn't understand that, that says more about him than it does about my government," he told reporters Saturday. The exchange between Musk and Australian officials is the latest in a long-running spat with the Australian government over social media regulation. Australia's government is exploring a raft of new measures that would see social media companies take greater accountability for the content on their platforms - including a ban for those under 16 years old. The country's online watchdog took Musk's company to court earlier this year, alleging it had failed to remove "extremely violent" videos that showed a Sydney preacher being stabbed. But it abruptly dropped its attempt to force a global takedown order on X after Musk scored a legal victory in a preliminary hearing, a move he celebrated as a free speech triumph.
>>21600882 Breaking News:Donald Trump survives another apparent assassination attempt- Donald Trump was the target of a second apparent assassination attempt Sunday when Secret Service agents opened fire on a gunman at his golf club in West Palm Beach, Florida, where the former president was golfing just a few holes away. Trump was unhurt, and the gunman fled but was arrested shortly later. At least one agent, who was one or two holes ahead of Trump on the course, fired after spotting the man pointing a rifle through a fence, law-enforcement officials said. A witness saw the man dart out of bushes and take off in a black Nissan, which helped sheriff’s deputies track and stop him while he was headed down I-95. Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw said that Trump, who was between the fifth and sixth holes on the course, was one or two holes behind at least one secret service agent who was in advance of the golf party. The ex-president was about 400 yards away (365m) from the gunman, Bradshaw added, when the secret service engaged the suspect after spotting the rifle. The man, whom law-enforcement officials identified as 58-year-old Ryan Wesley Routh, was detained and is facing criminal charges. Investigators said they didn’t know if the gunman himself fired a shot during the encounter. Authorities found an AK-style rifle with a scope, two backpacks and a GoPro portable camera - suggesting the gunman wanted to film himself - in the bushes where he was hiding, Bradshaw said. “With a rifle and a scope like that, that’s not a long distance,” he said. The FBI said it was investigating the incident as an assassination attempt. “I AM SAFE AND WELL!” Trump said in a fundraising campaign email sent shortly after the incident. He added “Nothing will slow me down. I WILL NEVER SURRENDER!” The West Palm Beach shooting comes two months after a 20-year-old gunman tried to kill Trump during a campaign rally in western Pennsylvania. The shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks, opened fire from a rooftop about 400 feet away from where Trump spoke, killing a spectator, injuring two others and wounding the former president in the ear. Secret Service agents shot back, killing Crooks. The agency has been under intense scrutiny since then, as multiple investigations examine how it failed to prevent that assassination attempt.
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273ca3 No.21755483
#37 - Part 52
Australian Politics and Society - Part 28
>>21600900 What are the political implications of this second foiled plot to kill Donald Trump? - "For a short time after Thomas Crooks attempted to kill Trump at Butler, Pennsylvania rally in July some Democrats tempered their rhetoric about Trump, but not for long. The Democrat party convention in Chicago made clear in stark terms the former president was the greatest danger to US governance in the country’s history. Vice President Harris, who has routinely cast Trump as an existential threat to US democracy who would be a dictator, said in a public statement after the attempted attack that she was “glad” Trump was safe. Are those two positions congruent? Some might think she couldn’t believe both at once. The second murder attempt will also fuel conspiracy theories among Republicans about supposed orchestrated attempts to remove Trump from the race, one that he has a better chance of winning according to polls than in both 2016 and 2020, when, as it turned out, polls had significantly understated the Republican’s support. Questions are already being asked about how Routh knew about Trump’s whereabouts, given the Republican candidate doesn’t have a public schedule, and was on his own property. For all his bravado after the event, the 78-year-old Trump himself must fear for his life in coming months. Where there is a will there’s a way, and the former president has insisted on doing outdoor rallies despite advice not to. He does not have the same level of security as the president or vice president. For instance, if Harris had been paying golf the entire golf course would have been secured with hundreds of secret service agents. Trump has a handful of security around him at all times. The second attempt on Trump’s life within nine weeks, breaking the history books, points to the profound hatred for the former president among a small segment of US society. For all the forecasts the July attempt on his life would secure Trump’s victory in November, coverage of the assassination dropped to almost zero weeks later. It’s probable this attempt will be almost forgotten in a fortnight too." - Adam Creighton - theaustralian.com.au
>>21600939 The blasts, the battle and at last an apology. Now it’s time for action - As the Australian army’s highest-ranking officer was scrambling to workshop his response to accusations that Diggers’ brains have been exposed to avoidable trauma, the ex-special forces operator who has been the issue’s biggest agitator was meeting US defence officials in Washington. Former lieutenant colonel Paul Scanlan wasn’t in the American capital on official Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance business. Nor was he a formal envoy of the Australian military he served for 27 years, including on multiple overseas deployments to Iraq, Afghanistan and East Timor. His military background helped get him through the back door of Pentagon bodies such as the US Defence Health Agency, but Scanlan’s mission was decidedly personal. A tall, striking veteran with a booming laugh and boundless energy, he believes the Australian Defence Force and the Department of Veterans’ Affairs have badly mismanaged the brain trauma caused by exposure to repeated blasts in training and battle, including in soldiers he served with. These blasts cause pressure waves that compress and, experts claim, damage brain tissue in soldiers, including those who have never seen action. “The US interim guidance, as of 2022, is 4 PSI [pounds per square inch] per single exposure. Australia doesn’t have any guidance,” Scanlan says. “We’re also missing the cumulative blast exposure. You could be doing say 10 to 20 of these at three PSI, 20, 30, 60 PSI a day. And we don’t know what that long-term cumulative exposure is.” Rather than lobby for change from afar - as many veterans and their families have done to drive the landmark devastating royal commission findings into veterans’ suicide last week - Scanlan has worked on getting inside the tent.
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273ca3 No.21755485
#37 - Part 53
Australian Politics and Society - Part 29
>>21607471 Video:Daniel Andrews car crash: Review concludes police investigation was ‘deeply flawed’, ‘unfounded’ and ‘contrary to the available evidence’- A bombshell review of the Daniel and Catherine Andrews car crash has found Victoria Police engaged in “an overt cover-up to avoid implicating a political figure in a life-threatening” incident. The explosive 36-page assessment by a former police assistant commissioner asserts that the Andrews’ family SUV was “travelling at speed” and on the wrong side of the road when it struck teenage cyclist Ryan Meuleman in a Blairgowrie side street on January 7, 2013. The former premier and his wife have always insisted that they came to a “complete stop” and “turned right from a stationary position” just “moments” before being “T-boned” by the bike. But the expert review, conducted by the state’s former Assistant Commissioner for Traffic and Operations Dr Raymond Shuey, concludes the police investigation which supported the Andrews’ version of events was “deeply flawed”, “unfounded” and “contrary to the available evidence”. “The version as provided by Catherine and Daniel Andrews is considered improbable and implausible,” Dr Shuey asserts. “The truth is still outstanding. It is most probable that the vehicle undertook a sweep turn at speed, cutting the corner and still on the incorrect side of the roadway in Ridley St, 27 metres from Melbourne Rd when the collision occurred.” “The propagation of a lie” and “a striking deception”, the report finds, began when the driver’s name was recorded as “Catherine Louise Kesik” -- Mrs Andrews’ maiden name – in a Traffic Incident System report submitted by police in the hours after the crash. “This is contrary to the name of Andrews as recorded by police as contemporaneous notes on the form 502, the investigation notes, TAC reports, statements and all other recordings provided,” it says. “Kesik then becomes the name under which the crash is indexed and retrievable. This irregularity would be a ‘standout’ for supervisors, insurance, legal reviewers … “It is my opinion that this deception is part of a course of conduct and a component of an overt cover-up to avoid implicating a political figure in a life-threatening crash. Failure by supervisors and reviewers to identify this or seek explanation is inexcusable.”
>>21607487 Video:‘Daniel Andrews in various press statements reconstructed versions clearly intended to place fault on the cyclist’’- Daniel Andrews has always insisted in his evidence that Ryan Meuleman’s bike struck his family’s Ford Territory “at speed”. “He absolutely T-boned the car, hit it at such force he was literally inside the car,” the former premier once declared of the 2013 Blairgowrie crash. But a review of his statements to police reveals that Mr Andrews admitted, in his own words, that he actually had no way of knowing that was the case. “The first I saw of him was when he smashed into the windscreen on the driver’s side,” he said in his sworn statement to police. It’s a contradiction former assistant commissioner Dr Raymond Shuey hammers home in his review of the crash. “Both statements cannot be true,” he asserts. “Daniel Andrews in various press statements reconstructed versions clearly intended to place fault on the cyclist.” Instead, Dr Shuey paints a very different picture of the likely cause of the near-fatal collision - a speeding car that cut the corner of Melbourne Road, smashing into Ryan on the wrong side of Ridley St – just 1.5m from the far edge of the right hand side of the roadway – 27 metres up from the intersection. “It was definitely not a low-speed vehicle impact,” the 36-page review asserts. “It was definitely not a high-speed bike impact against a slow speed vehicle - otherwise the flip motion of the cyclist would have been in a different and opposite direction to his actual trajectory. “If the vehicle was travelling from a stationary start in Melbourne Road (as stated by Catherine and Daniel Andrews), 27 metres prior to impact, it would not have reached the resultant speed to cause the damage and injuries. “Low speed impacts propel pedestrians and cyclists forward of impact. This impact was so severe, it flipped the cyclist … onto the bonnet, propulsion over the roof line and then sideways onto the roadway.”
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273ca3 No.21755488
#37 - Part 54
Australian Politics and Society - Part 30
>>21607498 Daniel Andrews car crash:‘Appalling conspiracy theories’: Andrews blasts former cop’s crash claims- Former premier Daniel Andrews and his wife Catherine have issued a rare joint statement post-politics to blast a report by a former police officer that cast doubt on their version of a 2013 car accident that injured a teenager. The report was compiled by former police assistant commissioner Dr Raymond Shuey, shortly before his death, in his capacity as an expert witness for a court case brought by Ryan Meuleman, who was hit by the couple’s car when riding his bike. Meuleman is suing his former lawyers over the handling of his original claim for compensation after the crash. Previous investigations by Victoria Police and the state’s integrity watchdog have cleared Daniel and Catherine Andrews over the accident and its handling. In their statement, the couple took aim at the Herald Sun, which first published the report’s findings on Tuesday, describing the article as “conspiracy theories dressed up as journalism”. Andrews’ wife, Catherine, was driving a taxpayer-funded 4WD when the then 15-year-old cyclist was hit. Andrews, who was opposition leader at the time, was also in the car, along with the couple’s three children. Shuey’s report, seen by The Age, alleges authorities engaged in an “overt cover-up to avoid implicating a political figure in a life-threatening crash”. In response, the couple said in a statement on Tuesday afternoon: “This so-called report was commissioned by lawyers on behalf of their clients who are seeking money through the courts by suing their former lawyers. “We are not a party to this legal action. We did nothing wrong. This matter has already been comprehensively and independently investigated and closed by Victoria Police and integrity agencies. “We will not dignify these appalling conspiracy theories by commenting further at this time.” Meuleman, who in 2022 secured an $80,000 compensation payout from the Transport Accident Commission, is suing his former law firm, Slater & Gordon. He alleges the firm did not conduct a thorough enough investigation into the January 7 2013 crash and that the firm should have fought for a larger payout.
>>21614315 Ukraine fury as Australia offloads military gear on ‘eBay for weapons’ - Decommissioned Australian military equipment keenly sought by Ukraine to help its fight against invading Russian forces is being sold for recreational use on eBay-style auction websites, angering the Ukrainian diaspora and sparking calls for an overhaul of Defence Force disposal policies. The federal government has rebuffed repeated entreaties to send hundreds of Chinese-made surveillance drones to Ukraine that were grounded because of security concerns but work perfectly and have played a crucial role in saving Ukrainian soldiers’ lives. The Ukrainian-Australian community was bitterly disappointed earlier this year when the government opted to dismantle and bury its grounded fleet of MRH-90 Taipan helicopters rather than take up a formal request to donate them to the Ukrainian army. The Pickles Auctions firm has monthly online auctions of decommissioned military equipment, with the next sell-off slated for early October. In recent months, the firm’s Facebook page has invited “off-road enthusiasts” to bid on decommissioned army long-range patrol vehicles, troop carriers and Land Rovers, saying “there’s a vehicle to suit every adventure”. One of the long-range patrol vehicles - used by Special Air Services soldiers in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars – reportedly sold for $113,000 last year. Kateryna Argyrou, co-chair of the Australian Federation of Ukrainian Organisations, said it was “short-sighted and baffling” to see retired Australian Defence Force (ADF) cargo trucks, troop carriers and inflatable boats for sale online when they could be put to use on the battlefield.
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273ca3 No.21755491
#37 - Part 55
Australian Politics and Society - Part 31
>>21629166 Anthony Albanese won’t meet Donald Trump during his visit to the US for the Quad summit - Anthony Albanese has brushed off suggestions he should seek a meeting with Donald Trump as the Prime Minister touched down in Philadelphia ahead of meetings with the leaders of India, the US and Japan to co-ordinate how to push back against Chinese aggression in the Indo-Pacific. After Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu travelled to the former president’s Florida home of Mar-a-Lago in July to meet the Republican presidential candidate, and ahead of a scheduled meeting between India’s Narendra Modi and Mr Trump next week, Mr Albanese declined to use the former president’s name at a brief press conference on Thursday (Friday AEST). “I’m meeting the President of the United States, Joe Biden, and I’ll be meeting President Biden and meeting Prime Minister (Fumio) Kishida and Prime Minister Modi. That’s the purpose of my visit here,” he said. He said he would raise with Mr Modi the issue of India’s spying in Australia. The talks are to take place during the weekend’s Quad leaders’ summit in the US in what will be Mr Albanese’s first meeting with his Indian counterpart since revelations that ASIO had expelled an Indian “nest of spies”. “That will no doubt be something that is raised,” Mr Albanese said, describing Australia’s relationship with India as “a very strong one”. “What I do is I raise issues privately. That’s how we deal with things diplomatically. I will continue to do so.”
>>21632672 Anthony Albanese has become the first foreign leader invited to Joe Biden’s private home ahead of a Quad leaders summit - Anthony Albanese has expressed his concern over the series of attempts on Donald Trump’s life after a wide ranging meeting with Joe Biden at his private home in Delaware, a day ahead of the next Quad leaders summit, which also includes Japan and India. The Prime Minister, speaking at a press conference in Philadelphia on Friday night (Saturday AEST), said he was “very concerned about any disruption to democratic processes” when asked about the recent spate of assassination attempts on the Republican presidential candidate. “Democracy is something we can’t take for granted. We need to cherish it. We need to nurture it. And there’s no place for violence in democratic processes, whether it be extreme examples of assassination attempts, obviously, but other forms of violence as well,” he told reporters. Mr Albanese, who yesterday dismissed suggestions he should have sought a meeting with Mr Trump, became the first foreign leader to visit Joe Biden’s private residence in Delaware on Friday, where the President was accompanied by his national security Jake Sullivan, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and US Ambassador to Australia Caroline Kennedy. “It was a very warm and engaging discussion. It was a discussion between allies and a discussion between friends, which is what Australia is with our friends here in the United States,” Mr Albanese said after the 90 minute discussion, which took place on the eve of this year’s Quad summit to take place on Saturday (Sunday AEST).
>>21632721 Joe Biden hosts Anthony Albanese at his home ahead of Quad meeting - The US president has hosted Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at his personal home, in what could be the last official one-on-one meeting between the leaders. Joe Biden welcomed Mr Albanese to his property in Wilmington, Delaware, ahead of an annual gathering of the Quad - a grouping that also includes India and Japan. "My understanding is it was the first time that a foreign leader has met him at his home," the prime minister said afterwards in the nearby city of Philadelphia. "And so I feel that it was a great honour for that." The president has invited Quad leaders to visit his hometown four months before his term in the White House comes to an end. Asked about the concerns around Mr Biden's age and capacity to do the job that saw him withdraw from this year's election, Mr Albanese argued the president was "fit and totally on top of his brief". "I regard him as a friend and, importantly, someone who I can learn from," he said. The pair swapped gifts, as is traditional on such visits, with Mr Albanese giving the president an official Royal Australian Air Force flight jacket with a "Joe Biden" name patch. The prime minister received a framed artwork depicting Delaware landmarks, made with wood sourced from the state.
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273ca3 No.21755495
#37 - Part 56
Australian Politics and Society - Part 32
>>21632742 Video: Australian Federal Police raids 'dismantle' crime syndicate, see alleged creator of app for criminal underworld arrested and charged - A series of Tuesday morning raids conducted by the Australian Federal Police has seen dozens of people charged with illicit drug trafficking, conspiracy, destruction of records and supporting a criminal organisation and firearm charges. At the top of the list is a 32-year-old Sydney man Jay Je Yoon Jung, charged over allegedly creating and administering "Ghost", an encrypted messaging platform the AFP says has been specifically designed for use by the criminal underworld. The Narwee man is the first Australian-based person accused of creating an app of this kind. It is alleged he launched it nine years ago when he was 23 years of age. The AFP alleges he collected millions of dollars from his enterprise. Commander Paula Hudson is head of Operation Kraken and spoke exclusively to 7.30 about the AFP's ability to infiltrate the Ghost app in March this year, which gave them access to 125,000 messages sent by users. "We will be alleging that this platform is solely being used for criminality and serious organised crime, drug trafficking, drug importation, tobacco trafficking, firearms trafficking, money laundering," Commander Hudson told 7.30. "Threatening to murder, threatening to harm, standover tactics and criminals seeking to do damage to people." Those messages were further detailed on Wednesday by AFP Assistant Commissioner Kirsty Schofield, who said the AFP were able to stop all threats made to life. "On one occasion we could see over the platform an image of a person who had a firearm to their head," Assistant Commissioner Schofield said. "We had an hour in which to respond to that threat and pass that information to our state and territory partners to mitigate that threat." AFP officers seized 205kg of illicit drugs, 25 weapons and $1.2 million of cash during the raids. On Tuesday 700 AFP members were mobilised to execute search warrants across four states.
>>21642606 Peter Dutton vows to scrap First Nations ambassador position if elected - Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has promised to scrap the role of First Nations people's ambassador, a new position created under the Albanese government, if the Coalition is elected at the next election. Justin Mohamed, a Gooreng Gooreng man, was appointed to the position in April last year to lead the government's efforts in "implementing a First Nations approach to foreign policy". Announcing the first-of-its-kind appointment, Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the new position ensured Australia would have dedicated Indigenous representation in international engagements for the first time. In an interview with 2GB Radio on Monday, Mr Dutton said the position would be "abolished on day one" of a Coalition government. "That money will be spent to help Australians who are struggling at the moment," he said. The comments came after The Daily Telegraph reported that the government had spent more than $145,000 on Mr Mohamed's travel expenses in the past financial year. The story was based on documents detailing the cost of Mr Mohamed's travel between April last year and June, released under Freedom of Information earlier this month. "I'm not going to tolerate a situation where we are wasting taxpayer money," Mr Dutton said. "Nobody can point to what it has achieved. It's the only position of its nature in the world, and it was all about talking to the Voice [to Parliament] and the Makarrata Commission and truth-telling."
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273ca3 No.21755497
#37 - Part 57
Australian Politics and Society - Part 33
>>21642659, >>21648303 Women to be induced from 28 weeks instead of getting abortions under proposed SA law changes - People who want to terminate their pregnancy after 28 weeks could be required to instead deliver their baby alive under proposed changes to laws in South Australia that decriminalised abortion three years ago. Liberal MP Ben Hood will introduce a bill in the SA upper house on Wednesday so that people pregnant for more than 27 weeks and six days would be induced instead of getting an abortion. Under SA legislation passed in 2021, a pregnant person can get a late-term abortion after 22 weeks and six days if medically appropriate and with the approval of two doctors. "What my amendments hope to do, is balance the choice of the mother with the rights of the child," Mr Hood said. "This importantly balances and does not impinge upon the rights of a mother to choose a termination. "When that child is born alive it will receive neonatal care - and then, if it is the choice of the mother - that baby will be put up for adoption." Mr Hood said the "unintended consequences" of the current legislation were 45 babies being aborted after 22 weeks and six days over an 18-month period. The South Australian Abortion Reporting Committee reported eight late-term terminations in 2022 and 37 in 2023 because of a risk to the physical or mental health of the pregnant person. The reports do not make clear how many of those were beyond 28 weeks.
>>21648220 Melbourne woman arrested in Turkey is human rights activist, not terrorist, says local councillor - A Melbourne woman arrested in Turkey over alleged connections to a Kurdish nationalist group has been described as a “human rights activist, not a terrorist” by a local councillor and friend in Australia. Turkish media reported Cigdem Aslan, who also goes by Lenna Aslan, was arrested by the country’s National Intelligence Organisation and police at Istanbul Airport last week before she could return to Australia. The 51-year-old was reportedly detained on suspicion of conducting activities for the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, also known as the PKK, which is listed as a terrorist organisation in Turkey and Australia. Merri-bek councillor Sue Bolton, who has known Aslan for more than a decade, said the mother of two was an active member of the Melbourne Kurdish community and passionate about ending discrimination against and oppression of Kurds. “She’s a good friend of mine,” Bolton, who is from the Socialist Alliance, said. “She is a salt-of-the-earth humanitarian. She is a human rights activist. She is not a terrorist.” Bolton said she was deeply worried about Aslan, an experienced nurse who she said had serious health issues. Turkish media said Aslan co-chaired a Kurdish organisation linked to the PKK and alleged she had participated in Australian protests against Turkish raids on Kurdish forces in Iraq. Turkish pro-government newspaper The Daily Sabah also reported Aslan had Australian-based links to the PKK. The newspaper alleged she had been tracked by Turkish intelligence “for a long time” and had been in contact with “high-level members of the terror group”. Bolton said she did not believe this was true. She said Aslan’s friends and the Australian Kurdish community were lobbying politicians to help bring her home.
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273ca3 No.21755499
#37 - Part 58
Australian Politics and Society - Part 34
>>21655824 "Where we go one, we go all":Dentons chief Doug Stipanicev denies QAnon town hall reference- The local chief of the world’s largest law firm once ended an all-staff town hall with a slogan associated with the far-right QAnon movement, a leaked video has revealed, amid allegations he sent anti-vax and anti-Semitic material to a former partner at the firm. In the video, stood-aside Dentons Australasia CEO and Australian chair Doug Stipanicev is seen telling employees to “maintain that rage” that came following the Covid-19 pandemic to increase the firm’s size and client contact. He then says a motto that is used by extremist conspiracy group QAnon - “where we go one, we go all” - and tells employees it is time for afternoon tea. It is not clear whether Mr Stipanicev was aware of QAnon’s use of the slogan. Mr Stipanicev told The Australian it was not his intention for the slogan to refer to QAnon, but rather related to a 1996 film in which teenage boys and their captain learn about life and loyalty sailing a boat through a deadly storm. “The slogan was in a sailing movie called White Squall,” Mr Stipanicev told The Australian. “I thought it was apt for a law firm - we work as a team and succeed together - and is meant to foster collaboration and team effort and belonging.” The motto may have been used to encourage employees of the firm to continue to grow and develop following the pandemic. The Australian understands Mr Stipanicev’s address to the all-staff meeting occurred around June 2022, just after many Covid-19 restrictions had eased. “We set out at the beginning of Covid to be stronger on the other side. We are stronger on the other side. We are significantly stronger on the other side,” Mr Stipanicev said in a video snippet of the address, obtained by this masthead. “We have our focus now on scale, connect and innovate. We propose to maintain that rage to continue to increase the size of this firm, increase our client contact, increase our people. We will do it together. Where we go one, we go all.” A former Dentons employee, who was in the room at the time, said “several employees” understood the slogan was associated with QAnon.
>>21660526 Back to Camelot:Caroline Kennedy set to leave Australia in months- Caroline Kennedy, the US ambassador to Australia, is planning to wrap up her Canberra posting within months regardless of whether Donald Trump or Kamala Harris wins November’s presidential election. Kennedy, the daughter of late president John F. Kennedy, arrived in Australia in July 2022 with much fanfare owing to her status as a member of America’s most storied political dynasty. The widespread expectation in diplomatic circles is that Kennedy will end her high-profile posting by the time of the presidential inauguration on January 20, in line with American diplomatic conventions. She was definitive about her plans in an April interview with a Perth FM radio station that went under the radar at the time. “I’ll be finished up next January,” Kennedy told Nova 93.7 when asked whether she had a set term in Australia. Asked whether she would consider a diplomatic posting somewhere else, Kennedy said: “It couldn’t get better than this.” She is close to President Joe Biden and told this masthead in an extended interview last year that she lobbied him to send her to Australia. When Kennedy was appointed, Australia’s former US ambassador, Joe Hockey, said: “It says so much about the strong relationship between the US and Australia that President Biden is sending someone from Democratic Party royalty to represent him in Australia.”
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273ca3 No.21755501
#37 - Part 59
Australian Politics and Society - Part 35
>>21660654 Fallen US Marines honoured -US marines killed in Tiwi Islands Osprey crash honoured at emotional healing ceremony in Darwin- Three US marines killed in a Northern Territory military aircraft crash last year have been honoured at a Tiwi and Larrakia healing ceremony in Darwin, where their families were formally adopted by Tiwi leaders. In August last year, an MV-22B Osprey carrying 23 US marines crashed on Melville Island, one of the two Tiwi Islands north of Darwin, during routine training for Exercise Predator's Run. Captain Eleanor LeBeau, 29, Corporal Spencer Collart, 21, and Major Tobin Lewis, 37, were killed in the crash. More than a year later, on Thursday, the US marines and their families were honoured in a series of ceremonies in Darwin attended by hundreds of people. The families, and members of the US Marine Rotational Force - Darwin, were welcomed with a Larrakia smoking ceremony, and adopted by Tiwi leaders, on whose homelands the crash occurred. Tiwi-Mantiyupwi leader Jennifer Ullungura Clancy said the crash had left the Tiwi people grieving for the loss of life on their country. "The day it happened, it was very hard for my people to move on, to be happy the next day," she said. "We can do [ceremony] and grieve our own way, to let go." Ms Ullungura said it was important for the American families to be adopted by Tiwi people. "When they come, they can do their grieving on their own, and then we do it together as one," she said. "Now we are family. Like we told them, we are family."
>>21723645 Marine Rotational Force-Darwin Video:U.S. Marines, families of fallen honored by Tiwi Island, Larrakia people in historic Pukumani ceremony- U.S. Marines and the families of three fallen Marines joined the Tiwi Island and Larrakia people in two significant ceremonies on Sept. 26 and 27. The events commemorated the lives of three U.S. Marines who died in a U.S. Marine Corps MV-22B Osprey crash on Melville Island, Tiwi Islands, Australia, on Aug. 27, 2023. The crash occurred on lands belonging to the Tiwi Island’s Mantiyupwi Clan, and the Tiwi Island Land Council guided both the environmental and cultural protocols following the incident. The Tiwi people, respecting their traditions, referred to the fallen Marines as having "gone to sleep" instead of using their names. They honored “Big Brother” (Maj. Tobin Lewis), “Little Sister” (Capt. Eleanor LeBeau), and “Little Brother” (Cpl. Spencer Collart) through a spiritual walk, a healing ceremony, and a historic Pukumani ceremony. On Sept. 24, a spiritual walk, including smoking ceremonies, took place at several locations, including Robertson Barracks, Defence Establishment Berrimah, Royal Australian Air Force Base Darwin, and Larrakeyah Defence Precinct. These ceremonies prepared the way for the final Pukumani ceremony. This ritual, unique to Tiwi Island culture, honors those who have passed and helps guide their spirits on their next journey. On Sept. 26, U.S. Marines, families of the fallen, and members of the Australian Defence Force gathered to witness the Tiwi Island people, supported by the Larrakia people, lead a healing ceremony, marking the end of the one-year and one-month mourning period. During the ceremony, the Tiwi Island people formally adopted the U.S. Marine Corps and the three fallen Marines, along with their families, into the Tiwi Island community - an unprecedented honor that granted them Tiwi names, including “Pandanus.” This adoption symbolized the deep bond between the Tiwi people and the U.S. Marine Corps, extending recognition to future Marine rotations under this name. “The Tiwi people have a long-standing connection with both the Australian and U.S. militaries,” said Leslie Tungatalum, the Tiwi Land Council Chair. “This adoption shows our deep respect for the Marines and their families and strengthens the ties between us.” On Sept. 27, U.S. Marines, families of the fallen, and ADF members traveled to Pickertaramoor, Melville Island - the crash site - for the Pukumani ceremony. The Tiwi people invited the Marines and families to join this sacred event, marking the rare occasion when non-Tiwi participants have been invited to participate. At the crash site, the Tiwi erected Pukumani poles, representing the eight Tiwi clans, alongside three additional poles for the fallen Marines. The poles, handcrafted by Tiwi artists, stand as memorials to the fallen. The Tiwi led the ceremony, which included smoking rituals, traditional songs, and dances to guide the spirits of the deceased on their journey. “Wuta nguriyrngawa mantawi kapi awuta American” (Our prayers are with the American people).
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273ca3 No.21755504
#37 - Part 60
Australian Politics and Society - Part 36
>>21687977 Aftab Malik appointed as Islamophobia special envoy - The newly appointed special envoy to combat Islamophobia, Aftab Malik, has vowed to advocate against hate directed at Muslim community and anti-Semitism, amid concerns the conflict in the Middle East is undermining social cohesion in Australia. Mr Malik, an internationally recognised Muslim scholar and public servant, said Islamophobia and anti-Semitism could often be found “lurking” together, stressing that “no form of hatred is more important than another”. His appointment comes two months after Anthony Albanese unveiled former lawyer and business leader Jillian Segal as the nation’s special envoy on anti-Semitism in July, when he said a counterpart to address Islamophobia would be announced “shortly”. As the escalation of attacks over the Israel-Lebanon border threatens to engulf the region in a wider conflict, Mr Malik said the fight against hate was “more important today than it’s ever been”. “Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia are not mutually exclusive. Where there is one, you most likely will find the other, lurking,” Mr Malik said. “I don’t intend to use this role to advocate that one form of hatred is more important than another: both anti-Semitism and Islamophobia are unacceptable.” Mr Malik, who spent almost a decade in the NSW Premier’s Department promoting social cohesion and countering hate and extremism, said he would work closely with Ms Segal on how to bring their communities together. “As such, I look forward to engaging with my counterpart, Jillian Segal, to share insights and exchange ideas on how we can fortify social cohesion, and bring our communities together on a common ground, rooted in dignity for all,” he said.
>>21700837 Sall Grover appeals landmark transgender discrimination win - Sall Grover is challenging a controversial Federal Court ruling that “sex is changeable” after a judge found excluding a transgender woman from the women’s-only social media app Giggle for Girls amounted to indirect discrimination. In August, transgender woman Roxanne Tickle won a landmark case against Giggle for Girls when Justice Robert Bromwich found Ms Grover had indirectly, but not directly, discriminated against Ms Tickle when she removed her from the app because she did not look sufficiently female. Ms Grover was ordered to pay the Ms Tickle $10,000, as well as her legal costs. In his ruling, Justice Bromwich found that “sex is changeable” and non-binary, saying the “concept of sex has broadened over the 30 years since the SDA”. In a statement on Thursday, Giggle for Girls and Ms Grover said they would argue the court “misinterpreted the legal definition of ‘sex’ under the Sex Discrimination Act 1984 (Cth), expanding it beyond biological realities, which could undermine protections meant for women and girls.” The “appeal challenges a declaratory judgment that wrongfully finds our actions constituted ‘unlawful indirect discrimination’ based on gender identity”, the statement said. Indirect discrimination is the imposition of a condition, requirement or practice that is likely to disadvantage a person relative to another person who has a different gender identity. Ms Grover will also argue the app serves as a special measure, which is “aimed at fostering equality between men and women”. Under the Sex Discrimination Act, special measures are actions that promote equality for disadvantaged groups. “By providing a dedicated space for women, we are not just protecting their rights but championing the values of fairness and safety for all,” the statement said. “The recent ruling of Justice Bromwich in the Federal Court of Australia … misinterprets the fundamental rights of women and girls, and the principles of single-sex spaces essential for their safety and dignity.”
>>21710884 Court rules against X Corp over Australian child abuse safety notice issued to Twitter - The Federal Court has ruled X Corp has to comply with an Australian child sexual abuse transparency notice issued to the social media giant while it was still called Twitter. The Australian eSafety commissioner took the matter to the Federal Court after X Corp challenged a $610,500 fine in September 2023. The fine stemmed from an infringement notice issued by eSafety because X Corp had not provided information about how it was meeting the basic online safety expectations in relation to child sexual exploitation and abuse material and activity on Twitter. But X Corp argued the notice did not apply because the company did not exist when the notice was issued. The notice was given to Twitter in February 2023, and X Corp came into being in March 2023. In a 30-second hearing at the Federal Court in Melbourne on Friday, Justice Michael Wheelahan dismissed the proceeding and order X Corp to pay eSafety’s legal costs.
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273ca3 No.21755508
#37 - Part 61
Australian Politics and Society - Part 37
>>21729841 Video: Jacob Hersant: First man charged after Victoria banned Nazi salute found guilty - The first man charged after Victoria banned public Nazi salutes has been found guilty after a court tossed out his argument the law was constitutionally invalid. Jacob Hersant, 25, was charged with performing the banned gesture in October last year just days after the state outlawed the public demonstration. The young father had attended the County Court for an unrelated criminal matter on October 27, throwing his arm up in front of media and saying: “Australia for the white man, heil Hitler.” The footage, which was played in court, showed Hersant raising his right arm at about a 90-degree angle before quickly pulling it down. “Oh, nearly did it, it’s illegal now isn’t it,” he said. On Tuesday, Hersant returned before the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court supported by his mother where magistrate Brett Sonnet found him guilty of the salute. Outside of court, Hersant was unrepentant, saying people can be offended by his actions but he has a “right to express myself politically”. “I don’t feel shame for giving a political salute because those are my beliefs,” he said. “I do give the Nazi salute and I am a Nazi.” Hersant told media he was not worried about the prospect of jail, saying if he had to “suffer” for his cause he was willing. But he also flagged he may appeal the ruling. “I continue to be a national socialist, I’ll continue to give the salute but hopefully police officers don’t see it,” he said.
>>21729862 Video: First person found guilty of Nazi salute as court upholds Victoria’s new ban - The first Victorian charged with performing the Nazi salute has been found guilty after a magistrate rejected his argument that the case was constitutionally invalid. Magistrate Brett Sonnet shot down 25-year-old Jacob Hersant’s bid for immunity after he was captured on news cameras performing a version of the Nazi salute outside the County Court just days after legislation banning the act took effect. “Australia for the white man, heil Hitler, heil Hitler,” Hersant was captured saying after the act. Outside court, an unrepentant Hersant vowed to continue performing the Nazi salute, and told the media he was prepared to go to jail to further his political views. Hersant said he felt no regret or shame for performing the salute in public, and revealed he performed the gesture at home every day. He also flagged the possibility of an appeal against his conviction. Other men have since been charged with the same offence, including neo-Nazi Nathan Bull, who is accused of performing the Nazi salute at Carlton’s Cinema Nova on March 9. During a hearing for Bull last month, the court heard the future of his prosecution would likely ride on the magistrate’s decision in Hersant’s case. In June, a NSW magistrate convicted three Croatian soccer fans who made a Nazi salute during the 2022 Australia Cup final. Magistrate Joy Boulos found beyond reasonable doubt that the three men had “deliberately and intentionally” performed the Nazi salute in rejecting their arguments the hand gesture was a symbol of Croatian national pride. The men were each fined $500 and convicted after being found guilty of one count of publicly displaying a Nazi symbol without reasonable excuse.
>>21734013 Former Labor Senator Fatima Payman announces 'Australia's Voice' party ahead of upcoming federal election - Former Labor Senator Fatima Payman has officially announced the formation of her new political party, “Australia’s Voice”. The announcement has come just months after Ms Payman’s controversial departure from the Labor Party over her pro-Palestine position regarding the Middle East conflict. Launching the party from Parliament House in Canberra on Wednesday, Ms Payman articulated her vision of creating a platform for “disenfranchised” Australians. “It is with great humility and deep responsibility that I announce the formation of Australia's Voice, a new political party for the disenfranchised,” she told reporters. “We can no longer sit by while our voices are drowned out by the same old politics. It's time to stand up, to rise together and to take control of our future.” Despite the passionate rhetoric, the 29-year-old Senator did not unveil any specific policies and declared the party's platform would “come in time”. When pressed about her party's ideological stance, Ms Payman insisted, “This is a party for all Australians”. “It’s not going to be an easy task… but we need to capture everyone’s concerns and make sure that they’ve got a voice here in Canberra,” she said. It was not clear how she would be able to simultaneously represent the concerns of conflicting groups such as Jewish and Muslim organisations or coal and climate lobbies.
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273ca3 No.21755509
#37 - Part 62
Australian Politics and Society - Part 38
>>21734026 Indigenous leaders slam ‘disrespectful’ Fatima Payman’s choice of party name, Australia’s Voice - Furious Indigenous leaders have slammed Fatima Payman for claiming and rebadging the voice for her own political brand, as the former Labor senator refused to outline policies or reveal candidates. Senator Payman’s announcement on Wednesday that she would lead a breakaway political party named Australia’s Voice has angered some of Australia’s most distinguished Indigenous figures, who are in solemn reflection over the defeat of the voice referendum a year ago on Monday. Uluru Dialogue co-chair Megan Davis, a Cobble Cobble woman and constitutional expert who worked on the voice process for 12 years, described Senator Payman’s announcement on Wednesday as “curious timing given it’s the anniversary of the referendum and many of our people are still grieving”. Four months since she crossed the floor to vote for Palestinian statehood, the West Australian senator launched the Australia’s Voice party in Canberra where she saying her policy platforms would “come with time”. In a later interview on ABC, she described Palestinian recognition as overdue. Indigenous entrepreneur Sean Gordon, who joined fellow political conservatives in supporting the Indigenous voice through the Uphold & Recognise collective, said he saw the name of the new party as part of persistent and wrong-headed efforts to link the Indigenous rights movement with pro-Palestinian activism. “The use of the term ‘voice’ by Fatima Payman for her new political party is a further attempt by the pro-Palestinian movement to leverage of the back of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people,” Mr Gordon said. “This is no different to the pro-Palestinian movement who drowned out our voices on Australia Day early this year.”
>>21734044 Far-right extremist Jacob Hersant to be jailed for Nazi salute but length of sentence still to be determined - The first person found guilty of performing the Nazi salute in Victoria will be sentenced to jail. Far-right extremist Jacob Hersant was found guilty on Tuesday of performing the gesture last year, after a magistrate rejected his argument the laws were constitutionally invalid. The 25-year-old was the first Victorian charged with performing the Nazi salute in October 2023, just six days after new legislation banning the gesture came into effect. This morning, Magistrate Brett Sonnet found the only "appropriate sentencing order" was a term of imprisonment, but said he was not yet in a position to determine the length of the sentence. The offence carries a maximum penalty of $24,000 or 12 months' jail. Hersant walked from court today after the magistrate allowed him to remain in the community until sentencing in four weeks' time. Outside the court, Hersant told reporters he had no regrets about the conviction. His associates, including prominent neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell, made anti-Semitic comments as they left. During today's hearing, Prosecutor Daniel Gurvich KC argued Hersant's prospects of rehabilitation were "poor to non-existent", and said his performance of the Nazi salute was "calculated to achieve maximum impact". "Public expression of Nazi symbols are an assault against human dignity and representative of hatred and prejudice that have no place in Victoria," Mr Gurvich said.
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273ca3 No.21755514
#37 - Part 63
Australian Politics and Society - Part 39
>>21746614 ASIO chief Mike Burgess tells social media summit of 'disturbing resurgence' in youth terror cases - In a sobering warning about the impact of social media on ideological radicalisation among children, ASIO's director-general has expressed concern that artificial intelligence will "accelerate the acceleration" of extremism. At a summit examining the harmful effects of online platforms on young people, Mike Burgess spoke in broad terms about the ways in which social media and digital technologies were fuelling threats to national security. But Mr Burgess was emphatic that the problem was an especially pressing one for policymakers focused on education and child safety, pointing out that "all" of the nation's most recent terror cases "were allegedly perpetrated by young people", including one as young as 14. "The internet was a factor in every single one of these incidents, albeit to different degrees and in different ways," he said. Mr Burgess said that, during a COVID peak, teenagers "represented around 50 per cent" of ASIO's counter-terrorism caseload - a figure that declined before a more recent "disturbing resurgence". "Around 20 per cent of our priority counter-terrorism cases involve minors," he said. "In one generation, we have allowed our children full access to alleyways, content and people that they would not be able to access in the physical world." Mr Burgess said that ASIO involvement in a case of youthful extremism was "usually" a sign that it was "too late" for other forms of intervention. "As a nation, we need to reflect on why some teenagers are hanging Nazi flags and portraits of the Christchurch killer on their bedroom walls, and why others are sharing beheading videos in the schoolyard and, more concerningly, why there are young Australians willing to kill in the name of their beliefs," he said.
#37 - Part 64
Coronavirus / COVID-19 Pandemic, Australia and Worldwide
>>21478327 Payments for COVID vaccine injuries are ending. Patients want that changed - Patients, academics and an independent MP are calling for the federal government to extend and expand compensation for people who experienced severe reactions to the COVID-19 vaccine, amid concerns the scheme was poorly managed and unfairly narrow in scope. Since opening in December 2021, the COVID-19 Vaccine Claims Scheme has received 4426 claims and paid $29.8 million to 378 claimants. There were 663 claims still being assessed this week, ahead of the scheme’s closure next month. Last year, the Sun-Herald reported thousands of people were experiencing long delays to receive the outcomes of claims for compensation after being diagnosed with conditions recognised by the scheme. Australia’s COVID-19 vaccine compensation scheme covers losses or expenses of $1000 or more from injury resulting in hospitalisation or death from a list of 11 specific severe reactions to a COVID-19 vaccine. While many people experienced flu-like symptoms after COVID-19 vaccination, the Therapeutic Goods Administration’s safety reports show severe reactions were extremely rare. Of the more than 68 million doses administered in Australia by November 2023, only 9300 were “associated” with hospital admission, which does not guarantee the vaccine caused the admission. The incidents were overwhelmingly following patients’ initial doses of a COVID-19 vaccine. A new report by UNSW’s Centre for Social Impact reviewed more than 700 rare adverse reactions to COVID-19 vaccines recorded in peer-reviewed medical journals, claiming there was a “gross misalignment between the very limited approved range of serious adverse events included in the Australian compensation scheme, and the medical evidence”. University of Western Australia medico-legal academic Associate Professor Marco Rizzi said the closed list of reactions in Australia’s COVID-19 vaccine claim scheme was too inflexible. Internationally, he said, some schemes were based on a causal inquiry, where physicians established a link between vaccination and the injury. Australia’s COVID-19 vaccine injury scheme will stop accepting claims on September 30.
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273ca3 No.21755518
#37 - Part 65
Julian Assange: Indictment, Extradition and Plea Deal - Part 1
>>21252770 High cost of Kevin Rudd’s company for return of Julian Assange - Taxpayers forked out more than $100,000 to return Julian Assange home, with the bill blowing out by nearly 30 per cent because Australia’s ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd accompanied the convicted criminal on his flight into Canberra. Documents provided to the Senate reveal the charter flight from Britain to Australia, via a court hearing in a US territory in an island in the Western Pacific, cost a total of $781,480. This was paid for by the Wau Holland Foundation, but taxpayers were left to fund additional travel costs from Assange being accompanied by Mr Rudd and Australia’s high commissioner to Britain, Stephen Smith. Mr Rudd’s “additional commercial travel costs” were $29,268 while Mr Smith’s were $17,807. Travel costs amounted to $55,403 for other officials at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Liberal senator Dave Sharma said Assange’s flight home “must be one of the most expensive staged photo ops ever undertaken”.
>>21273998 Julian Assange's wife Stella posts first family photo since husband's release - Julian Assange's wife Stella has shared the first photo of the WikiLeaks founder and their children all together since his release from a British prison in June. Ms Assange posted the photo on Instagram with her, her husband and their two children Gabriel, 7, and Max, 5, posing on the beach together. It is unclear when and where the photograph was taken. Last month, she told media how her husband planned to spend his early days once he was back with his family "Julian plans to swim in the ocean every day, he plans to sleep in a real bed, he plans to taste real food and he plans to enjoy his freedom," she said. Earlier this month, Ms Assange shared a photo of her and her husband on Instagram with the caption, "Free! #AssangeFree". On June 26, Assange pleaded guilty to the United States charge of Conspiracy to Obtain and Disclose National Defense Information. The charge was dealt with in Saipan in the US territory of the Northern Mariana Islands, where he was sentenced to 62 months in prison, but was allowed to return to Australia a free man due to time previously served. Assange had spent five years in the UK's Belmarsh prison fighting moves to extradite him to the US in relation to the WikiLeaks publications.
>>21344337 Julian Assange’s father John Shipton headlines rally on Victoria parliament’s steps in solidarity with Gaza - The father of Julian Assange has headlined a major rally on the steps of Victoria’s parliament in support of Gaza, as activists call for thousands of prisoners taken during the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict to be released. John Shipton was one of the key speakers at the International Day of Solidarity with Gaza and Prisoners rally in Melbourne on Saturday -- marking the first time he had spoken on the conflict since his son’s release. Mr Shipton has been a long-time supporter of ending the conflict, telling a crowd in February the offences committed against children in the war “cannot be forgiven”. On Saturday, he warned the next job “might be a bit harder” as he thanked a large crowd of supporters for fighting for his son’s release from custody. Julian Assange returned to Australia earlier this year after pleading guilty to conspiring to unlawfully obtain and disseminate classified information. He was sentenced to 62 months in jail which was declared as time already served. The organisers of Saturday’s rally have repeatedly called for the release of Gazan prisoners taken by Israel during the conflict, which erupted following attacks by the Islamist terrorist group Hamas on October 7, 2023.
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273ca3 No.21755521
#37 - Part 66
Julian Assange: Indictment, Extradition and Plea Deal - Part 2
>>21360307 Inside Julian Assange's first days of freedom Down Under - The family of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has detailed his first days of freedom living a mostly anonymous life in the Australian bush - raising their two sons, swimming in the ocean and listening to the laughter of kookaburras. But wife Stella Assange and brother Gabriel Shipton warned in a letter to supporters that he won't be making public appearances and is taking a break from activism, after 12 years locked up in a London prison and the city's Ecuadorian embassy. 'It has been more than one month since Julian finally arrived back in Australia,' Ms Assange wrote in a blog post, published on Tuesday. 'He's still adjusting. Julian is recuperating and experiencing the wild and breathtaking Australian natural environment,' she said. 'The things that he longed for from his cell in Belmarsh prison that seemed unattainable are now a reality: swimming in the ocean, trekking through the wilderness and travelling around Australia.' Ms Assange described how he had been spending time with his two sons, Gabriel and Max and were 'finally' able to be together as a family. '(It) brings us overwhelming joy. Time is what has been robbed from us, especially from Julian, and now we are enjoying it as much as we can.' Assange said she and Julian were 'overwhelmed' by the community support which brought about his freedom. However Mr Shipton warned that Mr Assange's incarceration had been traumatic and deeply affecting, and that they and their team would be stepping back from activism and Wikileaks work while he recovers. 'As a family we're also realistic that ahead lies a challenging period of adjustment after what has been a deeply traumatising experience, ' he wrote, adding, 'It might be a while before he feels ready to speak publicly.'
>>21366125 Townsville City Council rejects proposal to build Julian Assange statue - Townsville City Council have overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to build a statue to honour Julian Assange, with one elected representative alleging the activist had damaged Australia’s diplomatic relationships and “put lives at risk”. Deputy Mayor Paul Jacob presented the council with an e-petition signed by 156 people calling for a statue of the controversial Townsville-born figure to be placed prominently in the city to “recognise the valuable contribution to providing truth to the world”. Mr Jacob said the petition was established by Alison Mason of Balgal Beach to recognise Mr Assange’s “valuable contribution to provide truth to the world”. “We the undersigned request that the council give consideration to providing a site on The Strand looking towards Magnetic Island and helping with site works to position a crowd-funded statue of Julian Assange on the Strand.” Councillor Andrew Robinson said he was strongly opposed. “Whilst being a truth seeker, the reckless way in which he has presented that information has put individuals’ lives at risk,” he said. “He has certainly undone a number of years’ worth of diplomacy and diplomatic relationships that Australia has with other nations, and to be honest, has been tried as for espionage.” Councillor Ann-Maree Greaney went further, arguing that the petition should be rejected outright. “I can think of a thousand people in our community who are hardworking and deserve a statue on The Strand other than Julian Assange,” she said. The motion to accept the petition but take no further action was passed.
>>21569805 Family photo shows Julian Assange lying low in Melbourne - Julian Assange’s supporters have launched an energetic campaign for US President Joe Biden to grant the WikiLeaks founder a pardon before leaving office next year, as new photos emerge of Assange’s life as a free man in Australia. Assange has been secluded from public view since his dramatic return to Australia in late June, after he pleaded guilty to one count of violating the US Espionage Act in exchange for his immediate release from detention in a high-security London prison. Assange’s brother, Gabriel Shipton, who led the push to free Assange, will travel to the United States later this month to meet American politicians and civil society groups in a bid to create momentum for Biden to pardon Assange before his tenure ends on January 20. Shipton’s trip will happen around the same time that Prime Minister Anthony Albanese travels to the US to meet Biden and fellow Quad leaders Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida. In the new photos of Assange, provided to this masthead, the WikiLeaks founder can be seen celebrating his father John Shipton’s 80th birthday this week in suburban Melbourne and posing in front of a campervan his father used to campaign for his release.
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273ca3 No.21755522
#37 - Part 67
Julian Assange: Indictment, Extradition and Plea Deal - Part 3
>>21589875 Sun, sea and surf for Julian Assange and family in new Australian life - After years in London’s grim Belmarsh prison, Julian Assange is roaming the forests of southeast Australia, swimming in the ocean and learning to parent the sons who once knew their father only as a prisoner. His wife, the Swedish-Spanish lawyer Stella Assange, recently returned to London for a week, leaving the WikiLeaks co-founder alone to look after their children, Gabriel, seven, and Max, five. “So he was solo parenting for a week,” Assange’s younger half-brother, the film-maker Gabriel Shipton, told The Times. “Everyone survived. So I think he had the kids in a good routine after a few days.” The family are believed to be living in a secret location on the New South Wales coast, far south of Sydney. It is a region of lush dairy farms, towering forests and often empty beaches, known for fizzing waves and white sands. Assange has not spoken publicly about his new life as a free man in his native Australia since he was released from Belmarsh prison in late June. He departed from Stansted airport aboard a luxury Bombardier business jet for Sydney, via Saipan, an American territory in the Pacific where he stopped briefly to plead guilty to violating US espionage laws - a penalty Washington required under his release deal. Shipton is spearheading a campaign to persuade the US to pardon Assange, which would also have the benefit of lifting proceeds of crime strictures that are likely to prevent Assange from earning an income from talking and writing about his past activities with WikiLeaks. Later this month Shipton will travel again from Australia to Washington - his seventh visit this year — to continue lobbying for a presidential pardon for his half-brother.
>>21653886 Assange to give first public address since prison release - Controversial WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange plans to break his post-prison silence in an address to the Council of Europe next week, his organisation said Wednesday. WikiLeaks said the 53-year-old would travel from his native Australia to Strasbourg on October 1 to testify before a parliamentary legal committee investigating his case. Assange was released from a British prison in June, after serving time for publishing hundreds of thousands of confidential US government documents from 2010. The trove included searingly frank US State Department descriptions of foreign leaders, accounts of extrajudicial killings and intelligence gathering against allies. Assange spent most of the last 14 years holed up in the Ecuadoran embassy in London while trying to avoid arrest or locked up at Belmarsh Prison. WikiLeaks said that “on October 1, Julian Assange will arrive in Strasbourg to give evidence before the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights”. The Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly is scheduled to debate a report about his case on October 2. The Council of Europe is an international organisation that brings together the 46 signatory states of the European Convention on Human Rights. Assange supporters have long called for him to receive a full US presidential pardon. President Joe Biden, who is likely to issue a slew of pardons before leaving office next January, has previously described Assange as a “terrorist”.
>>21687984 ‘Let us stop gagging … and killing each other’: Assange breaks his silence - Julian Assange says he is only free because he pleaded guilty to being a journalist and admits his personal transition from years confined in a maximum security prison to freedom has been a “profound and a surreal shift” with which he is still struggling. The 53-year-old WikiLeaks founder, released in June after five years in a British prison after plea deal with the US government, said it was important to remember he was not free because the legal system worked, but only because he chose it over “an unrealisable justice”. “I am free today after years of incarceration because I pleaded guilty to journalism; pleaded guilty to seeking information from sources; I pleaded guilty to obtaining information from a source and I pleaded guilty to inform the public,” Assange said, in his first public comments since his release from prison. Speaking at the Council of Europe legal affairs and human rights committee in Strasbourg, France, on Wednesday, Assange stressed the US “insisted” on him agreeing not to file a case at the European Court of Human Rights against it in return for the plea deal. Wearing a navy-blue suit and a maroon tie, Assange coughed regularly through his 45-minute address to the council, occasionally stumbling over his words. He admitted he found it difficult to talk about his lengthy experience behind bars.
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273ca3 No.21755523
#37 - Part 68
Julian Assange: Indictment, Extradition and Plea Deal - Part 4
>>21687992 Julian Assange, WikiLeaks founder, speaks in his first appearance since his release from prison - Julian Assange is back on European soil. When last here, he was behind bars. On Tuesday, he gave evidence about his years of incarceration in a high-security UK prison, after the United States charged him under the Espionage Act. It's his first public appearance since being released from prison and returning to Australia. In an at times scathing address, he criticised the United States and its allies in their handling of his case. "I am not here today because the system worked, I am free today after years of incarceration because I pleaded guilty to journalism," Assange told Europe's leading human rights organisation, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) at Strasbourg, France, which is investigating his detention and conviction. The appearance of the WikiLeaks founder at PACE was a tightly controlled affair, international media faced extensive restrictions, and Assange did not give interviews. Assange told the ABC ahead of the hearing he was "pleased to be here." Flanked by his wife, Stella, and the WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson, Mr Assange said legal protections "only existed on paper." "I eventually chose freedom over unrealisable justice after being detained for years…. With no effective remedy," he said. "Justice for me is now precluded because the US government insisted … that I cannot file in the European Court of Human Rights or a Freedom of Information request." Speaking of his 5 years in a UK prison, Assange said it was a "relentless struggle to stay alive, physically and mentally." "It strips away one's sense of self," he said. "Isolation has taken its toll. The transition from years of confinement in a max-security prison to being here before the reps of 46 nations is a profound and surreal shift." The emotional address included some light moments too, with Assange thanking his wife for looking after his children while he was in prison. The packed auditorium broke into laughter when he went on to describe how he is getting used to having a mother-in-law.
>>21695329 Video: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange blames British legal system, banks and oil giants for detention during speech in Strasbourg - Julian Assange has blamed 14 years of his detention on a compliant British legal establishment in hock to keeping important British-American interests intact, such as arms manufacturer BAE, various banks, and oil companies such as BP and Shell. Assange spoke for the first time since arriving at a plea deal with the US, addressing the Council of Europe parliamentarians in Strasbourg on Tuesday that it “was good to be among friends” and thanking “all the people who understood my liberation was their own liberation”. He said he had expected “harassment and legal processes” when he solicited, obtained and then published US information back in 2010 and 2011 but he had been prepared to fight for that to reveal US war crimes. Assange on Tuesday said at that time he believed his basic rights would have been protected under European law and in the US no publisher had been prosecuted for publishing information, domestically or internationally. “My naivety was believing in the law,’’ he said during a 45-minute address to the parliamentarians, adding that “when push comes to shove, the laws are reinterpreted for public expediency’’. He said he had angered one of the constitutional powers of the US - the intelligence sector. “It was powerful enough to push for a reinterpretation of the US constitution … and yes, perhaps ultimately if I had gotten to Supreme Court of the US, and I was still alive, I might have won, depending on the make-up of the US judges in the system. “In the meantime, I had lost 14 years, the house arrest, the embassy siege, the incarnation in Belmarsh … It is an important lesson that when a major power wants to reinterpret the law … it doesn’t care too much about what is legal, that’s something for a much later date; and in the meantime there is a deterrent effect, a retribution effect.”
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273ca3 No.21755525
#37 - Part 69
Brittany Higgins Rape Allegations and Linda Reynolds Defamation Trial - Part 1
>>21281320 ‘Harassment’: Brittany Higgins’ defence revealed - Brittany Higgins has doubled down on her attack on former defence minister Linda Reynolds, alleging her former boss “engaged in a campaign of harassment” against her, including providing confidential information to the media, newly released court documents reveal. Ms Higgins’ amended defence to Senator Reynolds’ defamation claim, filed in the West Australian Supreme Court, amplifies her allegations that she was the victim of an attempted cover-up, stating she felt under pressure not to make a complaint “in the interests of the Liberal Party” in the lead up to an election. In his judgment in the Lehrmann defamation case this year, judge Michael Lee found, on the balance of probabilities, that Bruce Lehrmann raped Ms Higgins, but expressly rejected her claims that Senator Reynolds was involved in a cover-up of the assault. Mr Lehrmann has lodged an appeal. Senator Reynolds is now suing Ms Higgins over a series of social media posts she says defamed her.
>>21338861 Reynolds v Higgins: Trial begins in Linda Reynolds’ pursuit of vindication - Huddled around a table in a luxury hotel in Sydney’s inner suburbs, former political staffer Brittany Higgins, now-husband David Sharaz and Network Ten journalist Lisa Wilkinson met to strategise the delivery of a bombshell interview that would spark a cultural reckoning. It was January 27, 2021, and Higgins was preparing to detail her alleged raped by former colleague Bruce Lehrmann in the parliamentary office of Liberal Senator Linda Reynolds and the political cover-up that followed. The tell-all interview on The Project would be broadcast to more than half-a-million people, triggering a political storm that culminated in multiple inquiries, a cultural overhaul, lucrative book deals and a $2.4 million compensation pay out. Over the next five weeks, Reynolds’ legal team will take to the WA Supreme Court to argue that it marked the beginning of a campaign to get what she claims Higgins set out to: the destruction of Reynolds’ reputation. Reynolds made good on her threat to sue Higgins for defamation over several social media posts accusing her of harassment on July 31, 2023, claiming they damaged her reputation, brought her into public hatred and caused her distress and embarrassment. The former defence minister is expected to spend several days in the witness box outlining the impact of the publications on her reputation and physical health before her high-profile colleagues take the stand, including former Prime Minister Scott Morrison, WA senator Michaelia Cash and Tasmanian senator Wendy Askew. Higgins, who recently revealed she and Sharaz were expecting their first child, will spend up to one week providing evidence.
>>21339036 ‘Brittany Higgins fairytale needed a villain’: Linda Reynolds fights cover-up allegations - Linda Reynolds has used a trove of photographs and text messages to allege Brittany Higgins and her husband David Sharaz deliberately created a plan to falsely portray the Coalition minister as the “villain” who led a cover-up of Ms Higgins’ alleged Parliament House rape. The first day of the senator’s defamation trial against Ms Higgins saw her lawyer Martin Bennett tender multiple photographs showing Ms Higgins smiling and laughing while out on the campaign trail across Perth just months after she was allegedly raped by then-colleague Bruce Lehrmann. Mr Bennett said the evidence showed how Ms Higgins and Mr Sharaz had used falsehoods and lies to create a narrative that Senator Reynolds had led a political cover-up of Ms Higgins’ alleged rape. “Every fairytale needs a villain, and in 2020 or 2021, Ms Higgins and her then-partner and now husband, Mr Sharaz, cast Senator Reynolds in that role for their fictional story of a cover-up of the rape,” Mr Bennett said. “The fact she had been raped was traumatic and terrible but it needed something more to attract the attention, to attract media interest, to attract the promotion of Ms Higgins, so she made it a political sex scandal. That’s the fiction that needed a villain and she cast Linda Reynolds in that role.”
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273ca3 No.21755526
#37 - Part 70
Brittany Higgins Rape Allegations and Linda Reynolds Defamation Trial - Part 2
>>21339073 Linda Reynolds v Brittany Higgins: Judge won’t be swayed by sideshows - "It took only minutes after Linda Reynolds’ lawyer, Martin Bennett, produced the memorable line that “every fairytale needs a villain” before the cesspit of social media chewed it up and spat out a revised version. No matter that Bennett had spent most of the morning detailing Reynolds’ actual case: that Brittany Higgins and her now-husband David Sharaz had concocted a “fictional story of a cover-up” by Reynolds of the young woman’s rape allegations. No matter that Bennett reaffirmed Reynolds had never questioned the veracity of Higgins’ account of being raped - indeed, had urged that it be immediately reported to police. That would have spoiled the narrative. Instead, “Reynolds’ lawyer believes that rape is a fairytale!” lit up the twittersphere. Climate 200 founder and teals campaigner Simon Holmes a Court posted that “every day Linda Reynolds pursues Brittany Higgins is another day we’re reminded about her government’s hostility towards victims of sexual assault”. The bid by some of Higgins’ supporters to reframe the case as forcing a rape victim to prove her rape will be a recurring theme through the next five weeks of the trial. But inside the courtroom, Higgins’ lawyers are confined to a more difficult task: substantiating her claims that Reynolds not only failed to support her after she revealed the assault, but actively attempted to cover it up “in the interests of the Liberal Party”. Justice Paul Tottle must decide whether Reynolds was defamed, not whether Higgins was raped. He won’t be distracted by spurious attempts - inside the court or out - to stray from that task." - Stephen Rice - theaustralian.com.au
>>21354159 ‘This is aggravation’: Reynolds’ lawyer threatens to add fresh post to Higgins’ defamation rap sheet - Liberal Senator Linda Reynolds’ lawyer has accused Brittany Higgins of aggravating conduct after she published the cover of a book entitled ‘How many more women? how the law silences women’ alongside the words “Pertinent reading” as the former defence minister entered the witness box for their defamation trial. Reynolds lawyer Martin Bennett had concluded quizzing the former defence minister on her life and career when he revealed Higgins had posted the image on her Instagram story while his client was on the stand. Bennett told the court he intended to amend the statement of claim in Reynolds’ defamation action against Higgins to include the post, arguing its timing and the imputations amounted to aggravation. Reynolds ended her first day of sworn testimony poring over her recollection of a meeting with Higgins in her parliamentary office on April 1, 2019, just over one week after she and colleague Bruce Lehrmann breached security by entering after hours while intoxicated and leaving the suite unlocked.
>>21360269 New Brittany Higgins social media posts prompt defamation trial warning from Linda Reynolds's lawyer - The high-profile defamation trial against Brittany Higgins has taken another twist, with Senator Linda Reynolds's lawyer declaring new social media posts published yesterday were part of a co-ordinated plan to mislead the public into thinking the Senator was trying silence survivors of sexual assault. Lawyer Martin Bennett said the posts, which included an Instagram story from Ms Higgins, had been deliberately timed to coincide with the start of Senator Reynolds's evidence yesterday. In one post, Ms Higgins recommends as "pertinent reading" a book relating to "how the law silences women" and another post is by an advocate for sexual assault survivors, Saxon Mullens, who is fundraising for Ms Higgins' legal costs. Mr Bennett said it was part of a "coordinated plan" to "mischaracterise these proceedings" as an attempt by Senator Reynolds to silence sexual assault survivors, to "mislead the public" about the true nature of the proceedings. Senator Reynolds is suing Ms Higgins, her former staffer, for alleged defamation over social media posts made in 2023 which the Senator says falsely claimed she mishandled Ms Higgins' allegation she was raped in Parliament House in 2019. Mr Bennett has applied for a subpoena to obtain copies of communications between Ms Higgins and Ms Mullens, who was instrumental in changing consent laws in New South Wales.
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273ca3 No.21755528
#37 - Part 71
Brittany Higgins Rape Allegations and Linda Reynolds Defamation Trial - Part 3
>>21366136 Video: Linda Reynolds shares anger over Brittany Higgins's pre-production tapes for Channel 10's The Project interview - Liberal MP Linda Reynolds has told the West Australian Supreme Court of the moment she realised the extent of what she claims was a "pre-planned" and "pre-meditated" attack to inflict maximum damage on her by Brittany Higgins and her now husband David Sharaz. But the former defence minister said she never doubted Ms Higgins's allegation she was raped in Senator Reynolds' then-ministerial suite at Parliament House in Canberra in 2019. Senator Reynolds' lawyer Martin Bennett questioned her in court today about the moment she first heard details about the five-hour pre-interview for The Project involving Ms Higgins, Mr Sharaz and others. Senator Reynolds said she learned about it during the criminal trial of Bruce Lehrmann, who had been accused of raping Ms Higgins. Senator Reynolds said the pre-interview, during which the strategy to make public Ms Higgins rape allegations was discussed, made her realise how much thought had gone into the attack against her. "It became clear how premeditated this plan was," Senator Reynolds said. "I had no idea just how well prepared this plan was. They had a package for the media, they had a package for the Me Too movement, they had a package for disaffected Liberals. "It was pre-planned, it was pre-meditated, it was personal against me. "I was angry, I was hurt, and as I said I felt like a fool."
>>21372143 ‘He was stitching me up’: Reynolds lashes attorney-general on the stand over Higgins settlement - Liberal senator Linda Reynolds has accused Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus of “stitching her up” during the settlement of former staffer Brittany Higgins’ compensation claim, while defending her decision to leak confidential legal letters to the media. During cross-examination in the WA Supreme Court on Thursday, Higgins’ lawyer Rachael Young, SC, grilled the former defence minister about her decision to forward three legally sensitive letters to The Australian’s Janet Albrechtsen in December 2022. The emails came six months after Reynolds had been named a defendant in Higgins’ compensation claim over the mishandling of her alleged rape by colleague Bruce Lehrmann in the senator’s parliamentary suite in 2019. The senator took issue with the Commonwealth’s plan to conduct her defence, forwarding Albrechtsen an email laying bare her concerns about the settlement’s handling - including that she was being muzzled. The contents of those email were later republished in an article by The Australian. Young put to Reynolds that she had sent the emails from her personal address to avoid them becoming public - a claim the senator denied. And Higgins’ solicitor submitted that Reynolds leaked the letters to Albrechtsen about effectively being muzzled and her dissatisfaction with the process to ensure favourable coverage, a claim she again rejected. “Did I want Ms Albrechtsen to know I had not had the ability to defend claims? Yes, I was incredibly angry because I could see the attorney-general of this country was stitching me up on allegations I had not seen and believed had expired,” Reynolds told the court. “I had no expectation of how she would write it, I just provided evidence of corruption, and she could report that as she saw fit.”
>>21385847 ‘I carry the guilt’: Reynolds breaks down over airing Kitching warning of political firestorm - WA Liberal senator Linda Reynolds has broken down on the witness stand, describing her guilt over telling Labor senators that late Victorian senator Kimberley Kitching warned her the party intended to “rain hell” on her over Brittany Higgins’ alleged rape, and doubling down on claims the saga led to Kitching’s death. On Tuesday, the former defence minister told the Western Australian Supreme Court Kitching’s decision to hand an anonymous letter about the alleged rape over to the Australian Federal Police, and not her party, had left Kitching ostracised by her colleagues. And she made national headlines when she made the extraordinary claim the saga led to Kitching’s death of a heart attack on March 10, 2022, at the age of 52. Reynolds left the court in tears on Friday after telling Higgins’ barrister Rachael Young, SC, that her remarks reflected her guilt at revealing to other politicians that Kitching had tipped her off to the impending political firestorm in 2021, rather than reflected a desire to have her claims aired in the press. “It displays my guilt. If I hadn’t revealed it was her… that’s what led to her being ostracised. I had kept it in confidence, even after everything. It was my guilt. I shouldn’t have weakened and told anyone. Everyone can see how angry she was with me. She was losing weight. But I carry the guilt of telling the senators and … her being bullied to death.”
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273ca3 No.21755532
#37 - Part 72
Brittany Higgins Rape Allegations and Linda Reynolds Defamation Trial - Part 4
>>21396390 Brittany Higgins' defamation trial hears evidence of sharp decline in Senator Linda Reynolds' health - Liberal Senator Linda Reynolds's partner has testified her cardiologist thought she could die after she collapsed in the senate following intense pressure over her handling of Brittany Higgins' rape allegation. Robert Reid gave evidence in the Western Australian Supreme Court on Monday during the defamation trial brought by the Senator against her former staffer Ms Higgins over a series of social media posts. Mr Reid told the court of the significant deterioration in his partner's health after the 2019 rape allegation was made public, in an article by journalist Samantha Maiden and in Ms Higgins' interview with Channel 10's The Project on February 15, 2021. Mr Reid recalled receiving a message to come to parliament on March 23, 2021 after Senator Reynolds had collapsed and gone back to her ministerial suite. He said when he saw her, "she looked white, she looked almost dishevelled, it was very painful". On medical advice, they drove to a nearby hospital to have her heart checked, given she had a pre-existing heart condition. "Linda was still crying," Mr Reid said. They saw a cardiologist. "He said 'we might lose her'", Mr Reid said, breaking down in tears. "He said 'this is very serious'." The doctor though, did not admit Senator Reynolds and instead advised sending her home and monitoring her closely.
>>21404272 ‘Utterly false’: Scott Morrison rubbishes Brittany Higgins cover-up claims in explosive testimony - Former prime minister Scott Morrison has vigorously defended West Australian senator Linda Reynolds’ handling of Brittany Higgins’ rape allegation, rubbishing claims of a political cover-up and saying it was parliamentary process that had failed the former staffer. Giving evidence in Reynolds’ defamation case against Higgins on Tuesday via videolink from Sydney, Morrison pored over what unfolded in the days after Higgins’ tell-all interview with The Project on February 15, 2021, including what he described as “aggressive” and “co-ordinated” questioning in federal parliament and by the media. Morrison revealed the broadcast was the first he knew of the alleged rape in Reynolds’ ministerial suite and conceded he was disappointed the then-defence minister had kept him in the dark. But he said he understood Reynolds’ predicament in attempting to balance her obligations to the government while maintaining the promise of confidence she had given Higgins. Morrison told Higgins’ lawyer, Rachael Young, SC, that the need to ensure workplace safety at parliament was what had motivated him to order an inquiry, not the growing media attention.
>>21415080 Linda Reynolds’ friend describes senator’s ‘state of distress’ after Coalition’s 2022 election defeat - One of Linda Reynolds’ closest friends has described how the senator broke down after she learned she had failed to secure any shadow ministry roles in the wake of the Coalition’s 2022 election defeat. Denita Wawn, chief executive of Canberra-based Master Builders Australia, told the West Australian Supreme Court on Thursday about Senator Reynolds’ “heightened state of distress” during a weekend away shortly after the 2022 election. Ms Wawn said the senator’s state that weekend was the worst she’d seen since Senator Reynolds was hospitalised soon after Brittany Higgins went public with her allegation that she had been raped by Bruce Lehrmann inside Senator Reynolds’ Parliament House office. Ms Wawn has been friends with Senator Reynolds for more than 20 years and is contact with her at least once a week. She said the only time she had only seen Senator Reynolds in a worse state than during that 2022 getaway was in 2021, soon after Ms Higgins first appeared on The Project. Ms Wawn said she and her friends were incredibly concerned with the senator’s wellbeing in the aftermath of that program, telling the court she was worried that the senator could die. Senator Reynolds was hospitalised for weeks after the 2021 revelations after the stress of the situation exacerbated a pre-existing heart condition. “She was a mess, I think is the best way to described her both physically and mentally,” Ms Wawn said.
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273ca3 No.21755534
#37 - Part 73
Brittany Higgins Rape Allegations and Linda Reynolds Defamation Trial - Part 5
>>21422113 Secret medical reports fuel doubts for key witness appearance in Reynolds, Higgins row - The exchange of top-secret medical reports has fuelled doubts about whether the woman who served as Liberal Senator Linda Reynolds’ chief of staff at the time Brittany Higgins alleged she was raped in Reynolds’ office will take the stand in the pair’s defamation row. Former chief of staff Fiona Brown had been due to give sworn testimony in the West Australian Supreme Court on what unfolded in the days after Higgins’ alleged rape by Bruce Lehrmann in the former defence minister’s office after a night out on March 23, 2019. But on Friday, Brown’s barrister Dominique Hogan-Doran, SC, handed over two top-secret medical certificates and a report to a handful of lawyers and Justice Paul Tottle. The substance of the documents is protected by strict confidentiality orders, but the parties have already alluded to using testimony Brown gave in a separate court matter.
>>21439437 Brittany Higgins won’t give evidence in Linda Reynolds’ defamation trial - Brittany Higgins has pulled out of giving evidence in the defamation action brought against her by Liberal senator Linda Reynolds in a bombshell that could mark an early end to the proceedings. Ms Higgins’ barrister Rachael Young SC made the shock announcement in the WA Supreme Court on Monday afternoon, indicating Ms Higgins was suffering from poor health, and saying she does not believe she needs to call Ms Higgins to mount a winning defence. “We don’t think we need to call Ms Higgins to satisfy Your Honour to be successful in these proceedings,” Ms Young said. The former Liberal staffer had been scheduled to spend a week in the witness box from August 26, and was due to fly to Perth from her home in France. Ms Young submitted three medical reports containing details of the conditions that she argued backed up why Ms Higgins would no longer give testimony. The exact medical reasons for the withdrawal were not specified in open court, and Ms Young applied for an order to protect the details of the reports from being published. Ms Higgins is pregnant, and has also battled issues with her physical and mental health since she went public with her allegation in 2021 that she was raped inside Senator Reynolds’ parliamentary office. She was also been hospitalised in Perth earlier this year amid a court-ordered mediation session aimed at resolving the defamation matter. Senator Reynolds’ defamation matter is now due to conclude much earlier than anticipated, and could be finished by the beginning of next week.
>>21453311 ‘She’s drafting a plan for you’: Maiden gives evidence on breaking Higgins’ story - The recording of an interview between Brittany Higgins and the journalist who would break the story about her alleged rape in former defence minister Linda Reynolds’ office has laid bare how the young political staffer felt it had rendered her “toxic”. Journalist Samantha Maiden was played portions of the hour-long interview with Higgins after being called to give evidence in Reynolds’ defamation case against the former staffer. Flanked by three lawyers, Maiden told the court she recalled hosting Higgins at her home for an interview over dinner on January 21, 2021, where Higgins would detail an incident she said had made her a “problem” for her then-boss. In the recording, the former staffer told Maiden she felt like Reynolds “hated her” and branded a meeting they had alongside chief of staff Fiona Brown in April 2019 a “box ticking” exercise. That would be the sole meeting the trio had regarding a security breach, during which Higgins claims she was raped by colleague Bruce Lehrmann in Reynolds’ ministerial suite after a night out on March 23, 2019. Higgins’ partner and former press gallery journalist David Sharaz first approached Maiden about the story in January 2021, penning a text message about a “Me Too incident” the Liberal Party had “covered up”. “I am letting this be [Higgins’] decision, but she’s drafting a plan for you. She wants to do it in an election year,” Sharaz wrote. Maiden confirmed Higgins later sent a document referred to as “The Dossier”, but rejected that it went by that name at the time and said that was something that “entered the media lexicon” afterwards. The article would be published on news.com.au on February 15, 2021, with Maiden telling the court the timing was dictated by Higgins’ desire to have the story drop during a parliamentary sitting week.
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273ca3 No.21755538
#37 - Part 74
Brittany Higgins Rape Allegations and Linda Reynolds Defamation Trial - Part 6
>>21459208 David Sharaz told journalist Samantha Maiden a Morrison government payout would make Brittany Higgins look ‘bought off’ - David Sharaz told a senior journalist that his now wife Brittany Higgins would not feel comfortable accepting a payout from the Morrison government as it would make her look “bought off”, as the scale of Mr Sharaz’s involvement in taking Ms Higgins’ rape allegations public was laid bare. Hundreds of messages between Mr Sharaz and news.com.au political editor Samantha Maiden were released by the Western Australian Supreme Court on Wednesday afternoon, after they were tendered as evidence in Linda Reynolds’ defamation action against Ms Higgins. The almost 10,000 words exchanged between the pair shed new light on the role of Mr Sharaz in bringing Ms Higgins’ plight to public attention. Among the cache was a message from Mr Sharaz in January 2021 - before Ms Maiden broke the story – in which he described the Morrison government as being in “panic bribery mode”, and a February 2021 message soon after Ms Maiden’s story was published in which he said “there is ZERO chance she can accept a government payout without looking bought off”. Ms Higgins would later accept a $2.445m settlement payment from the Albanese Labor government in December 2022, and Senator Reynolds - who has accused Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus of freezing her out of that compensation process – has referred the matter to the National Anti-Corruption Commission. Also in February 2021, a week after Maiden was the first to reveal Ms Higgins’ story, Mr Sharaz told the reporter that both he and Ms Higgins were “regretting all of this” because “the government seems to have gotten away with it all, and we’re both unemployed”. Mr Sharaz texted Maiden on February 19: “I can see why PMO hate us. It all looks planned haha”.
>>21459213 Psychiatrist’s ‘vastly different reports’ on Brittany Higgins - A psychiatrist prepared “vastly” different reports about the impact of the government’s handling of Brittany Higgins’ rape claim, just months before she secured a $2.445m commonwealth payout linked to that handling, a court has heard. As it emerged that Linda Reynolds had launched another court action against Ms Higgins -- this time over the trust fund the former political staffer established to administer that commonwealth settlement – the Western Australian Supreme Court on Thursday was told that psychiatrist Dr Julio Clavijo prepared two reports on Ms Higgins in early 2022. Martin Bennett, the lawyer representing Linda Reynolds in both her defamation action against Ms Higgins and her action against Ms Higgins’ trust, has made an application to have Dr Clavijo give evidence on Wednesday of next week after receiving documents overnight. Those documents, Mr Bennett said, showed that Dr Clavijo produced two significantly different reports about the causes of the mental harm suffered by Ms Higgins. The first of those reports, Mr Bennett said, “would disclose no cause of action against Senator Reynolds” over her handling of Ms Higgins’ rape claim. However, only the subsequent report was used in Ms Higgins’ settlement claim against the commonwealth. Mr Bennett said the first of the reports was handed to Ms Higgins’ lawyers on January 31, 2022, and the second was given to them on February 9. Both reports were marked with the same date of January 5, 2022. “The purpose of asking Dr Clavijo to come is to simply ask him to explain why there are two reports signed by him in his capacity as an expert witness, acknowledging the code of conduct for expert witnesses, both dated the same day … It’s just hard to find a sensible explanation,” Mr Bennett said. Mr Bennett said questions needed to be answered as to why the psychiatric reports exist in such “significantly and materially different terms”.
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273ca3 No.21755540
#37 - Part 75
Brittany Higgins Rape Allegations and Linda Reynolds Defamation Trial - Part 7
>>21520912 Brittany Higgins's lawyer delivers rebuke of senator Linda Reynolds testimony in defamation trial - Senator Linda Reynolds was an unreliable witness who failed to answer questions and whose "gratuitous" and "self-serving" testimony was more like advocacy, court defamation proceedings against her former staffer Brittany Higgins have been told. The defamation case, which has been heard over the past month in the WA Supreme Court, revolves around a handful of social media posts made by Ms Higgins last year that Senator Reynolds took offence to. The posts were made four years after the young woman was raped in Senator Reynolds's parliamentary office by her colleague Bruce Lehrmann. While he has always denied raping Ms Higgins, he was found to have done so in civil proceedings in the federal court earlier this year. In a blistering final submission, Ms Higgins's lawyer Rachael Young SC told the court Senator Reynolds did not always believe her former staffer had been raped, contrary to what she had repeatedly claimed. Senator Reynolds expressed ambivalence about the alleged rape to News Corp journalist Samantha Maiden, directly disavowed it in an interview with Channel 7's Spotlight last year, and her lawyer Martin Bennett also cast doubt in his opening address, Ms Young said. This included Mr Bennett's assertion that "the imagination of young people" meant the rape could have happened anywhere in the Senator's office, so she was not to know it happened on her couch, and his description of Ms Higgins "seeking a villain in her fairytale story of political cover-up".
>>21525883 Higgins, Reynolds’ lawyers in tug-of-war over ‘conspiracy’ claim amid shock Credlin connection - Liberal senator Linda Reynolds’ lawyer has accused Brittany Higgins of concocting a plan to weaponise her alleged rape in an “unprovoked attack underpinned by visceral hatred”, while revealing Sky News anchor Peta Credlin finessed one of her powerful public addresses. Higgins’ barrister, Rachael Young, SC, used the final hour of her closing address on Tuesday to savage the conspiracy arm of Reynolds’ Supreme Court defamation claim over several social media posts from July 2023. Young told the court the Reynolds’ evidence had failed to support her claim Higgins and the ex-staffer’s now-husband David Sharaz had devised a malicious plan to attack her by handpicking journalists, curating the timing of the bombshell story and aiding her political opponents. She downplayed the relevance of a five-hour recording before Higgins’ tell-all interview with The Project in 2021 in which Sharaz told journalist Lisa Wilkinson the former staffer’s motivation was for Reynolds to lose her job. Heard in its entirety, Young, said the audio showed Higgins’ real desire was for cultural change and that had been evidenced by her continued advocacy for reform and to support victims of sexual assault.
>>21530690 Reynolds’ lawyer throws spotlight on Higgins, Sharaz texts amid political furore - Liberal senator Linda Reynolds’ lawyer has accused Brittany Higgins of mocking the fact the attack she launched by weaponising her alleged rape had culminated in the former defence minister’s hospitalisation. Reynolds’ lawyer Martin Bennett used the final day of his closing address on Wednesday to take the WA Supreme Court through a series of text messages between Higgins and her now-husband David Sharaz in February 2021. After several days of intense questioning over Higgins’ allegation she had been raped by a colleague in Reynolds’ ministerial office following a night out on March 23, 2019, Reynolds had a public breakdown in the senate. The message thread tendered as evidence in Reynolds’ defamation claim against Higgins over several social media posts showed Sharaz laughing at reports the then-defence minister had delayed her return to work after being hospitalised with a cardiac condition. “Wow,” Higgins said. “She’s done. You don’t take three weeks and come back,” Sharaz replied. The court was later shown a second thread from March 28, 2021, which appeared to show Sharaz and Higgins responding to the impact the political fallout was having on Reynolds and then Prime Minister Scott Morrison. “Suck shit Linda, you awful human,” Sharaz wrote.
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273ca3 No.21755541
#37 - Part 76
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 1
>>21252828 AUKUS: Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility Welcomes ASC Personnel - Twenty-eight ASC Pty Ltd [formerly known as the Australian Submarine Corporation] personnel began training at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility (PHNSY & IMF) in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, as part of the Australia, United Kingdom and United States (AUKUS) enhanced trilateral security partnership this week. The ASC employees will be trained and certified on various aspects of submarine maintenance to support the AUKUS Pillar 1 program that is supporting Australia’s acquisition of sovereign conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines. “After months of preparation, we are excited to welcome the Australian maintainers into our shipyard family. The intensive training process they will undergo over the next few years will lay the groundwork for them to ultimately lead and execute their own maintenance operations,” said Capt. Ryan McCrillis, commanding officer of PHNSY & IMF.
>>21273950 AUKUS to withstand winds of political change: navy chiefs - The US Navy's highest-ranking officer has reaffirmed her nation's commitment to AUKUS, regardless of who wins the White House. As she visited the HMAS Stirling naval base alongside her Australian and UK counterparts for the first time, Admiral Lisa Franchetti said the US would be there for its partners when it matters, where it matters. As part of the AUKUS plan, US and UK nuclear submarines will rotate through HMAS Stirling, located on Garden Island south of Perth, before the site houses Australia's own nuclear submarine fleet. But growing expectations of a second Donald Trump presidency and delays in the US submarine supply chain have fuelled concerns that Australia's military partners may not follow through on their commitment. But Admiral Franchetti hosed down those concerns. "Regardless of who is in our political parties and whatever is happening in that space, it's allies and partners that are always our priority," she told reporters on Tuesday. "I am committed to delivering our part of AUKUS and really working with my teammates every day to make sure that … we meet those key milestones to deliver AUKUS for our nations today, tomorrow and far into the future. I know that all of our partners know that we are going to be there for them when it matters, where it matters, and that's what we deliver every single day."
>>21273969 Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy downplays Rockingham residents' concerns of AUKUS nuclear waste storage - The Albanese government has sought to dispel community concerns surrounding a planned radioactive waste management site off Perth's coast for AUKUS nuclear submarines. It comes as the chiefs of navy of the three AUKUS countries - the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia - met for the first time at the HMAS Stirling naval base on Garden Island, 50 kilometres south of the Perth CBD and about five kilometres off the coast of Rockingham, where the submarines will dock and be serviced. The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA), the nuclear safety watchdog, has issued a licence to the Australian Submarine Agency to prepare a site on HMAS Stirling for a low-level radiation waste management and maintenance site, to be known as the "Controlled Industrial Facility". It will be a workshop for servicing and repairing the nuclear submarines and will temporarily store the waste. Some Rockingham residents have expressed alarm at the prospect of a radiation site just off the coast. Among the submissions to ARPANSA on the facility, concerns were expressed about residents' safety and the potential for radiation leaks. But federal Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy has sought to ease those fears, saying there was no risk to the community. "This is akin to what occurs in 100 other sites around the country, anywhere that has a hospital that deals with medical imagery that involves radioactive isotopes has exactly the same level of waste," Mr Conroy said. "This is completely safe, and has been approved by the regulatory authorities."
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273ca3 No.21755545
#37 - Part 77
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 2
>>21281355 Australia confident Trump will back AUKUS sub deal after talks with his camp - Australia Defence Minister Richard Marles said on Wednesday Canberra is confident a re-elected Donald Trump will back the AUKUS security alliance and associated nuclear submarine sales after talks with his camp. The possibility of a Trump victory in the November presidential election has U.S. allies around the world scrambling to divine and prepare for his diplomatic agenda, including his take on the A$368 billion ($243 billion) AUKUS deal to help Australia acquire nuclear powered submarines and deter China in the Pacific. The deal includes the sale of three to five U.S. nuclear-powered Virginia Class submarines in the 2030s, a time when the U.S. fleet will shrink to a historic low. Some fear Trump's America First stance could hew to voices in Congress who want the submarines reserved for the U.S. navy instead. But conversations with the Trump camp had given Australia confidence he would honour the deal should he win the presidency again, Marles said in an interview on Sky News. "Every engagement we've had with the Trump camp in the normal process of speaking with people on both sides of politics in America, there is support for what is playing out in relation to AUKUS," he said. "We do have a sense of confidence, irrespective of what occurs in November of this year, we can firstly look forward to the alliance being as strong as ever and secondly that the equities that we have in that alliance, AUKUS front and center, will be maintained"
>>21289243 Video: UK First Sea Lord on AUKUS, Royal Navy in Asia Pacific and CSG deployments - Interview with the UK Royal Navy's most senior sailor, First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Ben Key, on AUKUS, OPVs in Asia Pacific and Carrier Strike Group (CSG) deployments to the Indo Pacific. Recorded in July 2024 at the Indian-Ocean Defence and Security (IODS) conference held in Perth, Australia. Includes the importance of AUKUS for the Royal Navy and progress made to date on AUKUS Pillar 1.
>>21303420 Federal government signs $2.2 billion deal to extend life of Collins submarines into the 2030s - The federal government has signed a $2.2 billion, four-year deal with the national submarine builder ASC to ensure the navy's existing Collins submarines are still functioning into the 2030s. The contract is part of a broader $4 to $5 billion spend on ensuring the serviceability of the Collins submarines, after half of the fleet was found to have significant corrosion damage earlier this year. HMAS Sheehan, HMAS Farncomb and HMAS Rankin have all been ruled out of action for the rest of 2024, meaning the navy has only three submarines at its disposal. Minister for Defence Industry Pat Conroy said on Saturday the "sustainment contract" with ASC, formerly Australian Submarine Corporation, represented an investment to "maintain our sovereign capability". Mr Conroy said the contract would enable 700 new jobs in Osborne, South Australia, 400 in Henderson in Western Australia, and would help to grow the workforce needed for the planned AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines. Australia is hoping to continue operating the Collins Class submarines well into the 2030s, when they're gradually replaced by second-hand nuclear-powered Virginia class boats purchased from the US under the AUKUS partnership.
>>21326219 First Royal Australian Navy Sailors Graduate From Basic Enlisted Submarine School - In a first for the AUKUS trilateral enhanced security partnership, a group of Royal Australian Navy (RAN) enlisted sailors has graduated from the United States Navy's Basic Enlisted Submarine School (BESS). The sailors all graduated with distinction with one of them being named the Honor Graduate for scoring a 100% in the class. The graduation marks a significant milestone in the development of a conventionally armed, nuclear-powered attack submarine (SSN) fleet for Australia under the AUKUS Pillar 1 Optimal Pathway. “It’s another exciting step to see our Royal Australian Navy sailors graduate from this unique and challenging training. I am incredibly proud of their exceptional dedication and effort to reach this significant milestone,” said Chief of the Royal Australian Navy Vice Adm. Mark Hammond. “I’d like to thank our long-standing partners and friends in the U.S. Navy for providing the training to assist the Royal Australian Navy to operate, maintain and support Australia’s future nuclear-powered submarine capability.”
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273ca3 No.21755546
#37 - Part 78
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 3
>>21348313 Powerful Republicans back AUKUS under Trump - Australia’s sovereignty of nuclear-powered submarines will be guaranteed under the AUKUS defence pact if Donald Trump wins back the White House at the November election, two top Republican senators said. Ranking members of the powerful US Senate Foreign Relations and Intelligence committees Jim Risch and Marco Rubio said Australia would still have control of the submarines by the early 2030s even if America’s own production targets were not met. The US Navy submarine building program is substantially stretched, prompting concerns about shipbuilding delays and budget cutbacks. It has also raised concerns about whether the US would seek to keep control of vessels sold to Australia and determine where they are positioned to cover any shortfalls in its own fleet. “The sovereignty issue has been resolved. Australia is going to have submarines to use as submarines, the US has got submarines to use as submarines, and the sovereignty over the submarine is not an issue,” Senator Risch told The Australian Financial Review. The comments come as the US secretary of defence and the secretary of state are set this week to meet with their Australian counterparts for annual talks in Annapolis. The ministers are expected to question delays over the US relaxing defence export controls to foster defence trade under the AUKUS pact between the US, Australia and Britain. Senator Risch, a top Republican whose endorsement of Trump before the Iowa caucus in January helped him regain control of the Republican Party, said he did not think Trump would renege on the AUKUS arrangements, most of which have now passed Congress as law. “I don’t think that’s going to be an issue whichever administration it will be,” Senator Risch said. “I’d be careful until when the election is over before you start writing stories about who’s going to do what.”
>>21372114 Australia makes undisclosed 'political commitments' in new AUKUS deal on transfer of naval nuclear technology - Undisclosed "political commitments" have been made between the Albanese government and its AUKUS partners in a new agreement for the transfer of naval nuclear technology to Australia, which critics warn is likely to also allow radioactive waste to be dumped here. The White House confirmed Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States had reached another significant "AUKUS milestone" that set up further trilateral cooperation that would be essential for this country to build, operate and maintain nuclear-powered submarines. Under the AUKUS "optimal pathway" unveiled in San Diego last year, Australia will spend up to $368 billion over the next three decades to first purchase second-hand Virginia-class submarines and then develop a new SSN-AUKUS fleet using British technology. In a letter to the Australian House of Representatives speaker and the president of the Senate, US President Joe Biden urged Congress to give the revamped AUKUS agreement "favourable consideration". Mr Biden's letter explains that the new agreement would permit the continued communication and exchange of Naval Nuclear Propulsion Information (NNPI), including certain Restricted Data (RD), only previously shared between the US and UK. "[It] would also expand on the cooperation between the governments by enabling the transfer of naval nuclear propulsion plants of conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarines, including component parts and spare parts thereof, and other related equipment," the letter reads. "I have determined that Australia and the United Kingdom, by participating with the United States pursuant to international arrangements, are making substantial and material contributions to our mutual defence and security."
>>21379709 Video: Former Australian prime minister Paul Keating attacks senior members of Albanese government over AUKUS agreement and foreign policy - Former Australian prime minister Paul Keating has taken aim at Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Defence Minister Richard Marles, accusing them of abandoning traditional party values. Speaking to 7.30 in an interview about the AUKUS agreement, Mr Keating accused the government of being a "sellout" on its defence policy, while defending Chinese interests in Taiwan. "In defence and foreign policy, this is not a Labor government," Mr Keating said. "This is a party which has adopted the defence and foreign policies of the Morrison Liberal government. This is a sellout." The former Labor leader had been asked about the AUKUS agreement between the US, UK and Australia, which he has been a constant critic of since its announcement. Mr Keating then called it "the worst deal in all history".
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273ca3 No.21755549
#37 - Part 79
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 4
>>21379731 Aukus pact will turn Australia into ‘51st state’ of the US, Paul Keating says - Australia’s participation in the Aukus defence pact risks handing military control of the country to Washington and becoming the “51st state of the United States”, according to former prime minister Paul Keating. Speaking on ABC’s 7.30 on Thursday night, Keating argued that Australia had made itself a target for aggression by joining the military alliance with the US and the UK in implicit opposition to China’s growing power in the Asia Pacific region. Australia had no quarrel with China, Keating said, and concerns about China’s designs on Taiwan were not justified because the island was “Chinese real estate”. “Taiwan is not a vital Australian interest,” he said, adding that the American attitude to Taiwan was like China deciding that Tasmania needed help to secede from Australia. “What Aukus is about in the American mind is turning [Australia into suckers], locking us up for 40 years with American bases all around … not Australian bases,” he said. “So Aukus is really about, in American terms, the military control of Australia. I mean, what’s happened … is likely to turn Australia into the 51st state of the United States.”
>>21379780 Anthony Albanese brushes off criticism by former Labor PM Paul Keating - Paul Keating has taken another swipe at the Albanese Labor government’s national security policies, saying it should be “celebrating the rise” of China instead of turning Australia into “a US protectorate”. The former prime minister started his brutal assessment of Labor’s defence policy in an interview on ABC’s 7.30 on Thursday, where he said the government’s embrace of the AUKUS nuclear submarines deal was “likely to turn Australia into the 51st state of the United States”. “This is a party which has adopted the defence and foreign policies of the Morrison Liberal government. This is a sellout,” Mr Keating said. But Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was unperturbed by the views of the 80-year-old Mr Keating, who was voted out of office 28 years ago. “Paul was a great prime minister - that ended in 1996,” Mr Albanese told reporters in Perth on Friday. “Paul has his views. They’re well known. The world has changed between 1996 and 2024. My government is doing what we need to do today, and everyone will get a go here.” Mr Keating, who has been vocal in his criticism of the tripartite deal between Australia, the UK and US since it was announced in 2021 when Scott Morrison was prime minister, took another shot at Mr Albanese late on Friday. Mr Keating said Mr Albanese had put Australia on a path to becoming a “US protectorate” in Asia when the nation should be “celebrating the rise of China”. “The fact is, the Albanese government is returning to the Anglosphere to garner Australia’s security,” Mr Keating said in a statement. “In effect, the Albanese government is doing the very thing that all my life, I had trenchantly opposed, and in the post-War years, Labor had opposed. And that is, finding our security from Asia rather than our security in Asia.”
>>21385621 Defence Minister Richard Marles insists AUKUS milestone won't force Australia to accept foreign nuclear waste - The defence minister insists Thursday's milestone agreement on AUKUS does not oblige Australia to take nuclear waste from the United States or the United Kingdom. Australia and the US made significant progress on Thursday towards acquiring nuclear-powered submarines under the AUKUS agreement, in a deal that included undisclosed "political commitments" to Australia's partner nations, the US and the UK. Critics of the nuclear submarine plan claimed that the deal would eventually oblige Australia to take high-level radioactive waste from the US and UK. Defence Minister Richard Marles insisted on Friday morning that was not the case. "Nuclear waste won't end up in Australia, other than the waste that is generated by Australia," Mr Marles said. "That is the agreement that we reached with the UK and the US back in March of last year, and so all this is doing is providing for the legal underpinning of that." Mr Marles said there would be "no circumstance" where Australia takes waste from any other country.
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273ca3 No.21755552
#37 - Part 80
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 5
>>21396367 US, UK could pull out of AUKUS with year’s notice - The US or the UK could pull out of the AUKUS submarine deal with just a year’s notice if either nation decides the pact weakens their own nuclear submarine programs, new documents reveal. An updated AUKUS agreement and a political “understanding” between the countries, tabled in parliament on Monday, establish a 50-year legal framework for the transfer of nuclear materials and equipment to Australia. The understanding says the US and UK “should not unreasonably withhold” nuclear information or equipment from Australia. But it includes an escape clause for either country if they decide the AUKUS deal adversely affects their ability to “meet their respective military requirements and to not degrade their respective naval nuclear propulsion programs”. “A government may discontinue its participation in this understanding earlier and, in such case, should provide one year’s written notice to the other governments of its intent to do so,” the understanding says. Under the new agreement, the terms for the transfer of nuclear material and equipment will be “mutually decided in writing” at a later point in time. The documents also reveal Australia will indemnify the US and UK “against any liability, loss, costs, damage, or injury” arising from nuclear risks connected to the $368bn program. The agreement - which expires in 2075 - confirms Australia will be responsible for all management, storage and disposal of spent fuel and nuclear waste, including radioactive materials from maintenance of US and UK submarines in Australia.
>>21422049 Australia, New Zealand vow joint response to cyber threats under ANZUS - Australia and New Zealand have moved to modernise the nations’ defence alliance, declaring a major cyber strike on either country would be treated as an armed attack under the ANZUS Treaty, requiring a joint response “to meet the common danger”. In annual leaders’ talks on Friday, Anthony Albanese and New Zealand counterpart Christopher Luxon also pledged to purchase the same military hardware whenever possible, opening the prospect that Wellington could buy Australian-built general purpose frigates. Amid growing concerns over the threat of crippling cyber strikes, the leaders confirmed such attacks would trigger the nations’ treaty obligations under ANZUS. “Warfare has changed and cyber warfare is a large part,” Mr Luxon said. “We are making sure (the alliance) is modern and reflective of the environment we operate in.” The change will ensure New Zealand - which has no other formal allies - has access to the Australian Signals Directorate’s world-leading offensive and defensive cyber capabilities if its networks suffer a major attack.
>>21422173 NT bases key for US: Deterrence starts at the Top (End) - Australia has become “the central base of operations” for America’s military to deter Chinese aggression in the Indo-Pacific, the chair of the US House of Representatives’ powerful foreign affairs committee has declared. Republican congressman Michael McCaul told The Weekend Australian a recently announced boost to US bomber deployments to Australia’s Top End bases would enable America to project power across the region to prevent future wars. Mr McCaul also hailed an AUKUS breakthrough on Friday allowing licence-free technology transfers. He declared the partnership vital to convince Chinese President Xi Jinping that an invasion of Taiwan was a “not a good idea”. He said the security pact would survive a Trump presidency, arguing that the AUKUS concept predated the Biden administration and had “very, very strong bipartisan support”. Speaking in Sydney after a 10-day visit, Mr McCaul said Australia’s geography offered key advantages to the US as it sought to deter Chinese aggression. “It is the central base of operations in the Indo-Pacific to counter the threat,” he said. “If you really look at the concentric circles emanating from Darwin - that is the base of operations, and the rotating (US) forces there are providing the projection of power and force that we’re seeing in the region.”
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273ca3 No.21755553
#37 - Part 81
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 6
>>21466649 Video: USS Hawaii (SSN 776) joins USS Emory S. Land (AS 39) in First-ever Nuclear-Powered Attack Submarine Maintenance Availability in Australia - In a historic first, Australian personnel will work alongside with their U.S. counterparts to conduct maintenance on USS Hawaii (SSN 776) in Australia as part of a Submarine Tendered Maintenance Period (STMP) at HMAS Stirling in Western Australia. The STMP marks a significant step forward in the Australia, United Kingdom, United States (AUKUS) Pillar 1 program, which is paving the way for Australia to acquire a sovereign, conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarine capability. Over the coming weeks, submarine tender USS Emory S. Land (AS 39) will execute several maintenance activities aboard Hawaii. This is the first time Australians have participated in a U.S. submarine maintenance period in Australia. More than 30 Australian personnel who participated in a knowledge exchange period that began in January 2024 aboard Emory S. Land will execute the majority of planned maintenance work with U.S. support and oversight. The Emory S. Land crew will execute planned and emergent maintenance activities including the removal and reinstallation of an antenna located in Hawaii’s sail, divers visually inspecting the underwater towed array and torpedo tube muzzles, and simulating the removal and installation of a trim pump, to include full rigging and preparations. “This is an important moment for the Royal Australian Navy,” said Rear Adm. Matthew Buckley, the Australian Submarine Agency’s Head of Submarine Capability. “For the first time, we have Australians who were trained and certified aboard Emory S. Land using their skills on a U.S. SSN in Australian waters.”
>>21507255 Submarine chiefs sketch out scale of AUKUS challenge, but say we are on target - The head of the US Navy’s nuclear propulsion program says it will be “challenging” for America to meet its production targets to provide Australia with between three and five nuclear-powered Virginia class submarines, but that “we are on the path to achieve this.” Admiral William Houston, the former US submarine forces commander, provided an assurance on Friday that the US was hiring 40,000 workers and investing more than $10bn in its submarine industrial base to ensure it was in a position to provide Australia with nuclear-powered submarines from 2032. “We are fully committed to the sale and transfer of the submarines we have discussed to Australia,” he said. “Of course, it’s conditions based - that you are ready to maintain them, which you are well on track to do, and to meet the safety and stewardship requirements.” Admiral Houston was speaking alongside Australian Submarine Agency director-general, Vice Admiral Jonathan Mead, and Royal Navy second sea lord, Vice Admiral Martin Connell, at HMAS Stirling near Perth. The submarine chiefs appeared together to mark the first time that a Virginia class submarine, the USS Hawaii, had received maintenance work outside of a US territory - a key milestone in Australia achieving an enduring nuclear-powered submarine capability. More than 30 Australian Navy personnel, embedded since January on the USS Emory S. Land, a submarine tender, have been working alongside US counterparts to provide the maintenance work. Vice Admiral Mead said this was an “unprecedented” development that would help ensure, from 2027, that the nation was ready to accommodate a rotational presence at HMAS Stirling of one UK and up to four US nuclear-powered submarines and - beyond that - Australia’s own future fleet of nuclear-powered submarines.
>>21520904 PM dodges China question, spruiks ‘jobs for subs’ - Anthony Albanese has dodged a question about the purpose of AUKUS while spruiking a new “jobs for subs” initiative in Western Australia. Speaking to reporters from HMAS Stirling, an island naval base just off Perth, the Prime Minister was asked on Monday if the trilateral defence pact was designed to fight a third world war, possibly against China, or prevent one. “AUKUS is designed to serve Australia’s national interest, working with the United States and the United Kingdom, which is, of course, our traditional allies,” he said. “This is about our own national interest.” Earlier, the federal government unveiled its Nuclear-Powered Submarine Graduate, Apprenticeship and Traineeship Initiative. The program aims to help shipbuilder ASC Pty Ltd recruit 200 entry-level workers over the next two years to build up the workforce needed to maintain the AUKUS fleet. The jobs will be mostly based in Western Australia, where up to five nuclear-powered submarines are to be docked at HMAS Stirling. The roles will be wide ranging, offering opportunities in fabrication, machining, engineering, project management, supply chain and operations qualifications.
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273ca3 No.21755555
#37 - Part 82
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 7
>>21520908 Video: Entry-level workers set to support AUKUS submarines - Graduates, apprentices and trainees will be recruited to maintain Australia's future nuclear-powered submarine fleet in an attempt to shore up the necessary workforce. The federal government's initiative will allow submarine builder ASC Pty Ltd to hire about 200 entry-level workers over the next two years. As part of Australia's trilateral agreement with the US and UK - known as AUKUS - up to five nuclear-powered submarines will have a presence at the HMAS Stirling naval base just south of Perth from as early as 2027. The new roles will help sustain and maintain the fleet. "We want to keep Australians safe," Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said. "That's why WA will play a key role in building AUKUS. This will help promote peace and deterrence in the region and support local jobs." The new jobs will span fabrication, machining, engineering, project management, supply chain and operations, and most will be based in WA. About $8 billion will be spent on wharf upgrades, training facilities and supporting infrastructure at the WA naval base. The government has also committed to funding more than 4000 Commonwealth-supported places in science, technology, engineering and mathematics bachelor degrees across 16 universities to nurture the future submarine workforce. Across the nation, the submarine program is expected to create about 20,000 jobs over the next three decades.
>>21525998 US navy boss Tom Mancinelli says Australia will retain sovereignty over nuclear subs - The US Acting Under-Secretary of the Navy, Tom Mancinelli, has said the Indo-Pacific is America’s “priority theatre” and that the US is “here to stay” on a trip to Western Australia in support of the AUKUS security partnership. Mr Mancinelli told The Australian that US national defence strategy had assessed the People’s Republic of China as being its long-term “pacing challenge” and the US Navy was “laser focused” on the Pacific region. Mr Mancinelli said that the US would “benefit tremendously” from the AUKUS security partnership, including “what it means for American force posture, for what it means for our own defence industrial base”. He said maintenance work being conducted at HMAS Stirling near Perth on the USS Hawaii -- a Virginia-class submarine – was the “hallmark event of AUKUS for 2024”. America was looking towards achieving a “steady drumbeat of US sailors and attack submarines coming here to HMAS Stirling,” he said. “I believe the goal we set for ourselves is two per year, beginning in 2025, to make sure that the sailors of the Australian navy team here at HMAS Stirling are improving their skills and know-how to the point where the Submarine Rotational Force-West is a reality by the end of 2027.” SRF-West is aimed at accommodating a rotational presence at HMAS Stirling from 2027 of one British and up to four US nuclear-powered submarines and - beyond that - Australia’s own future fleet of nuclear-powered submarines.
>>21556604 White House pushes for AUKUS to move to ‘pillar two’ weapons focus - The US is pushing for the AUKUS partnership to launch some world-leading new military technology projects before Joe Biden’s presidency ends, amid signs of growing impatience with the initiative. The US National Security Adviser, Jake Sullivan, revealed in an interview at the White House that he wanted to see “two or three signature projects launched and under way by the time the administration finishes” on January 20. While he expressed satisfaction with progress on so-called pillar one of AUKUS, the submarine program, his timeline for pillar two’s cutting-edge tech scheme puts new pressure on the three countries’ military and scientific agencies to deliver in the next five months. It is three years ago this month that the leaders of the US, UK and Australia announced the joint technology initiative. In the meantime, China has extended its advantage in critical technologies, according to a report last week by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
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273ca3 No.21755559
#37 - Part 83
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 8
>>21607503 Gareth Evans: Why AUKUS is not in Australia’s interests - a response by Labor’s elders - "Paul Keating, Bob Carr and I seem to have jangled a few security establishment nerves with our critique of the AUKUS submarine deal as having profound negative implications for Australia’s security and sovereignty. Our former colleagues and advisers, Kim Beazley, Paul Dibb, Mike Pezzullo and the US Studies Centre’s Peter Dean, were in full war-cry mode in The Weekend Australian. They have now been joined by the Australian National University’s John Blaxland, currently seconded to the Australian embassy in Washington. Our critique much of which has either been misrepresented or ignored in these responses – has five basic elements. One, there is zero certainty of the timely delivery of the eight AUKUS boats. Both the US and UK have explicit opt-out rights. Even in the wholly unlikely event that everything falls smoothly into place, we will be waiting 40 years for the last boat to arrive, posing real capability gap issues. Two, even acknowledging the superior capability of nuclear-propelled submarines, making large assumptions about their continued detectability advantages, and accepting for the sake of argument the utility of “deterrence at a distance”, how useful will this eight-boat fleet actually be for Australia’s defence? When, given usual operating constraints, only two of them will be deployable across our vast maritime environment at any one time. Third, even assuming the eye-watering cost of these boats is fiscally manageable, it will make much harder the acquisition of other capabilities - in particular, state-of-the-art missiles, aircraft and drones – arguably even more important than submarines for any kind of self-reliant capacity in meeting an invasion threat, were one ever to arise. Four, the price now being demanded by the US for giving us access to its nuclear propulsion technology - achieving what is now described as fleet “interchangeability”, not just “interoperability” – has become indefensibly high. The conversion of Stirling into a major base for a US Indian Ocean fleet will mean Perth now joining Pine Gap and the North West Cape, and probably the B-52 base Tindal, as a potential nuclear target. It is hard to conceive of Australia ever being a target of any kind of Chinese military attack, short of our being sucked into fighting alongside the US in a war not of our making, and manifestly not in our national interest. But that prospect is now very real, given the abdication of Australian sovereign agency inherent in the AUKUS decision as it has evolved. Five, the purchase price we are now paying, for all its exorbitance, will never be enough to guarantee the absolute protective insurance that supporters of AUKUS think they are buying. ANZUS, it cannot be said too often, does not bind the US to defend Australia, even in the event of existential attack. We can rely on military support if the US sees it in its own national interest to offer it, but not otherwise." - Gareth Evans was Australia’s foreign minister from 1988-96 - theaustralian.com.au
>>21607516 China says AUKUS is ‘driven by Cold War thinking’. Here are 3 reasons it is so threatened by the pact - Ever since AUKUS’ public announcement three years ago, China has been staunchly opposed to the partnership. Beijing has blasted AUKUS diplomatically and mounted a concerted campaign to challenge its legality. China has said AUKUS is “driven by Cold War thinking,” “fuelling military confrontation,” and creating “additional nuclear proliferation risks”. The aim of AUKUS is for the Australian navy to acquire nuclear-powered submarines, with Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States also collaborating on other advanced military technologies. As AUKUS sceptics have argued, it’s entirely possible Australia will never get its planned nuclear-powered attack submarines. Any number of factors --- from the mercurial whims of a future US president to American shipbuilding constraints — could see the partnership fall over. However, if the plan succeeds, even in a modified form, it’ll pose a serious military challenge to China. As Kevin Rudd, the former Australian prime minister and current ambassador to the US, said in recent days, it’s probably already complicating China’s future geopolitical calculations. Here are three reasons why China finds the pact so threatening.
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273ca3 No.21755561
#37 - Part 84
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 9
>>21621205 AUKUS open to military technology co-operation with key allies - Former prime minister Scott Morrison has welcomed the potential inclusion of allies Canada, New Zealand, and South Korea to AUKUS Pillar II to share military technology, but experts are warning that broadening the defence alliance could undermine its relevance. Mr Morrison, who negotiated the establishment of the tripartite pact with the US and Britain when he was prime minister, said it was a “good and welcome move, so long as AUKUS remains a highest common denominator partnership and harmonising and collaborating among founding AUKUS jurisdictions retains priority”. Anthony Albanese, Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and US President Joe Biden on Wednesday said “AUKUS partners and Japan are exploring opportunities to improve interoperability of their maritime autonomous systems as an initial area of co-operation” in a development revealed in The Australian on Tuesday evening. “Recognising these countries’ close bilateral defence partnerships with each member of AUKUS, we are consulting with Canada, New Zealand and the Republic of Korea to identify possibilities for collaboration on advanced capabilities under AUKUS Pillar II,” the leaders said in a statement. Strategic Analysis Australia director Peter Jennings said, however, it was best for AUKUS to remain exclusive to Australia, Britain and the US to keep its “relevance and force”. “I think the most effective way to kill AUKUS would be to broaden it out too widely,” he said. “With maybe the odd exception if there’s technology that’s worth thinking about.”
>>21660461 New AUKUS treaty with UK to keep $368bn nuclear-powered submarine program on track - Australia and the United Kingdom are to negotiate a separate bilateral treaty “at pace and with high priority” to keep the $368bn AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine program on target. The new treaty, which will be negotiated in confidence, is supplementary to the broader 2021 trilateral AUKUS deal between the UK, Australia and the United States. Ministers believe having a new strategic and operational bilateral framework between just Australia and the United Kingdom will help the two countries focus on the core elements of the submarine, and will accelerate the design, build and delivery of SSN-AUKUS. Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles met UK Defence Secretary John Healey, and the US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin in central London on Thursday. Mr Marles was expected to discuss the skilling up of local workers for submarine manufacture with his AUKUS partners. Last year it was announced SSN-AUKUS would be based on the United Kingdom’s next-generation design, using nuclear power technology from the United States and other new technologies from all three nations. The timetable has been for Australia and the UK to begin building SSN-AUKUS in local shipyards “within this decade” and that SSN-AUKUS will be the submarines used by the UK at the end of the 2030s and Australia will use them by early 2040s.
>>21666169 Video: Richard Marles meets with US, UK counterparts to discuss AUKUS deal progress - The UK will train hundreds of Australians to operate nuclear powered submarines as part of a new bilateral treaty, to try to keep the $368 billion AUKUS security pact on track. - ABC News (Australia)
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273ca3 No.21755562
#37 - Part 85
AUKUS Security Pact and Nuclear Submarine Program - Part 10
>>21666281 ‘Utterly untrue’: Keating berates Marles over AUKUS defence - Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles has slapped down former prime minister Paul Keating and other senior Labor critics of the AUKUS defence pact, as the government looks to rein in the controversy before it threatens to sap public support. Standing beside the American and British defence secretaries at a press conference in London, Mr Marles said AUKUS was now rolling inexorably forward, and had the strong backing of the Australian public. US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin also weighed in: he rejected one of Mr Keating’s central claims, telling journalists that AUKUS would not compromise Australia’s ability to make sovereign defence and security decisions in its own national interest. Mr Keating ridiculed these comments, saying Australia would only remain in charge of its own security until the prime minister and defence minister took a call from the US president, seeking to mobilise Australia’s submarines. “Wherein, both would click their heels in alacrity and agreement. The rest of us would read about it in some self-serving media statement afterwards,” Mr Keating said in a statement. The $368 billion plan to bring nuclear-powered submarines to Australia has come under increasing fire from Labor grandees, including Mr Keating and former foreign ministers Bob Carr and Gareth Evans. They have argued it will be too expensive and potentially undeliverable and will yoke Australia into military and geopolitical dependency on the US. The debate has not frayed the bipartisan support for AUKUS in Canberra, but could spur concern among observers in Britain and the US about the solidity of Australia’s commitment.
>>21666329 Keating, Marles exchange fire over pact to buy US submarines - Former prime minister Paul Keating has berated the Labor government for claiming the AUKUS alliance will follow a similar path to his defence policy from three decades ago, escalating his attacks by calling the defence pact an act of “sublimation” to America. Keating accused Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles of misleading Australians over the plan to build a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines, arguing the outcome would sacrifice Australian sovereignty. His blistering comments about “flogging a dead seahorse” came after Marles met his United States and United Kingdom counterparts in London on Thursday and recommitted to the plan to buy several US submarines before building a new fleet of AUKUS submarines. “The fact is, the Albanese government, through this program and the ambitious basing of American military forces on Australian soil is doing nothing other than abrogating Australia’s sovereign right to command its own continent and its military forces,” Keating said. Marles launched a passionate defence of the strategy by vowing there was no turning back on the $368 billion nuclear submarines deal, speaking alongside UK Defence Secretary John Healey and US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin at Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich on Thursday. “We have to have a top-of-the-line, first-rate, long-range submarine capability,” Marles said, drawing a parallel between the current plan and the Keating government’s decision to build the Collins-class submarine in the 1990s. “So to be able to have the same capability in the future that in Mr Keating’s time he was planning for with the Collins-class submarines, we must walk down this path.”
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273ca3 No.21755563
#37 - Part 86
Australia / China Tensions - Page 1
>>21258031 Alarm over espionage, organised crime risk posed by Chinese cameras - Hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of cameras manufactured by companies linked to grave human rights abuses by the Chinese government are monitoring public spaces all over Australia, and potentially providing backdoor access to footage to other bad actors. The cameras, manufactured by Chinese Communist Party-linked companies Hikvision and Dahua, were removed last year from government departments amid spyware concerns, but they remain prolific in countless other public settings. Leading global security expert Conor Healy, who visited Australia last week, said concerns regarding the capacity for the cameras to enable covert access to an array of bad actors, including pedophiles and organised criminal networks, were at least as worrying as the companies’ links to Chinese human rights abuses. “Claims of thousands or tens of thousands of Dahua and Hikvision surveillance devices in Australia are serious underestimations,” said Mr Healy, director of government research at US-based independent security and surveillance industry research group IPVM. “The true number is at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, given their significant market share in Australia. Australians can easily see this for themselves by walking a block of any city street, and that is without considering the numerous other brands these devices masquerade as.”
>>21281383 Navy chief Vice Admiral Mark Hammond say AUKUS doesn’t mean war with China over Taiwan is inevitable - The AUKUS agreement will not automatically drag Australia into a war to defend Taiwan, the ADF’s navy boss has declared. Chief of navy Vice Admiral Mark Hammond spoke on stage with his counterparts US Admiral Lisa Franchetti and UK Admiral Sir Ben Key — at day one of the Indian Ocean Conference on Wednesday. The three admirals represent each nation in the trilateral AUKUS agreement that will see rotations of nuclear-powered submarines visit Australia from 2027. Australia will acquire the vessels in the 2030s. The agreement is largely seen as an effort to deter and contain an increasingly belligerent China, whose leadership has a long-held goal of annexing Taiwan. When asked if AUKUS meant Australia would inevitably be “dragged” into a conflict over the island-nation, Admiral Hammond replied sharply: “No.” “Any participation by Australian Defence Force in any conflict, anywhere on the planet is a sovereign decision of the Australian Government, so no,” he continued.
>>21296756 Video: US military, seeking strategic advantages, builds up Australia's northern bases amid China tensions - The U.S. military is building infrastructure in northern Australia to help it project power into the South China Sea if a crisis with China erupts, a Reuters review of documents and interviews with U.S. and Australian defence officials show. Closer to the Philippines than Australia's east coast capital, Canberra, Darwin has long been a garrison town for the Australian Defence Force and a U.S. Marine Rotational Force that spends six months of each year there. A few hundred kilometres to the south, RAAF Base Tindal is home to key elements of Australia's airpower, and was a temporary base for U.S. jets in recent exercises. As northern Australia re-emerges as a strategically vital Indo-Pacific location amid rising tensions with China, the United States has quietly begun constructing hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of facilities there to support B-52 bombers, F-22 stealth fighters, and refuelling and transport aircraft - all part of a larger effort to distribute U.S. forces around the region and make them less vulnerable. "When you look at the positioning of northern Australia, particularly Darwin, in relation to the region … it's always good to have multiple options in where you would want to put your forces in any type of crisis," said Colonel Brian Mulvihill, commanding officer of the U.S. Marine Rotational Force.
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273ca3 No.21755564
#37 - Part 87
Australia / China Tensions - Page 2
>>21314074 Quad meets in Japan as Beijing pressures politicians not to attend Taiwan summit - Foreign Minister Penny Wong has announced at the Quad Foreign Ministers meeting that Australia will contribute $18 million for a Canberra-based "Cable Connectivity and Resilience Centre" for countries in the Indo-Pacific region which are rolling out new cable networks. It comes as politicians from at least six countries say Chinese diplomats are pressuring them not to attend a China-focused summit in Taiwan, in what they describe as efforts to isolate the self-governed island. Representatives from Bolivia, Colombia, Slovakia, North Macedonia, Bosnia and one other Asian country that declined to be named say they are getting texts, calls and urgent requests for meetings that would conflict with their plans to travel to Taipei, the island's capital. The IPAC summit in Taiwan begins on Monday and is being held by the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, or IPAC, a group of hundreds of politicians from 35 countries concerned about how democracies approach Beijing. The summit was held as Foreign Minister Penny Wong meets her US, Japanese and Indian counterparts in Tokyo for the Quad Foreign Ministers meeting. All four nations say the grouping is focused on building a "positive" agenda for the region, but the Quad has also devoted considerable time and effort to pushing back against China's growing financial and strategic clout in Asia.
>>21332391 Norther Territory base upgrades will ‘help protect’ US B-52s in a conflict - The US’s top air force commander in the Pacific says upgrades to Australia’s Tindal air base to accommodate B-52 bombers will give American forces the flexibility they need in a future conflict. General Kevin Schneider, the Commander of the US’s Pacific Air Forces, said he was pleased with the pace of jointly funded base upgrades at Tindal and Darwin to support joint air operations, including a new runway and hangar for US strategic bombers. He said the remoteness of the Australian bases, which are beyond the range of most Chinese missiles, offered the US the ability to protect its forces should war break out. “Defence of the force is always something that is top of mind,” General Schneider said at the RAAF-hosted Exercise Pitch Black in the Northern Territory. “So in all of our planning, all of our considerations for how we would respond, defence of our forces and the risk to our forces is something that we continue to consider.” He said the distance of the bases from potential conflict areas would give US forces the time they needed to move into and out of harm’s way. While Australia’s Top End bases are unprotected by air and missile defence systems, General Schneider hinted the US would step in to protect the facilities with its own defensive batteries in the event of a conflict.
>>21332444 United States Air Force commander General Kevin Schneider on regional tension - A senior US military commander says the “heavy handed” activities of Beijing, Moscow and Pyongyang has forced like-minded nations across the globe to unite, maintaining large scale military activities across Northern Australia is sending a strong, collective message to the region’s troublemakers. The comments come amid heightened military activity across the Northern Territory, where multinational exercises across air, land and maritime domains are being conducted. In the skies, Exercise Pitch Black 2024 is the largest in its 43-year history, with more than 140 aircraft across 20 nations testing their air combat skills, air-to-air refuelling methods, and air reconnaissance practices. On the ground, Exercise Predators Run - an annually held land warfighting activity – has also delivered the largest instalment in its history, with thousands of troops from Australia, United Kingdom, United States and The Philippines using the width and breadth of the Top End to improve its ‘near-peer’ fighting ability. Speaking to media at RAAF Base Darwin on Tuesday, United States Air Force commander General Kevin Schneider said the mammoth training exercises underway in Darwin and beyond were part of a broader effort to “build relationships” across the Indo-Pacific in the face of aggressive posturing from the north. “(There are) like-minded partners who continue to see the security situation in the same light that we do, as governments in Beijing, Moscow and Pyongyang are heavy handed in their activities and conduct,” he said. “Things that we would describe as illegal, aggressive and deceptive.”
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273ca3 No.21755566
#37 - Part 88
Australia / China Tensions - Page 3
>>21366092 U.S.-Australia talks focus on China's 'coercive behaviour' - The United States and Australia kicked off high-level talks on Tuesday that will focus on China's "coercive behaviour", as well as the AUKUS nuclear submarine project and mounting tensions in the Middle East, officials said. The annual Australia-U.S. AUSMIN talks, taking place in Annapolis, Maryland, include the top defense and diplomatic officials from both nations. "We're working together today to tackle shared security challenges, from coercive behaviour by the PRC (People's Republic of China), to Russia's war of choice against Ukraine, to the turmoil in the Middle East," U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said. "And I know that (this) year's AUSMIN will deliver results for both of our peoples." The U.S. and China are at odds on a range of issues including U.S. support for Taiwan, as well as Chinese military activity in the South China Sea, over most of which China claims control including the disputed Second Thomas Shoal, where U.S. ally the Philippines has maritime claims.
>>21366107 US to increase force projection from Australia in face of 'coercive' China - Australia will begin co-manufacturing guided weapons with the US next year to boost supply for allies in the Indo Pacific and increase a US military presence in the country, including bomber aircraft, the two nations said after annual defence talks. Australia and the United States are already working to upgrade air bases in northern and western Australia, which are closer to potential flashpoints with China in the South China Sea than Australia's capital of Canberra. After annual AUSMIN talks in Annapolis, Maryland, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said there would be an increase in the presence of rotational U.S. forces in Australia. "This will mean more maritime patrol aircraft and reconnaissance aircraft operating from bases across northern Australia. It will also mean more frequent rotational bomber deployments," he said. In opening remarks Austin said the two allies faced shared security challenges including "coercive behaviour" by China. A joint statement released after the AUSMIN talks expressed concern over Chinese military activity around Taiwan, and China's excessive maritime claims in the South China Sea. They "noted grave concern about China's dangerous and escalatory behavior toward Philippine vessels lawfully operating within the Philippines' exclusive economic zone".
>>21366116 Deepened US-Australia security cooperation ‘risks exacerbating confrontation’ - "The US and Australia are expected to hold the Australia-US Ministerial Consultations (AUSMIN), with the participation of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong, and Australian Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Richard Marles, in Annapolis, Maryland on Tuesday. Observers warned further military cooperation between the US and Australia would expand US hegemony in the region and exacerbate geopolitical confrontation. Ahead of AUSMIN, Austin met Marles at the Pentagon to discuss the historic military-to-military progress between the two nations, the US defense department said on Monday local time. Austin hailed the achievement in their defense industrial cooperation and expanding efforts with their allies and partners. Australia is involved in the US strategy to contain China in the Indo-Pacific region and the US has long been hoping that Australia will fully commit to the US strategy, Yu Lei, a professor at Shandong University, told the Global Times on Tuesday. From what we have seen so far, the Australian government has shown prudence and political wisdom in dealing with its relations with China, demonstrating a relatively flexible posture, said Chen Hong, director of the Australian Studies Center at East China Normal University. He warned that Australia should realize that being used by the US and serving its Indo-Pacific strategy will only exacerbate geopolitical confrontation, rather than benefit its own security." - GT staff reporters - globaltimes.cn
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273ca3 No.21755567
#37 - Part 89
Australia / China Tensions - Page 4
>>21385715 Canada and Australia, eyeing China, signal more military cooperation - Canada and Australia, expressing alarm at China's claims over the disputed waters of the South China Sea, on Thursday said they would increase their military and defense industry cooperation. Canadian Defence Minister Bill Blair said security in the Indo-Pacific region was being challenged "in a number of significant and difficult ways" and accused Beijing of trying to reshape the international system to advance its own interests. Blair, speaking after Vancouver talks with Australian counterpart Richard Marles, said the two nations needed to work more closely together to maintain order in the Indo-Pacific. "We have agreed to pursue closer collaboration by enhancing the interoperability of our armed forces and by deepening our operational cooperation," he told reporters. The two said they were concerned about what they called Beijing's excessive maritime claims in the South China Sea as well as Chinese military activity around Taiwan. The Philippines' armed forces and their counterparts from Canada, United States, and Australia this week held joint maritime exercises in the South China Sea. "Our cooperation is based on seeking to deter. We are absolutely about working with each other so that we can avoid conflict," said Marles, referring to his talks with Blair.
>>21404174 Nancy Pelosi rebukes former Australian PM Paul Keating over ‘stupid statement’ on Taiwan - A war of words has broken out between the former Australian prime minister Paul Keating and the former US House speaker Nancy Pelosi over Taiwan, after the prominent Democrat accused Keating of making a “stupid statement” about the territory. Keating was quick to hit back on Tuesday, suggesting Pelosi had “very nearly” sparked a military confrontation between the US and China over her “indulgent” 2022 visit to Taiwan. The dispute began after the national broadcaster published an excerpt of an upcoming interview with Pelosi in which she rebuked Keating for describing Taiwan as “Chinese real estate”. “That’s ridiculous. It is not Chinese real estate and he should know that,” Pelosi told the ABC’s 7.30 program. “Taiwan is Taiwan and it is the people of Taiwan who have a democracy there. I think that that was a stupid statement.” In the interview, to be broadcast in full on Tuesday evening, Pelosi added: “I’ve no idea about Keating, but I think that it was a stupid statement to make, and I don’t know what his connection is to China that he would say such a thing. “But it is really not in the security interest of the Asia-Pacific region for people to talk that way.”
>>21409544 Video: Nancy Pelosi takes aim at Paul Keating over his 'ridiculous' statement on Taiwan, speaks out on the dangers of Donald Trump - Former US speaker of the house Nancy Pelosi has slammed former Australian prime minister Paul Keating's controversial remarks about Taiwan as "ridiculous". Speaking to 7.30 last week Mr Keating described Taiwan as "Chinese real estate" and called for Australia to back away from what he deemed a dangerous alliance with the US, especially when it came to the AUKUS agreement. "You don't want to get my description of him for saying that," Ms Pelosi told 7.30 in an exclusive interview. "That's ridiculous. It is not Chinese real estate, and he should know that Taiwan is Taiwan, and it's the people of Taiwan who have a democracy there." Ms Pelosi said that Mr Keating's comments went against the interests of the region. "I think that was a stupid statement," Ms Pelosi told 7.30. "I don't know what his connection is to China that he would say such a thing, but it is really not in the in the security interest of the Asia Pacific region for people to talk that way. "It may be something he believes, but I think he's wrong." Since entering congress in 1987 Ms Pelosi has been outspoken on human rights issues related to China, as well as on the issue of Taiwanese independence. She led a high-profile Congressional delegation to Taipei in 2022. "We have a history of support for Taiwan for decades in the congress, it's bipartisan, Democrats and Republicans … and it has been very strong in support of the democracy in Taiwan."
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273ca3 No.21755569
#37 - Part 90
Australia / China Tensions - Page 5
>>21439410 Liberals seek to regain lost Chinese voters at next election - The Coalition will target Chinese voters in key inner city seats with messages of their frugal economic management, tough stance on crime and support for entrepreneurship in the hopes of winning back the diaspora that swung against the party at nearly double the rate of the national average in 2022. The Australian can reveal the opposition intends to pour “significant effort and resources” into winning back hundreds of thousands of voters in Chinese communities, with Liberal MPs in key seats describing the “huge opportunity” the cohort presents for the party at the next election. Opposition Leader Peter Dutton - who has personally attended half a dozen engagements with Chinese communities this year — said traditional Liberal Party values were “resonating” with multicultural Australia because of the cost-of-living crisis and poorly-managed migration system, among other failings of the government. “My message to communities across Australia, and to Chinese Australians and to other multicultural communities, is that there is a better way,” he told The Australian. “Australians are fast realising that they just can’t afford another three years of the Albanese government,” Mr Dutton said. The Liberal Party suffered swings of nearly 7 per cent across the 15 seats with the highest proportion of people with Chinese ancestry at the last election, compared to its national average of just 3.7 per cent on a two-party-preferred basis. But numerous Liberal sources said that, without Scott Morrison as leader and a reduction in the “clunky language” on China exercised under his government, they were optimistic the party would win back a significant portion of Chinese voters.
>>21459246 Liberals talked of banning Chinese super app - now MPs flock to it - Liberal MPs are flocking back to Chinese social media service WeChat, reversing a Morrison-era boycott over national security concerns to win back diaspora voters who turned against the party and cost it seats at the last election. The party’s full court press to woo the constituency includes recruiting candidates and staffers of Chinese heritage, along with a plan to push more MPs to open accounts on the ubiquitous platform despite accusations it is a Communist Party tool. Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has been working with local Chinese media on the app that spans everything from messaging to payments. Melbourne MPs Michael Sukkar and Keith Wolahan are gaining hundreds of thousands of views on videos posted to their own accounts. The Liberals are considering setting up an official party account alongside individual MPs who are establishing accounts. Senior party sources familiar with the matter said they viewed winning back Chinese-Australians as equally important to retaking the six seats it lost to teal independents. “We pissed off a lot of the Chinese community in 2022 [under Scott Morrison] and Dutton instinctively knows we can and must improve on last time,” a top Liberal source said. Dutton has notably softened his rhetoric on China since the past election, describing himself as “pro-China” in the lead-up to a June visit by Chinese Premier Li Qiang, stressing his desire for peace in the Indo-Pacific and effusively praising the Chinese diaspora. However, the Liberals responded with harsh criticism when Chinese officials clumsily inserted themselves between reporter Cheng Lei and cameras during Li’s visit, highlighting the difficulty in maintaining a more dovish stance.
>>21483208 Australia looks to sideline China in ‘far-reaching’ Pacific policing deal - Australian officials are confident of locking in regional support this week for an ambitious Pacific-wide policing pact they hope will help stymie Beijing’s energetic efforts to gain a security foothold in the region. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will travel on Tuesday to the Pacific Islands Forum in Tonga, with the Pacific Policing Initiative set to be one of the key agenda items alongside tackling climate change and the recent unrest in New Caledonia. The initiative, to cost hundreds of millions of dollars, would see a regional training centre established in Brisbane, centres of law enforcement excellence set up across the Pacific and the formation of new multinational police units that could rapidly deploy across the region when trouble arises. Pacific police chiefs have compared the initiative to bodies such as EUROPOL (the European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation) and AMERIPOL (the Police Community of the Americas) that combat crime beyond national borders. Tongan Prime Minister Siaosi Sovaleni will seek official endorsement from fellow leaders for the initiative at the forum and request that Pacific police chiefs develop an implementation plan to drive it forward.
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273ca3 No.21755572
#37 - Part 91
Australia / China Tensions - Page 6
>>21494416 ‘Godsend’: Australia wins support for policing pact to counter China - Nuku’alofa, Tonga: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has scored a significant diplomatic victory, locking in support from Pacific leaders for a far-ranging $400 million policing pact designed to counter China’s growing security presence in the region. The quicker-than-expected show of support for the Pacific Policing Initiative came despite pushback from some Pacific leaders, who said the pact was “cryptic” and risked entangling the Pacific in the superpower rivalry between China and Western nations led by the United States. Albanese and three fellow leaders announced on the sidelines of the Pacific Islands Forum in Tonga on Tuesday that the policing agreement had been endorsed by forum leaders. While stressing the initiative will be “Pacific-led”, Australia will be the main funder for the initiative, spending $400 million over five years on the pact and setting up a new co-ordination hub at Australian Federal Police facilities in Brisbane. The initiative will also see four regional training centres established across the Pacific, beginning with Papua New Guinea, and the creation of a new multinational standing police unit ready to respond to natural disasters or other crises. Progress on the policing pact has rankled Beijing, with the state-owned Global Times newspaper quoting an expert saying the agreement “not only violates general principles in international relations, but also infringes on [Pacific nations’] sovereignty to independently choose co-operation partners”.
>>21494421 Anthony Albanese tries his hand at soft-touch diplomacy at Pacific Islands Forum - Anthony Albanese has sealed a major agreement with Pacific Island nations to create region-wide police response force, in a blow to China’s ambitions to expand its security support for the region. Australian taxpayers will foot the bill for the “Pacific-led” initiative, paying $400m over the next five years to stand up a multi-country Pacific Police Support Group and establish new police training centres across the region. At least four police training centres will be opened in Pacific countries under the new law and order partnership, starting with Papua New Guinea, while a new co-ordination hub will be established in Brisbane to prepare Pacific police force members for regional deployments. Forum members will contribute members to the standing police response force, which will be deployed to respond to civil unrest, natural disasters and major regional events. “This policing initiative continues a long history of Pacific police forces working together to strengthen regional peace and security, and to support each other in times of need,” Mr Albanese said. “The security of the Pacific is the shared responsibility of the Pacific region and this initiative benefits each of our nations.” Mr Albanese won the support of regional counterparts for the initiative despite a warning by Vanuatu - one of China’s closest partner’s in the region. “We need to make sure this (initiative) is framed to fit our purposes and not developed to suit the geo-strategic interests and geo-strategic denial security postures of our big partners,” Vanuatu’s Prime Minister Charlot Salwai said.
>>21500024 Anthony Albanese caught on camera joking about Pacific Policing Initiative with top US official Kurt Campbell - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has bridled at questions from journalists about a private conversation where he joked with US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell about splitting the cost of the Pacific Policing Initiative announced yesterday in Tonga. Last night Radio New Zealand journalist Lydia Lewis filmed Mr Albanese and the top US official discussing the ambitious plan, which could reshape the way policing is conducted across the region. In the video, Mr Albanese calls the announcement a "cracker" and said the initiative would make "such a difference" in the Pacific. Mr Campbell called the plan "fantastic." He also suggested that the US had been contemplating a similar initiative until Australia's ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd asked them not to. "I talked with Kevin about it and so you know, we were going to do something like that and he asked us not to so we did not," he said. "We've given you the lane, so take the lane!" After that Mr Albanese joked that the US could wear some of the cost of the initiative. "We can go halfsies on the cost if you like," he laughed. "Only cost you a bit." Mr Albanese brushed off the exchange when he was asked about it this morning, saying there were no plans for the US to help cover the initiative's $400 million dollar price tag.
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273ca3 No.21755574
#37 - Part 92
Australia / China Tensions - Page 7
>>21509573 China responds furiously as Pacific Islands leaders reject bid to cut Taiwan from bloc meetings - China's ambassador to the Pacific has responded furiously after the region's leaders rejected a push from Solomon Islands to stop Taiwan participating in its top diplomatic gathering. Pacific leaders have also formally endorsed a major new policing pact championed by Australia, as well as signing off on the terms for a high-level mission to the troubled Pacific territory of New Caledonia. Solomon Islands had been pressing other Pacific nations to strip Taiwan of its status as a "development partner" for the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF), with its foreign minister Peter Shanel saying this week that Taiwan was "not a sovereign country" and PIF should "follow international law". But reopening a debate over Taiwan - which still maintains three diplomatic allies in the Pacific - risks opening a new fissure in the forum, and the final communique issued by leaders makes it clear the organisation will stick with a 1992 agreement which maintains the status quo. But China's ambassador to the Pacific nations, Qian Bo, said the final communique "must be a mistake". "The situation is obvious, among the 18 members of the PIF, 15 countries have diplomatic relations with China and 15 countries have categorically stated they stand by the One China principle," he told reporters after the meeting. "So this is a surprising mistake made by someone, I'm not sure [who] but I think it must be corrected!" The ambassador suggested that he was also blindsided by the reference to Taiwan and China in the final communique. "Surprisingly we also learned there is language concerning [Taiwan and China] … this should not be the final communique, there must be a correction on the text," he said. "We have already talked to the secretariat and to the [secretary-general] and other delegations where we have received wide understanding and support."
>>21510024 Pacific Islands Forum communique taken down after Chinese envoy calls Taiwan reference ‘unacceptable’ - A summit of Pacific leaders has ended in drama after China’s regional envoy demanded the scrapping of language about Taiwan, with the communique later republished without the offending paragraph. The Pacific Islands Forum (Pif) summit in Tonga this week brought together Australia, New Zealand and 16 Pacific island countries or territories, only three of which still have diplomatic relations with Taiwan. China is not a member of the regional grouping, but - like the US and numerous other major countries – attends some of the Pif events as a “dialogue partner”. For more than 30 years, Taiwan has been afforded the lesser status of “development partner”, a situation that irks Beijing, which claims the self-governed democracy as its territory. Solomon Islands, which has fostered increasingly warm ties with Beijing since switching diplomatic recognition from Taiwan in 2019, had raised concerns in the lead-up to this week’s summit about Taiwan’s status. But the final communique published on the Pif website on Friday rebuffed any push for change and stood by existing arrangements. “Leaders reaffirmed the 1992 Leaders decision on relations with Taiwan/Republic of China,” it said. China’s special envoy for the Pacific, Qian Bo, called for changes to the communique. He reiterated Beijing’s position that China should be seen as the representative “on behalf of the whole China, including Taiwan and the mainland”, Nikkei Asia reported. The Guardian has seen and verified a copy of the final communique that appeared on the Pif website earlier on Friday. It included a line reaffirming the decades-long arrangements regarding Taiwan. But as of Friday evening local time, this communique was no longer easily accessible on the website. The communique was republished on the Pif website on Saturday morning local time, but with paragraph 66 about Taiwan no longer included. A paragraph about Solomon Islands being the host of next year’s Pif was moved up to become the new paragraph 66.
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273ca3 No.21755577
#37 - Part 93
Australia / China Tensions - Page 8
>>21510053 China condemns support for Taiwan at Pacific leaders' forum - China's special envoy for the Pacific, Qian Bo, on Friday slammed a joint communique by Pacific Islands Forum leaders that affirmed support for Taiwan's participation in PIF events, calling the reference to the self-governing island a "mistake" that should be "corrected." The joint communique states that PIF leaders "reaffirmed the 1992 Leaders decision on relations with Taiwan/Republic of China," a reference to when Taiwan became a PIF "development partner." Qian's remarks came on the final day of the 53rd PIF leaders' meeting in Tonga, following a closing news conference by PIF Secretary-General Baron Waqa and the leaders of Tonga, the Cook Islands and the Solomon Islands, who are the current, preceding and next chairs of the PIF. The Chinese envoy communicated his displeasure to Waqa immediately after the news conference in a contentious exchange that highlights how tensions over Taiwan, and China's role in the region, have simmered beneath the surface of the meeting and in the increasingly contested region. China has been pushing to strip Taiwan of its position as a PIF development partner and thwart its attendance at next year's meeting in the Solomon Islands, which has been accused of acting as a proxy for Beijing's efforts. With pledges of aid, Beijing has been making appeals to Taiwan's diplomatic partners in the region, with Kiribati and the Solomon Islands recognizing China in 2019 and Nauru switching its ties earlier this year. The Solomon Islands' Agovaka called into question Taiwan's participation with PIF but denied his country was acting as a proxy for China. "We are not working on behalf of China. As I said, this is about sovereignty. China is a sovereign state, Solomon Islands is a sovereign state, our friends from Taiwan are not a sovereign state," he told Nikkei on Friday. Three PIF members - Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands and Palau - have diplomatic relations with Taiwan.
>>21512355 Video: China wins a ‘correction’ against Taiwan after Pacific summit - A reference to Taiwan’s ongoing role as a Pacific Islands Forum partner has been stripped from the final communique issued for the body’s meeting in Tonga this week after a backlash by China. The communique from the PIF leaders’ meeting was reissued by the forum’s secretariat without explanation after China’s envoy demanded a correction. The earlier version issued on Friday after the departure of regional including Anthony Albanese affirmed Taiwan’s status as a PIF development partner since 1992. But the reference was erased from a subsequent version published on Saturday after China’s ambassador to the Pacific nations, Qian Bo, told journalists there “must be a mistake”. The Chinese envoy said there was language in the statement that should “not be the final communique”, declaring: “There must be a correction on the text.” Taiwan later accused China of “an arbitrary intervention” and “unreasonable actions” but said the communique did not undermine Taiwan’s status with the PIF. The Lowy Institute’s Pacific Islands Program director, Mihai Sora, said after the change was revealed that it looked like China had got its way, and “more surprises” could be expected when pro-China Solomon Islands hosted the next ’ meeting. “This example of how China wields its increasing influence makes it crystal clear that it has interests in the Pacific beyond providing ‘development assistance’,” said Mr Sora, a former Australian diplomat whose postings included Solomon Islands. “Namely, China wants to eradicate all diplomatic support from Taiwan in the region, even through direct interference in the Pacific Islands Forum leaders’ meeting,” he said. “Given Qian Bo’s apparent outrage at the original text, perhaps he expected different language. It looks like he got his way on the day, but at what cost to the integrity of the Forum, and to regional unity? “I’m sure we can expect more surprises the next time Forum leaders meet in 2025, when Honiara will be host,” he said.
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273ca3 No.21755579
#37 - Part 94
Australia / China Tensions - Page 9
>>21516451 China, Philippines accuse each other of ramming ships in South China Sea - The Philippines and China exchanged accusations of intentionally ramming coast guard vessels in disputed waters of the South China Sea on Saturday, the latest in an escalating series of clashes in the vital waterway. The collision near the Sabina Shoal was their fifth maritime confrontation in a month in a longstanding rivalry. Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea, including parts claimed by the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. Portions of the waterway, where $3 trillion worth of trade passes annually, are believed to be rich in oil and natural gas deposits, as well as fish stocks. The Permanent Court of Arbitration in 2016 found China's sweeping claims had no legal basis, a ruling Beijing rejects. Philippine Coast Guard spokesperson Jay Tarriela showed videos of Saturday's confrontation at a press conference, saying China Coast Guard vessel 5205 "directly and intentionally rammed the Philippine vessel" without provocation. The ramming damaged the 97-metre (320-foot) Teresa Magbanua, one of the Philippines' largest coast guard cutters, but no personnel were injured, Tarriela said. Liu Dejun, a spokesperson for China's coast guard, said in a statement a Philippine ship, "illegally stranded" at the shoal, had lifted anchor and "deliberately rammed" a Chinese vessel. He called on the Philippines to withdraw immediately or bear the consequences. "The Chinese coast guard will take the measures required to resolutely thwart all acts of provocation, nuisance and infringement and resolutely safeguard the country's territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests," Liu said. Tarriela said Manila would not withdraw its ship "despite the harassment, the bullying activities and escalatory action of the Chinese coast guard".
>>21516458 Australia joins US to condemn China’s aggressive Coast Guard tactics - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has criticised dangerous actions in the contested South China Sea after the Chinese Coast Guard rammed a Philippines vessel, sparking counterclaims from China that the smaller nation was at fault. It follows a backflip by the Pacific Islands Forum, a bloc of 18 countries including Australia, to remove a reference to Taiwan from an official communique after Chinese complaints, showing the superpower’s growing influence in the region. Saturday’s ramming incident was the fifth confrontation between China and the Philippines in a month as China asserts its claim over most of the crucial trade route, including sections claimed by nations including Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. Philippines Coast Guard spokesman Jay Tarriela displayed footage of a Chinese ship that “directly and intentionally rammed the Philippine vessel” without provocation, and revealed damage to the 97-metre Philippines ship. Nobody was injured in the incident. Australia, the UK and US criticised China’s behaviour. “We need nations in the South China Sea to recognise the international law of the sea requires safe navigation there,” Albanese said at a press conference on Sunday. “I’ll get a full briefing about it but there shouldn’t be dangerous activity because it comes at great risk.” Albanese’s call for restraint comes days after he secured a $400 million deal at the Pacific Island Forum (PIF) to fund policing in Pacific nations where China and the US are competing for influence. A communiqué released at the end of last week’s forum included a segment on “Relations with Taiwan/Republic of China”, sparking the ire of Chinese officials who claim the democratic island as Chinese territory. After China expressed its discontent, the document was removed from a website on Friday and a new document was posted on Saturday with the references to Taiwan removed. Asked about the change, Albanese was more muted, saying the communique expressed what leaders had agreed at the Tongan conference.
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273ca3 No.21755586
#37 - Part 95
Australia / China Tensions - Part 10
>>21520879 Video: 'We'll remove it' - Pacific caves to China's demand to exclude Taiwan from leaders communique - The Pacific Islands Forum has submitted to China's demand to remove the mention of Taiwan from the final communique of the leaders' summit that concluded in Tonga this week. Kiribati wants to see consequences for whoever is behind the Taiwan communique bungle, after Beijing's special envoy to the region cried foul at the inclusion of Taipei in the outcomes document. On Friday, China's Ambassador to the Pacific, Qian Bo, was furious after the PIF Secretariat released the final communique which included a section in which Pacific leaders "reaffirmed" their relations with Taiwan. Qian told journalists that affirming reference to Taiwan "must be a mistake" and "must be corrected", and soon after the document was taken down from the PIF website. The moment Qian asks the PIF past chair and Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown to remove the Taiwan reference has been caught on camera by RNZ Pacific. "We'll remove it, I'll talk to you about it later," Brown can be heard saying to Beijing's top diplomat. Qian's outburst has since been reported widely with some Pacific political commentators suggesting it demonstrates how Beijing throws its weight to exert its influence the region. The Forum Secretariat has "re-issued" a new version of the communique, which according to a PIF spokesperson is "correct version of the 53rd Pacific Islands Forum Communique". This new version has removed the following section: "Relations with Taiwan/Republic of China: 66. Leaders reaffirmed the 1992 Leaders decision on relations with Taiwan/Republic of China."
>>21520889 Video: Chinese experts criticize Philippines for endangering ships and violating humanitarian principles after Philippine vessel deliberately collides with CCG ship at Xianbin Jiao - "At 08:02 on Saturday, the Philippine ship 9701 weighed anchor and continued its provocations at China's Xianbin Jiao (also known as Xianbin Reef) in the South China Sea. In response, the Chinese coast guard ship 5205 lawfully issued verbal warnings and conducted monitoring and control measures, according to the China Coast Guard (CCG) on Saturday. At 12:06, the Philippine ship deliberately rammed into the Chinese ship 5205 in an unprofessional and dangerous manner, causing a collision for which the Philippines bears full responsibility, CCG spokesperson Liu Dejun said. China once again urges the Philippines to face reality, abandon illusions, and immediately withdraw their illegal ship, as this is the only correct path forward. The Philippines should not misinterpret the situation, provoke conflicts, or escalate tensions, otherwise, the consequences will be solely borne by the Philippine side, the spokesperson warned. The CCG reiterated China's indisputable sovereignty over Nansha Qundao, or Nansha Islands, including Xianbin Jiao, and their adjacent waters. China will take necessary measures to resolutely thwart any provocative acts of infringement and firmly defend the country's territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, the spokesperson said." - Zhang Yuying - globaltimes.cn
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273ca3 No.21755589
#37 - Part 96
Australia / China Tensions - Part 11
>>21525977 Concerns raised over Australians doing research on ethnic minorities in China - In Xinjiang, Uyghurs and other minority groups live in a police state. More than a million men, women and children have been taken from their families and held by the Chinese government in re-education camps; there are allegations of forced sterilisation, forced labour and genocide. Despite this context, Australian researchers have, over the past decade, collaborated with Chinese colleagues on several studies of tissue and DNA taken from Uyghurs and other minorities in Xinjiang. There are now questions about whether the test subjects truly gave informed consent for their DNA and blood to be taken. “We don’t have any rights to say yes or no to anything,” said Adam Turan, a Uyghur who left the region in 2011. His family remains there. Consent is an important pillar of human research. Research subjects must freely give it, and Australian collaborators must assure themselves Australian ethical standards have been met - including in cases where the study was done overseas. In July, an Australian-Chinese study testing the DNA of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang to help build a forensic database was pulled from the scientific record after it emerged police may have been involved in collecting the samples. This masthead can also reveal another Australian team worked on ways of measuring ethnic identity at a boarding school program for Uyghurs. Turan said children were often forcibly removed to such schools, which exist to stamp out Uyghur culture. “I would think [collecting DNA] would be a red line for anyone who has read any news in the last seven or eight years - but clearly it’s not,” said Monash University’s Dr Kevin Carrico, who studies the ethics of research in China. “I am baffled by how researchers could find themselves working in this context. It’s genuinely beyond comprehension.”
>>21547121 US national security adviser reveals new plan for Australia to help curb Chinese dominance - The United States intends to confront China’s dominance of the world’s key ingredients for cutting-edge technology by creating a major new network of democratic powers, including Australia, according to a top American official. The US National Security Adviser, Jake Sullivan, revealed in an interview inside the White House that the scheme was a top priority and that he hoped to set it up before the next administration took power in January. “It’s a big piece of business, it’s vital, and it’s unfinished,” he said. Even amid intensifying military and political rivalry between Washington and Beijing, technology was the most intense realm of contestation: “The technology competition between the US and China remains probably the place of greatest sustained and strategic friction,” the top adviser said. The potential members of such a new democratic supply network are the world’s seven leading industrial democracies - the G7 nations of the US, Germany, Japan, the UK, France, Italy and Canada – plus South Korea and Australia, according to US sources. This group collectively accounts for about 48 per cent of the global economy by value. Of these nations, only Australia and Canada are major sources of raw critical minerals, indispensable for high-performance computer chips and feeding into civilian products like mobile phones, fibre optic cables, lithium batteries and solar panels but also military essentials such as radar, missile targeting, night vision goggles, turbines and solid-state lasers. The intention was to “ensure that China cannot simply dump and drive alternatives out of business” in its drive to control the global supply of critical minerals, Sullivan said.
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273ca3 No.21755590
#37 - Part 97
Australia / China Tensions - Part 12
>>21575846 Australia sends expert teams to Fiji as Chinese state-backed hackers attack Pacific Islands Forum - The Australian government sent expert teams to Fiji this year to help the Pacific's top regional body after its networks were infiltrated by Chinese state-backed hackers, the ABC has learned. The cyber attack on the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) Secretariat, which is based in Suva, was first detected in February this year, although the hackers likely gained access well before that. It comes as China continues to press its interests in the Pacific, and as competition between China and the West throughout the region continues to intensify. Beijing has also been building up policing ties in the region, holding its third annual meeting with Pacific police representatives in Fuzhou yesterday. The ABC has been told that the PIF cyber breach detected in February was "extensive" and that the group behind the hack was intent on gathering information about the Secretariat and its operations. The hackers also wanted to gather information on the Secretariat's communications with PIF member nations. The Australian government sent one of its roving teams of cyber specialists - which draw on both government and private sector expertise — to Fiji, to help the Secretariat deal with the problem. Over time those teams have helped PIF expel the hackers and remediate its computer networks. The ABC has also been told that analysis by the Australian Cyber Security Centre found that the attack was the work of a group of hackers backed by the Chinese government. Australia has publicly attributed multiple cyber-attacks to Chinese state-backed groups before, including to hackers linked to China's Ministry of State Security (MSS).
>>21575862 First parliamentary delegation in five years about to visit China - A bipartisan parliamentary delegation is to visit China in October, the first such trip since Beijing denied visas to former Coalition government MPs Andrew Hastie and James Paterson in 2019 for failing to “repent” for their views on the rising super power. The Australian can reveal the China trip has been approved by the offices of Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton, but the participants are still to be confirmed. President of the Senate, Labor’s Sue Lines, is under consideration to lead the delegation, but the West Australian senator’s office was not able to confirm she would do so late on Wednesday. The Australian has learned fellow federal politicians in WA, whose economy is hugely reliant on China, have been lobbying for a spot on the trip, as have other MPs in seats with high proportions of Chinese-heritage Australians. Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade declined to comment on the trip, redirecting The Australian to federal parliament’s International and Parliamentary Relations Office, which did not reply by late Wednesday. Sources familiar with the China trip, which like nearly everything involving Canberra’s relationship with Beijing is highly sensitive, said it would include a stop in neighbouring Mongolia. All participants will be issued burner phones, standard on parliamentary trips to China and a rising number of overseas destinations. China’s ambassador in Australia, Xiao Qian, has raised a potential parliamentary visit for more than a year, as his embassy has become frustrated with the frequency of trips by Australian federal politicians to Taiwan. Chinese Premier Li Qiang raised the prospect in a meeting in Canberra in June with Senator Lines and Speaker of the House, Milton Dick, a Labor MP from Queensland. A spokesman at the Chinese embassy in Canberra on Wednesday declined to comment about the trip.
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273ca3 No.21755592
#37 - Part 98
Australia / China Tensions - Part 13
>>21582746 Chinese Communist Party propaganda boss on a secret mission to Australia - A top official from the Chinese Communist Party’s central propaganda department has made a discreet trip to Australia that reveals both Beijing’s improved diplomatic ties with Canberra but also the extreme sensitivity surrounding the “stabilised” relationship. The Australian can reveal Mo Gaoyi, the deputy director of the Communist Party’s publicity department, is currently in Australia and on Wednesday met in Canberra with Assistant Minister for Foreign Relations Tim Watts. Sources familiar with the itinerary of Mr Mo, who also oversees Beijing’s State Council Information Office, said he had since travelled to Sydney where he was due to have private meetings with Chinese journalists and a select group of Australian academics. The Chinese embassy in Canberra declined to comment on the extremely rare trip, the first by a Deputy Director of the Communist Party’s Central Committee publicity department since 2014. Sources familiar with his meeting with Mr Watts told The Australian it covered areas of co-operation in the bilateral relationship, such as trade, and arts and cultural exchanges, along with more prickly subjects, including consular matters, cyber attacks, foreign interference and access for Australian journalists to China. Mr Mo’s visit to Canberra and Sydney - which was at the request of Beijing and has been overseen by the Chinese embassy – is a further sign of the improvement in diplomatic relations between Canberra and Beijing. However, the extreme secrecy around the trip again reveals the sensitive nature of Australia’s relationship with China despite a two-year “stabilisation” process.
>>21593708 US military build-up in Australia hailed as major win for security - Australia is being transformed into a pivotal American military base the likes of which we have not seen since World War II. This historic change has occurred so progressively over the past decade that few Australians have stopped to consider the big picture significance of this moment for Australia’s future security in the face of a rising China. If Chinese President Xi Jinping wants to see the self-harm he has inflicted from his country’s hegemonic behaviour in the Indo-Pacific he needs to look no further than this new and powerful military marriage of convenience between Australia and the US. As a direct result of Xi’s actions, Washington now sees Australia as its last regional bastion in any future conflict with China. This is a pivotal and historic change from the Cold War when the US saw Australia as only a bit player in its larger battle with the Soviet Union. This has severely complicated China’s calculations about its long-term ability to project power far beyond its shores, and is likely to give it pause when considering military adventurism in the region, including against the likely flashpoints of Taiwan and the Philippines. As a result of China’s rise, the US is now moving fast to position its military here on a scale not seen since US general Douglas MacArthur plotted from Brisbane in 1942 to repel the Japanese advance in the Pacific. This ever-increasing rotational presence of US forces - from marines, to nuclear bombers to warships and soon nuclear submarines and much more – has not just been welcomed by both sides of politics in Canberra and in Washington, it is being turbocharged.
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273ca3 No.21755593
#37 - Part 99
Australia / China Tensions - Part 14
>>21593741 Beijing ‘is suppressing ethnic Chinese in Australia’: Taiwan - Taiwan’s Foreign Minister has accused China of suppressing Australia’s ethnic Chinese population, saying Beijing gave up on its trade sanctions against Canberra only because they failed. Lin Chia-lung also said Taiwan did not fear the slow improvement in Australia’s relationship with China because it was not a “zero sum game”. He said Australia’s recent experience as a victim of Chinese trade sanctions worth $20bn required other countries in the region to join forces to push back against any future bullyboy trade tactics by China. In strongly worded comments in an interview in Taipei, Mr Lin said Beijing’s aggressive behaviour extended to China’s attempts to control or “suppress” the behaviour and the public attitude of the Chinese population in Australia. “Recently we also see that Chinese have a long-armed jurisdiction over some citizens in Australia, they suppress people overseas,” Mr Lin told The Australian. Intelligence agencies believe China has actively sought to influence and pressure ethnic Chinese in Australia, especially students, to promote the interests and views of Beijing and suppress criticism of the Chinese Communist Party. Mr Lin said all countries in the Indo-Pacific were increasingly vulnerable to China’s economic coercion. “I know that Chinese policies for Australia caused some detrimental effects on the Australian economy but eventually China stepped back because what China did to Australia is not beneficial to anybody,” he said.
>>21600988 Video: Ex-pilot facing extradition makes final bid for freedom - A lengthy submission by a former pilot seeking to halt his extradition to the US to face trial over allegations he unlawfully trained Chinese military personnel will be considered by the attorney-general. Ex-fighter pilot Daniel Duggan has spent 22 months behind bars and was ruled eligible for extradition by a magistrate in May. Mark Dreyfus holds the final say on whether the 56-year-old will be extradited over his alleged crimes. The 89-page submission was given to the attorney-general in late August after months of research, background and expert opinion, Duggan's wife Saffrine said. "It is the most detailed examination into the allegations against Dan and it revealed glaring errors in process and fact in the US case," she said in a statement on Monday. Ms Duggan described the case as "vague, embarrassing and oppressive", saying it had omitted key pieces of evidence such as her husband's flight logbook. While someone could only be extradited for conduct which was a crime in both countries, Ms Duggan said her husband was accused of actions that were only illegal in the US but were "tenuously" linked to legislation enacted in 2018. "In other words, this was legislated nine months after the US indictment, and six years after Dan's alleged offences. It is retrospective," she said. Duggan was arrested in Australia in October 2022 at the behest of the US after being accused of breaching arms-trafficking laws by providing military training to Chinese pilots in South Africa between 2010 and 2012.
>>21614220 Video: Chinese military video appears to show 'dangerous' intercept of Australian aircraft over South China Sea - The People's Liberation Army has released video of a 2022 incident that appears to show a Chinese J-16 fighter intercepting an "enemy" Australian P-8 Poseidon surveillance aircraft while it was conducting a routine patrol in international airspace. During the encounter over the South China Sea, the PLA aircraft flew closely alongside the RAAF plane firing flares, before cutting in front of it and releasing "chaff" into its flight path, which included aluminium fragments that were sucked into the P-8's engine. More than two years after the "dangerous" intercept, the Chinese military broadcast the video of the events as part of a PLA documentary in which the J-16 pilot described "facing a strong enemy, a tough opponent" and not being "afraid". According to the PLA propaganda film shown on Chinese state television in recent days, a "flashing infrared bomb" was also fired towards the Australian aircraft, although the ABC has been unable to verify this claim. Australia's defence department said it was aware of the "unverified" video that purported to show the 2022 incident and emphasised that it had undertaken maritime surveillance activities in the region for decades "in accordance with international law".
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273ca3 No.21755596
#37 - Part 100
Australia / China Tensions - Part 15
>>21614266 Video: ‘Draw your sword’: China releases video of PLA jet harassing RAAF plane - Nationalistic Chinese have mocked an Australian air force pilot and claimed Beijing had cowed the Albanese government after China’s national broadcaster released rare footage of what appeared to be the People’s Liberation Army Air Force harassing an RAAF plane in a tense encounter over the South China Sea. The Albanese government has been muted in its initial response to the apparent addition of the encounter between an Australian P-8 Poseidon surveillance aircraft and a Chinese fighter jet in a recently released documentary run on China’s flagship broadcaster CCTV. Previously neither the Chinese or Australian governments had released footage of the encounter, which took place in 2022, weeks after Anthony Albanese became prime minister. The footage featured in the second episode of a six part documentary made by China’s national broadcaster to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party’s army, the PLA, in 2027. In publicity for the show, CCTV said it had been created to “educate and inspire” Chinese soldiers to follow “Xi Jinping’s Thought on Strengthening the Army”. China’s leader has made achieving a “world-class army”, a key priority during his 12 years in power. Australia was not named in the show, but widespread reports on China’s internet said the footage was of the infamous 2022 encounter that Defence Minister Richard Marles described as “very dangerous” in some of his first comments after being sworn into his portfolio. Beijing has told Canberra to keep away from water and air near China, as it tries to push back on military operations by American allies in its near neighbourhood. The documentary gave a public airing to what is often kept behind closed doors. “You must draw your sword when you meet the enemy,” the Chinese pilot in the encounter said in the documentary.
>>21638248 Video: Biden caught saying China is ‘testing us’ in hot mic moment with Albanese - US President Joe Biden has been caught in another hot mic moment, this time warning Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and other Indo-Pacific leaders that he believes China’s aggression is a deliberate strategy to test the region at a challenging time for Beijing. Biden’s candid comments were caught at a summit of the Quad alliance on Saturday (Sunday AEST), which he convened at his former high school in Delaware to put his personal mark on a group he hopes will endure well after his presidency ends in January. The White House has long been careful not to frame the Quad -- which is made up of the US, Australia, Japan and India – primarily as a vehicle for Washington to thwart Beijing’s ambitions. However, this notion was undermined when a camera feed picked up the president beginning the discussion by focusing on China and declaring that its recent assertiveness was a “change in tactic, not a change in strategy”. “China continues to behave aggressively, testing us all across the region, and it’s true in the South China Sea, the East China Sea, South China, South Asia and the Taiwan Straits,” Biden told Albanese, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida. “We believe [Chinese President] Xi Jinping is looking to focus on domestic economic challenges and minimise the turbulence in China’s diplomatic relationships, and he’s also looking to buy himself some diplomatic space, in my view, to aggressively pursue China’s interest.” The remarks were made after journalists were forced to leave the room once the leaders had given their formal remarks. And while it’s not the first time Biden has been caught on a hot mic, the comments are nonetheless likely to raise eyebrows in China, which has been at odds with the US over everything from trade to spy balloons.
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273ca3 No.21755597
#37 - Part 101
Australia / China Tensions - Part 16
>>21642550 Quad leaders meet; group ‘incites bloc confrontation’ - "At the Quad leaders' summit US President Joe Biden hosted in his Delaware hometown over the weekend, the four-nation group - which consists of the US, Japan, India and Australia - agreed to expand security cooperation, including joint coast guard mission, with China on mind. The agenda of the meeting and its joint statement, which referred to East and South China Seas, exposed Quad's nature of bloc confrontation, analysts said on Sunday, criticizing the four-nation partnership for its detrimental role of fomenting confrontation and inciting geopolitical tensions in Asia Pacific. US national security adviser Jake Sullivan insisted earlier Saturday during a briefing with reporters that "China is not the focus of the Quad," CNN reported, but the issue (of China) featured throughout the day. The joint statement, released on the White House's website, did not directly name China, but it did mention "East and South China Seas," meanwhile, Biden was caught on a hot mic telling the other leaders that an "aggressive China is testing us," CNN reported. Anchored by shared values, the Quad leaders seek to uphold the international order based on the rule of law and they are "seriously concerned" about the situation in East and South China Seas, according to a joint statement after the summit." - Zhang Han and Guo Yuandan - globaltimes.cn
>>21642580 Taiwan in bid for UN membership after success for Palestine - Taiwan has urged Penny Wong to throw Australia’s support behind the self-governed territory’s bid for UN membership after the Albanese government backed Palestine’s admission to the global body. Taiwan’s top diplomat in Australia, Douglas Hsu, said Palestine’s recently upgraded UN status underscored the injustice of Taiwan’s exclusion from the organisation at China’s behest. “We found it very interesting and we found it very unreasonable, because Taiwan is a leading democracy,” he told The Australian. “Taiwan is an important economy in the world. We play a very important role in global supply chains. However, we are not even granted the status of being included in the United Nations.” As the Foreign Minister departed for New York to attend the UN General Assembly’s annual high-level session, Mr Hsu said: “We are asking like-minded countries to address this issue.” Taiwan’s request follows the Senate’s repudiation last month of Beijing’s interpretation of a 1971 UN resolution recognising the People’s Republic of China as “the only legitimate representative of China to the UN”. It passed a bipartisan motion declaring UN Resolution 2758 “does not establish the People’s Republic of China’s sovereignty over Taiwan and does not determine the future status of Taiwan in the UN, nor Taiwanese participation in UN agencies or international organisations”.
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273ca3 No.21755598
#37 - Part 102
Australia / China Tensions - Part 17
>>21642629 Labor elders now just weak-kneed ‘appeasers’ on AUKUS - "Paul Keating and Gareth Evans in their attacks on AUKUS demonstrate they have learned nothing from history. One lesson is that to keep the peace it’s necessary to maintain a balance between major powers and their allies. That was the key to peace in Europe for nearly a century after the end of the Napoleonic Wars. It’s the key to peace in the Indo-Pacific region today. We have to maintain a balance of power with an aggressive China. Both Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 of AUKUS will help to do that. If we don’t, China will dominate the region, reducing neighbouring countries to the traditional status of mere tributes to China. The South China Sea would be turned into a Chinese lake, giving China complete command of sea and air traffic through that vital waterway. And Taiwan would of course be incorporated into the People’s Republic of China. To stop this, there is a coalition of nations that balances the power of China and deters Chinese adventurism. That coalition is led by the US and its allies. It’s also includes countries such India and, for that matter, Indonesia, which while cautious not to become allies of any nation nevertheless want a balance of power in the Indo-Pacific region. This seems to me to be a straightforward proposition for anyone who is concerned about Australia’s security. But the likes of Keating and Evans seem to think a policy of appeasement will work. If deterrence and power balances are one of the lessons of history, then another is that appeasement does not work. In the 1930s it failed and it is not going to work today. Using language such as de-escalation when the Russians are pouring missiles and bombs into Ukraine, the Iranians through their surrogates are firing thousands of rockets and missiles into Israel, and the Chinese are threatening and harassing allies such as The Philippines is the language of weakness and fear. They need to understand that unless this behaviour stops they run the risk themselves of escalating to the point of war with the West. If we stick with the appeasement strategy - the one favoured by Keating and Evans - that is the strategy that leads to war." - Alexander Downer, foreign affairs minister from 1996-2007, and high commissioner to the UK from 2014-18 - theaustralian.com.au
>>21648253 Defending nation’s sovereignty is not ‘appeasement’ - a response to Alexander Downer - "Could the Alexander Downer who accuses me and Paul Keating of appeasement possibly be the same Alexander Downer who recently wrote in this newspaper that if he had a vote in the US presidential election it would be for Donald Trump? That same Donald Trump whose willingness to accommodate Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine makes Chamberlain’s behaviour in Munich in 1938 seem almost Churchillian. And could this Downer, who now tells us the West is facing “an existential threat from the alliance of Russia, Iran and China”, possibly be the same Downer whose enthusiastic embrace of George W. Bush’s fanciful “axis of evil” (Iran, Iraq and North Korea) led us to blindly follow the US in its invasion of Iraq in 2003, with consequences resonating catastrophically ever since? I would normally ignore being offensively lectured to and misrepresented by a former foreign minister whose only memorable achievement in nearly 12 years in that office was longevity, but his latest contribution is so wrongheaded and at odds with Australia’s national interests as to demand a response. It is not appeasement to demand that those who beat the drums of war justify their fearmongering with more than rhetoric. And it is not appeasement to believe that Australia’s national interests - as for others in our region trying to navigate a course between the US and China – lie in maintaining close and mutually beneficial relations with both the neighbourhood giants, not becoming either’s patsy, and working diplomatically to encourage détente between them. While China’s behaviour certainly justifies push-back, much of it is no more than what we can and should expect of a rapidly, economically rising, hugely trade-dependent regional superpower, which is wanting to claim its own strategic space, and to generally reassert some of its historical greatness after more than a century of wounded national pride. It is not unreasonable to think much of China’s assertiveness would be significantly moderated were the US to step back from demanding recognition of America’s continued primacy, with Washington now seeing just about every arena as a zero-sum struggle for dominance." - Gareth Evans, Australia’s foreign minister from 1988-96 and president of the International Crisis Group from 2000-09 - theaustralian.com.au
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273ca3 No.21755600
#37 - Part 103
Australia / China Tensions - Part 18
>>21660354 Jim Chalmers takes economic charm offensive to China - Jim Chalmers has warned that further deterioration in China’s slowing economy would wreak havoc on Australia, with a drop of one percentage point in Chinese GDP growth projected to inflict about $6bn in lost domestic output. Amid global concerns over the rapid slowdown in China and as President Xi Jinping met his top comrades to discuss their enormous economic challenges, the Treasurer arrived in Beijing on Thursday to meet National Development and Reform Commission chair Zheng Shanjie, who oversees China’s five-year economic plans and the country’s foreign investment regime. Dr Chalmers, who late on Thursday co-chaired with Mr Zheng the first meeting of the Australia-China Strategic Economic Dialogue since 2017, said there were “consequences for us” if the Communist nation’s economic slowdown and structural challenges worsened. Writing for The Australian to mark the first visit to Beijing by a treasurer in seven years, Dr Chalmers said Australia’s resilience and prosperity were closely connected to China’s economy and the global economy, which is “why we monitor the Chinese economy so closely”. Hours before Dr Chalmers met his Chinese counterparts, China’s politburo - led by Mr Xi – pledged a new stimulus package to implement better “the driving role of government investment”.
>>21660373 China-Australia relations see more high-level exchanges, conducive to avoid amplifying difference: experts - "China-Australia relations have seen positive progress with more recent high-level exchanges, and observers noted that strengthened communication between the two sides can effectively avoid amplifying differences. The two countries' top diplomats met on Tuesday, meanwhile the fourth China-Australia Strategic Economic Dialogue is scheduled to be held in Beijing. According to Xinhua News Agency on Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met with his Australian counterpart, Penny Wong, on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday. Wang, also a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, told Wong that both sides should continue to build a more mature, stable, and fruitful comprehensive strategic partnership. Both sides should properly handle the issues in bilateral exchanges and not define China-Australia relations from the perspective of differences, Wang said, hoping Australia joins hands with China to ensure that bilateral relations go on the right track and achieve more results. Wong said Australia is ready to work with China to strengthen economic and trade cooperation, engage in constructive communication on issues of differences, and promote the stable development of bilateral relations. The Australian side's adherence to the one-China policy has not changed, Wong said." - Xu Keyue - globaltimes.cn
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273ca3 No.21755602
#37 - Part 104
Australia / China Tensions - Part 19
>>21660409 Morrison pushes for stronger Quad to counter aggressive China - Scott Morrison has warned Quad leaders to not allow their “focus and agenda to become diluted and distracted” in a new era of globalised strategic rivalry pitting western powers against aggressive and coercive autocracies led by China, Russia, Iran and North Korea. Following criticism about the substance of the Quad leaders’ dialogue meeting in Joe Biden’s home state of Delaware last weekend, Mr Morrison said the pact between Japan, Australia, the US and India must be maintained and strengthened as a key pillar in deterring the “arc of autocracy”. Speaking at the Yomiuri International Economic Security Symposium in Tokyo on Thursday, the former prime minister launched a defence of his former government’s “strident position” towards Xi Jinping’s People’s Republic of China. “We can peacefully coexist, but only with the right safeguards in place. We must do so with our eyes wide open and with the good sense to put a sufficient deterrent in place to counterbalance the growing power and influence of autocracies,” Mr Morrison said. “The objective of such a deterrent is simple, to ensure that when President Xi (Jinping) wakes up every morning and thinks about Taiwan, he concludes ‘not today’.” Ahead of Jim Chalmers meeting with Chinese counterparts in Beijing on Thursday, marking the first visit to the Communist nation by an Australian treasurer in seven years, Mr Morrison explained why he had pushed-back against the PRC. “I believed this was necessary to counter the PRC’s deliberate strategy to test Australia’s will and to split us off from our allies and partners. I believed that pretending to share values and interests with an autocracy seeking to bully and coerce us, while they undermined the very rules and norms that afforded us our freedom, got us where we are today. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.”
>>21666439 Pierside accident: -China’s Newest Nuclear Submarine Sank, Setting Back Its Military Modernization- China’s newest nuclear-powered attack submarine sank in the spring, a major setback for one of the country’s priority weapons programs, U.S. officials said. The episode, which Chinese authorities scrambled to cover up and hasn’t previously been disclosed, occurred at a shipyard near Wuhan in late May or early June. It comes as China has been pushing to expand its navy, including its fleet of nuclear-powered submarines. The Pentagon has cast China as its principal long-term “pacing challenge,” and U.S. officials say that Beijing has been using political and military pressure to try to coerce Taiwan, a separately governed island that Beijing claims as part of its territory. China says its goal in building a world-class military is to deter aggression and safeguard its overseas interests. A spokesman for the Chinese embassy didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The U.S. doesn’t know if the sub was carrying nuclear fuel at the time it sank, but experts outside the U.S. government said that was likely. The Zhou-class vessel that sank is the first of a new class of Chinese nuclear-powered subs and features a distinctive X-shaped stern, which is designed to make the vessel more maneuverable. The sub was built by China State Shipbuilding Corp., a state-owned company, and was observed alongside a pier on the Yangtze River in late May when it was undergoing its final equipping before going to sea. After the sinking, large floating cranes arrived in early June to salvage the sub from the river bed, according to satellite photos of the site.
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273ca3 No.21755603
#37 - Part 105
Australia / China Tensions - Part 20
>>21718402 Darwin Port increases 'friendly cooperation' with China in new deal - The Chinese-controlled Port of Darwin has signed a "friendly cooperation" agreement with Shenzhen Port in southern China, a city that controversially entered a "strategic partnership" with the Northern Territory capital five years ago. Representatives from both ports last month conducted a signing ceremony in China's Guandong Province to establish the non-binding Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), which aims to increase trade links between both strategic maritime gateways. Details of the "friendly port relationship" do not appear to have been announced locally in Australia, but according to official Chinese statements both parties will soon carry out "all-round in-depth exchanges and cooperation". In a brief statement, Darwin Port CEO Peter Dummett confirmed to the ABC that he had travelled to China to sign the agreement with Shenzen representatives on September 23. "Darwin Port and Shenzhen Port have entered into a friendly non-binding MOU in order to establish a closer relationship between both ports and to further understand potential business opportunities for trade and development." In 2015 the CLP Northern Territory government signed a $506 million deal with Chinese-owned Landbridge Group to lease Darwin Port for 99 years, sparking security concerns at the highest levels of Australia's defence department and in the United States. Last year, the Albanese government announced it would not cancel the controversial lease after a review by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet found there was "a robust regulatory system in place to manage risks to critical infrastructure". Both the federal government and Northern Territory government are yet to respond to requests for comment about the recent "friendly cooperation agreement" struck between Darwin Port and Shenzhen Port.
>>21739533 Chinese trade restrictions on Australian lobsters to be lifted before Chinese New Year - Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says he has secured a promise from China's Premier Li Qiang to lift a ban on Australian rock lobsters by the end of the year. The news will be welcomed by the rock lobster industry, which has struggled since being locked out of the lucrative market, and which had been growing increasingly frustrated by the delay to restoring the trade. Mr Albanese met with Premier Li today on the sidelines of the ASEAN meeting in Laos, and emerged saying China's second most senior leader had agreed on a "timetable" to let lobsters back by the end of this year, in time for Chinese New Year in early 2025. "This will be welcomed by the people engaged in the live lobster industry in places like Geraldton and South Australia and Tasmania and so many parts of particularly regional Australia," he said. Australian rock lobster exports to China were worth some $700 million a year before Beijing locked them out as part of a broader campaign of economic punishment against Australia in 2020 and 2021, when the bilateral relationship hit its nadir. China has already removed tariffs and barriers on a host of other Australian products -- including wine, coal and barley – leaving lobsters as the last major industry that remained frozen out of the massive market. Mr Albanese told journalists in Vientiane that Premier Li's promise had once again vindicated the government's approach to China. "With our patient, calibrated and deliberate approach, we've restored Australian trade with our largest export market, and today we discussed restarting exports of Australian live rock lobsters," Albanese said in Laos.
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273ca3 No.21755605
#37 - Part 106
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 1
>>21258061 Satanic Temple set to return to Memphis-area school with 'Before School Satan Club' - The Satanic Temple has plans to come back to the Memphis area. After hosting its “After School Satan Club” at Cordova-based Chimneyrock Elementary on Jan. 10, the Salem, Massachusetts-based nonprofit is poised to host a “Before School Satan Club” in the coming weeks. The pending dates are March 20, April 17, and May 15, from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m., the group said in a social media post. The plan is to offer science projects, community service projects, puzzles and games, nature activities, arts and crafts, and snacks. A flyer posted on Twitter says “Hey Kids! Let’s have fun at the Before School Satan Club!” When the group started promoting the “After School Satan Club,” it used the line, “Hey Kids, Let’s have fun at the After School Satan Club.” Not long after The Satanic Temple started promoting the original After School Satan Club, interim superintendent Toni Williams, board chair and reverend Althea Greene, and board member Mauricio Calvo passionately denounced the group, while flanked by pastors of local churches. “As a superintendent, I am duty bound to uphold our board policy, state laws, and the constitution,” Williams said at the time. “But let’s not be fooled. Let’s not be fooled by what we’ve seen in the past 24 hours, which is an agenda, initiated to make sure that we cancel all faith-based organizations that partner with our district.” Added board chair Althea Greene: “You see the faith-based community standing here,” she said. “We're going to stand up and we're going to be vocal. Satan has no room in this district.”
>>21258069 Satanic group leads invocation at Ottawa County board meeting amid lobby uproar - Protest and support chants erupted in the lobby steps away from the Ottawa County board podium, where a leader of a West Michigan satanic group led the commissioners in prayer before a meeting Tuesday night. Standing tall with a smile in the middle of a small room with every seat filled, a man identifying himself as Luis Cypher with the Satanic Temple of West Michigan greeted residents and commissioners before delivering the opening invocation. "That must be destroyed by truth, should never be spared. It's demise. It is done. Hail Satan. Thank you very much, we wish everyone a wonderful evening tonight," Cypher said while raising his hand with his index finger and pinky extended in the air. What appeared to be over 100 individuals flocked to the lobby ahead of the meeting, signs were waved reading "One Nation Under God" as well as chants of "Hail Satan!" and "We Love Satan!" The allowance of a Satanic Temple, described on their website among other things as a "leading beacon of light in the battle of abortion access," sparked an uproar at the Tuesday night meeting. Ottawa County residents took advantage of the public comment period to advocate toward beliefs of God, shaming the Satanic temple. "Tonight you all had failed miserably in your primary responsibility. You have out of the respect for a flawed custom of men allowed worship not only to a false ideal of man's creation but to the greatest enemy of the all good God who allowed you to fill these positions," one resident said at the podium while holding a cross.
>>21258072 Video: Commissioner disagrees with policy allowing Satanist to give opening prayer - Ottawa County Commissioner Doug Zylstra disagrees with a policy change allowing an ordained minister of Satan to give opening prayer during a board meeting Tuesday. Luis Cypher, head of the Satanic Temple of West Michigan, delivered the opening invocation while over a hundred attended, many pushing back against his troubling remarks. On Tuesday, people choosing to worship Satan, and those worshiping Jesus came face to face. A protest erupting ahead of Tuesday's meeting. “That which can be destroyed by truth should never be spared its demise. It is done, hail Satan," Cypher said. Many attending Tuesday's meeting held signs, sang and prayed while disagreeing with the choice to let Cypher speak. Followers of Christ held flags with "One Nation under God" while others like Joseph Amorasos prayed for change. “For the lord has truly risen, hallelujah, let us pray," Amorasos said. Every chair in the meeting room was filled, while overflow in the hallway sang Amazing Grace. One woman even held a sign with "My Jesus mercy" while Cypher gave his remarks.
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273ca3 No.21755607
#37 - Part 107
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 2
>>21258080 Satanic Temple invocation forces Ottawa County to reckon with the meaning of religious freedom - It was an odd night in Ottawa County. The planned invocation from the Satanic Temple of West Michigan, scheduled several months after a lawsuit led the board to develop new policies for accepting invocation requests, drew hundreds to the Fillmore Complex on Tuesday. The Satanic Temple of West Michigan announced in March they'd been scheduled to give the meeting’s prayer April 23. The meeting drew one of the largest crowds the board has seen since Ottawa Impact commissioners took office in January 2023. Hundreds gathered in the lobby and in front of the Fillmore Complex. Many stood in small groups to pray, sing hymns and hold signs opposed to the TST. Attendees in the lobby continued to sing through the start of the meeting, including during the invocation. Cypher, minister of Satan and lifelong resident of Ottawa County, gave an invocation which, including an introductory statement, lasted about 2 minutes and 30 seconds. He started by offering a “loving embrace” to residents. “Let us stand now, unbound and unfettered by arcane doctrines born of fearful minds in darkened times. Let us embrace the Luciferian impulse to eat of the tree of knowledge and dissipate our blissful and comforting delusions of old,” Cypher said. Commissioners Gretchen Cosby and Kendra Wenzel prayed to themselves during the invocation. Prior to the meeting, Commissioner Rebekah Curran handed out heart-shaped cookies with “John 3:16” stickers on the packaging. "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life." When the meeting moved to public comment, Curran was the first speaker. She offered a prayer from the lectern. “I feel like it's a really important moment in time to not only show the love of Christ, but show the power of Christ,” Curran said. “I just pray that everyone will feel the manifest presence of God in this room and in this building today.”
>>21258091 Q Post #3967 - These people are pure evil. This is not about politics. You are ready. Q - https://qanon.pub/#3967
>>21258091 Q Post #4545 - Humanity is good, but, when we let our guard down we allow darkness to infiltrate and destroy. Like past battles fought, we now face our greatest battle at present, a battle to save our Republic, our way of life, and what we decide (each of us) now will decide our future. Will we be a free nation under God? Or will we cede our freedom, rights and liberty to the enemy? If America falls so does the world. If America falls darkness will soon follow. Only when we stand together, only when we are united, can we defeat this highly entrenched dark enemy. This is not about politics. This is about preserving our way of life and protecting the generations that follow. We are living in Biblical times. Children of light vs children of darkness. United against the Invisible Enemy of all humanity. Q - https://qanon.pub/#4545
>>21274018 Australian Federal Police charge man for allegedly trafficking Indonesian girl to Sydney to work in brothels - A man has been charged with recruiting a teenager from Indonesia to work in Sydney brothels as part of what authorities say is an international sex trafficking ring. Australian Federal Police (AFP) claim to have removed at least seven potential victims from sexual exploitation following a 20-month investigation into the alleged syndicate operating between Australia and Indonesia. A 43-year-old Arncliffe man has been charged with one count of trafficking children and is accused of facilitating the transportation of a 17-year-old girl from Indonesia to Sydney to engage in sex work. Authorities also allege he was the "principal" in the criminal operation. AFP officers have been working with Indonesian authorities since December 2022 after receiving intelligence about a trafficking ring forcing young women into sexual servitude in Sydney brothels. Officers searched several properties in Sydney's south-west in March this year, where they allegedly found several foreign nationals who were identified as potential victims of human trafficking. AFP Commander Kate Ferry said she was "confident we have disrupted the criminal syndicate". "This result is a testament to our resolve and the resolve of the Australian Federal Police to stop the exploitation of vulnerable women being trafficked into Australia for sexual exploitation," Commander Ferry said. "We understand it can be incredibly difficult for vulnerable victims to come forward, and we want to assure them that there is help and protection available."
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273ca3 No.21755608
#37 - Part 108
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 3
>>21274077 Video:The children for sale - and the Australians who exploit them- Anna dreams of becoming an astronaut when she grows up. “I want to go to the moon,” the 12-year-old murmured as she stared down at her interlaced hands inside a children’s rescue shelter three hours north-west of the Philippines’ capital, Manila. The moon is worlds away from the province of Bulacan, where Anna and her two younger cousins - aged 11 and 8 - were sexually abused by their parents and two uncles. Their offenders arranged for Western foreigners to purchase live-stream viewings of the crimes and watch from thousands of kilometres away for their sick sexual gratification. Shamefully, Australian predators are major contributors to the dark and disturbing trade. The children were told the acts were needed to pay for food, clothes and school. International law enforcement alerted local authorities to the abuse and the three cousins were sent to the People’s Recovery, Empowerment and Development Assistance Foundation (Preda), where they have spent more than two years trying to heal from a type of pain no child should ever understand, let alone feel. The phones used to record the abuse were traced to their parents, who are detained awaiting trial and their uncles, who fled and are at large. The Philippines is the global epicentre of the live-stream child sexual abuse trade, according to the United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund. According to the 2022 Disrupting Harm Study conducted by UNICEF, ECPAT International and Interpol, 20 per cent of internet-using Filipino children aged 12 to 17 were subjected to online abuse and exploitation, representing an estimated 2 million children. Statistics show Australia is among the leading countries feeding the demand. Rescue organisations say the issue has worsened since the COVID-19 pandemic began, when high internet usage combined with lockdowns created a thriving environment for online exploitation. Behind each statistic is an innocent child who, in the majority of cases, has been abused by those they trusted the most, selling their bodies to Australians and other foreigners for as little as $20 per act of abuse.
>>21332280 National Gallery of Australia acquires painting by controversial artist Paul Gauguin for almost $10 million - Paul Gauguin was a violent paedophile. The blue roof, or Farm at Le Pouldu, by Paul Gauguin has been purchased by the National Gallery of Australia for $9.8 million, becoming the first painting by the artist in an Australian public collection. Gauguin is one of the world's most famous artists, but has a controversial legacy due to accusations of sexual predation of girls while in French Polynesia.
>>21348278 Brett Sutton - Australian coach of olympic triathlon medallist was child sex offender - An Australian who coached the women’s triathlon silver medallist is the second known child sex offender to be accredited for the Paris Olympics. The presence of the Dutch beach volleyball player Steven van de Velde, who was jailed for raping a 12-year-old British girl, caused a storm of protests when he competed last weekend. Now The Sunday Times can reveal that on Wednesday Brett Sutton, 65, who had been given accreditation by China, attended the triathlon to watch his athlete, Switzerland’s Julie Derron, take silver ahead of Team GB’s Beth Potter. Sutton even gave an interview to Swiss television close to the finish line on Pont Alexandre III in which his official Olympic accreditation lanyard could be seen hanging from his neck. Sutton pleaded guilty in 1999 to five counts of sexual abuse of a 13-year-old Australian girl, a talented swimmer he had been coaching. He was sentenced to two years in prison the year before the Sydney Olympics, but the sentence was suspended for three years. The judge, Robert Hall, said that Sutton had interfered with the girl in a “gross and disgraceful way” and “abused his role to an inexcusable degree”, but he took into account that, as the national triathlon coach, Sutton was preparing a number of athletes for the Games. “A large number of leading athletes will suffer disadvantage from your absence from the scene,” Hall said. Sutton has been at the Olympics despite being banned from coaching by several federations.
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273ca3 No.21755610
#37 - Part 109
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 4
>>21354276 Australian sex offender has left the Games, IOC looking into the issue - A convicted sex offender who coached women’s triathlon silver medallist Julie Derron of Switzerland has left the Paris 2024 Games and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) said on Sunday it was looking into the matter. Australian Brett Sutton appeared on an interview with Swiss TV channel RTS commenting on Derron's performance after Wednesday's triathlon. He was wearing an Olympic accreditation and was also seen wearing a red jacket with the Chinese flag and Olympic rings on it. The Chinese Olympic Committee did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In 1999, Sutton pleaded guilty to five counts of sexual abuse of a 13-year-old Australian swimmer he had been coaching and was sentenced to two years in prison. The sentence was suspended for three years. "I understand that this person is no longer here at the Games, they have left the Games," IOC spokesperson Mark Adams told a press conference on Sunday. "It is an issue for the Chinese Olympic Committee and the national federation will need to get involved," he added, referring to reports that Sutton had been accredited by the Chinese Committee. "Looking forward I can tell you we will obviously look into this issue." "Coaches are not accredited by us but by the National Olympic Committees, and approved by the IOC," a World Triathlon spokesperson said on Sunday.
>>21386017 Video:How 'unassuming' crocodile expert Adam Britton shocked a community- Every month, Merinda Sharp cuts flowers and visits her neighbours' neglected rural home. "I put them on the gate, in memory of the torture and the horrific life that those animals went through," she says. On the outskirts of Darwin, hidden within a tight-knit outback community of dusty and isolated sprawling properties, where dogs are trained to scare off visitors, this one remained quiet and overlooked for years. Then one of the nation's worst cases of bestiality exposed the sinister events that had been taking place for almost a decade, sending shock waves through the neighbourhood and fracturing it with disbelief. Adam Britton, celebrated as a world-renowned crocodile expert and zoologist, was arrested and remanded in custody in 2022, last year pleading guilty to 60 charges of bestiality, animal cruelty and possessing child abuse material. In a shipping container he called his "torture room", Britton filmed himself abusing, raping and killing dozens of dogs and puppies. In some instances, he would drive to a secluded location to brutally murder his victims "for his own sadistic sexual pleasure", court documents state. Between 2020 and 2022, Britton sourced 42 dogs for free from online classifieds giant Gumtree, promising their previous owners he would give them a "good home". Britton killed at least 39 of them before his arrest. The details of Britton's crimes are so graphic, the ABC has chosen not to publish them in full.
>>21386104 Adam Britton:TV croc expert who filmed dog abuse, killings jailed for ten years- A prominent crocodile expert who appeared on ABC will spend the next six years behind bars after admitting to the “sadistic” torture and sexual abuse of more than 42 dogs. Adam Robert Corden Britton, 51, was sentenced before Darwin Supreme Court on Thursday to 10 years and five months behind bars with a non-parole period of six years. Britton, who worked as a croc expert with David Attenborough on the BBC as well as National Geographic, was also sentenced for the possession of child abuse material. It comes two years after Britton’s arrest and almost a year after he was found guilty, but was slammed as “pathetically weak” by Animal Justice Party MLC Emma Hurst. “These were horrific acts of animal cruelty. There is a well-researched link between violence towards animals and violence towards people,” Ms Hurst said in a statement. “This man is a danger to other animals and the community. I am relieved to hear his sentence includes time behind bars … but it is not long enough.” According to the facts, Britton would refer to the cruelty as “ZooSadism” and posted to Telegram groups such as “New Wicked Kennel”, which had 15 users. In an online chat, Britton referred to his “torture room” and what implements he would use, including a bread knife, before adding that: “I can’t stop myself hurting dogs. “I am going to get another dog to kill tomorrow. I plan to hurt it, a lot. I am ridiculously excited about it,” he said.
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273ca3 No.21755615
#37 - Part 110
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 5
>>21386175 Adam Britton:NT crocodile expert sentenced to more than 10 years in prison for bestiality and animal cruelty crimes- Adam Britton, a once-celebrated zoologist, remained expressionless as he was sentenced to 10 years and five months in prison, with a non-parole period of six years, for the rape, torture and murder of dozens of dogs. His sentence was backdated to his arrest in April 2022. Britton has been on remand at the Darwin Correctional Centre since his arrest, and has faced multiple delays to sentencing since pleading guilty to 60 charges of bestiality, animal cruelty and possessing child abuse material last year. On Thursday afternoon, in front of a packed gallery in the Northern Territory Supreme Court, as Chief Justice Michael Grant detailed what he described as Britton's "grotesque" and "unspeakable" crimes against animals, the distress in the courtroom was palpable. Like at previous court appearances, Justice Grant warned that the details had the potential to cause "nervous shock or some other adverse psychological reactions" and excused court officers. While Adam Britton marketed himself as an acclaimed crocodile expert and researcher, appearing in National Geographic and in documentaries alongside David Attenborough, he concealed a disturbing double life systematically torturing animals for years. Britton sourced 42 dogs from online classifieds giant Gumtree between 2020 and 2022, promising dog owners - who were often reluctantly giving their pets away due to travel or work commitments — that he would give them a "good home". He then filmed himself raping and killing them in a shipping container he called his "torture room" on his rural property on the outskirts of Darwin. On the free messenger service Telegram, Britton discussed his kill count and uploaded videos of his murders under the pseudonyms 'Monster' and 'Cerberus'. Justice Grant said Britton's communications with other users on Telegram incited violence, and said it was "manifestly clear" that he derived "perverse pleasure and excitement from the suffering of these animals". "Your conduct on each of those occasions involved a degree of depravity and reprehensibility which falls entirely outside any ordinary human conception and comprehension," Justice Grant said.
>>21386240 Adam Britton:British croc expert jailed for sexual abuse of dogs- A renowned British crocodile expert has been jailed for 10 years and five months in Australia, after admitting to sexually abusing dozens of dogs, in a case which horrified the nation. Adam Britton, a leading zoologist who has worked on BBC and National Geographic productions, pleaded guilty to 56 charges relating to bestiality and animal cruelty. The Northern Territory (NT) Supreme Court heard the 53-year-old filmed himself torturing the animals until almost all died, and then shared the videos online under pseudonyms. His abuse went unnoticed for years, until a clue was found in one of his videos. Britton was arrested in April 2022 after a search of his rural Darwin property, which also uncovered child abuse material on his laptop. Much of the detail of Britton's crimes are too graphic to publish, and so "grotesque" Chief Justice Michael Grant warned the courtroom they could cause "nervous shock". As the facts of the case were read aloud, some members of the public rushed outside. Others watching from the gallery cried and mouthed insults at Britton. He at times hung his head and reached for tissues. Born in West Yorkshire, Britton grew up in the UK before moving to Australia more than 20 years ago to work with crocodiles. With a PhD in zoology, he had built a global reputation for his expertise, even hosting Sir David Attenborough while the veteran broadcaster filmed part of the Life in Cold Blood docuseries on his property. Locals have told media he seemed like a quiet but passionate defender of animals. But he was harbouring a "sadistic sexual interest" in them, court documents say. In reality, he was abusing the animals in a shipping container on his property that had been fitted out with recording equipment - which he called his "torture room" - before sharing footage of his crimes online using aliases. He was only caught after uploading a clip in which he tortured at least eight dogs - all except one were puppies - which was passed on to NT police in an anonymous tip-off. Britton usually went to great lengths to avoid identifying himself or his location in his videos, but in this one a bright orange City of Darwin dog leash could be seen in the background. Within weeks, in April 2022, police swooped on his property and arrested Britton, who has been remanded in custody ever since.
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273ca3 No.21755617
#37 - Part 111
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 6
>>21396446 ‘He could’ve been stopped’: State pays $34m compensation to survivors of paedophile teacher - Survivors of a paedophile teacher who was moved around Victorian schools for decades received up to $34 million compensation from the state government - the highest payout linked to a state school offender. Vincent Henry Reynolds was jailed in 2019 after he pleaded guilty to sexually abusing 38 children over three decades at state primary schools across north and central Victoria. The 83-year-old is serving a 12-year sentence and will be eligible for parole after spending nine years behind bars. The $34 million in compensation paid to his victims is the most the department has paid out in relation to a single perpetrator. But one man, abused by Reynolds as a schoolboy and who did not wish to be named, told The Age that the damage could not be measured in monetary terms. “It’s lives lost, education abandoned, health and happiness destroyed,” the survivor said. “He could have been stopped, and we could have been spared. It’s heartbreaking.” Rightside Legal partner Grace Wilson said mismanagement by education authorities over the years had allowed Reynolds to wreak havoc on many lives. “The mismanagement beggars belief. The cost to the state of repeatedly putting a sex offender back into the classroom is big, but the cost to the victims is much, much bigger,” Wilson said. The lawyer said the compensation helped many victims put their lives back together, but only to an extent. “Nothing can restore the childhood innocence they were robbed of.”
>>21409571 Notorious pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale admits more child sex abuse - Convicted pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale has admitted more historical child sexual abuse in Victoria. Appearing in Bendigo Magistrates Court via video link from Port Phillip Prison, as he lay in his prison bed and propped up by three pillows, the frail 90-year-old pleaded guilty to eight additional sexual assault charges against children. He was facing 62 child sexual assault charges but 56 were withdrawn. The former Catholic priest, who had been too unwell to appear before his committal hearing previously, admitted six counts of indecently assaulting young males and two counts of buggery of two children who were aged under 14. The crimes were committed in the regional Victorian towns of Inglewood, Ballarat, Apollo Bay, Horsham and Mortlake between 1973 and 1981. "Are you guilty or not guilty, Mr Ridsdale," Magistrate Megan Aumair asked the accused on Wednesday. "I'm guilty," Ridsdale replied. Ridsdale is serving a maximum of 40 years in prison after previously pleading guilty to sexually abusing at least 72 children during the 1970s and '80s while working as a Catholic priest at multiple schools and churches across Victoria. He had a fall in November 2022 and was bed-ridden, suffering chronic pain, muscle wasting and weak limbs and was recommended to be placed into palliative care in 2023. If he serves out his current maximum sentence, Ridsdale will be at least 100 years old.
>>21415088 Geelong man from secretive church pleads guilty to raping multiple boys - A member of a secretive and ultra-conservative Pentecostal church has pleaded guilty to raping and persistently sexually abusing multiple children in the Geelong area. Todd Hubers, 38, also known as Todd Hubers Van Assenraad, from East Geelong, was charged in January 2023 with a string of child abuse charges relating to nine boys, including the sexual penetration of two children who were aged under 12 years old. On Thursday, Hubers, a software engineer, stood for the County Court via video link from remand at Ravenhall Correctional Centre and uttered the word “guilty” after each of the 16 charges. The court heard that between 2016 and 2023 Hubers sexually penetrated and touched boys aged 16 and two boys aged under 12, multiple times, and performed indecent acts in front of other children. The court heard the crimes took place at various locations around the Geelong and Bellarine Peninsula areas including at public swimming pools and on one occasion inside play equipment. Hubers is a member of the controversial Geelong Revival Centre (GRC), where sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity said he taught religion and music within the assembly. The Age has previously spoken to more than a dozen former GRC members who raised serious allegations about a range of incidents stemming from their years inside the church. These include alleged incidents of sexual abuse not being reported to police, claims of brutal physical punishments on children, pressure on members not to seek medical treatment for serious illnesses in the belief that prayer would be sufficient, and the forced separation of families if a member decides to leave the church.
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273ca3 No.21755621
#37 - Part 112
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 7
>>21415105 Identities of abusers should be listed on church websites, WA child sexual abuse inquiry finds - The names of known child abusers should be published prominently on church websites and the WA government should create a centrally accessible list of all known perpetrators, an inquiry into institutional child sexual abuse has urged. The Community Development and Justice Standing Committee handed down its final report on Thursday after examining the support available to survivors of institutional child abuse. It found the Catholic Church and other religious entities had prioritised their own institutional and financial wellbeing over the needs of those that had been abused by their members. "Institutions that maintain an unholy wall of silence can only be doing so as a strategy to limit their financial liability rather than providing just outcomes for victim/survivors," the committee said in its report. "Transparency would be a game changer." The committee singled out the Christian Brothers, accusing them of moral failure by trying to hide information on the abuse of children under their care to protect their financial viability. It claimed they refused to attend the inquiry - despite every effort made to accommodate them - giving reasons "that did not bear scrutiny". "It is the conspiracy of secrecy and institutional denial around abuse that not only adds to the trauma suffered by those who were abused but also obstructs their path to justice," committee member Christine Tonkin told state parliament on Thursday.
>>21489976 Muhammad Zain Ul Abideen Rasheed sentenced to 17 years in jail for sexual abuse of hundreds of victims - A sex predator who pretended to be a teenage YouTube star to blackmail hundreds of children into performing sexual acts has been sentenced to 17 years in jail. In handing down her sentence in the District Court of WA on Tuesday, Judge Amanda Burrows said the volume of offences was of such magnitude there was "no comparable case … I can find in Australia". Muhammad Zain Ul Abideen Rasheed, 29, targeted children in Australia and overseas by pretending to be a 15-year-old social media influencer with a large following. He would approach children online in that guise, sending them pictures of the online star and initially asking innocuous questions to gain their trust. The court heard that then escalated to sexually explicit "fantasies" he asked them to approve of, while also asking them for pictures of themselves he could "rate". He threatened to send screenshots of their responses to friends and family unless they performed increasingly extreme sexual acts - including those involving family pets and other young siblings or children in the home. In sentencing, Judge Burrows said those offences were "of a degrading, humiliating nature [and] the conduct involving a family pet was particularly abhorrent". The court heard Rasheed would set a "countdown" timer, threatening to distribute the responses and further images he had made of them if they didn't comply with his demands. Judge Burrows said Rasheed's offending was aggravated by the fact he abused a number of the victims with groups of other adults, inviting other paedophiles to watch live streams while he directed children to perform the distressing acts.
>>21492766 Video: AFP to take on cyberscam kingpins fleecing Australians of billions - The Australian Federal Police is taking on cyber scam syndicates netting billions of dollars a year from unsuspecting Australians in a new global operation using the same sophisticated tactics that have helped bring down some of the nation’s most-wanted offshore criminals. Operation Firestorm will focus on disrupting online criminal networks operating out of Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe that fleeced Australians out of $2.74bn last year, and restraining the assets of syndicate crime bosses, The Australian has been told. It will also seek to disrupt human trafficking networks that The Australian revealed in an investigation in May had already tricked tens of thousands of workers into forced criminality in cyber slave factories operating across Southeast Asia. The global initiative is being welcomed by enforcement agencies across Southeast Asia, where increasingly sophisticated, Chinese-run criminal networks are generating more revenue than the regional drug trade. The operation will be run out of the AFP-led Joint Policing Cybercrime Co-ordination Centre (JPC3) in Sydney, which brings together law enforcement and key industry partners including Austrac and the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission in the fight against cybercrime. It will involve extensive co-operation and intelligence sharing with partners worldwide to reach criminals fleecing Australians.
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273ca3 No.21755623
#37 - Part 113
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 8
>>21494425 ‘Leader of the Pack’: Inmate allegedly led child sex abuse ring from prison - A woman who called herself “leader of The Pack” was allegedly directing a child abuse ring from inside a NSW prison, police say. Jessica Isabelle Rose, 31, a transgender woman formerly known as Dean Angus Bell, allegedly directed a group of inmates who called themselves “The Pack” to share letters detailing the sexual abuse of children and plans to abuse more children in the future. The group allegedly wrote accounts based on real-life experiences of abusing children, as well as assaults they planned to commit after release - with murder allegedly mentioned in one of the stories. The group allegedly passed the stories between them at Junee Correctional Centre. Police became aware of the alleged child abuse ring in April as part of Strike Force Edits, which was established to uncover the distribution of child abuse material in NSW prisons. Sex crimes detectives identified the group of inmates as part of their investigation and arrested Rose at Junee Correctional Centre on Tuesday. The size of “The Pack” will form part of investigations, but police believe a significant number of inmates could be involved, due to the amount of child abuse material allegedly being created. The priority for police was to arrest the alleged leader and disperse the group, with more arrests expected in the near future. Rose was taken to Wagga Wagga police station and charged with eight counts of producing child abuse material, eight counts of disseminating the material, and knowingly directing a criminal group. Bail was not applied for and was formally refused. She will next face court on October 23.
>>21494429 Former Sydney swimming coach Dick Caine revealed as serial paedophile - Former elite swimming coach Dick Caine has been revealed as a serial paedophile after a judge found he had sexually abused six underage students, and lifted an order concealing his identity to the applause of his victims. Caine, who was head coach at the Carss Park swimming pool in Sydney’s south for decades, pleaded not guilty to 39 charges against girls aged 10 to 16 across the 1970s and 1980s. The 78-year-old did not appear for a single day of his lengthy judge-alone special hearing in Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court after he was previously deemed unfit to face a criminal trial due to health reasons. The court heard that Caine was in palliative care in hospital. Delivering his long-awaited judgment, Judge Paul McGuire found “on the limited evidence available, the accused committed the offence charged” on all 39 counts against all six victims, some of whom attended court and welcomed the outcome as “closure”. Caine’s offending includes multiple counts of indecent assault of a child and unlawful carnal knowledge of a pupil, a form of sexual assault. McGuire found Caine had a tendency to have a particular state of mind, being a sexual interest in prepubescent and pubescent females, and to act on that in a particular way, including touching their breasts, forcing oral sex, digital penetration and sexual intercourse with girls for whom he was a swimming coach. “I find that none of the complainants consented to any of the sexual contact, and that the accused knew that none of them consented,” the judge said. Caine’s offending occurred in the pool sauna, gym, female toilets, his office, home and car. The court heard his victims had “genuine” hopes of competing in the Commonwealth Games and Olympic Games. But after the coach’s abuse, one victim had disposed of her collection of sporting memorabilia and trophies. Another victim had received annual Christmas cards from Caine, and found them “to be a reminder of the accused’s previous threat for her to keep quiet”.
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273ca3 No.21755624
#37 - Part 114
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 9
>>21507224 NSW Liberal MP Rory Amon charged with child sex offences; quits party, parliament - NSW Liberal MP Rory Amon has quit his party and his seat after he was charged by police with historic child sex offences, allegations he says he will deny in court. Mr Amon, the representative for the state electorate of Pittwater appeared before Magistrate Lisa Stapleton at Manly Local Court on Friday afternoon. The charges relate to an alleged sexual assault in Mona Vale in July 2017, in which Mr Amon allegedly assaulted a teenage boy who was known to him. Mr Amon was charged with five counts of sexual intercourse with a person over 10 and under 14 years, two charges of indecent assault of a person under 16 years, one charge of commit act of indecency with a person under 16 years and two charges of attempting sexual intercourse child with a child over 10 under 14. “Following extensive inquiries, a 35-year-old man was arrested at Manly Police Station about 6am today,” a NSW Police spokesperson said. “In March 2023, Strike Force NOORAL was established to investigate the incident.” The taskforce investigation began the same month Mr Amon was elected to parliament, he is the opposition assistant youth spokesperson. All ten alleged incidents took place between June 1 and late July in Mona Vale. The teenage boy, according to court documents, was 13 years old at the time of Mr Amon’s alleged sexual offences. Born Roderick Gilmore Amon, he joined the Northern Beaches Council in September 2017, meaning the alleged assault predates his political career by two months. Prior to local politics he worked as a family law solicitor with a specialty in domestic and family violence.
>>21520935 Daycare paedophile Ashley Paul Griffith pleads guilty to sexually abusing dozens of children in Brisbane and Italy - A former Queensland childcare worker has pleaded guilty to raping, sexually abusing and exploiting dozens of girls under his care. Ashley Paul Griffith was arraigned on more than 300 charges in the District Court in Brisbane today. The offences against around 60 children happened between 2003 and 2022 at early learning centres in Brisbane and Italy. Several victims and their families were in court, with some parents crying as the names of their children were read out. The parents of one of the young victims, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, described the "horrific" moment they were told their daughter had been sexually abused. They said they thought police were contacting them about another incident at the daycare centre. Instead, they were asked to identify their child from a photo. "We see people going in [to the daycare centre now], and I [think], this happened to my child in that room," the child's mother said. "It’s a room of horrors." The child's father said it was "hard to believe" how someone could "get away with something like that for so long". The couple said they decided to tell their daughter about what happened to her, but she's still very young and doesn't entirely understand. "As she grows up, we'll deal with that as it comes but it’s going to be something we deal with through our lives now," the child’s father said. "It was good that [he pleaded guilty] and we can move onto the next step now."
>>21521002 Video: Brisbane childcare rapist unseen for years in 'broken' system - The parents of one of dozens of young girls raped by a childcare worker say the system is broken and they can't fathom how he got away with prolific offending over years in a "room full of horrors". Ashley Paul Griffith, 46, today pleaded guilty in Brisbane District Court to more than 300 child sex offences including 28 charges of rape, as well as ongoing sexual abuse and making child exploitation material. Griffith committed the crimes at childcare centres in multiple Brisbane suburbs over a span of more than 19 years. The parents of one of the victims, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, spoke outside court after Griffith spent more than two hours entering his pleas to each individual charge. "We certainly feel there's something broken in the system," the victim's father said. "How someone like that could get away with that for so long, it's hard to believe it's being run as effectively as it could be". The victim's mother said she wanted to stand outside the childcare centre where her daughter was attacked in order to warn other parents. "It happened to my child in that room. It's a room full of horrors," she said. The mother said her complaint about Griffith's behaviour in 2018 was not acted upon and she accused the centre of being run "as a business, not as a place that was looking after children".
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273ca3 No.21755627
#37 - Part 115
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 10
>>21525868 ‘Never free this predator’: parents’ plea on pedophile childcare worker Ashley Paul Griffith after pleading guilty to 306 child abuse charges - The parents of a little girl preyed upon by Australia’s worst alleged pedophile have been joined by a leading abuse advocate in calling for the former childcare worker to never be released after he pleaded guilty to more than 300 child abuse charges. Ashley Paul Griffith appeared in Brisbane’s District Court on Monday before a courtroom packed with families of young girls he abused over 15 years as he moved between Queensland, NSW and Italy. Griffith accepted 28 counts of rape against at least 12 children, 190 counts of unlawfully and indecently dealing with a child and 67 counts of making child exploitation material. He also pleaded guilty to 15 counts of maintaining an unlawful sexual relationship with a child, four counts of producing child abuse material outside of Australia, one count of distributing child abuse material outside of Australia, one count of using a carriage service for child pornography material and one count of possessing child exploitation material. A man and woman whose daughter was allegedly abused by Griffith said life in prison was not long enough for the man who had been so prolific in his abuse. “It’s a little bit disappointing that life is probably not as long as we’d like, especially if there’s any kind of parole element to that,” said the father, who cannot be named to protect the identity of his child.
>>21530701 Queensland Police asked to reinvestigate failed complaints about pedophile Ashley Paul Griffith - The Queensland Police Minister has demanded a new internal investigation into officers’ handling of complaints about a childcare worker’s behaviour with young girls before he was unmasked as Australia’s worst pedophile. After Ashley Paul Griffith, 46, pleaded guilty to more than 300 charges of child exploitation on Monday, Labor government minister Mark Ryan ordered Police Commissioner Steve Gollschewski to conduct another review of how two complaints made to officers in 2021 and ’22 were handled. An internal review was previously completed by police, which found the matters were appropriately investigated and the claims could not be substantiated. Mr Ryan said it was important nothing else could be learned. “The level of trauma he has inflicted upon so many is almost beyond comprehension,” Mr Ryan said. “Notwithstanding this matter having been previously reviewed, I have asked the commissioner if this matter could be examined again. If any improvements or learnings can be identified, then it is my expectation they should be implemented as soon as possible.” A former co-worker of Griffith, Yolanda Borucki, 60, alerted police in August 2021 to an incident involving the man and a child. However, investigators said there was insufficient evidence to lay charges. Within weeks, he returned to the centre before moving on to two other facilities in neighbouring northside suburbs in early 2022. A separate investigation was undertaken by Queensland Police in April 2022, but no details are known. In that time, he assaulted several other young girls before his arrest that August.
>>21547193 ‘He got me when I was young’: The brave evidence of Dick Caine’s victims - One of Sydney swimming coach Dick Caine’s victims was just 10 when she was first sexually abused by the man her parents had considered the “ants pants”. More than four decades later, when news of Caine’s arrest broke in 2022, the woman cried as she told her husband: “He got me when I was young.” Caine’s identity was covered by a non-publication order as six complainants gave evidence during his judge-alone special hearing from June to August in Downing Centre District Court. That veil of secrecy was lifted last week after Judge Paul McGuire found, on the limited evidence available, Caine had committed 39 offences of child sexual abuse in the 1970s and 1980s. Caine, 78, was deemed unfit to face a traditional trial due to health reasons. His lawyers in 2022 said he had terminal cancer, that he would probably not make Christmas 2023, and now claim he is in palliative care. His victims are outraged Caine did not front up to a single day of proceedings and is not in custody. This is what they told Caine’s hearing, according to the judge’s 132-page summary of evidence published after the verdicts.
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273ca3 No.21755629
#37 - Part 116
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 11
>>21551369 Adam Britton:NT crocodile expert’s depraved childhood interest in animals- A one-time prominent crocodile expert outed as a depraved torturer and killer of dogs had only ever been sexually attracted to animals, court documents reveal. Adam Robert Corden Britton had sexually abused, brutalised and killed at least 39 dogs in less than two years before he was finally tracked down by authorities in April 2022. The former senior research associate at Charles Darwin University sourced these animals from sites including Gumtree, promising them a “good home” He regularly filmed himself carrying out acts a judge described as being of “sheer deviancy and brutality”, and uploaded them to bestiality sharing platforms under the pseudonyms ‘Monster’ and “Cerberus’. Britton, 53, was sentenced to 10 years and five months, with a non-parole period of six years, on August 10 after pleading guilty to 56 offences. In beginning his sentence remarks, Chief Justice Michael Grant warned they would include “graphic descriptions of what can only be described as grotesque depravity and cruelty towards animals”. He believed some of the facts he had to read to the court had the potential to “cause nervous shock” or other physiological reactions. Much of the detail included in the judgment are too grotesque and disturbing to report.
>>21551377 Adam Britton's lifelong lie:Crocodile expert who raped and tortured pet dogs was NEVER attracted to humans despite his 16-year marriage- A depraved zoologist who was jailed for a decade for filming the rape and torture of pet dogs was never attracted to humans, despite his 16-year marriage, and fantasised about animals from the age of six. Adam Robert Corden Britton, 53, was this month sentenced to 10 years and five months behind bars, with a non-parole period of six years, backdated to his April 2022 arrest. UK-born Britton, who moved to Darwin to pursue his zoology career, pleaded guilty to 63 charges of animal abuse, bestiality, and possession of child exploitation material. He sourced the dogs from Gumtree Australia over a two-year period for the sole purpose of torturing them to death on camera, but would tell the former owners their pets were enjoying their new home. The dogs were usually already dead by the time updates were given to their old owners. Most were horrifically abused and slowly murdered within a few days. On Thursday, sentencing remarks by NT Chief Justice Michael Grant were released by the Northern Territory Supreme Court. The 42-page document, obtained by Daily Mail Australia, gives a horrifying insight into Britton's privileged childhood which was marred with depraved sexual fantasies - such as sneaking into paddocks at the age of ten to hug horses and eat their hair. The judge said Britton's had an 'unusual' interest in animals from the age of six, when he would watch videos of animals defecating and urinating and fantasised about being immersed in cow faeces. The sentencing remarks also outlined Britton's lifelong struggle with the socio-sexual disorder, paraphelia and zoosadism. Britton was never attracted to humans and struggled to have proper relationships with women when he was a university student in Hong Kong and the UK. He had two female partners, but they were not sexual relationships.
>>21551386 SUPREME COURT OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY - R v ADAM BRITTON - Sentencing Remarks -The choice to know will ultimately be yours.- https://supremecourt.nt.gov.au/_resources/documents/sentencing-remarks/html?url=https://supremecourt.nt.gov.au/__data/assets/rtf_file/0010/1439632/Britton_08082024_22212255_sen_net.rtf
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273ca3 No.21755633
#37 - Part 117
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 12
>>21556741 Ashley Griffith arrest: Don’t admit liability, church managers told as police traced sex abuse victims - Uniting Church managers were told by their internal insurance expert that they were not to admit any liability as police investigated the nation’s worst case of child abuse in daycare, involving the rape and sexual abuse of at least 91 girls in Queensland, NSW and Italy by childcare worker Ashley Paul Griffith. A raft of new documents leaked to The Australian also raise more serious questions about how authorities handled a complaint against Griffith after he appeared to have been seen kissing a sleeping girl at a Brisbane childcare centre 10 months before his arrest. A local station’s police sergeant was initially assigned to the complaint, and a specialist child protection squad had still not contacted a church manager four days later to take up the investigation, it can now be revealed. After being cleared by police and the church over the complaint, Griffith went on to rape at least one more girl and sexually abused three others before his arrest in an unrelated investigation. He pleaded guilty in the District Court in Brisbane last Monday to 307 charges. Queensland police maintain an internal review cleared officers over their handling of the complaint and of another later one against Griffith, but there are calls for a broad independent inquiry into how he was able to abuse girls for almost two full decades.
>>21561874 Child rapist Ashley Griffith’s evil act after redundancy notice - The nation’s worst pedophile, Ashley Paul Griffith, singled out and raped a little girl at a Uniting Church daycare centre in Brisbane in the weeks after he was told he was being made redundant and four months after a complaint about him “kissing” a girl at the same centre was dismissed, court records indicate. His devastating abuse of the girl, a new victim he is not known to have previously assaulted, on his way out of the daycare centre can be revealed as calls grow for an independent and public inquiry into how he was able to abuse children for almost two full decades. On Monday, March 14, 2022, the church’s early learning operations manager Yolanda Borucki informed Griffith his position had been made redundant, according to a source who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Nine days later, on March 23, 2022, Griffith submitted a letter of resignation from the centre, and on March 31 he emailed families announcing he had resigned. In this same period, he struck a new victim. Among the hundreds of shocking charges Griffith pleaded guilty to in Brisbane’s District Court last week, five related to the rape, abuse and recording of a girl between March 23 and April 1, 2022. The charges are listed as occurring in the same suburb as the Uniting Church childcare centre. He then went on to abuse at least three more girls at other Brisbane daycare centres before his arrest in an unrelated investigation, according to the charges he pleaded guilty to. It can also be revealed one of the most senior leaders of the Uniting Church in Queensland took just 43 minutes to approve Griffith’s redundancy, after he was earlier cleared of kissing a sleeping girl at the same centre. Reverend Heather den Houting was then the general secretary of the church and had been involved in managing a report from a co-worker that Griffith was seen on top of a little girl during nap time and that his “mouth was moving along her mouth” in October 2021. Both police and an internal church investigation found he had no case to answer in November 2021.
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273ca3 No.21755635
#37 - Part 118
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 13
>>21575883 Western Bulldogs set to face second legal claim over historical sexual abuse - The Western Bulldogs are facing a second potentially devastating legal action over alleged abuse by a convicted pedophile who volunteered at the club. The alleged victim, now 51, claims he was abused by child predator Graeme Hobbs in 1987 after meeting him at Whitten Oval. Hobbs’ first victim, Adam Kneale, was awarded $5.9 million in November 2023, after the club stalwart had admitted abusing him, was jailed and the Bulldogs were found negligent in protecting him from harm. The landmark judgement was hailed as an “earthquake” in Australia’s legal system, with the sum dwarfing previous compensation payouts to abuse survivors. It was also the first successful claim against an AFL club. Kneale was aged 11 when the “jack of all trades” Hobbs first raped him at the ground in 1984. The Western Bulldogs have challenged the negligence verdict in the Kneale case, with the hearing scheduled to start in the Court of Appeal on Friday. But a second alleged victim - a schoolmate of Kneale – has now claimed in Supreme Court documents he too was befriended and abused by Hobbs at the club and off-site. He alleged Hobbs twice took him, when he was 14, from the club to an Essendon house where he was abused. On one occasion, he alleged he was forced to watch Hobbs rape Kneale, while another time he claimed he was asked to strip naked and Hobbs tried to rape him. Hobbs, who is now dead, was a club volunteer, fundraiser and under 19s training staff member. Rightside Legal partner Michael Magazanik, who represents Kneale and the alleged second victim, said both abuse survivors were committed to holding the club to account. “Both of my clients have lived with their shocking consequences of their abuse for decades,’’ Mr Magazanik said. “It has caused mental illness, torment and suffering. Hobbs and his pedophile friends were convicted and jailed but that doesn’t give their victims their lives back. “That’s why both my clients want justice from the Western Bulldogs and it’s why the jury (in the first case), six Victorians chosen at random, thought justice was required.’’
>>21582871 Video: Uniting Church set cops on Ashley Griffith abuse informer - The Uniting Church accused a whistleblowing manager of damaging its reputation and future profitability for going to the media about Australia’s worst pedophile, Ashley Paul Griffith, before pursuing a complaint against her with police. A leaked “show cause” notice sent to the church’s early learning operations manager, Yolanda Borucki, accuses her of likely causing “significant reputational damage” and “significant damage to ongoing profitability” for emailing confidential and sensitive information to a journalist at Nine Network’s A Current Affair. Eleven days after the notice, acting on a complaint from the church, police raided Ms Borucki’s home on Brisbane’s bayside, seized her phones and devices and charged her with computer hacking for allegedly using a restricted computer without the church’s consent. Ms Borucki, 60, was charged despite still being employed by the church when she allegedly accessed the information, and having possession of her work phone, computer and car and the ability to log into her emails. The grandmother allegedly used her work email and a work device to forward the material. Queensland police were declining to answer questions about past complaints against Griffith when Ms Borucki appeared on the national television program in August last year. She revealed that in October 2021 a co-worker at a Uniting Church childcare centre in Brisbane reported stumbling across Griffith leaning over a sleeping girl in an outdoor fort, “basically kissing her”. Police and the church cleared Griffith and dismissed the complaint. Griffith went on to rape another little girl from the same centre in his final week there after being told his position was being made redundant, court records indicate. Subsequently, he abused three more girls at other centres before his arrest in an unrelated police investigation in August 2022. The Uniting Church has said it is “deeply saddened and sorry that harm was done at one of our facilities”.
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273ca3 No.21755637
#37 - Part 119
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 14
>>21589845 Western Bulldogs fight multimillion-dollar payout to child sex abuse survivor, claim jury was ‘misled’ - The Western Bulldogs claim a jury that awarded a “startling” $5.9m to child sex abuse survivor Adam Kneale, assaulted for years at Whitten Oval by a club volunteer and pedophile, was “misled”. The footy club has demanded a jury verdict finding it was negligent for abuse committed by star fundraising volunteer Graeme ‘Chops’ Hobbs be thrown out, or the multimillion-dollar compensation payout to the predator’s victim be slashed. The pedophile, now dead, was jailed after admitting to abusing Mr Kneale for six years from the age of 11. During his civil trial in October 2023, Mr Kneale gave evidence he was sexually assaulted at the Bulldogs’ home-ground more than 40 times. The appeal fight is set to be closely watched by a second alleged victim who has launched fresh legal action against the club, also for abuse at the hands of Hobbs at Whitten Oval in the 1980s. In the Court of Appeal on Friday, the Bulldogs’ high profile barrister Bret Walker SC labelled the award - the highest amount handed to an abuse survivor in Australia - as “genuinely startling”. “It speaks for itself as to its excessiveness,” said the lawyer, who charges north of $25,000 a day. The Bulldogs were ordered by the jury to pay Mr Kneale $3.25m for pain and suffering alone, with Court of Appeal judge Justice David Beach stating he was “not aware” of any other cases where general damages were assessed at more than $1m. Barrister Sam Hay KC, for Mr Kneale, conceded “the award is high” but that it could be “indicative of the way the general public views the nature of this abuse”.
>>21648351 Victims warned WA’s worst serial sex predator could be released - Victims of WA’s worst serial sex predator Dennis John McKenna are reeling after being told the child abuser could be released from prison in two months. Department of Justice letters have been sent to a number of men preyed upon by McKenna, while they boarded as students at St Andrew’s Hostel in Katanning some time between 1975 and 1990. “I am writing to offer you the opportunity to discuss any concerns or queries you may have about future contact with an offender,” the letter reads. “The Prisoners Review Board is required to consider Mr McKenna for possible release on parole. I would like to speak with you regarding your thoughts on this matter. The offender’s date of parole eligibility is 17 November, 2024.” Those notified of the parole date can now make a written submission to the department’s Victim offender Mediation Unit. Since 1991, McKenna has been handed jail sentences on three occasions after police investigations highlighted more victims from his reign of terror as the hostel’s warden. When combined, McKenna was sentenced to 22 years behind bars for 65 offences against 29 boys. The most recent punishment came in 2013, when the now 79-year-old was convicted of a further 34 child sex crime offences. His systemic abuse at the Katanning facility, used to accommodate the children of farming families attending the town’s high school, resulted in a 2012 inquiry and report titled St Andrew’s Hostel: How the System and Society Failed our Children. But those who survived McKenna’s molestation never want to see him free again. “He’s a rapist, he’s a paedophile, and there’s no way he should be let out,” survivor Michael Hilder told Radio 6PR.
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273ca3 No.21755639
#37 - Part 120
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 15
>>21653844 Convicted pedophile, Olympic swim coach Dick Caine dead at 78 -Convicted pedophile Dick Caine, the former Sydney swimming coach found to have raped six students under his care, has died in hospital following a terminal cancer diagnosis. Caine, 78, was spared jail and deemed unfit to appear physically in court due to his poor health following his arrest in June 2022. His ongoing trial was kept under wraps by a gag order, prompted by fears among Caine’s legal representation he would attempt suicide if the details of the trial were widely reported. The order was lifted upon his conviction. He was found to have sexually abused six girls aged 10 to 16 in the 1970s through to the 1980s during his career as an Olympic and world champion swim coach at Carss Park swimming pool in Sydney’s south. All 39 charges brought against Caine were proven in a hearing before Judge Paul McGuire at the Downing Centre District Court between June and August this year. Caine’s next hearing remains listed for December 6, though a District Court representative said they anticipated the matter would be relisted in the wake of his death. His six victims were due to provide victim impact statements. He died on Wednesday morning, having reportedly survived past a prior prognosis anticipating he would be dead in the months following his 2022 arrest. In court, his wife Jennifer alleged he had lung and throat cancer for which he was in palliative care with “maybe six months” to live. Caine also suffered from dementia, with his defence arguing further public scrutiny placed him at risk of stroke and heart attack. He was released on bail following charges. In Caine’s judge-only trial, he was found to have raped his victims in the pool’s sauna, office and bathrooms, also sexually assaulting his victims at a hotel, in his car and at his home.
>>21711060 ‘It empowers others’: Former Australian under-19s captain speaks out on abuse allegation - A former juniors Australian captain who is suing Cricket Australia over a historical allegation of sexual abuse says he has come forward “to call out both those who take advantage of the vulnerable and the organisations who protect them”. Dean Reynolds led Australia on the 1985 under-19s tour to India and Sri Lanka, where he has alleged he was sexually touched by the coach Bob Bitmead. He filed a statement of claim in the Queensland Supreme Court in July that seeks damages of more than $4 million from CA. Bitmead has previously denied the allegation. CA has lodged its defence, denying all of Reynolds’ claims. CA’s defence denies that Bitmead abused Reynolds and then says: “The claim is excessive and has no proper regard to the evidence; and, any injury resulting from the subject incident (which is denied) has resolved.” CA’s defence also argues that “the nature and extent of any duty of care owed by the defendant (CA), or by Bitmead, which is not admitted, is a question of law to be determined by trial”. The case is set down for mediation on November 14. Now 57, Reynolds was interviewed as part of a 2022 investigation of the tour by the ABC, an episode that led him to reconsider his own experiences in 1985 and afterwards. “I am sharing my story now because I seek closure and feel it is important to demonstrate bravery in speaking out against authority figures who have acted wrongly,” Reynolds told this masthead. “I know I am not the first or the last, but it’s important to call out both those who take advantage of the vulnerable and the organisations who protect them, either directly or by choosing to look the other way.”
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273ca3 No.21755641
#37 - Part 121
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 16
>>21718411 Former Marist College student preparing to sue over alleged canings and other corporal punishments in 1970s - A former Canberra Marist College student is preparing to sue over the canings and other corporal punishments he allegedly received as a young student in the early 1970s. The case against the Trustees of the Marist Brothers has been lodged with the ACT Supreme Court. In his statement of claim, the now 67-year-old described extraordinary incidents including being repeatedly struck on the hand with a metal ruler, caned on his hands until the cane broke, and caned on the back of the legs. He also alleged one teacher instructed him to hold out his hand while the teacher stood on the edge of a podium, raised the cane above his head and leapt off with all his weight to strike the student's hand. The man, who was first enrolled at the school as a 12-year-old and attended from 1970 to 1972, is being represented by Shine Lawyers. His statement of claim also alleges a sexual assault after a school play at the Canberra Theatre when he said he was left alone in a room with a man he did not know. In their submissions, the Trustees of the Marist Brothers questioned that allegation, saying there was no record of the school holding a production at the Canberra Theatre at the time. The man's lawyers have not mentioned any figures but said they were claiming negligence, saying the operators of the school owed the boy a duty of care to avoid the risks of harm. The claim suggests those running the school should have had a system for students to report misconduct, should have removed abusive teachers and staff from the school, and put a mandatory reporting system in place as well as ensuring students were not put in a position where they would be assaulted or be in fear of assault.
>>21718431 Australian Bishop Christopher Saunders pleads ‘not guilty’ to abuse charges - Bishop Christopher Saunders appeared in Australian court Monday to enter a plea of not guilty to 28 criminal charges, including allegations of sexual assault and indecent dealings with a minor. The former bishop of the Diocese of Broome stands accused of a long slate of alleged crimes of grooming and abusing young Aboriginal men over a period of eight years, beginning in 2008. Saunders, 74, confirmed to the court that he understood the charges and entered a plea of not guilty on all counts. He is due back in court for the next hearing in the case in January, having last appeared in June as his lawyer argued against a petition to change the bishop’s bail conditions. The bishop also faces several separate firearms charges, including illegal possession of a weapon. He did not enter a plea on those charges during the Sept. 30 hearing. Saunders was arrested in February of this year, following a January police raid on his former residence in the Diocese of Broome, carried out by Child Abuse Squad detectives. The bishop led the Diocese of Broome in Western Australia until 2021, when he resigned citing “ill health” amid allegations of sexual misconduct and grooming against young Aboriginal men. The bishop’s resignation followed a decision to step back from governance of the diocese in 2020, after accusations surfaced that he had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars of Church funds on gifts for vulnerable young men, including cash, phones, alcohol, and travel. The police investigation which led to the raid and the bishop’s arrest came after Church authorities handed over a 200-page investigation conducted into Saunders alleged misconduct, ordered by the Vatican in 2022, after a separate police investigation had been closed the previous year due to lack of evidence. In a statement at the time of Saunders’ arrest, Australian bishops’ conference president Archbishop Timothy Costelloe of Perth said that “It is right and proper, and indeed necessary, that all allegations be thoroughly investigated,” and promised that the Church would “cooperate fully with police and take every necessary step to avoid any actions which may compromise the integrity and autonomy of the police investigation.” Saunders now faces 28 criminal charges related to alleged sexual abuse, including two counts of rape and 14 counts of unlawful and indecent assault related to alleged victimization of young Aboriginal men in towns throughout the diocese between 2008 and 2016.
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273ca3 No.21755644
#37 - Part 122
Child Sexual Abuse, Pedophilia, Human Trafficking and Satanism Investigations - Part 17
>>21739558 Beaumaris Primary School sexual abuse survivor reaches record $8 million settlement with Victorian government - A survivor of "shocking" sexual abuse at a Melbourne primary school has received what his lawyer has called "the biggest publicly known payment to an abuse survivor in Australia" in an extraordinary $8 million settlement with the Victorian Education Department. The man, who was sexually abused by notorious paedophile Darrell Ray, was among a generation of students who suffered abuse in the 1960s and 70s at Beaumaris Primary School in bayside Melbourne. The man's lawyer, Michael Magazanik of Rightside Legal, said his client had been fighting for justice for most of his adult life and settled the claim a week before it was set to reach Victoria's Supreme Court. "He's been on this path for decades, first pushing for a criminal prosecution for lots of Ray's victims, and then his own fight for proper compensation," Mr Magazanik said. "Of course, it's been a rocky road for him and life hasn't been easy because he's been dealing with entrenched damage. Now he's got what he deserves and we're proud to have fought for him. It's the biggest publicly-known payment to an abuse survivor in Australia. It represents the shocking damage the abuse did and the cost of starting to repair my client's life, starting to put him back in the position he might have been in had the school kept him safe." Speaking to ABC Investigations, the man said he hoped his legal victory would inspire survivors who have lost faith in the justice system. "I'd strongly recommend that victims of sexual abuse get themselves a lawyer and not go down the National Redress path," the man said. "That's the main thing I'd want to get across to other survivors. Trust your lawyer and get what you deserve, not what the government wants to give you. For me, personally, an apology was never going to give me any closure. I was offered twice and said no. Other people might get closure from an apology, but I won't. And the money does not give me closure either - I will never get closure. I wouldn't still be here were it not for finding my faith. And that's not for everyone either. But I had to become a Christian to even have a remote chance of surviving and finding a better way of life."
>>21739573 Video: British YouTuber and rapper Yung Filly extradited to Perth to face allegations of rape - He is accused of assaulting a woman in a hotel room on September 28th 2024. In 2021 Yung Filly was also accused of meeting and texting 17 year old girls when he was 26 and recently he was also seen biting women outside clubs (Allegedly). UPDATE: Yung Filly has been granted bail of $122,000, with conditions that require him to stay in Western Australia until his court appearance in December. He must also report to the police three times a week.
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273ca3 No.21755674
PREVIOUSLY COLLECTED NOTABLES
Q Research AUSTRALIA #37 ————————————– https://www.fullchan.net/?d4d8c760960ac176#14DVgZKLtqomapm7zxz7rsVTw8iUNwx6uYbLJUvyTUvm
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273ca3 No.21755677
THREAD ARCHIVES
Q Research AUSTRALIA #37 ————————————–——– https://archive.vn/rA053
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273ca3 No.21755683
CURRENT DOUGH
https://www.fullchan.net/?4f37fd905354f8b6#ChLsjayUd9DhV8mA2eXQBJ3qKsxvDoYz7WDhLqVY82jW
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273ca3 No.21755719
Misinformation law would prevent ‘Trumpian’ lies in referendum, says Yes vote architect Megan Davis
JAMES DOWLING - 11 October 2024
1/2
Voice to parliament architect Megan Davis has called for misinformation legislation to protect a future referendum from an onslaught of “Trumpian” lies and distortions, following the defeat of the Yes campaign last year.
Professor Davis, also said the Uluru Dialogue, of which she is co-chair, had tried to warn the well-funded Yes23 campaign at Christmas in 2022 that Advance, the major group opposing the voice, had already taken control of the narrative – months before Yes23 released its first commercial on news websites and television.
In a speaking event through the University of NSW, at which she is pro vice-chancellor – society, Professor Davis also criticised the ABC over its “false equivalence”, saying the veneer of balance culminated in Yes campaigners being denied interviews through the end of the referendum debate.
The renowned constitutional lawyer detailed what she claimed were the beginnings of a misinformation campaign against the voice from November 2022, and her frustrations in driving the Albanese government to legislate against misleading campaigns on behalf of the No vote.
“I remember saying to Labor ‘it’s a problem for us (Indigenous groups), and you might not think it’s a problem for you, but it’s going to become one, you just don’t see it yet’,” Professor Davis said.
“I’ve had a lot of contact from Queenslander mob … who are saying the Queensland Electoral Commission put out all of these ads about misinformation so that Queenslanders can distinguish between what is fact and what is not. We’d asked for that.
“They’re taking it seriously now because their own electoral misfortunes are at stake.”
Key to this was a proposal from Indigenous committees within government to float a bill against referendum misinformation, fearing an onslaught of “Trumpian” No campaigns.
“The Aboriginal committees did press upon Labor to pass legislation to protect the referendum from lies and misinformation,” she said.
“It’s important to ask the question, and certainly in relation to referendums going forward, what role the law can play in terms of Australians being able to debate these issues fairly … we want freedom of speech, but we need to balance that with upholding principles of democracy and democratic rights.
“We had been told by ALP campaign experts that they expected the Trumpian misinformation to arrive on Australian shores in the 2019 election, and it didn’t happen. Then they thought it would happen in the 2022 election; it didn’t happen. And then they were kind of ambivalent about what impact it had on our referendum.”
Professor Davis said the national broadcaster was equally at fault.
“The ABC constantly emailed all of the Aboriginal staff at UNSW saying ‘we’re desperately looking for a No activist from La Perouse, can someone find us one please, because we’ve got this debate coming up’,” she said.
“We have to do all of this ABC interaction on the basis of the most ridiculous arguments that were not even plausible legal arguments, but just because they wanted this balance.
“By the time you got to the last six weeks, commercial television wouldn’t even run Yes (campaigners). Unless No ran someone, unless Advance (put up an interviewee) they would not run someone from the Yes campaign.”
Professor Davis echoed comments by ABC board member and journalist Laura Tingle, who similarly criticised the alleged poor editorial rigour of the national broadcaster in the final days of the campaign.
At the launch of David Marr’s book, Killing for Country, Tingle said ABC reporters had to “fill in a form” detailing “the number of minutes the Yes case has got, (and) the number of minutes the No case has”.
“It’s completely sick,” she said. “It affects the way we structure and report stories because they say if you can’t get somebody who’s a No, you can’t put on somebody who’s a Yes.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21755723
>>21755719
2/2
Professor Davis, a Cobble Cobble woman and Harvard Law visiting professor, argued this “false equivalence” gave voters the impression Indigenous populations were evenly split on the voice, despite polling indicating vast support.
“It was impossible for us to articulate our case, because journalists would come to us with the most farcical and absolutely offbeat questions,” she said.
The ABC disputed her account.
“We do not agree with Professor Davis’s comments. The advice to managers in the lead-up to the voice referendum was to ensure each of the programs and platforms they manage had a genuine diversity of perspectives,” a spokesperson said. “Teams were explicitly told that 50/50 balance of advocates was not required.
“The coverage was high-quality and successfully included diverse voices and opinions from all parts of Australia. The ABC was ever mindful of its responsibility to facilitate a comprehensive but responsible debate in an impartial manner.”
In an essay, Professor Davis said journalists had returned to “running government press releases” rather than delving into the nuance of Indigenous affairs.
“The media absolutely abdicated (its responsibility) to read. They did not read the expert panel report, they did not read the Referendum Council Report. All they went off was Advance’s talking notes,” she said.
“That fundamental job to fact-check, and to make sure that what you’re putting to the Yes campaign or the Aboriginal people is accurate and factual, just went out the window, and then it was just amplified in the most extraordinary way on social media.”
She said key stakeholders in the Yes campaign had recently convened to autopsy their shortcomings in the referendum debate, with lobby group Advance seen as the driving force behind an early loss of control over the political narrative.
“Advance was really clever. They started (campaigning) really early, they got money outside of the statutory declaration period (and) they had this really clever (seemingly) neutral news site that had referendum news well before it was really in the consciousness of most Australians,” Professor Davis said.
“They ran multiple No campaigns and did a really effective job, and I don’t think the Yes campaign was ready for it.
“We went to the main campaign, Yes23 … and said to them ‘this is a problem’. We said that to them over Christmas.
“By the time January, February came around, I think we had probably already lost that narrative debate.”
Professor Davis spoke at UNSW Law and Justice’s Legal Hour: Misinformation in the Media event alongside lawyer Kevin Lynch, Guardian correspondent Ben Doherty and UNSW associate professor Alyce McGovern.
In August last year, Anthony Albanese claimed the No campaign was promoting fear and nonsense about what the voice’s priorities would be.
“Some of the stuff is just so absurd. Like the idea that Indigenous Australians, with an eight-year life expectancy gap, with infant mortality rates worse than non-Indigenous Australians, with a young Indigenous male more likely to go to jail than university, that they’re worried about where subs might be located. Or that they’ll issue or be concerned about parking fines,” the Prime Minister said.
However, the potential reach of the voice was at the forefront of the debate, particularly over whether or not it should be able to advise executive government as well as parliament. Professor Davis and fellow constitutional expert Gabrielle Appleby wrote in The Weekend Australian in March 2023 that nobody would be able to shut the voice up and it would be able to speak on a wide range of matters, including to the Reserve Bank, but “it will have to spend its political capital wisely”.
Less than a week before the referendum was defeated, Centre for Public Integrity chair Anthony Whealy said the voice might seek to make representations to the government on AUKUS in cases where Indigenous people were concerned about nuclear proliferation on their land.
However, he predicted the voice would lose its efficacy if it sought to make broad representations outside issues that directly affected Indigenous people.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/misinformation-law-would-prevent-trumpian-lies-in-referendum-says-yes-vote-architect-megan-davis/news-story/c6570cb5c4513226f6777867e90ae9dd
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273ca3 No.21755730
>>21326219 (pb)
An AUKUS First, Seven Royal Australian Navy Enlisted Sailors Graduate Nuclear Power School
dvidshub.net - 10.11.2024
1/2
Goose Creek, South Carolina – Demonstrating another significant milestone for the Australia, United Kingdom, United States (AUKUS) trilateral security partnership, 12 Royal Australian Navy uniformed personnel, including the first seven enlisted sailors, graduated from the U.S. Navy’s Nuclear Power School at Joint Base Charleston-Naval Weapons Station, Oct. 11.
The enlisted Royal Australian Navy sailors, who trained alongside U.S. sailors, began the naval nuclear power training pipeline in October 2023. Since then, they have been learning their specific rates, as well as the fundamentals of design, operation and maintenance of naval nuclear propulsion plans. These sailors are the vanguard of Australia establishing a sovereign conventionally armed, nuclear-powered, submarine (SSN) fleet in the early 2030s.
“Naval Nuclear Power training is exceptionally rigorous and to have seven Australian sailors and five officers complete the program and move on to the Nuclear Power Training Unit takes us one step closer to operating our own SSNs,” said Chief of the Royal Australian Navy Vice Adm. Mark Hammond.
“Two days after assuming command of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program, I presided over the graduation of the first three Royal Australian Navy officers from Naval Nuclear Power Training Unit Charleston,” shared Adm. Bill Houston, Director, Naval Reactors. “I have been nothing but impressed by the quality of Australian sailors and officers in our training pipeline and serving aboard our nuclear-powered submarine.”
Following graduation, the Royal Australian Navy sailors will report to the Naval Nuclear Power Training Unit Charleston for training focused on shipboard nuclear power plant operation and maintenance of the U.S. Navy’s nuclear fleet.
Making Australia Sovereign-Ready
Training and education opportunities are critical to ensure Australia is ready to operate its sovereign Virginia-class SSNs early next decade.
“The Australian sailors are receiving the same training as their American counterparts,” shared Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy James Honea. “They are held to the same high standards required to operate nuclear-powered attack submarines so that when they report to their boat, they’re ready to put their training to the test, integrate with the crew, and become Australia’s future front-line warriors aboard their own sovereign SSNs.”
Currently, there are six Royal Australian Navy officers serving aboard or assigned to U.S. Navy Virginia-class submarines, 12 officers and 28 enlisted sailors within the naval nuclear power training pipeline with an additional 19 enlisted sailors completing Basic Enlisted Submarine School in Groton, Connecticut. Additionally, 39 personnel from ASC Pty Ltd. (formerly known as the Australian Submarine Corporation) are training at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, to prepare them for future roles in maintaining nuclear-powered submarines for the Royal Australian Navy.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21755733
>>21755730
2/2
Full Speed Ahead, ‘Well on our Way’
The first three Australian-flagged SSNs will be Virginia-class submarines that are typically crewed by 15 officers and 117 enlisted submariners. Australian submariners will be joining U.S. SSN crews to gain practical experience and build their crews ahead of taking possession of their first sovereign SSN in the early 2030s.
“The training at Goose Creek and Groton are preparing our Australian allies to operate Virginia-class submarines,” said Rear Adm. Lincoln Reifsteck, Director, AUKUS Integration and Acquisition. “Over the coming months, we will see that number grow significantly across both the uniformed and civilian training pipelines so we can make sure, come 2032, Australia can fully crew its first, sovereign, conventionally armed nuclear-powered submarine.”
The AUKUS partnership is a strategic endeavor aimed at strengthening the security and defense capabilities of each partner nation. The U.S. remains committed to peace and prosperity in order to secure a free and open Indo-Pacific. This alliance helps sustain peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific, benefits each country’s national security and prosperity, and uplifts all three industrial bases.
“Thirty-seven months after AUKUS’ inception, we are well on our way to developing Australia’s SSN capability,” said Vice Adm. Jonathan Mead, Director General of the Australian Submarine Agency. “Last month, Australian sailors conducted the first maintenance period on a U.S. SSN in Australia. Today we graduate the first enlisted personnel from an exceptionally rigorous school, already we have Australian officers serving aboard both U.S. and UK SSNs.”
AUKUS Pillar 1 will deliver a conventionally armed SSN capability to the Royal Australian Navy by the early 2030s. The Department of the Navy’s AUKUS Integration and Acquisition Program Office is the U.S. lead responsible for executing the trilateral partnership for Australia to acquire conventionally armed, nuclear-powered attack submarines at the earliest possible date while maintaining the highest nuclear stewardship standards and setting the highest standards for nuclear non-proliferation.
https://www.dvidshub.net/news/483013/aukus-first-seven-royal-australian-navy-enlisted-sailors-graduate-nuclear-power-school
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4e0c39 No.21756288
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273ca3 No.21761349
>>21756288
o7
>>21755719
Indigenous voice Yes campaign ‘obsessed’ with misinformation, failed to engage debate: lawyers
ELLIE DUDLEY - 13 October 2024
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Prominent lawyers and staunch Indigenous voice advocates have condemned Megan Davis’s claims that a misinformation bill could have helped secure a Yes victory, with one leading supporter asserting that the Yes campaign became “obsessed” with critics’ misleading narratives while also spreading untruths themselves.
Constitutional lawyer Greg Craven, a vocal supporter of the voice and member of the referendum working group, told The Australian the Yes campaign were also complicit in spreading disinformation in the lead up to the referendum, including claims surrounding the inclusion of executive government in the proposal.
Meanwhile prominent silk Arthur Moses SC said that the referendum failed due to the government’s lack of detail, not misinformation, and said Labor’s bill in its current form would shut down “legitimate expressions of opinions” and be “counter-productive” for voters.
Their comments come after Professor Davis, one of the Voice to parliament architects, in a lecture at the University of NSW called for misinformation legislation to protect a future referendum from an onslaught of lies and distortions, following the defeat of the Yes campaign in October last year.
Mr Craven said during the campaign he engaged in private conversations trying to have leading Yes advocates to engage in meaningful discussions rather than characterising opposing arguments as misinformation.
“Large swathes of the Yes campaign were obsessed with the idea of misinformation and disinformation and would characterise any contrary argument as misinformation or disinformation,” he said.
“So arguments on the no case were not simply wrong or to be argued against, they fell into this category of misinformation or disinformation which meant they should be effectively banned from the referendum.”
“That was a huge worry and it was a worry that I consistently raised in private meetings – that you can't run a referendum campaign if all you can do is say that the other side is lying.”
Mr Craven said it was incredibly important to draw a distinction between disinformation – something that is fundamentally and knowingly untrue – and misinformation, which is something that happens to be wrong, but the person saying it believes it to be true.
“The example of something that is disinformation on the No side would be that the voice would be a third House of Parliament,” he said. “There’s simply no way that’s true. However, if you ran the line that having a voice would divide Australia on the grounds of race, I fundamentally disagree with that, I think it’s utter nonsense and it’s wrong. But I think there were thousands and thousands of people saying that who were not for a single moment trying to deceive anyone. That was just their view.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21761352
>>21761349
2/2
He said while there were some “big examples” of disinformation on the No side, the Yes side also pushed some untruths.
“For example, the idea that the having the words executive in were no problem, and that the executive would never be shanghaied into major decisions by the voice, because the drafting was perfect,” he said.
“I think that verged on disinformation. You can tell that because at different times, different people on the Yes case, notably including Megan (Davis) were saying totally contradictory things.
“When they wanted the voice to be powerful, they could say it would do lots of things. But when they wanted to reassure people that it wouldn’t be too powerful, they would say it was going to be very, very weak.”
The Albanese government’s revamped misinformation bill, which will empower the Australian Communications and Media Authority to fine tech giants millions of dollars for false content it deems harmful, has been widely panned by human rights groups, religious groups, the Coalition and other advocates of free speech.
Mr Craven criticised the bill more broadly, saying “the idea that you could have any sort of public authority, simply declaring that something is misinformation or disinformation is a real concern”.
“The idea that every time someone disagrees with you, if you happen to have the power in the area, you can shut them down,” he said. “I think that’s a huge concern.”
Mr Moses, a former president of the Law Council and the NSW Bar Association, said that seeking to restrain the freedom of speech of Australians “will not win their vote but will be counter-productive”.
“I disagree with Professor Davis and I am profoundly disappointed that such proposals are being advanced,” he said.
“I was an advocate for the Voice referendum but I believe that we have to respect the judgment of the Australian public and not advance excuses as to why the referendum failed which seek to blame the No campaign.
“The reason the referendum failed was not because of misinformation but because there was not sufficient detail about the proposal. That is a simple and undeniable fact.”
But Mr Moses said rather than advocating on having laws passed that “seek to restrain the freedom of speech on this issue” the focus should be on “details with advocacy that wins the contest of ideas”.
“That is the very stuff of a democracy. Australians are smart and compassionate. If you present Australians with the facts and advance your case with respect for their wisdom they will listen and come with you on the journey,” he said.
“Australians do not like to be lectured to by anyone. They appreciate dialogue and debates. Seeking to restrain freedom of speech will not win their vote but will be counter-productive.”
Mr Moses said the misinformation bill “misses the target” and there was “legitimate concern” it “could be weaponised to shut down debate on matters of public importance”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/indigenous/indigenous-voice-yes-campaign-obsessed-with-misinformation-failed-to-engage-debate-lawyers/news-story/cc3797bd65fd7b95d4949e9065f20ba4
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273ca3 No.21761378
>>21729841 (pb)
>>21729862 (pb)
>>21734044 (pb)
Calls for NSW to ban Nazi salute, symbols after white supremacist rally in Corowa
Erin Somerville and Melissa Brown - 13 October 2024
A regional New South Wales town that was targeted by a white supremacist rally remains a safe and welcoming place for multicultural communities, according to a local community leader.
Police dispersed a group of about 50 masked people gathering under a neo-Nazi banner in Corowa's central business district on Saturday.
No arrests were made and police inquiries are continuing.
Federation Shire Councillor and former mayor, Patrick Bourke, said the rally has shocked the community, which had been preparing for the Corowa Show.
"It was disgusting, it really was," Cr Bourke said.
"There's no room in Federation Council or Australia for that sort of behaviour.
"I just felt sorry for so many families, younger ones, they don't need to be subjected to that sort of behaviour."
Cr Bourke said the council and community would double down on its efforts to ensure the community was safe and respectful.
"Just loud and clear that we are open for business," he said.
"Anyone that's willing to have a go, make a living, raise a family, Federation Council is the place to be."
The rally has been met with similar disdain by state and federal leaders.
Albury MP Justin Clancy said the community rejected "this abhorrent activity".
"Our community unequivocally condemns the cowardly and white supremacist activity that took place [on Saturday]," Mr Clancy said in a public statement.
"I thank the strong, caring community of Corowa for standing together and rejecting this abhorrent activity."
NSW bans welcomed
Member for Farrer Sussan Ley said white supremacists were attacking country communities and encouraged New South Wales to join Victoria in banning the Nazi salute and related symbols.
"They are not free speech," she said.
"They should be banned, and we don't want to see them on our streets."
She said white supremacist groups were strategically targeting country communities.
"We cannot and should not tolerate gangs of balaclava-covered thugs spouting hate anywhere in this country," she said.
"Federal and state authorities have the Coalition's support to take whatever action is necessary to dismantle this organisation and stop these sorts of activities occurring."
Victoria neo-Nazi crackdown
The Corowa rally occurred just across the border from Victoria, where the use of Nazi salutes and symbols has been outlawed.
Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan said the government would continue to look at how it can strengthen anti-vilification framework.
"It is cowardly, it is hurtful and it is hateful," Ms Allan said.
"They are driven by hate and division.
"That's why we need to continue to be united to stamp out any sign of this sort of behaviour."
Ms Allan said the Victorian government was seeking more information about the incident from NSW Police.
In an unrelated incident, a Victoria Police sergeant was suspended on Friday after allegedly performing a Nazi salute on two occasions in front of colleagues.
Ms Allan said she supported the actions of Police Chief Commissioner Shane Patton to act swiftly in response to the allegations.
State Opposition leader John Pesutto said he was disgusted by the actions of the white supremacists in Corowa.
"Their messages are odious and wherever we see this we have to condemn it in the strongest possible terms, and I do," he said.
Anyone with information about the Corowa rally is urged to call CrimeStoppers.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-13/calls-for-nsw-to-ban-nazi-salute-white-supremacists-corowa/104467024
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273ca3 No.21761388
>>21569783 (pb)
Premiers including Jacinta Allan decline invite to meet with King Charles III
Shannon Deery and Jade Gailberger - October 13, 2024
Premier Jacinta Allan has declined an invitation to meet with King Charles when he visits Australia this week.
She has turned down the opportunity to welcome him and wife Camilla at a reception in Canberra next Monday, prompting claims she is snubbing the royals.
The Sunday Herald Sun can report that not one premier will be at the reception.
Ms Allan, who has parliament this week, said she had a cabinet meeting next Monday.
Australian Monarchists League Victorian spokesman Bev McArthur slammed the decision as an “embarrassing” snub, and the nationwide rejection a “slap in the face” to the royal family.
“All premiers and ministers have sworn allegiance to our monarch, Charles III, and it is a monumental insult that they now spit in his hand extended in friendship,” she said.
“This is a historic opportunity to unite Australia, to focus on charitable work and to give back to communities. Yet our immature politicians are clearly choosing to play politics.”
King Charles will address an event attended by political and community leaders, and prominent Australians who have demonstrated outstanding achievement in fields including health, the arts, culture and sport.
NSW Premier Chris Minns cannot attend because of a cabinet meeting, Queensland Premier Steven Miles is occupied with his election campaign, and Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff is on a US trade mission.
South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas has a regional cabinet meeting, while a spokesman for Western Australia’s Premier, Roger Cook, said he had “other commitments”.
It is understood, however, that Mr Minns will attend several events with the King during his visit.
Victoria’s Deputy Premier, Ben Carroll, is also unable to attend the reception, leaving Ms Allan’s parliamentary secretary, Nick Staikos, to take her place.
“On behalf of Victoria, the Governor of Victoria her excellency Professor the honourable Margaret Gardner AC and parliamentary secretary Nick Staikos MP formally representing Premier Jacinta Allan will attend the parliamentary reception for His Majesty King Charles III and Her Majesty Queen Camilla in Canberra on Monday,” a government spokesman said.
Opposition spokesman Brad Rowswell wrote to Ms Allan in May urging her not to downplay the King’s visit.
“Sometimes, leadership requires putting personal prejudice aside in the interests of the greater good,” Mr Rowswell said on Saturday.
“Premier Allan represents a state that wholeheartedly embraces and supports King Charles as our head of state.
“Sending a junior Labor MP to represent the Premier on this occasion doesn’t pass the Pimm’s test.
“The decent and respectful thing to do would be to jump on a plane and give King Charles a warm Victorian welcome, or is she just too embarrassed to do so after her Commonwealth Games debacle?”
This week’s visit will be King Charles’ first visit to a Commonwealth realm since he ascended to the throne.
The 75-year-old is due to arrive in Australia on Friday before engagements in Sydney and Canberra.
It will be his 17th visit to Australia.
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/premiers-including-jacinta-allan-decline-invite-to-meet-with-king-charles-iii/news-story/55659166724621c0601ff31065cc9140
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273ca3 No.21761789
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21360391 (pb)
>>21600882 (pb)
Man arrested with weapons at Donald Trump rally identified as Vem Miller as local police say he posed as a journalist
Georgie Hewson - 14 October 2024
A man with a shotgun, a loaded handgun, ammunition, fake licences and fake passports in his vehicle was arrested at a security checkpoint outside a rally for Donald Trump in California, according to local police.
The arrest took place on Saturday, local time.
The suspect, identified as Vem Miller, a resident of Las Vegas, was driving a black SUV that was stopped by deputies assigned to the rally in Coachella, east of Los Angeles, the Riverside County Sheriff's Department said in a statement.
The 49-year-old was arrested on suspicion of possessing a loaded firearm and possession of a high-capacity magazine, the department said.
He was eventually released on bail and will appear in court over the state firearms charges at a later date.
The man gave all indication he belonged there and was allowed in to the event as a member of the press, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco told reporters.
"We know he claimed to be a journalist, and he claimed to have VIP status to the event that got him into the perimeter, and when that investigation was continued by the deputy, that didn't necessarily materialise," Sheriff Bianco said.
"So other than his words that he was a journalist ... I can't tell you that he gave us a document and we said that was fake."
Media members, as well as VIP ticket holders, were routed through a number of intersections manned by state and local law enforcement officers before arriving at a large, grassy area where drivers were asked to open hoods and trunks, and each vehicle was searched by a canine officer.
Other general ticket holders were directed to a site roughly 5 kilometres away from the rally, where they were boarded onto buses and driven to the site.
Sheriff Bianco said he believed his deputies "probably prevented a third assassination attempt" by taking the man into custody.
"If you're asking me right now, I probably did have deputies that prevented the third assassination attempt," he said.
"If we are that politically lost that we have lost sight of common sense, of reality, and for that reason that we can't say, 'Holy crap, what did he show up with all of that stuff for, and loaded guns?' and I'm going to be accused of being dramatic?
"Then we have a serious problem in this country."
He also praised the work of local deputies conducting checks on the outer perimeter of the rally.
"Thank God, and by an act of really what we did in the week leading up to keeping that place secure, I certainly wouldn't want to be saying after the fact that I wish we would have done more to prevent that shooting," he said.
The sheriff declined to speculate about the suspect's motives or frame of mind.
"We know we prevented something bad from happening, and it was irrelevant what that bad was going to be," he said.
"There is absolutely no way that any of us are going to truly know what was in his head."
Trump's campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the arrest.
The sheriff said further investigations will be conducted by the FBI and Secret Service.
The Secret Service said that it was aware of the arrest and that neither Trump nor rally attendees had not been in any danger during the incident.
"While no federal arrest has been made at this time, the investigation is ongoing," the organisation tasked with protecting presidents and presidential candidates said in a joint statement with the FBI and the US Attorney's office.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-14/trump-rally-man-arrested-weapons-california-riverside-county/104468236
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qUl_pDTJig
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273ca3 No.21761808
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21265625 (pb)
>>21589729 (pb)
Labor MP Peter Khalil’s office vandalised with Hamas-linked symbol
Natassia Chrysanthos - October 14, 2024
Labor MP Peter Khalil’s office has been spray-painted with a Hamas-linked inverted red triangle and the slogan “glory to the martyrs” in the latest act of vandalism to target politicians’ offices over the war in the Middle East.
The words “land back” were also painted outside Khalil’s inner Melbourne office, which was splashed with red paint, and vandals used extinguishers and propellants to pour an unknown foul-smelling liquid through a hole they had drilled in a door in the early hours of Monday morning.
The office was a crime scene on Monday as police and a hazardous materials team investigated.
Khalil, who was recently appointed the government’s special envoy for social cohesion, said he was dismayed.
“I have always fully supported the right to peaceful protest. This is not protest. This is vandalism. This is defacing property. Worse, this is using violent symbolic material or actions that are harmful to others ... in their place of work. It is completely unacceptable and it needs to be called out,” he said.
“Everyone has a right to express their ideological and political views. But you cannot say it is acceptable to express them through intimidation, physical harassment or actions that put people in harm’s way.”
He said the inverted red triangle symbol – which has become associated with pro-Palestinian activism but is also used to mark kill targets in Hamas’ social media content – had a connotation that was “disturbing and concerning”, while the stench was “unbearable and clearly a biohazard of some sort”.
Khalil, whose inner-north Melbourne seat of Wills has been a focus of pro-Palestinian activism and is a target of the Greens at the upcoming election, said he was concerned the people who had targeted his staff and office were unable to articulate their positions in a rational and respectful way.
“The vast majority are able to engage peacefully without a problem. Clearly, a small minority won’t, and they need to be condemned.”
A spokeswoman from Khalil’s office said staff had arrived at work about 8.45am on Monday to find the office had been vandalised.
“Alongside the vandalism shown in photos, a hole had been drilled into the back door and a red [or] pink substance pumped into the office,” she said.
“Staff reported an overwhelming stench on opening the door, like an abattoir.”
She said the office was closed to the public as police investigated, and staff would not be on site.
Coalition senator James Paterson said the targeting of Khalil’s office was unacceptable.
“The perpetrators of this intimidating and dangerous behaviour must feel the full force of the law,” he said.
Greens leader Adam Bandt said the Greens condemned the vandalism.
“Protests must always be peaceful and non-violent. Everyone should feel safe at work, and we wish Peter Khalil and his team well after this vandalism overnight,” he said.
Germany banned the inverted red triangle in July because of its use by Hamas and its supporters to mark enemy targets in videos and graffiti.
Since the terrorist group’s attacks on Israel on October 7 last year, the triangle has morphed into an online symbol shared by Hamas sympathisers as well as pro-Palestinian activists, including some unaware of its origins. It has been displayed in pro-Palestine protests in Melbourne, including in Khalil’s seat.
Monday’s vandalism is the latest in a series of attacks on MPs’ offices this year. In July, two teenagers aged 17 and 18 were charged with burglary and criminal damage after Labor MP Josh Burns’ Melbourne office was targeted.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said at the time it was a troubling escalation of radical pro-Palestinian activism in Australia.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/labor-mp-s-office-vandalised-with-hamas-linked-symbol-20241014-p5ki3e.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_B5fN3KeJM
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273ca3 No.21761883
Alleged Pinochet agent turned Bondi nanny Adriana Rivas launches last-ditch appeal to block extradition to Chile
Rivas, who is accused by Chile of being a torturer and kidnapper, launches challenge in the federal court
Ben Doherty - 14 Oct 2024
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A former Bondi nanny and cleaner accused by Chile of being a torturer and kidnapper for Pinochet’s military dictatorship in the 1970s has launched a last-ditch legal appeal to avoid extradition.
Adriana Rivas, 70, has been in prison in Australia since 2019, when she was arrested on an extradition request from Chile – seeking her for trial on seven counts of aggravated kidnapping relating to the disappearance, and presumed murder, of seven members of Chile’s communist party who disappeared in 1976.
Party leader Victor Díaz was abducted by Pinochet’s secret police, the Dina (Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional, or National Intelligence Directorate) in May 1976. Six more party members were kidnapped off the streets of Santiago in December – the youngest, 29-year-old Reinalda del Carmen Pereira Plaza, was six months pregnant when she disappeared.
Documents from Chile’s appeal court provided to Australian courts allege Rivas worked as an agent of the Dina’s shadowy Lautaro Brigade (established to target members of the communist party) and was involved in the torture and disappearance of political opponents of the military dictator.
Rivas’s legal team have fought Chile’s extradition request over half a decade, including appeals to Australia’s federal court and the high court (which was ultimately abandoned). They argued the allegations against her were “political” and therefore not extraditable, and that the people were not kidnapped but legitimately arrested.
At each stage, courts found she was eligible for extradition – the final decision on whether she would be surrendered to Chile lay in the hands of Australia’s attorney general.
But Rivas has now launched a last-minute challenge in the federal court, asking the court to declare government’s decision to surrender her to Chile “void and of no legal effect”.
Her application, which indicates a decision to surrender her had been made, asks the court to restrain government ministers “directly, or by their agents, officers or delegates, from surrendering Ms Adriana Rivas to the Republic of Chile”.
Lawyer Adriana Navarro, representing the families of the seven people disappeared, told Guardian Australia they were “mortified” they had not been informed of the apparent decision to surrender Rivas, nor that she had filed another appeal to block the extradition.
“They’ve had enough, they find it disturbing that they have to learn through the media that this is happening,” Navarro said.
She said the families had been told “nothing whatsoever” through official channels about the progress of Rivas’s case over the past five years, and felt “mocked” by a system which kept them uninformed.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21761886
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21761883
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Rivas first came to Australia in 1978. In Chile, she worked as a secretary at the Simón Bolívar Centre, a secretive compound on the outskirts of the capital later discovered to be the Dina’s interrogation, torture and extermination site. She has insisted her role was administrative and she knew nothing of the crimes that occurred at her place of work.
When she travelled to Chile to visit family in 2006, she was arrested and questioned. She was held in custody for three months and released on bail under strict conditions, including a prohibition on leaving on the country.
But in 2007, while Rivas was living in Chile on bail, a man called Jorgelino Vergara was arrested and charged with Diaz’s murder. In 2010, he gave testimony that directly alleged Rivas participated in the torture of prisoners at the Simón Bolívar Centre.
A Chilean police report specifically names her as a brigade member involved in the commission of “forced entries, detention, interrogations and application of torture”.
Metal bunk beds were rigged with electrical current and detainees repeatedly shocked all over their bodies, according to the police report, which also detailed they were injected with unknown substances or “suffocated by asphyxiating them with plastic bags”.
Chile’s interior ministry wrote in court documents: “It is important to emphasise the cruelty of the crimes committed.”
Rivas has expressly denied these allegations and any involvement in torture, and she has not been convicted of any crime.
Vergara’s testimony ultimately led to the conviction of more than 70 Dina agents and officials of the Pinochet regime. The same year he agreed to give evidence against the Dina, Rivas escaped over Chile’s land border into Argentina and flew back to Australia.
In a 2013 SBS interview, she said she had worked at the Simón Bolívar Center, but insisted she was not involved in interrogating detainees.
“Not guilty. Not guilty. If I … look, I never had the opportunity to be where the detainees were. Never, understand? All my work was as a secretary or security. Nothing more.”
In the same interview, she defended the use of violence against opponents of the regime. “Everyone knew they had to do that to the people in order to break them because communists would not talk. It was necessary.”
Rivas said she did not regret working for the Dina.
“For me it was a job. It was a chance to survive. Understand?”
No hearing date has been set for the federal court application to be heard.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2024/oct/14/adriana-rivas-former-bondi-nanny-chile-pinochet-allegations-extradition-appeal-ntwnfb
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuHQx1Ank38
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273ca3 No.21761894
>>21761883
Chilean ‘torture chamber operator’ turned Bondi nanny in shock legal challenge
Perry Duffin - October 14, 2024
Adriana Rivas appeared as a gentle older woman, caring for the children of Bondi – then Chile accused her of playing a part in a brutal torture chamber in the dark days of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.
Now the nanny has launched a surprise legal challenge after a decade of denials landed her behind bars, awaiting extradition, with what appeared to be no way out.
Rivas, now 70, was arrested in 2019 at the request of her homeland, which alleged she had participated in the kidnapping of seven people who had vanished in Santiago.
Court documents provided by Chile during her extradition hearing claim Rivas worked for the secret police which rounded up enemies of Pinochet’s military regime and used sarin gas, electricity and welding torches to torture victims in an empty swimming pool.
Despite Rivas’ denials, she has repeatedly been found eligible for extradition by the courts.
But she was not handed over to Chile, instead remaining in a detention centre for five years.
For the past two years, the federal attorney-general maintained a single-line response to questions about Rivas: “The extradition process involving Ms Rivas is at the final stage, requiring the Australian government to make a determination whether to surrender Ms Rivas to Chile.”
But late last month Rivas filed a new application to the Federal Court suggesting that surrender had finally been ordered.
The application, seen by the Herald, asks the court to “void” the government’s decision to surrender Rivas to Chile.
Rivas’ application also seeks to stop the ministers from taking further steps “directly, or by their agents, officers or delegates, from surrendering Ms Adriana Rivas to the Republic of Chile”.
Dennis Miralis, the solicitor leading the challenge, did not reply to requests for comment.
Rivas had already failed to have her extradition overturned in the Federal Court in 2021. Her legal team had unsuccessfully argued then, and through the lower courts, that her prosecution was “political” in nature.
Chilean documents, released by the lower courts, spell out disturbing allegations that those rounded up by the DINA were interrogated in “dungeons” using electrified metal bunk beds.
The victims were gassed, as part of experiments, and injected with unknown substances before being suffocated and anonymised using a welding torch on the face and hands.
“Then, the bodies were put inside sacks, tied up with cables to a piece of railway beam and then thrown into the ocean by air force helicopters,” a dossier authored by Chilean authorities claimed.
In May 2022 – three years after her arrest – it seemed the final nail was driven into her case after the High Court threw out her challenge. Rivas had failed to tender the necessary documents and effectively “abandoned” her case, the court concluded.
The nanny arrived in Australia in 1978, just a few years after allegedly joining the DINA intelligence apparatus, and lived an obscure life until Chile began prosecuting the dictator’s former agents.
She was arrested while visiting Chile in 2006 but released on bail and allegedly escaped back to Australia in 2010.
She remained off the radar until 2014, when in an interview with multicultural broadcaster SBS she appeared to justify the use of torture to “break people” – particularly “communists”.
“It was necessary, just as the Nazis used it, and as in the United States, everyone does,” SBS quoted Rivas as saying. “It’s the only way to break people because psychologically there is no method.”
Rivas is alleged to have been involved in the kidnapping of Fernando Ortiz, Fernando Navarro, Lincoyán Berrios, Horacio Cepeda, Héctor Veliz, Reinalda Pereira and Communist Party secretary Víctor Díaz.
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/chilean-torture-chamber-operator-turned-bondi-nanny-in-shock-legal-challenge-20241013-p5khw3.html
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273ca3 No.21768193
Kevin Rudd calls for vigilance to deter Xi’s threat to global order
JOE KELLY - 15th October 2024
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Kevin Rudd says the world must ride out the threat posed by Xi Jinping through a combination of deterrence and diplomacy, avoiding a conflict that could redefine global politics, up-end the US-China relationship and generate “death and destruction at an unimaginable scale.”
Australia’s top diplomat in Washington is also championing realism towards China’s stabilisation of ties with the US and its allies, arguing this represents merely a “shift in tactical diplomacy” as Beijing continues to press its challenge to the existing international order.
While it is unusual for an Australian ambassador to so publicly examine a leading international figure such as Xi Jinping, Dr Rudd has a unique vantage point as a former prime minister, foreign minister, diplomat and world expert on Chinese affairs.
In his new book, “On Xi Jinping” Dr Rudd argues that Mr Xi has changed China through the power of his own ideology and individual political leadership, offering an “alternative authoritarian development model for the world.”
Mr Xi’s objective is to “change the international order itself, underpinned by an increasingly powerful China as the emerging geopolitical and geo-economic fulcrum of that order.”
Dr Rudd also says that Beijing remains “locked in a death struggle with the United States to secure the commanding heights across all critical domains of technology, most crucially artificial intelligence.”
The warning comes amid a normalisation of relations between Canberra and Beijing, with China removing the final trade obstacle this month by resuming the live lobster trade after Australian exporters in 2020 were hit with restrictions costing $20bn annually.
The deal was clinched at last week’s ASEAN summit by Anthony Albanese and Chinese Premier Li Qiang – their second meeting this year. The Prime Minister said “a series of regular meetings between ministers” had resumed, with Jim Chalmers in September becoming the first treasurer in seven years to visit China and an Australian parliamentary delegation visiting China this week.
In the 604-page book based on his doctoral thesis and published by Oxford University Press, Dr Rudd makes the case that China’s threat to the global system will reach its pinnacle during the Xi Jinping era – concluding the danger period is now.
Should the world successfully navigate this stretch, Dr Rudd suggests China will return to the political centre because of the harsh toll arising from the Chinese leader’s insistence on strict adherence to his own interpretation of Marxist ideology.
Dr Rudd argues that Mr Xi has taken Chinese politics since 2012 to the “Leninist left” by reasserting the power of the leader, while shifting economic policy since 2017 to the “Marxist left” by elevating the primacy of state planning over market forces.
In addition, Mr Xi was moving Chinese foreign policy to the “nationalist right” by promoting Chinese civilisational centrality and a grievance culture over the West’s past occupation and containment of China.
Dr Rudd warns that a successful push to take Taiwan would usher in a period of US global decline and make Mr Xi’s position “unassailable.” He also says there is debate in China about integrating “nuclear forces into regional war-fighting scenarios given advances in US ballistic missile defence technology.”
“Xi’s period in office likely represents the period of peak danger on the possibility of war over Taiwan,” Dr Rudd says. “Unless Xi can hold on for another twenty years or more, China, on balance is less likely to become more ideologically extreme once he goes.”
Dr Rudd says China “would broadly welcome a return to the centre” after Mr Xi, saying that the challenge for the wider world “is to effectively navigate the Xi Jinping era through a combination of deterrence and diplomacy, without recourse to crisis, conflict and war.”
A war, “whatever its outcome, would generate death and destruction at an unimaginable scale.”
“It would also redefine Chinese, American and global politics and geopolitics in deeply predictable yet indelible ways,’ Dr Rudd says. “And the world would never be the same again.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21768199
>>21768193
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If a policy of deterrence was successful and Mr Xi was prevented from taking Taiwan, Dr Rudd says it would be “highly unlikely” his successor would then seek to claim the island.
Making the case for why China would shift to the centre after Mr Xi’s departure, Dr Rudd writes that the Chinese leader’s “ideological onslaught” had come at a price for the Chinese people, the Chinese economy and Beijing’s global standing. “The damage has been real and, in many areas, seems unrecoverable,” he says.
The emergence of the Quad and the AUKUS agreement along with enhanced security co-operation between the US, Japan and South Korea, rejuvenation of the US-Philippines security alliance and hardening of European strategy towards China are all cited by Dr Rudd as major foreign policy losses for China.
“Xi’s embrace of Putin in a strategic partnership with ‘no limits’ on the eve of Russia’s invading Ukraine … has decisively affected baseline European sentiment towards China,” he says. “Furthermore, wolf warrior diplomacy writ large inflicted great damage on China’s global political standing with little gain.”
Mr Xi’s ideological approach to the Chinese economy meant industrialists and entrepreneurs now only saw “limited future opportunities in Xi’s China,” with many “declining to invest further.”
This is compounded by the “overall impact of slower growth on living standards and employment levels for the bulk of the working-age population.”
While Mr Xi “understood what his predecessors were seeking to do by leaving the democratic door open for the next generation,” Dr Rudd said that the Communist Party leader decided instead to “slam it tightly shut.”
“Xi, as an intelligent man … understood the costs of doing so. But he saw these social, economic, and international reputational costs as well worth paying to preserve the powers of the CCP for the long-term.”
Dr Rudd concludes that Mr Xi’s real enemy could be time, arguing the survival of his ideological vision would require him to “maintain power well into his nineties to appoint enough ideologically reliable younger cadres to enable his long-term political strategy to take root.”
“Prevailing in such a long-term struggle against the political, economic, and social forces arrayed against him will be a tall order indeed.”
Puncturing any long-term optimism about a strategic reset following the stabilisation of US/Chinese ties following the November 2023 summit between Mr Xi and Joe Biden, Dr Rudd promotes a realist view.
He says this was part of a tactical shift by Beijing to better “achieve changes in the international order that would advance China’s national interests and values.”
This became clear in the wake of China’s Foreign Affairs Work Conference in December 2023 which sketched out how the Chinese Communist Party would foster “new dynamics” in its relations with the world and help raise China’s international “influence, appeal and power to shape events to a new level.”
“Tactics may well have changed,” Dr Rudd says. “But China’s strategic intention, it seemed, had not.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/kevin-rudd-calls-for-vigilance-to-deter-xis-threat-to-global-order/news-story/85e8135cf7b8a55e3c14a72894cd4e2d
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273ca3 No.21768209
WA Premier tells Port Hedland council 'stick to knitting' after anti-COVID vaccine motion passes
Charlie McLean and Jessica Shackleton - 14 October 2024
The Western Australia Premier has told a council in the state's north to "stick to its knitting" after it passed a motion urging state and federal governments to suspend some COVID-19 vaccinations.
The Town of Port Hedland held a special council meeting on Friday and has instructed its chief executive to write to authorities nationwide to immediately stop the use of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.
The motion centred on a conspiracy theory about DNA contamination from COVID vaccines.
Premier Roger Cook said the Port Hedland council had gone "off the rails" by spreading the unverified claim.
"The Town of Port Hedland should stick to its knitting," the Premier said.
"It should stay focused on the services and people of that community.
"It's another example of that council lacking the focus on the issues which matter to their constituents … making sure they look after the people, not get distracted by these silly ideological debates."
The Town of Port Hedland councillor who put forward the motion, Adrian McRae, ran as a candidate for the Great Australia Party, which campaigned against vaccine mandates at the 2022 federal election.
He made headlines earlier this year over his appearance on Russian state television endorsing the transparency of Vladimir Putin's election victory.
Councillor claims vaccine concerns being ignored
Cr McRae agreed that weighing in on national vaccine policy was not the council's job, but said state and federal governments had failed to take community concerns about the safety of COVID vaccines seriously.
The DNA argument surfaced during the pandemic and has been discredited by several international bodies and the Australian Department of Health and Aged Care.
"DNA is stored in the protected centre of our cells — the nucleus. The mRNA is broken down quickly by the body. It never enters the nucleus and cannot affect or combine with our DNA in any way to change our genetic code," the department's website reads.
Vote doesn't represent community, says Mayor
Mayor Peter Carter and councillor Ambika Rebello were the only two councillors to vote against the motion, which passed 5-2.
"It's not the place for local government to do this sort of work," Cr Carter said.
"They're saying, 'well, it's for the community', well, the community is 17,000 people and we had 50 odd people in the gallery. That does not represent the whole community."
The motion also asked the council's administrators to write to the Prime Minister and national health authorities drawing attention to the issue.
The council's administration warned proceeding with the letter was almost certain to result in extreme reputational and financial impact.
Cr Carter said the motion was not a good look for the town.
"You're trying to build relationships with the state government, the federal government," he said.
"We're a very important town and this motion that was put forward … it shouldn't have even been there."
Cr Carter has faced his own controversies in recent years, including corruption allegations over his personal business dealings, inappropriate comments about a woman's mental health, and is engaged in defamation action against a fellow councillor.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-14/wa-council-port-hedland-approves-anti-covid-vaccine-motion/104471064
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273ca3 No.21768314
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. The Sydney airport arrest that unravelled a global crime ring and caught a ‘demon’
Clare Sibthorpe - October 15, 2024
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The arrest of an Australian man at Sydney Airport has led to the unravelling of a global child abuse ring and the capture of its alleged leader, dubbed the “demon”.
Queensland father Gary Richmond-Jones was jailed for two years in August for the planned abuse of a 12-year-old girl while on holiday in the Philippines with his wife and children.
In a July investigation into Australia’s contribution to the insidious online child abuse trade, of which the Philippines is the epicentre, the Herald reported that a stranger had contacted Richmond-Jones on X advertising child abuse material and leaving a number.
While in Manila with his family in 2022, the former car salesman from Mackay downloaded the encrypted messaging app Telegram to contact that person.
He said he was interested in “real” underage Filipino girls, “took his pick” from sexual photos of several children and asked “what price” for a range of “services” which equated to various forms of sexual abuse.
After organising a meeting spot, he decided not to go through with the abuse and stopped responding to the stranger. He later told a Sydney court he had an eleventh-hour realisation that “child abuse is never okay”.
But his incriminating conversations, including the child abuse material, remained on his phone and were discovered by Border Force officials upon his return to Australia.
The Australian Federal Police arrested him, sparking a Philippine National Police (PNP) investigation that discovered the alleged puppet master of the international paedophile syndicate, which sold child abuse videos to foreigners for as little as $13.
Authorities say that man was Teddy Jay Mojeca Mejia, a Filipino fugitive who’d been hiding in Dubai since 2021.
Thanks to the AFP’s arrest of Richmond-Jones and the intelligence it passed on to the PNP, Mejia was last month extradited to Manila and charged with offences relating to the alleged abuse of 111 children.
The 32-year-old is accused of luring vulnerable children aged between nine and 11 into making sexual videos, which he sold online to at least 19 people from countries including Australia.
When it emerged Mejia was secretly living in the United Arab Emirates, the PNP raised an international Interpol red-notice warrant.
The AFP’s Manila team then worked with its liaison officers in Dubai to help facilitate the extradition process between the Philippines and UAE.
Video published online by local news outlets showed Mejia being marched down a hallway at Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport by a large group of police officers, his face hidden with a black hoodie and mask.
He was forced to stand in front of journalists during a press conference in which Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos called him a “demon” who preyed on vulnerable children who spent a lot of time online.
Abalos alleged Mejia would “scare” children into complying with his sick demands by photoshopping their faces onto naked bodies and threatening to disseminate the material.
“Some of the victims, he would rape and film the rape and sell the video,” Abalos alleged in a translated version of the press conference.
“It will be recorded and will be sold until the children become his slaves. This is how bad this man is.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21768323
>>21768314
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According to the Philippine Internet Crimes Against Children Centre, 28 Filipino children have been removed from harm due to the investigation, and more are expected to be rescued in the future.
Richmond-Jones is one of many Australian men fuelling the demand for online child abuse material in the Philippines, where children’s parents often record the abuse and sell the videos to foreigners with the help of alleged “pimps” like Mejia.
According to the International Justice Mission, Australians are the third most commonly reported nationality linked with online sexual exploitation of young adults and children in the country.
AFP Assistant Commissioner David McLean praised the tenacity of Philippine investigators in holding Mejia accountable for “these horrible criminal accusations”.
“The AFP provided evidence and intelligence we obtained from the arrest of an Australian man in January 2023, but we could not identify the people he was communicating with in the Philippines,” he said.
“The PNP’s determination to identify this alleged perpetrator and the child victims highlights the importance of international partnerships in child abuse investigations.”
Richmond-Jones was sentenced in the NSW District Court to two years in jail. He was also fined $2100 for intentionally importing child abuse material into Australia.
Mejia was charged with multiple counts of statutory rape, people trafficking and offences contrary to the Philippines Anti-Online Sexual Exploitation of Children and Anti-Child Sexual Abuse and Exploitation Materials Act.
If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline (13 11 14), the Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) and Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800).
https://www.1800respect.org.au/
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/
https://www.kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.smh.com.au/world/asia/the-sydney-airport-arrest-that-unravelled-a-global-crime-ring-and-caught-a-demon-20241015-p5kico.html
https://www.smh.com.au/national/the-family-holiday-that-took-a-sickening-turn-and-ended-with-a-father-behind-bars-20240701-p5jqah.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Btk2I2CNQ0s
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273ca3 No.21773928
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21761808
Penny Wong forced to re-start speech multiple times as protesters criticise Gaza response
Evelyn Manfield - 16 October 2024
Protesters angry with the Australian government for not sanctioning Israel for its deadly strikes in Gaza and Lebanon have repeatedly disrupted a speech by Foreign Minister Penny Wong at the University of Tasmania on Tuesday night.
The minister was giving an address about international relations and policy making – which included reflections on the dangers aid workers faced in Gaza, as well as her hope for a two-state solution – when interruptions caused her to repeatedly stop her speech and leave the stage as audience members yelled at her.
During the approximately 45-minute-long speech, more than 10 interjections were made, with calls for the government to sanction Israel, plus criticism of the government's previous decision to pause funding to aid agency UNRWA.
Senator Wong initially responded by saying she had heard the concern.
"I'd say to you, we are a democracy and everyone's voice matters and I understand this is a very distressing [sic], but I don't actually believe, and I have never believed, that we gain anything by shouting each other down," she said.
As the interjections continued, and an official from the university tried to bring the audience to order, Senator Wong appeared frustrated as she made multiple attempts to return to the stage and continue her speech.
"Part of what I'm doing in this speech, to anybody else who wishes to speak but not listen, is actually try to lay out some of what we are doing in relation to what is happening in Gaza and what we are doing in relation to Lebanon," she said.
"So, it's disappointing that people don't actually want to hear some of the facts about what the government is seeking to do in this situation."
Despite interjectors being told to leave the venue, the remarks continued, with audience members expressing concern for loved ones in Lebanon.
"Our friends and family are in a total state of utter fear," one audience member called out.
"Please listen to the people who give you the power to do your job – that's what you are, you are our representative," one person could be heard saying.
"Do you want to hear what I have to say? Or do you want to just shout at me?" Senator Wong responded.
Outside the event in Hobart, dozens of protesters also gathered, chanting and holding signs criticising Senator Wong and the Australian government.
The protest follows repeated anger from the community towards government figures over Australia's response to the war in Gaza, including vandalism of electorate offices, such as Labor MP Peter Khalil, whose Melbourne office was sprayed with red paint and doused in an unknown substance in recent days.
Senator Wong on Wednesday described the protesters' conduct as disrespectful.
"I don't think we gain anything by being disrespectful to one another," she told ABC Radio Hobart.
"Some of the things that were being said and shouted were not true.
"One example is being told to stop bombarding Lebanon… we are calling for a ceasefire in Lebanon."
The ABC contacted the University of Tasmania, which has not provided comment.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-15/penny-wong-speech-shouted-down-by-pro-palestinian-protesters/104477114
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZfng1aaPvM
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273ca3 No.21773932
New AUKUS submarine servicing and shipbuilding precinct at Henderson to 'rival resources industry' in WA
Nicolas Perpitch - 16 October 2024
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Western Australia's Henderson shipyard will house a multi-billion-dollar defence precinct for naval shipbuilding and servicing of AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines to create an industry the state government claims will rival the state's massive resources industry.
The Commonwealth today announced it would invest $127 million over the next three years for initial works, including feasibility studies and a detailed design.
Defence Minister Richard Marles and Premier Roger Cook announced the cooperation agreement between the two governments for the shipyard in Perth's south would create a total of about 10,000 high-skilled jobs.
"This represents the most significant defence industry offering to Western Australia since federation," Mr Marles said.
The defence precinct will be established at the southern end of the shipyard and will be used to build new landing craft for the Australian army and new general purpose frigates for the Navy.
Submarine maintenance function
After eight years of lobbying by the WA government, the Commonwealth has also agreed maintenance of the country's future nuclear-powered submarines, as part of the AUKUS defence agreement with the United States and the United Kingdom, will occur at Henderson.
The shipyard will carry out depot-level maintenance on the submarines, meaning more than one dry dock will need to be built and thousands of highly-skilled workers will be needed into the future.
Mr Cook said it was a game changer that constituted a significant new industry for WA that would help diversify the state's economy.
"This particular industry will rival the resources industry as one of our main areas for economic growth, for economic activity and for employment," the premier said.
Mr Marles said it was too early to say what the total infrastructure cost of the project will be, but it is expected to be in the tens of billions.
Industry sources say a government-commissioned report from US project management firm Bechtel has presented various options costing between $12 billion and $20 billion.
The feasibility studies and detailed design will determine how many dry docks are necessary and the total cost.
UK, US subs to arrive from 2027
In 2022, former Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who signed the AUKUS agreement, had promised $4.3 billion to build a single dry dock at Henderson to "turbocharge" the naval shipbuilding industry.
The Henderson agreement builds on an announcement in March committing $8 billion to expand the HMAS Stirling Naval base, in nearby Rockingham, which will be home to Australia's nuclear propelled AUKUS submarines, the US Virginia class, from the early 2030s.
The naval base will host rotations of US and UK submarines from 2027.
Mr Marles today said the Henderson facility would not be ready for depot-level maintenance of submarines by 2027 but said it "aligned" with the requirements under AUKUS.
Australia's future nuclear submarines will be built in South Australia at the Osborne shipyard, while WA is now confirmed as the maintenance hub, next to the submarines' base.
But Mr Marles said it was not a competition between South Australia and WA and the workforce of both states was needed to build the new industry.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21773936
>>21773932
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Job creation
An estimated 3,500 skilled workers will be needed for the HMAS Stirling expansion which includes:
• around 1,000 construction jobs at Henderson
• about 300 jobs for submarine maintenance at Henderson
• 1,200 jobs to build surface vessels, such as frigates, and
• around 1,100 people to work on building landing craft.
"And what you'll see created here are jobs that will last into the future, generation after generation,' Mr Cook said.
Asked where all these skilled workers would come from, the premier said many would be skilled workers from interstate, while others would come through training at South Metro TAFE in Rockingham and elsewhere.
'Measly' allocation of funds: Opposition
The Coalition welcomed the decision to build a defence precinct at Henderson, but criticised the initial $127m allocation of funds over three years as lacking any real commitment.
"The Albanese Government is already kicking these important works into the long grass, with 'delivery of initiatives' not set to commence for another nine months," Opposition defence spokesman Andrew Hastie said.
"Labor's measly $127 million commitment to transforming Henderson is reflective of their lack of investment in the defence Budget which is barely keeping up with inflation under this government."
But WA Defence Industries Minister Paul Papalia had no doubt as to the significance of the project.
"Western Australia is already the engine room of the nation's economy, now it's going to be the powerhouse of our defence industry," he said.
"This agreement today will result in Western Australia being the home of the biggest naval maintenance hub in the entire Southern Hemisphere."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-16/new-aukus-submarine-servicing-base-at-hmas-stirling/104478192
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273ca3 No.21773945
Papua New Guinea's chance at an NRL team may hinge on a pledge not to sign a security deal with China
Marian Faa - 14 Oct 2024
Papua New Guinea's hopes of fielding a team in Australia's NRL competition could hinge on a promise from its government not to sign a security deal with China.
Australia and PNG are closing in on agreement that would see Canberra provide up to $600 million in support for the NRL bid.
The ABC can reveal the negotiations include an assurance PNG will not sign a security deal that could allow Chinese police or military forces to be based in the Pacific nation.
When asked about the security element, PNG Prime Minister James Marape said it was not the "main feature" of the agreement.
"I would not be in a position to say that that's the only reason why this has been happening," he told the ABC.
"For PNG and Australia, we have deeper sentimental values. Both nations love rugby league, both nations have a strong affinity. And all in all, we're working towards far bigger issues than just the security aspect to it."
Pat Conroy, Australia's Minister for International Development and the Pacific, said the finer details of the agreement were still being negotiated, but he would not clarify what they were.
In a sit-down interview with the ABC, he said the deal was about bringing Australia and PNG closer together.
"Rugby league is one element of our soft diplomacy," he said.
"It's one element of the Albanese Labor government using every tool of statecraft to bring the people of the Pacific and Australia together and ensure that Australia is the partner of choice."
The minister said he didn't believe there was a place for Chinese police in the Pacific.
"We make no secret of the fact that there's geopolitical competition in this region," he said.
"Countries outside the region are always seeking to form security partnerships with Pacific nations. But Australia, as a proud member of the Pacific family, is committed to being the partner of choice."
Mr Conroy was in Port Moresby on Sunday to attend the Prime Minister's XIII rugby league games between Australia and PNG.
He and Mr Marape met with NRL chief executive Andrew Abdo and officials involved in the PNG NRL bid.
If successful, it's expected PNG will join the competition in 2028 with a team based out of Port Moresby.
Up to $600 million in Australian federal funding over 10 years would go towards setting up the franchise, player development, education and community outreach programs.
'Race for influence' in PNG
Dr Gordon Peake, a senior advisor on the Pacific islands at the United States Institute of Peace, said the security negotiations around the deal went far beyond "soft power" diplomacy.
"I think it shows that the real game that is going on here is very much about hard power, and it's all about Australia trying to thwart or stop Chinese influence in Papua New Guinea," he said.
The negotiations have come after Solomon Islands signed a wide-ranging security pact with China in 2022, which opened the way for Beijing to send police and military forces there.
The ABC understands China has sought similar deals with other Pacific nations, including Papua New Guinea.
"That [Solomon Islands deal] was really the equivalent of China running up the score against Australia," Dr Peake said.
"Australia doesn't really want to have another incident where it has diplomatic egg on its face, and it has China jostling for additional primacy in Papua New Guinea."
Dr Peake said China gaining a military foothold in PNG would present security risks to Australia given the two countries' proximity.
It remains unclear exactly how the deal would be framed and enforced.
"What would happen if, in the future, a Papua New Guinea minister went up to Beijing and signed something or agreed to expand relationships with China? I mean, would the NRL team be suspended?" Dr Peake said.
"Would they? Would they roll up and go home?
"It certainly puts China in second place in this race for influence in Papua New Guinea, but it's kind of hard to see how it's going to get implemented in the years to come."
Mr Conroy said the parties were broadly aligned on the "fundamentals" of an agreement, and he was optimistic it would be finalised soon.
It's unclear exactly when a deal will be announced, with negotiations ongoing.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-14/png-australia-nrl-deal-security-pact-with-china/104467706
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273ca3 No.21773947
>>21773945
Using rugby to sabotage China-PNG cooperation? See how ‘sincerely’ Australia treats PICs
Global Times - Oct 15, 2024
How sincere is Australia when developing relations with countries of the South Pacific islands, a region Canberra always views as its own backyard and considers to be under its sphere of influence? The answer is that Australia's offers are never without conditions. In its views, it is all about what is in its tool box to control those island countries.
According to a report from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) on Monday, Canberra is considering providing up to $600 million in support for Papua New Guinea's hopes of fielding a team in Australia's National Rugby League (NRL) competition, but the condition is that PNG shouldn't sign a security deal with China.
On one hand, it is about rugby, on the other, it is about China's perceived influence. If Australia has truly linked these two unrelated matters, that would be laughable.
Even the Australian Strategic Policy Institute suggested that "Australia shouldn't need to use an NRL team as leverage to guarantee our security," because "if we do need to, then we mustn't be doing the rest of our diplomacy right."
If we delve into the reason behind this possible move by Australia, we could uncover its deep-seated zero-sum mentality and its questionable methods for exerting influence over Pacific Island countries (PICs) to jeopardize their cooperation with other nations.
For a long time, Australia has approached these countries with a condescending attitude. The so-called cooperation is primarily for the sake of Australia's own interests, rather than the interests of those island countries. Especially as China has strengthened its cooperation with the region in recent years, Australia feels its supremacy being challenged, but fails to reflect on why it is losing hearts of these countries. The fact that it sees China's presence in the region as a threat and tries to sabotage China's cooperation with regional countries demonstrates a lack of respect for their sovereignty.
Now Australia may be levering rugby cooperation with PNG to undermine normal economic and security cooperation between China and PNG. Behind the "olive branch" Australia extends lies its geopolitical calculations. As both Australia and PNG have deep sentimental values regarding rugby, Australia is playing the emotional card; however, it is actually introducing geopolitical competition into its financial assistance to the country, Qin Sheng, a research fellow at the Center for Australia, New Zealand and South Pacific Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times.
Qin noted that the extent to which Australia shows care and respect for PNG can be assessed by the effectiveness of its assistance. For decades, Australia has used its major power status in the South Pacific to impose influence on PNG, but it has not paid attention to the real needs of its people or the social and economic development of this small island nation. Last month, PNG's Minister for National Planning Ano Pala delivered scathing criticism of Australia's "boomerang aid" and development inefficiencies.
Chen Xiaochen, executive deputy director of the Centre for Asia Pacific Studies at East China Normal University, told the Global Times that the PICs have been reluctant to see exclusive and competitive relations in the region and therefore have adopted diverse diplomacy by cooperating with countries outside the region such as China. Notably, the Solomon Islands signed a policing cooperation agreement with China and refuted rhetoric from Australia and others that China is "a threat to the Pacific region peace."
The South Pacific island countries are becoming aware that Australia is not conducting its diplomacy correctly by using the region to engage in competition. Australia's approach to the region has strong geopolitical purposes, and is likely to backfire.
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202410/1321259.shtml
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1700f6 No.21774105
On the water
because sea levels are rising
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273ca3 No.21780962
>>21761808
Pro-Palestinian academic Khaled Beydoun’s visa cancelled after calling October 7 anniversary a ‘good day’
Paul Sakkal - October 16, 2024
Pro-Palestinian professor Khaled Beydoun has been blacklisted by Australia after the government revoked his visa over the activist’s description of the anniversary of Hamas’ October 7 attacks as a day of “considerable celebration”.
A government source, unable to speak publicly about the confidential case, said the American academic flew home after being told his visa was going to be cancelled. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has since officially revoked Beydoun’s visa.
Beydoun told a Sydney rally on the anniversary of Hamas’ massacre of about 1200 people in Israel in 2023 that the day was “not fully a day of mourning” but also a “good day” because awareness of the Palestinians’ plight had increased in the past year.
Burke said later that day he had ordered a check on the academic’s visa as soon as he heard Beydoun’s remarks. He can cancel visas if he believes a person is “not of good character”.
The Department of Home Affairs warns potential travellers to Australia that one visa cancellation may bar future travel applications and prevent entry to the country.
Beydoun, who has 2.5 million Instagram followers and is an associate professor at Arizona State University, made his comments at a rally outside Lakemba Mosque in western Sydney organised by a group with links to Islamist group Hizb ut-Tahrir.
“Today is not fully a day of mourning, today is also a day that marks considerable celebration, considerable progress and in some respects, considerable privilege,” Beydoun said.
“It’s a good day, and we’ve got to mark some of the good news that comes about, that we oftentimes neglect. The level of global literacy around what’s taking place in [Palestine] has exponentially risen.”
Beydoun’s statement was made during a heated national debate about the freedom to protest on the anniversary of October 7, with pro-Palestinian and free speech advocates on one side and Labor, Liberal and Jewish leaders on the other. Gazan authorities say more than 40,000 have been killed in the Israeli offensive since the October 7 attacks.
Burke’s action also came when authorities were on high alert after a small group of protesters waved flags of Hezbollah, a listed terror organisation, at rallies the week before October 7.
Broadcaster Antoinette Lattouf, who was sacked by the ABC for social media posts about the war and is challenging her dismissal, interviewed Beydoun for a podcast in the days before his controversial remarks.
“Khaled amassed his massive following as people turned to his platform and voice to get alternative framing on the conflict than the ones offered by legacy Western media outlets,” she said in her introduction to the interview on The Briefing.
The American academic said the expansion of Israel’s war into Lebanon demonstrated a “very militant Zionism trying to claim as much land as possible” aided by a compliant US realising its footprint in the world was “diminishing”.
Beydoun was contacted for comment. A spokesman for Burke declined to comment.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/activist-s-visa-nixed-after-calling-october-7-anniversary-a-good-day-20241016-p5kiqf.html
https://www.instagram.com/khaledbeydoun/
https://play.listnr.com/podcast/the-briefing/episode/khaled-beydoun-the-us-professor-australia-wants-to
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273ca3 No.21780991
>>21453375 (pb)
>>21466382 (pb)
Tanks for the fight to save a democracy: Australia answers Kyiv’s firepower plea
BEN PACKHAM and JACQUELIN MAGNAY - 17 October 2024
1/2
Australia will donate 49 of the army’s M1A1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine in the nation’s most significant and lethal contribution to the country’s war against Russia, amid warnings that Vladimir Putin is bolstering his forces with North Korean troops in a dangerous new development for Kyiv.
Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy will formally pledge the US-made tanks to Ukraine at a NATO meeting in Brussels this week, following a year-long campaign by Kyiv to secure the weapons.
It is one of the largest single contributions of Western tanks to Ukraine since the war began, exceeding the US’s own donation of 31 M1A1s.
The Australian tanks were due to be retired from next year and replaced with next-generation M1A2s, but are said to be in good condition and are said to be far superior to those operated by Russia.
The contribution takes Australia’s support for Ukraine to $1.5bn, and follows an outcry over the government’s decision last year to scrap 45 MRH-90 Taipan helicopters rather than offer them to Kyiv for the war effort.
Defence Minister Richard Marles said: “Australia’s support for Ukraine has not wavered since Russia’s illegal invasion, and Australia will continue standing with Ukraine.”
Some of the tanks will need to undergo repairs and upgrades before they are gifted to Ukraine, but could be delivered sooner at Kyiv’s request, allowing those in poorer condition to be used to provide spare parts for American-donated M1A1s.
The government says the surplus tanks are worth $245m, but military experts believe they will make a far greater impact than the figure suggests, giving the Ukrainians an offensive edge against dug-in Russian troops.
Speaking in London before heading to the NATO defence minister’s meeting, Mr Conroy declined to say whether Australian personnel would be required on the ground in Ukraine to maintain the tanks.
He said the weapons would “deliver more firepower and mobility to the Ukrainian Armed Forces, and complement the support provided by our partners for Ukraine”.
“This is a good day for Ukraine and frankly a bad day for Vladimir Putin,” Mr Conroy said.
The donation follows the delivery of an initial 27 of 75 new M1A2 tanks to be operated by the army under a $3.5bn procurement initiated by the Morrison government.
The army will retain 10 of the older-model tanks for training purposes.
Ukraine’s ambassador to Australia, Vasyl Myroshnychenko, welcomed the announcement, saying his country was in dire need of Western weapons as Putin ramped up his alliance with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un.
“We are very grateful for the support, especially now in the light of the deployment of troops from North Korea,” he said.
“So we see, this is now becoming much more relevant to the Indo-Pacific, and therefore it’s a very strong response from the Australian government.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21780996
>>21780991
2/2
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned on Sunday that Pyongyang had escalated its support for Moscow beyond supplying weapons, and was now “ transferring people from North Korea to the occupying military forces”.
Ukrainian media has reported 10,000 North Korean soldiers are already in Russia.
The figure could not be independently verified, but South Korea’s national intelligence agency said it was “highly likely that the reported casualties of North Korean officers and soldiers in Ukraine are true”.
Opposition defence spokesman Andrew Hastie backed the government’s decision, saying it should have come earlier.
“Better late than never, although these could have been used during the summer fighting months just past,” he said.
“The Ukrainian ambassador has been pleading with Labor to gift Australia’s retiring M1A1 Abrams tanks. The Coalition has supported ambassador Myroshnychenko’s calls, and we’re pleased the Albanese government has come to the table.”
A Coalition-dominated Senate inquiry recommended last month that the tanks be provided to Ukraine, along with the army’s soon-to-be retired Tiger armed reconnaissance helicopters, Hawkei protected vehicles, and more Bushmaster trucks.
Ukraine’s international partners have provided 819 tanks to support the country’s fight against Russia, including more than 270 Western-made models.
Retired major general Mick Ryan, a senior fellow with the Lowy Institute, said the Australian tanks would make a major contribution to Ukraine’s war effort. “There’s nothing more lethal in close combat than a main battle tank. And M1A1s are very good main battle tanks,” he said.
“The Ukrainians already have them. There’s a support base for them in Europe, the Poles are buying them, and lots of other countries use them.
“And this is a battalion’s worth of tanks. Which is significant. The government has clearly listened to those experts who have been recommending this for some time.
“I think whilst it’s taken time to get to the right decision, it is the right decision and we should applaud this decision.”
Former land forces commander Fergus McLachlan said Ukraine needed as many Western tanks and advanced weapons as possible. “Tanks are about seizing and holding ground. So rather than just stopping them losing, we are providing them with something that will potentially help them to advance.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/tanks-for-the-fight-to-save-a-democracy-australia-answers-kyivs-firepower-plea/news-story/d1aa4a0c05cc4ed6113aebb353136f8d
https://x.com/ZelenskyyUa/status/1846634591580307572
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273ca3 No.21781017
>>21780991
Australia confirms 49 M1A1 Abrams tanks will be gifted to Ukraine
Robert Dougherty - 17 OCTOBER 2024
1/2
Australia has announced the gifting of 49 M1A1 Abrams main battle tanks to Ukraine as part of a latest military assistance package worth around $245 million.
The new equipment is expected to bolster the Armed Forces of Ukraine in its fight against Russian military forces; as well as add to the Armed Forces of Ukraine’s firepower and mobility, and complement partners’ support for Ukraine’s armoured brigades.
The announcement brings the total value of Australia’s military assistance to Ukraine since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion to over $1.3 billion, and overall support to more than $1.5 billion.
Australian Minister for Defence Industry and Capability Delivery, the Hon Pat Conroy MP will be at the NATO Defence Ministers' Meeting in Brussels and will be confirming this news directly with his Ukrainian counterpart.
“We stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Ukraine in their fight against Russia’s illegal invasion,” according to Minister Conroy.
“These tanks will deliver more firepower and mobility to the Ukrainian Armed Forces, and complement the support provided by our partners for Ukraine.
“As we face a challenging geostrategic environment, it is important that we continue to work together with our partners around the world to deter aggression and coercion and protect the global rules-based order.”
The M1A1 Abrams tanks have been an important capability for the Australian Army, providing substantial defence against enemy fire and improvised explosive devices. As they have done for Australia, the Abrams tanks will see both the capability and resistance of the Armed Forces of Ukraine further bolstered.
As was announced in January 2022, the Australian Army M1A1 Abrams are to be replaced by the M1A2 fleet. To support the transition, the Australian Army will retain a small number of M1A1 Abrams tanks to assist the introduction of the new M1A2 fleet.
The Australian Defence Force also continues to make significant contributions to multinational efforts to train Ukrainian military personnel under Operation Kudu.
The Australian Government will continue to work with the Government of Ukraine and our international partners to deliver meaningful support for Ukraine to end the conflict on its terms.
“Australia’s support for Ukraine has not wavered since Russia’s illegal invasion, and Australia will continue standing with Ukraine,” according to Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles.
“This is the latest support package which the Albanese Government has announced, taking our overall commitment support to Ukraine to more than $1.5 billion.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21781018
>>21781017
2/2
Ukrainian Ambassador to Australia and New Zealand, Vasyl Myroshnychenko has thanked the Australian government and public for their continued support.
"The Government of Ukraine expresses its strongest gratitude to the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia – and the Australian people – for the allocation of 49 M1A1 Abrams tanks for Ukraine’s military defence," he said.
"I take this opportunity to specifically thank the Prime Minister Anthony Albanese MP, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Defence Richard Marles MP, the Minister for Foreign Affairs Senator Penny Wong and the Minister for Defence Industries Pat Conroy MP for their commitment to Ukraine’s cause. Your leadership has significantly contributed to Ukraine’s security and future.
"This support package is very timely, very substantial and very fit for purpose. Combat assaults by the Russian Federation on Ukraine and Ukrainians have increased by some 20 per cent in the last three months to their highest level in 2024. Only this week, the Russian aggressor conducted an air strike on Ukrainian cities and towns involving nearly 140 drones and missiles.
"The tanks provided by Australia, one of the largest allocations of tanks by any ally, are likely to be used by tank brigades and mechanised infantry brigades of the ground forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) who are engaged along a 1400 long kilometre front – or the distance between Sydney and Adelaide. Some of the soldiers in these and other units have been trained by Australian soldiers based in Great Britain.
"Ukraine’s capacity to both defend itself and to bring the war to a just conclusion is in part reliant on receiving adequate and continuous support from those nations, including Australia, who also believe in democracy, the integrity of national borders, and the international rules-based order.
"We look forward to working closely with the Australian Government to execute the expeditious and effective transfer of the tanks to the battlefield in Ukraine. Everything that can be done to swiftly execute this process should be done as there are literally lives at stake."
https://www.defenceconnect.com.au/land/14928-australia-confirms-49-m1a1-abrams-tank-will-be-gifted-to-ukraine
https://x.com/AmbVasyl/status/1846643708193919295
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273ca3 No.21781110
Alleged sex-cult leader James-Robert Davis jailed over domestic violence offences against woman he 'enslaved'
Elise Worthington and Kyle Taylor - 17 October 2024
1/2
A New South Wales man accused of running a sex cult where women were allegedly kept as slaves has been sentenced to 25 months imprisonment for assaulting a former partner and another woman.
James-Robert Davis appeared via audio-visual link in Sydney's Downing Centre Local Court on Wednesday after last month being found guilty of seven offences, including assault and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
Davis was arrested in March 2021 after a Four Corners investigation in which multiple women told the ABC that Davis had sexually or physically abused them.
In sentencing remarks, Magistrate Clare Farnan described Davis's course of conduct as "a serious type of domestic violence because the offending had become normalised within a relationship".
Warning: This story contains descriptions of extreme violence and sexual abuse that may disturb some readers.
In 2021, Felicity Bourke told Four Corners she was subjected to months of psychological manipulation, coercive control and repeated physical and sexual violence perpetrated by her former partner, James-Robert Davis.
Felicity described how she was told to sign a contract that would make her a "slave", was forced to wear a collar, and was tattooed with a number as part of what was pitched to her as a form of sexual role-play known as BDSM.
At the time, Davis claimed that activity was consensual.
In court, Magistrate Farnan found that the situation was properly characterised as one of domestic violence and the actions of Davis constituted a serious breach of the trust involved in this relationship.
The court accepted that one count of assault involved Davis slapping Felicity so hard that it resulted in a burst eardrum.
Magistrate Farnan remarked that "while the complainant remained in a relationship with [Davis] he had been allowed to act unlawfully because of the normalisation [of domestic violence] within the relationship".
Another count of common assault involved Davis caning Felicity so hard that it left welts, which he claimed was consensual. The magistrate said that due to the nature of the relationship, it was difficult for Felicity to decline to consent to that type of activity.
Davis's actions towards Felicity were "particularly concerning" because the power imbalance in the relationship "left [her] with little recourse", the magistrate added.
Trail of destruction
Speaking to Four Corners in 2021, Felicity explained it took her years to realise she was a victim because of the extent of the psychological manipulation she was subjected to, but felt compelled to speak out about Davis.
"He is not the ultimate, that he's not a God, that he cannot walk through this life doing as he pleases to women and getting away with it," she said.
Prior to his arrest, Four Corners confirmed multiple complaints had been made about Davis to state and federal authorities, but he continued to act with impunity for years, leaving a trail of destruction in his wake.
Felicity told Four Corners at the time that she hoped sharing the abuse she endured would help other women facing the same fate.
"I always have thought about how those other girls feel and when you're in that position, all your power is taken away from you. And, it's really hard to get out," she said.
"Having the opportunity to be able to talk about my experiences could potentially help other girls in that situation to be able to escape."
Magistrate Farnan acknowledged that being subjected to cross-examination during the case was particularly distressing for Felicity.
Davis's legal defence submitted two letters in support of his character as well as medical reports detailing his diagnoses with PTSD, major depressive disorder and at one time an alcohol disorder.
A third character reference letter was withdrawn at the last moment, after the court refused to grant a non-publication order to suppress the author's identity.
The person in question was concerned about being publicly associated with Davis as a result of providing a character reference to the court.
None of the women who he previously referred to as his wives or slaves wrote character references or letters of support.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21781115
>>21781110
2/2
The Crown submitted that there was no evidence before the court that established a causal connection between medical conditions like PTSD and the offences Davis had been found guilty of and that the diagnoses had been made some time after the dates of the offending.
The court accepted that Davis was being treated for the conditions he had been diagnosed for but was not able to assess if that made it less likely that he would reoffend.
Magistrate Farnan also found that because Davis continued to deny the offences, there was no discount to be applied on sentencing on account of a lack of any remorse.
"It's difficult to assess prospects of rehabilitation when an offender continues to deny offences they have been found guilty of," the magistrate said.
Initial charges dropped
After Four Corners' investigation aired in March 2021, police dramatically raided a rural property in New South Wales where a number of women who Davis called his "wives" were living with him.
The AFP spent more than two days scouring Davis's property at Yarrowyck, near Armidale, for evidence and allegedly confiscated weapons, ammunition, filming equipment and hard drives that were forensically analysed.
Davis was initially charged with federal slavery offences that were later dropped by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions and replaced with a raft of state charges.
Davis's sentencing comes after years of legal wrangling and an almost three-week trial.
The court accepted that Davis had effectively already served the entire term of his imprisonment. Magistrate Farnan also acknowledged the onerous nature of parts of Davis's time in custody, which included various periods of solitary confinement and also strict original bail conditions that meant effective home detention with electronic monitoring.
For now, Davis remains in custody and will be sentenced in November in the District Court on separate charges.
In April this year, he was also rearrested while on bail on charges of intentionally sexually touching a child.
He is expected to return to court next month on those charges and an apprehended domestic violence order matter.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-17/alleged-sex-cult-leader-james-robert-davis-jailed/104474880
https://qresear.ch/?q=James+Davis
https://qresear.ch/?q=James+Robert+Davis
https://qresear.ch/?q=James-Robert+Davis
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273ca3 No.21789070
>>21446910 (pb)
>>21761388
Anthony Albanese stuffs up diary royally and will miss Indonesian President’s-elect’s inauguration
BEN PACKHAM - October 17, 2024
Anthony Albanese will become the first Australian prime minister in decades to miss the swearing-in of a new Indonesian president, skipping the inauguration of the country’s new leader Prabowo Subianto amid a scheduling clash with King Charles’ visit to Australia.
The move comes despite Mr Albanese’s public commitment to Mr Prabowo just two months ago that he would attend the high-level ceremony.
It’s understood the government informed Indonesia about a fortnight ago that Mr Albanese was no longer able to travel to Jakarta for the event this Sunday, and that Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles would attend on his behalf to represent Australia.
Mr Albanese hosted the incoming Indonesian leader in Canberra in August, declaring: “I look forward to working closely with you, President-elect Prabowo, (and) to attending your inauguration in October.”
He told Mr Prabowo at the time that Australia had “no more important relationship than the relationship between our two great nations”.
Senior government sources said the scheduling conflict was not apparent when the Prime Minister committed to attending Mr Prabowo’s inauguration.
Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said the government should have negotiated with Buckingham Palace to allow Mr Albanese to attend the inauguration as well as hosting Australia’s head of state. “Things are grim when the Albanese government can’t even get basic scheduling right,” he said. “The opportunity to be at the inauguration of the new Indonesian president isn’t just important for Indonesian relations, but provides for engagement with other regional partners too.”
King Charles and Queen Camilla arrive in Sydney on Friday and are due to attend a number of events in the NSW capital on Sunday before heading to Canberra on Monday. They will head back to Sydney the following day, before departing Australia on Wednesday for Samoa, where they will attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.
Indonesian presidents have been sworn in every five years on October 20 since 2004, while the CHOGM dates have been locked in for months.
Senator Birmingham said: “The Albanese government should have been able to work through scheduling plans with the palace that enabled the PM to treat the royal visit with respect, as well as our largest near neighbour.”
Mr Prabowo’s inauguration will be attended by a host of international dignitaries, and will include a swearing-in ceremony and presidential address. Mr Albanese’s change of plans caught Indonesia watchers by surprise. The Lowy Institute’s Susannah Patton said it was a disappointing development, but an understandable one. “It’s a good reason, but it’s just strange that it wasn’t communicated earlier,” she said. “It’s a shame because the inauguration is an opportunity, right up front, to emphasise Indonesia’s importance to us. And I think a lot of other regional heads of state and heads of government will be there. But I don’t think it’s the end of the world.”
Mr Marles has worked closely with Mr Prabowo – his Indonesian counterpart as Defence Minister – making him “a pretty good substitute” for Mr Albanese at the ceremony, Ms Patton said.
ANU emeritus professor Greg Fealy, a specialist in Indonesian politics, said the bilateral relationship was unlikely to be adversely affected. “While it’s always best if the PM attends, Richard Marles knows Prabowo well and they have a good relationship,” he said. “I think it’s clear to Prabowo that Australia privileges relations with Indonesia so I don’t think this is a major problem.”
Mr Albanese has sought to get off on the right foot with his incoming Indonesian counterpart, and was the first foreign leader to call Mr Prabowo after his election victory in February. The president-elect appreciated the gesture, saying during his August visit: “This is, I think, a mark of the friendship, the good relationship between us, and I value this very much.”
Mr Prabowo, who made the trip to Australia to finalise a landmark defence co-operation agreement, said the nations’ bilateral ties were in good shape.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison and his wife Jenny represented Australia at former Indonesian president Joko Widodo’s second inauguration in 2019, while his predecessor Tony Abbott attended Mr Widodo’s first inauguration in 2014.
Former prime minister Kevin Rudd attended Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s second inauguration in 2009, and John Howard was in Jakarta to mark the start of the former Indonesian president’s first term in 2004.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/anthony-albanese-stuffs-up-diary-royally-and-will-miss-indonesian-presidentselects-inauguration/news-story/6ca2aaa31d65ba7cb374c0e95b8e8356
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273ca3 No.21789113
>>21761388
>>21789070
King Charles and Queen Camilla land in Sydney for royal visit
Jordan Baker and Riley Walter - October 18, 2024
They were supposed to fly over Sydney as giant photographs of their own faces stared back at them from the Opera House sails. Instead, King Charles III and Queen Camilla were met by sporadic rain as they arrived for the king’s first tour as monarch.
The couple arrived at Kingsford Smith Airport on Friday evening aboard a Royal Air Force Jet after the King made the unusual decision to travel on a commercial flight for the first leg of the journey. He had left Britain without his wife, with whom he reunited in Singapore for trip to Sydney.
A posse of Australia’s most important people awaited them, including the governor-general and the prime minister, with their spouses, and the NSW Premier Chris Minns with his mother Cara.
Just before 8.45pm, the King stepped onto Australian soil, leading the way ahead of Queen Camilla, who trailed behind sheltering herself with an umbrella from the drizzling rain.
After a brief welcome, the pair was ushered into a motorcade and whisked away from the runway.
The dignitaries present were joined by Ky and his sister Charlotte, whose presentation of a posy is the fulfilment of a wish through the Make a Wish Foundation.
The montage of royal photographs was scheduled to illuminate the sails for four minutes at 8pm to coincide with the couple’s arrival but was delayed because of a tardy cruise ship. “The photo projection on the Opera House sails celebrates a historic moment … and is a fitting tribute,” said NSW Premier Chris Minns.
This is the royal tour that almost didn’t happen, after the 74-year-old king was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer in February. Original plans were pared back; New Zealand was kicked off the itinerary, and there will be no state dinners.
Having suspended treatment for the nine-day trip - which includes a Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Samoa – the king will be accompanied by two doctors and a supply of his own blood, the Times of London reported.
The royals have also taken the unusual step of clearing the first day of their tour to rest after the 24-hour journey.
Sydney’s racing king, Racing NSW boss Peter V’Landys, is hoping the monarch will have recovered enough to make a private trip to the Everest racing carnival for the King Charles III Stakes on Saturday, and told media outlets this week that the king was keen to come.
However, his attendance is unlikely; the Times' royal correspondent Roya Nikkhah on Friday wrote on X that “The King and Queen will not be at the races tomorrow”, as they will take a “down day” after their flight.
The itinerary is busy, although still modest by royal standards. They will spend time in Sydney and Canberra, visiting the War Memorial and Parliament House for a reception.
They will learn about efforts to combat bushfires at the CSIRO, tour the National Botanic Gardens, and meet the Australians of the Year, Professor Georgina Long and Professor Richard Scolyer, who are saving lives through their work on melanoma.
The queen has booked some solo engagements, such as a visit to a library in Sydney and a discussion about family violence in Canberra.
On Tuesday evening, members of the public can see the king and queen at the Sydney Opera House forecourt, a favourite destination for visiting royals ranging from the Duke and Duchess of Sussex in 2018, to the Queen in 2006, to Charles with his former wife, the late Diana, in 1983.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/king-charles-and-queen-camilla-land-in-sydney-for-royal-visit-20241017-p5kjay.html
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273ca3 No.21789155
>>21761808
Greens silent amid killing of Hamas chief Sinwar
ALEXI DEMETRIADI - 18 October 2024
The Greens have remained silent about Yahya Sinwar’s death as Labor and the Liberals said Australia would “not mourn” the Hamas leader but they would his thousands of victims.
Anthony Albanese said the killing was a “significant moment” and a “vital turning point” in the conflict, and he hoped Sinwar’s death would “break the cycle of violence” and bring an end to the Israel-Hamas war.
Leading Greens, however, were tight-lipped on Friday after the Israeli government confirmed Sinwar had been killed in the southern Gazan city of Rafah.
Federal party leader Adam Bandt was on leave and unavailable, and did not comment on the death on social media. Neither did deputy leader Mehreen Faruqi nor senator Jordon Steele-John, the Greens’ foreign affairs spokesman. Neither senator’s office returned calls on the subject on Friday.
The lack of response from the Greens was in sharp contrast to that of the Labor government and Liberal opposition.
The Prime Minister welcomed Sinwar’s death, saying it was a “significant moment” in the Middle East conflict.
“Sinwar was a terrorist and the architect of the atrocities committed on October 7,” Mr Albanese said, calling him not just an enemy of Israel but of “peace-loving people everywhere”. “(His death) can be a vital turning point in this devastating conflict.”
Mr Albanese renewed his calls for a return of the remaining hostages in Gaza, more humanitarian support for civilians, and a ceasefire that would “break the cycle of violence and put the region on the path to an enduring two-state solution”.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong said Sinwar’s death was an opportunity to end the war, saying the terrorist leader had committed “untold suffering (on) so many people”.
“His violence culminated in the worst loss of Jewish life in a single day since the Holocaust,” Senator Wong said.
“We all look to a day when Gaza is free from Hamas, and to a day where both Israelis and Palestinians can live in peace in a two-state solution, which ensures that both parties (and) peoples can live in peace and security.”
Treasurer Jim Chalmers said Australia did not mourn Sinwar’s death “for one second”, but that it did for all his victims and civilians lost in the ongoing conflict.
The federal opposition also welcomed Sinwar’s death, but rejected the government’s call for a ceasefire, arguing it would allow the terror organisation to regroup and reassert control over Gaza.
Peter Dutton said the killing was a “great day” for the Middle East and the world was now a “safer place”. “(Sinwar) had equal disdain for Israelis, as evidenced by the October 7 atrocities, as he did for his own people, whom he used as human shields and kept impoverished in pursuit of his own twisted world view,” the Opposition Leader said.
An “ugly flame of vicious terrorism” had been extinguished, opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said, adding that Sinwar’s death provided a degree of “justice” to the families of those killed or taken hostage on October 7.
Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said calls for a ceasefire while Hamas remained active were premature, taking a swipe at the government’s stance.
“If Israel had followed the Albanese government’s advice and instituted an immediate ceasefire several months ago, Sinwar would still be alive today and Hamas would be back in control of Gaza … it is a good thing they did not,” the senator said.
Former Liberal prime minister Scott Morrison said Sinwar had “gone the way of (Osama) bin Laden”, saying it was “not the time for a ceasefire” but rather for Hamas to surrender.
“That is how this conflict must end … (a) ceasefire would have let Sinwar prevail,” he said.
There was a muted response domestically of people publicly airing support for Sinwar, unlike when Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah was killed last month. Then, the terror group’s flags were waved during rallies in Sydney and Melbourne.
The Hamas chief’s death could change the Middle East, Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said. He added that it showed Israel enjoyed “greater advantages” over its enemies than at “any point in history”.
“In destroying Hamas and showing that terrorism will be met with power, and not political capitulation, Israel has transformed regional dynamics and created the conditions for long-term peace,” he said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/greens-silent-amid-killing-of-hamas-chief-sinwar/news-story/961670044b9bf12ba694a6071b859da8
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273ca3 No.21789196
>>21761808
Australian air bases assisted with US strike on Houthi weapon stores
Andrew Greene and Jacob Greber - 18 October 2024
Air bases in Australia have helped with this week's United States air strike on underground Houthi weapons stores in Yemen, an attack that has been seen as a warning to Iran.
The Department of Defence confirmed Australia provided support for US strikes on October 17, targeting the Houthi facilities "through access and overflight for US aircraft in northern Australia".
"Australia is committed to supporting the US, and key partners, in disrupting Houthi capabilities used to threaten global trade and the lives of mariners in the Red Sea, a vital international waterway," a defence spokesperson said.
The ABC understands air-to-air refuelling aircraft were part of the mission, although the defence department has declined to confirm.
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said early on Friday morning (AEDT) that President Joe Biden ordered the strikes to "further degrade the Houthis' capability" to destabilise the region and protect US forces in "one of the world's most critical waterways".
While the US did not mention Iran, American media noted that the B-2 is the only plane capable of hitting deeply buried Iranian nuclear facilities.
"This was a unique demonstration of the United States' ability to target facilities that our adversaries seek to keep out of reach, no matter how deeply buried underground, hardened or fortified," Mr Austin said.
"The employment of US Air Force B-2 Spirit long-range stealth bombers demonstrate US global strike capabilities to take action against these targets when necessary, anytime, anywhere."
The US has been battling Iran-backed Houthis since shortly after the Hamas terrorist attack on Israel over a year ago.
US Central Command issued a separate statement that it "conducted multiple, precision airstrikes" on storage facilities in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, that had "various advanced conventional weapons used to target US and international military and civilian vessels in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden".
US forces "targeted the Houthis' hardened underground facilities housing missiles, weapons components, and other munitions," it said.
An Australian official said the "support is consistent with our long-standing alliance commitment and close cooperation, demonstrating the interoperability of our militaries".
"Australia will continue to work with partners to deter actions that undermine global and regional security and stability."
Darwin MP Luke Gosling, who is also the federal government's special envoy for defence, told the ABC that Australia works "incredibly closely with the US Air Force" in the north.
"We obviously are part of a global effort to make sure that terrorists are not able to interdict free trade, are not able also to threaten the lives of Australians or indeed Australia's interest around the world," he said.
"So of course we work with our allies and our partners to achieve that aim."
Mr Gosling said there are "no deliberate messages being sent from Australia, other than we are in lock-step with our allies in order to uphold a rules-based order upon which Australia's security and prosperity is so dependent".
Strike was a 'direct message of power'
Justin Bassi, executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said the operation was unprecedented in scale, means and what it targeted.
Overshadowed by global attention falling on the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, Mr Bassi said the raid is "possibly the major international story" of the past 24 hours.
"A direct message of power and deterrence to not only the Houthis, but Iran, it took a B-2 to be able to destroy these underground facilities in Yemen containing sophisticated weaponry supplied by Iran," he said.
In October 2022, Four Corners revealed that the US Air Force would build a "squadron operations facility" at RAAF Tindal air base, south of Darwin.
Two US B-2 bombers landed at Amberley Air Force Base near Brisbane in August, according to a post on X from an account calling itself the Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri.
Whiteman is where the US Air Force bases its fleet of B-2 bombers, which is believed to number 19 operational warplanes, according to the New York Times.
The newspaper reported on Friday that the B-2 is the only warplane that can carry the largest class of specially built bombs that can punch through soil, rock or concrete before detonating.
It is not known whether the bombs, known as GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators or MOPs, were used in the mission.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-18/australian-airbase-used-in-us-strike-on-houthi-stores-yemen/104490578
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273ca3 No.21789284
>>21773932
US congress asked to consider alternative AUKUS plan
JOE KELLY - October 17, 2024
1/2
The US congress has been handed an alternative AUKUS plan whereby it would not sell nuclear-powered submarines to Canberra and instead build up to eight new Virginia-class boats that could be retained in US Navy service and operated out of Australia.
The eight extra Virginia-class submarines could be used for both US and Australian missions while freeing up funds for Canberra to invest in other capabilities such as long-range anti-ship missiles, drones, loitering munitions, B-21 long-range bombers, or other strike aircraft.
The idea is canvassed by Ronald O’Rourke, a highly regarded specialist who has worked as a naval analyst for the Congressional Research Service of the Library of Congress since 1984, who labels the alternative model a US/Australian “military division of labour”.
It has won the backing of one of Australia’s leading strategic experts, Michael Shoebridge, who said Mr O’Rourke sought to present a “better plan that achieves the deterrence outcomes of AUKUS but does so in a faster and more cost-effective way”.
Mr Shoebridge, the founder and director of Strategic Analysis Australia, said “AUKUS is not actually about submarines – AUKUS is about deterring war with China by having increased military power that keeps making Xi Jinping think today is not the right day”.
“The alternative force Ronald O’Rourke sketches out with the B-21 bombers and new generation weapons and autonomous systems would be a more sovereign force than the current plan.”
By contrast, former home affairs secretary and leading strategic thinker Mike Pezzullo rejected Mr O’Rourke’s “model of keeping all of the SSNs for the US navy” and proposed a major lift in defence spending to boost submarine production rates.
The alternative AUKUS proposal from Mr O’Rourke, contained in an updated October 10 paper for members and committees of congress, would appear to clash with longstanding assurances from successive Australian governments that submarines provided by the US would remain under the sovereign control of the government of Australia.
Under the alternative model, Mr O’Rourke says that “up to eight additional Virginia-class SSNs would be built, and instead of three to five of them being sold to Australia, these additional boats would instead be retained in US Navy service and operated out of Australia along with the five US and UK SSNs that are already planned to be operated out of Australia under Pillar 1 as SRF-West (Submarine Rotational Force-West)”.
Mr O’Rourke links the case for the alternative model to concerns over whether the US industrial base can meet the target of producing 2.33 Virginia-class submarines per year – the rate needed to replace the boats sold to Australia.
The US Navy’s goal, set out in June 2023, called for maintaining a fleet of 66 SSNs (nuclear-powered attack submarines), but Mr O’Rourke notes there were only 48 in service in 2023.
He says the number of SSNs is projected to experience a “valley or trough from the mid-2020s through the early 2030s”.
Under the US Navy’s 30-year shipbuilding plan, the SSN force is forecast to decline to 47 boats in 2030, marking the bottom of the “valley”. It would then increase to 50 boats by 2032 and up to 66 boats by 2054.
Mr O’Rourke says these projected force levels do not account for the impact of selling three to five Virginia-class boats to Australia under AUKUS.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21789296
>>21789284
2/2
Mr Pezzullo said selling SSNs to Canberra was a “significant strategic risk for the US, and would only continue to be supported by a president who was confident Australia would support the US in any war in the Western Pacific and Indian Ocean.”
“That is why AUKUS Pillar 1 could be suspended or terminated at any time if military necessity required it,” he said. “We will then be left without Virginia SSNs.”
Mr Pezzullo said the “only solution to the problem is to dramatically lift production capacity and production to a rate of effort that would typically only be seen as an urgent wartime measure – perhaps lifting production to three to four submarines a year to meet US Navy and Royal Australian Navy requirements – this would require US and Australian defence/GDP spending to lift into the 4-5 per cent range”.
In his paper, Mr O’Rourke lists arguments both in favour of the existing AUKUS arrangements as well as his alternative plan. But he says the lack of assurance from Australia that any nuclear submarines sold to it would “be available for use in a US-China crisis or conflict” was important. This was cited as a key reason not to sell Australia the submarines in the first place.
“This could weaken rather than strengthen deterrence and warfighting capability in connection with a US/China crisis or conflict,” Mr O’Rourke says. “Selling Virginia-class boats to Australia could also weaken deterrence … if China were to find reason to believe, correctly or not, that Australia might use its Virginia-class boats less effectively than the US Navy.”
He notes that Defence Minister Richard Marles in March 2023 “reportedly confirmed that in exchange for the Virginia-class boats, Australia’s government made no promises to the US that Australia would support the US in a future conflict over Taiwan”.
Mr Shoebridge said that, under the existing AUKUS plan, Australia would not have eight nuclear submarines until 2054.
“When Australia has eight, that is the time we can reliably deploy two at any one time,” he said.
“I do (prefer O’Rourke’s plan). The complexity and time and expense of the AUKUS submarine plan and the fact that it takes more than 30 years to allow us to have two reliably deployed submarines means it’s not solving the problem that AUKUS sets out to solve.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/us-congress-asked-to-consider-alternative-aukus-plan/news-story/baa00d083dc42d389cf711f036efcb6e
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273ca3 No.21793463
>>21789113
King Charles III presented with rare Aussie military honours on tour of Australia
ADELAIDE LANG - 19 October 2024
King Charles III has been recognised with prestigious honorary rankings in Australia’s military on the first day of his inaugural visit to Australia as a reigning monarch.
Governor-General and Commander-in-Chief of the Australian Defence Force, Sam Mostyn, appointed the King to the Honorary Ranks of Admiral of the Fleet of the Royal Australian Navy, Field Marshal of the Australian Army, and Marshal of the Royal Australian Air Force.
King Charles has enjoyed a longstanding connection with the Australian Defence Force after he first held the title of Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Australian Armoured Corps in 1977.
“Australians share His Majesty’s pride in the ADF, its sailors, soldiers and aviators and the loved ones who support them,” Ms Mostyn said.
Chief of the Defence Force Admiral, David Johnston, said the appointments reflected Australia’s cherished relationship with the crown.
“The Sovereign serves as an example of service, and His Majesty’s appointments are symbolic of the Royal Family’s longstanding dedication and relationship with the nation,” he said.
“Since Australian Federation in 1901, Australia’s military forces have been custodians of great traditions connected to the Commonwealth, and 123 years later the Australian Defence Force is proud to continue this legacy.”
King Charles and Queen Camilla will visit the Australian War Memorial and Australian Parliament House when they head to Canberra on Monday.
When they return to Sydney, they are expected to participate in a Fleet Review of five naval ships on Sydney Harbour before they return to the United Kingdom.
The King’s Flag for Australia will be flown throughout the King’s whirlwind visit in recognition of his role as King of Australia.
The flag reflects the shield of the Commonwealth Coat of Arms and is used in the same way as the Royal Standard in the United Kingdom.
It will be flown on or outside buildings and on planes, cars, and ships to signify King Charles’ presence.
When King Charles and Queen Camilla touched down in Sydney on Friday night, they were welcomed by Ms Mostyn, alongside Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, NSW Governor Margaret Beazley, and NSW Premier Chris Minns.
It is the King’s 17th visit to Australia since his first trip in 1966 at the age of 17 and his first since he was crowned in 2022.
He is the first reigning monarch to visit Australia in more than 13 years.
The now 75-year-old monarch is battling cancer and the Australian tour will be his first overseas engagement since the shock diagnosis in April.
This has led to a shorter visit and a scaled back schedule, with no commitments set down for Saturday.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/king-charles-iii-presented-with-rare-aussie-military-honours-on-tour-of-australia/news-story/3c3c517e1f7e79c60d901eecbd7664fe
https://x.com/AlboMP/status/1847229085346591172
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273ca3 No.21793484
‘Rupert, please do it this way’: Trump asks Murdoch to help him secure victory
Farrah Tomazin - October 19, 2024
1/2
Michigan: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump says he plans to ask Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch to stop running negative ads and airing people who will criticise him ahead of November’s election.
With just over two weeks left in the campaign, Trump appeared on Fox & Friends where he also revealed that people on the network helped write the jokes he told the night before during a speech at the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner in New York, a longstanding feature of US presidential campaigns.
The comments came as both Trump and Kamala Harris hit the battleground of Michigan on Friday (Saturday AEDT) – a swing state in the midwest with high numbers of union workers, black voters and Arab Americans.
Trump won the state against Hillary Clinton in 2016 but lost it to Joe Biden in 2020. But in a sign of just how desperate Democrats are to hold on to it, Harris plans to return to Michigan next Saturday to campaign with one of the party’s most popular figures: Michelle Obama.
Before heading to Michigan, Trump appeared on Murdoch’s conservative cable network for an interview, in which he told the hosts: “You know the event I have now? A very big event. I’m going to see Rupert Murdoch.”
“I’m going to tell him something very simple, because I can’t talk to anybody else about it: Don’t put on negative commercials for 21 days and don’t put on the horrible people that come and lie,” he said. “I’m going to say: Rupert, please do it this way. And then we’re gonna have a victory, because I think everyone wants to have a victory.”
The night before, the former president appeared at the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Dinner, an annual dinner to raise funds for Catholic charities supporting children in New York.
For years, the dinner has offered candidates from both parties the chance to trade light-hearted barbs in the final stretch of the campaign.
Harris opted not to attend, marking the first time a major presidential candidate has snubbed the dinner in 40 years. She instead appeared in a pre-recorded video and comedy skit alongside actress Molly Shannon reprising her Saturday Night Live character Mary Katherine Gallagher, a quirky Catholic student.
Trump was the keynote speaker and made a rare appearance with his wife, Melania. His jokes not only took aim at Harris, he also mocked her husband, Doug Emhoff, who had an extramarital affair with his first wife – “The only piece of advice I would have for her in the event that she wins is not to let her husband Doug anywhere near the nannies” – Joe Biden – “President Biden couldn’t be here tonight. The DNC made sure of that” – and Democrat Senate Leader Chuck Schumer, who Trump said was “looking very glum” – “But look on the bright side Chuck. Considering how woke your party has become, if Kamala loses, you still have a chance to become the first woman president.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21793488
>>21793484
2/2
Fox & Friends co-host Steve Doucey praised Trump for his material at the event, and asked the former president: “Who helped you with it?”
Trump replied: “I had a lot of people helping, a lot of people, a couple of people from Fox – actually, I shouldn’t say that, but they wrote some jokes.”
“For the most part, I didn’t like any of them,” he added.
Trump’s appearance on Fox is the latest stage in his volatile relationship with the network and its Australian-born owner, whose outlets propped up the former president for years – even to the point of deluding its audience about the 2020 election being stolen, as revealed through a lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems.
The pair fell out after that election when Fox declared early during the vote count that Biden had won the state of Arizona. Things soured again in the 2022 midterm elections, when a much-anticipated red wave failed to materialise, blamed in part on Trump’s coterie of extremist candidates.
Soon after, Murdoch’s New York Post ran a front cover depicting the former president as “Trumpty Dumpty” with an accompanying story referring to him as “perhaps the most profound vote repellent in modern American history”.
The Fox & Friends interview was a lighthearted affair, in stark contrast to Harris’ earlier combative interview with Fox presenter Bret Baier.
The vice president has leaned into the interview in recent days, and sought to paint a contrast with Trump by suggesting he is too old and unfit to be president.
Amid reports suggesting Trump, 78, was cancelling interviews because he was “exhausted”, Harris said in Michigan: “Being President of the United States is probably one of the hardest jobs in the world, and so we really do need to ask if he’s exhausted being on the campaign trail, is he fit to do the job?”
Both candidates have descended on Michigan as polls show the candidates are statistically tied. Harris spent her day speaking at a union hall before holding a rally in Oakland County, northwest of Detroit that went from being Republican to Democrat over the past 10 years. Trump visited a campaign office in Hamtramck, the only Muslim-majority city in the US, and will also hold an evening rally in Detroit.
https://www.theage.com.au/world/north-america/rupert-please-do-it-this-way-trump-asks-murdoch-to-stop-airing-attack-ads-20241019-p5kjlh.html
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273ca3 No.21793501
>>21446927 (pb)
>>21642659 (pb)
>>21648303 (pb)
South Australian upper house narrowly votes down late-term abortion law amendments, with controversy between MP's
Sophie Holder and Evelyn Leckie - 17 Oct 2024
1/2
South Australia's upper house has narrowly voted down a proposal to amend abortion laws that would have required people wanting to terminate their pregnancy after 28 weeks to deliver their baby alive.
The amendments, proposed by Liberal MP Ben Hood, would have required women seeking to terminate a pregnancy from 28 weeks to instead undergo an induced birth, with babies to then be adopted.
Under legislation passed in 2021, a pregnant person can get a late-term abortion after 22 weeks and six days if it is deemed medically appropriate and approved by two doctors.
According to SA Health, in the first 18 months after the legislation was implemented, "fewer than five" people had their pregnancies terminated after 27 weeks.
Both major parties allowed a conscience vote on the private member's bill, meaning that MPs did not need to vote along party lines.
After around 3 hours of debate on Wednesday evening, the bill was defeated just before 10pm — nine members voted in favour of the bill and 10 against.
Parliament controversy
The vote was marred by disagreements between MPs, that resulted in a Liberal MP who was home on sick leave making a last minute dash to parliament to ensure her vote was counted.
Ms Lensink was away from parliament for the debate, because she is undergoing treatment for breast cancer.
She was a major proponent of the 2021 laws that decriminalised abortion in South Australia, and is strongly opposed to the changes being pushed by conservatives in her party.
She told ABC Radio Adelaide she was initially granted a pair arrangement by a Liberal Party colleague, Jing Lee.
Under that arrangement Ms Lee, who was in favour of the bill, would abstain from the vote, meaning the outcome wouldn't been affected by Ms Lensink's absence.
But Ms Lensink said about half an hour before the vote, Ms Lee told her she would no longer be her pair.
Ms Lensink said she then understood One Nation MP Sarah Game would be her pair instead.
"I thought it was fixed … then I start getting more texts and phone calls from other colleagues saying not it's not," Ms Lensink said.
"I thought it might get to the point where I would physically have to go there because I felt my pair might not be honoured."
It was then Ms Lensink said she got into an Uber to rush to parliament.
Ms Lensink said while decisions like Ms Lee's happen "from time to time", she was frustrated that Ms Game did not tell her she was not going to act as her pair.
Ultimately another Liberal colleague, Dennis Hood agreed to pair with Ms Lensink.
Mr Hood said he agreed to the arrangement because Ms Lensink did the same for him when he was undergoing cancer treatment during previous debate on a bill regarding sex work laws.
"I was unable to be in the parliament, I was just too ill and I think I was in hospital at the time," Mr Hood said.
"Michelle was good enough to pair me at the time so I said to her if you ever need the favour returned I would do the right thing by you."
Speaking outside Parliament on Thursday, Ms Game said it was "highly distressing" to know the situation that Ms Lensink was put in, but defended her own actions.
"There probably was a period of a couple of minutes where she thought I was open to pairing with her," she said.
"However as soon as I clarified that for a conscience vote that wasn't required, there was absolutely no way I would be voting against this bill.
She said Ms Lensink "misread the situation entirely".
"If it's a conscience vote, you cannot rely on somebody else being willing to give up their vote," she said.
Jing Lee has been contacted for comment.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21793506
>>21793501
2/2
How debate played out
Starting off the debate on Wednesday evening, Mr Maher slammed Mr Hood's bill.
"This bill is not based on evidence, it's insulting to women and girls and above all it's dangerous in how it plays politics with the health and wellbeing of women," Mr Maher said.
Liberal MLC Dennis Hood said he supported the proposed changes, saying it was a "compassionate response for both baby and mother".
"This bill is intended to strike a balance, I think very importantly, between respecting a woman's right to terminate a pregnancy while protecting the life of a baby that would almost certainly survive outside of the womb."
Labor MLC Clare Scriven also spoke in support of the bill.
"There is a strong message in the pro-life movement, which is 'love both'," she said.
SA Best's Connie Bonaros criticised Mr Hood's position on the issue, saying there was nothing "simple" about making a decision to terminate a pregnancy.
"You do not wake up one day and decide, 'I no longer want to be carrying this baby' at that late term and expect to turn up at a specialist clinic and say 'get this out of me' and have a specialist say 'OK, let's go,'" Ms Bonaros said.
"Unfortunately, that has been the sort of public message that has been sold in this debate.
"Unless and until we've walked in the shoes of any woman facing what these women face, then we have absolutely no right to cast judgement on them."
In his speech, Ben Hood said his bill was "not about taking away a woman's rights or limiting her autonomy".
"It is about drawing a clear and humane line once a baby reaches viability at 28 weeks," he said.
Mr Hood said babies born after 28 weeks were "not condemned to a life of suffering, most will grow up healthy and thrive".
"We cannot use the possibility of some complications as a justification for ending life," he said.
"These children are not statistics, they are living breathing beings who deserve the chance to live." he said.
Proposal sparks debate
The proposal has been met with debate within both political and broader medical circles.
The proposed amendment, which has been strongly backed by anti-abortion campaigner and University of Adelaide law professor Joanna Howe, has been met with support at rallies on Parliament steps.
It has been opposed by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RANZCOG), with its SA committee chair Heather Waterfall labelling abortion "an essential service".
Earlier, Greens MP Tammy Franks told ABC Radio Adelaide its party position was to vote against the proposal, saying abortion should be treated as a health issue.
"Both Greens votes will be voting this bill down," she said.
In a statement, Law Society of South Australia president Alexander Lazarevich reaffirmed support for the 2021 legislation, which was informed by a report from the South Australian Law Reform Institute.
"In the society's view, a medical professional is best placed to assess the individual circumstances of a patient and treat the patient according to best medical practice standards and the ethical framework under which all medical professionals must operate," he said.
"The law ought not to unduly interfere with or restrict the capacity of medical professionals to provide appropriate, individualised and evidence-based patient care."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-17/abortion-legislation-vote-south-australia/104477762
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273ca3 No.21793516
Grant Harden: Pedophile soccer coach who abused seven boys has sentence reduced
Prison attacks on a pedophile, who sexually abused boys and then filmed and shared it online, have been revealed during his plea for a shorter sentence.
Steve Zemek - October 18, 2024
Warning: Graphic content.
A vile pedophile and volunteer soccer coach who sexually abused seven boys has had six months shaved off his lengthy prison sentence, with a court hearing he had been attacked in jail forcing authorities to move him to another prison.
Grant Harden, of St Clair in western Sydney, was jailed after he filmed his sexual abuse of seven children and shared the videos online with a pedophile ring.
Harden’s offences were described as “extreme” and the sick child abuse material he produced as being “of a most shocking kind” after he subjected his victims, who were as young as four, to horrific abuse.
He was arrested in May 2020 as part of the AFP’s sweeping sting on a pedophile network before he was ultimately handed a crushing 30-year jail sentence.
After pleading guilty, he was sentenced for two lots of offences.
One was for the rape of the seven young boys and included 26 counts of sexual intercourse with a child under 10 and 35 counts of sexually touching boys under 10.
The court was told that Harden exploited one of his victim’s love of video games and groomed him by offering to buy him “skins” for Fortnite.
The second group of offences included using a carriage service to produce, possess, transmit and advertise child abuse material.
When police seized his phone they found more than 450 videos and images, including material featuring Harden’s abuse and exploitation of the young boys.
His non-parole period was set at 22 years and told he would not be eligible for release until May 2042 when he would be 51.
However, this year, he launched an appeal, in part claiming his sentence was “manifestly excessive”.
The Court of Criminal Appeal – comprising Justices Natalie Adams, Ian Harrison, Peter Hamill – dismissed two of the three grounds on which he appealed.
“The possession and distribution of images of sexual abuse, torture and humiliation of very young children, including toddlers and babies constitutes serious offending,” Justice Adams said in a judgment published on Friday.
She added that Harden had been “seeking out more extreme content from those with whom he traded.”
They did find that his sentence was the subject of error because District Court Judge Sarah Huggett was given incorrect details by the prosecution about the maximum penalty for the child abuse material offences.
The mistake at the time was not picked up by Harden’s lawyers either.
In June 2020, the law was changed, increasing the maximum penalty for the offence of transmitting child abuse material using a carriage service from 25 years to 30 years.
However some of Harden’s offending pre-dated the legislation being amended.
The Court of Criminal Appeal did not find that he should get a lesser sentence for that group of offences.
But they did find there should have been a greater overlap between the two lots of sentences.
His total sentence was reduced down to 29 and a half years, with a 21-year, six-month non-parole period meaning he’ll remain in jail until at least November 7, 2041.
The court was also told Harden had been targeted in jail and last year had to be moved to another prison.
“He has also been the target of a number of attacks by fellow inmates, the most recent of which resulted in his relocation from Junee Correctional Centre in late 2023,” Justice Adams said.
https://www.news.com.au/national/nsw-act/courts-law/pedophile-soccer-coach-who-abused-seven-boys-has-sentence-reduced/news-story/bb2a6942162e02e310be14ee897f0adf
https://qresear.ch/?q=grant+harden
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273ca3 No.21793646
Vindication for victims as paedophile counsellor Allan Keith Huggins jailed for at least 20 years
Duncan Murray - Oct 18, 2024
When one of serial paedophile Allan Keith Huggins' victims first reported the abuse, police did not believe him.
The then-teenager instead received a beating from his father for potentially ruining someone's career.
Years later that victim, Garry Faint, described the experience as a "nightmare", saying his parents died without knowing the truth about Huggins.
"They believed him over me," Faint said.
Huggins today learned he would likely die in prison for sexually abusing multiple boys during the 1970s and '80s.
The abusive former counsellor received a minimum 20-year jail term, backdated to 2020, making him first eligible for release in 2040, when he would be 92 years old.
He was found guilty in August on 36 counts of molesting 10 young male patients in Armidale, in northern NSW, between 1977 and 1986.
As the emotionless 77-year-old was led from the Sydney courtroom, his many victims and their supporters let out cheers and jabs of abuse.
"Hope you rot now you bastard," one said.
Another victim of Huggins' abuse, Phil Wright, said the outcome was better than many had expected and marked the end of a long journey after the crimes were first reported to police more than four decades ago.
"It feels like an amazing vindication," he said.
Both Wright and Faint reported the abuse to adults, including members of the Catholic church, but were either not believed or ignored, Judge Penelope Hock noted during sentencing.
Faint went to police after fleeing an assault by Huggins, but was instead driven home by the officers to be dealt with by his parents.
The officers had a brief conversation with his father, who later gave him "the biggest hiding of (his) life", leaving him with injuries including broken ribs.
Before the beating, the court was told his father said: "You f-cking little bastard, you're going to wreck someone's career."
"The police did not take any action," Judge Hock said.
"This was no doubt in part because of the offender's respected position in the community."
The victims of Huggins' NSW crimes were forced to wait more than a decade for him to finish serving a prison sentence in Western Australia, where he was convicted in 2015 of similar crimes and spent nine years behind bars.
Between 1977 and 1988, Huggins worked in NSW as counsellor of teenage and pre-teen boys, many of whom were vulnerable.
"Unbeknownst to those who employed him, he was a pedophile who went on to assault boys he was engaged to assist," Judge Hock said.
Huggins used hypnosis and relaxation techniques to place his victims in vulnerable states before removing their clothes and engaging in extreme acts of sexual abuse.
During the trial, Wright described being unable to move or stop the abuse from happening
The court was told at the start of today's District Court sentencing that a letter was delivered to the judge's chambers from Huggins, which was handed back to his solicitor unopened after Judge Hock declared the move "completely inappropriate".
The divorced father-of-three adult women did not react as the sentence was delivered, having spent much of the trial silently taking notes with his gaze stiffly lowered.
If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline (13 11 14), the Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) and Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800).
https://www.1800respect.org.au/
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/
https://www.kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.9news.com.au/national/allan-keith-huggins-victims-cheer-as-paedophile-counsellor-jailed-for-at-least-20-years/159e7535-7c76-48b9-a095-ca16ce08f7d2
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273ca3 No.21793661
Daniel Andrews appointed chair of key youth mental health institute
Broede Carmody - October 18, 2024
A mental health institute has defended appointing former Victorian premier Daniel Andrews as its new chair after ex-Liberal leader and Beyond Blue founder Jeff Kennett called the move “absurd”.
Andrews, who stood down in September last year after almost a decade in office, will soon lead the board of Orygen, a clinical research organisation based in Parkville, in Melbourne’s inner north. His new position, announced on Friday morning, will be a fixed three-year term.
The institute works with young people and their families to pioneer and advocate for new preventive treatments for mental health disorders.
During his premiership, Andrews established the Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System and also helped oversee the development of the biomedical precinct where Orygen is located. He also implemented some of the strictest lockdown measures in the world during the pandemic, which experts say have had lingering effects on young people’s mental health.
“I’m incredibly proud to take on this leadership role to help Orygen and its world-leading experts at this pivotal time for youth mental health in Australia and globally,” Andrews said in a statement.
“Orygen is one of Australia’s most important organisations, with a bold vision for all young people to enjoy the very best mental health as they grow into adulthood.
“It will be an honour to work closely with executive director Professor Patrick McGorry and help him realise that vision through Orygen’s groundbreaking research, knowledge translation, advocacy, workforce development and clinical care.”
But former Liberal premier and Beyond Blue founder Jeff Kennett criticised the move, arguing it was “the most absurd” appointment he had heard of in recent times.
“It is an abject disgrace to all of those who have suffered as a result of his gross mismanagement of the state,” Kennett said on Friday.
“I welcome former politicians who have been fortunate enough to hold high office doing more in the community, but this just doesn’t pass the pub test.”
Opposition mental health spokeswoman Emma Kealy said young people would remember Andrews for school closures during the pandemic.
“To put Andrews in charge of Victoria’s lead mental health agency is a disgraceful political appointment, particularly now Labor have scrapped their promise to implement all recommendations of the Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System,” Kealy said.
The Age last week revealed the Allan government had quietly shelved a commitment to legislate eight regional mental health boards in the time frame set out by the royal commission. Labor says it remains committed to every recommendation set out in the final report, but critics say missed timelines represent broken promises.
Andrews did not conduct interviews on Friday.
McGorry, Orygen’s executive director, defended the appointment and said his organisation would always have a bipartisan approach to mental health reform.
“I think it’s unfortunate if people are going to try to politicise this appointment,” he said. “All political leaders have their enemies. But this is a post-politics phase.
“We’re dealing with a youth mental health crisis in Australia and around the world. Orygen’s been at the heart of reform, and we need strong leadership. I’m surprised that Mr Kennett responded in the way he did.”
McGorry, a psychiatrist and former Australian of the Year, also said states with fewer and less restrictive lockdowns than Victoria had recorded similar mental health impacts during the pandemic.
“Western Australia, for example, Queensland. The data shows the mental health impacts of the pandemic were very similar to what we had in Victoria,” he said.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/victoria/daniel-andrews-appointed-chair-of-key-youth-mental-health-institute-20241018-p5kjf8.html
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273ca3 No.21793672
>>21793661
‘Slap in the face’: Backlash over Dan Andrews’ role as chair of youth mental health service
A mother whose teenage son died by suicide during the pandemic has slammed the decision to appoint Daniel Andrews as the chair of a leading youth mental health service.
Shannon Deery - October 18, 2024
A Victorian mother whose son died by suicide during Covid has slammed the decision to appoint Daniel Andrews as the chair of a youth mental health service.
The Herald Sun on Friday revealed the former Premier had been appointed to lead the board of Orygen, a not-for-profit youth mental health research institute and charity.
But it’s prompted a fierce backlash and comes despite latest data showing a surge in youth suicides, and calls for the state government to do more to address mental health concerns for young Victorians.
Ange Shearman, whose 16-year-old son Louie took his own life in April 2020, said the former Premier’s “hard line” lockdown policies were a major “push factor” in her boy’s death.
“I find it offensive, I find it disrespectful and a slap in the face,” she told the Saturday Herald Sun.
“Considering he was the Premier of the longest lockdown in the whole country, I find it very distasteful that he would be the chair of anything related to mental health.”
Ms Shearman accused Mr Andrews and his government of having no regard to the mental health impacts that lockdowns, specifically at the start of the pandemic, had on the community.
“I do blame his initial policies and hard line as a push factor (for my son’s death). If Louie could have got out of the house and be with his friends I think he’d still be here today. I think lockdown was a major factor,” she said.
Former Victorian premier Jeff Kennett said it was “an extraordinary appointment given the condition of so many Victorians as a result of his mismanagement of the state”.
Mr Kennett, the founder of mental health group Beyond Blue, added: “He (Andrews) is such a divisive figure in our community and given there will be a change of government at the next election, federally, I’m not sure that this is in the best interests of Orygen and the people they are trying to assist.”
Peter Meuleman, the father of a teenage cyclist struck by the Andrews’ family SUV in Blairgowrie in 2013, said it was “a disgraceful decision”.
“Andrews continues to hurt my son Ryan’s mental health to this day. This appointment is likely to re-traumatise Ryan and a lot of other people I suspect,” he said.
“I cannot believe anyone who claims to be an expert in youth mental health would think this is a good idea.”
Mr Andrews, who will replace Professor Ed Byrne as chair, was a longtime advocate for mental health investment and established a royal commission into the issue while in the top job.
In response to the royal commission’s 74 recommendations, Mr Andrews announced a record $3.8bn funding injection into mental health service in the 2021 state budget.
But since then the state government has walked back its investment and delayed the promised rollout of community-based centres.
In a statement, Mr Andrews said he was “incredibly proud” to be taking up the role during a “pivotal time for youth mental health in Australia and globally”.
“Orygen is one of Australia’s most important organisations, with a bold vision for all young people to enjoy the very best mental health as they grow into adulthood,” he said.
Orygen executive director and psychiatrist Professor Patrick McGorry said Mr Andrews’ had a “proven record as an agent of change with a strategic mindset”.
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/former-victorian-premier-daniel-andrews-appointed-chair-of-youth-mental-health-service-orygen/news-story/245d9461523c5c11cbd15936beb520ff
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273ca3 No.21793734
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21607471 (pb)
>>21607487 (pb)
>>21607498 (pb)
>>21793672
BIKE BOY SCANDAL COURT CASE UPDATE
The Bike Boy Scandal (Dan Andrews Car Crash)
Oct 18, 2024
BIKE BOY SCANDAL COURT CASE UPDATE
Thanks to everyone who has chosen to be part of Ryan’s case by donating to his fighting fund. Here are some of the highlights of what’s happening behind the scenes:
1: Cath and Daniel Andrews' Phone Records:
After both Cath and Daniel Andrews refused to actively seek their phone records from Telstra, Ryan's family has subpoenaed Telstra and another company that stores records on Telstra's behalf. We already have some of the phone records, and they are extremely concerning.
2. Assistant Police Commissioner Brett Curran’s phone records:
Despite being a police officer, whose jobs is to find evidence, Brett Curran can’t seem to access his own phone records. In response, the Meuleman family has now subpoenaed Telstra directly for these records.
3. The Call Daniel Andrews Made to 000 - at least 6 Minutes AFTER the Crash:
Ryan's family successfully subpoenaed this 000 call, which has been discussed in court. This 000 call will change EVERYTHING - once people hear how Daniel Andrews first described the crash, and WHO caused it.
4. The D24 Police Radio Call:
In order to take over and control the crash incident, Senior Constable Shayna Sage had to make sure another unit, which had been already been assigned to the crash, was called off. While this happened Ryan lay on the road, critically injured.
Ryan's family successfully subpoenaed the recording of the D24 police conversation - where SC Sage took over the investigation.
Given what we now know about the crash, Sage's comments in that recording are bizarre and extremely concerning.
Sage is currently employed as a police officer in Mansfield, in rural Victoria, and is expected to be questioned under oath about the D24 call and the crash "investigation" when the matter goes to trial next year.
Ryan and his family understand that without the generosity of good people like you, the many crimes against Ryan would never have been discovered.
"NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW" ... And with your ongoing support, Ryan and his family can ensure that the truth comes out, and those who have acted illegally are brought to justice.
Thank you.
Please donate here to Ryan's Justice Fund if you can, and please retweet this post to help raise awareness.
GO FUND ME:
https://gofund.me/55a07513
#BikeBoy #DanAndrews #VicPol #CrimeScene
https://x.com/BikeBoyScandal/status/1846826177039933757
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXqpOhmRa0M
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273ca3 No.21798523
>>21761808
>>21789155
Yahya Sinwar hailed as ‘legend’ at Sydney rally as sheik says Islam will ‘dominate’
ALEXI DEMETRIADI - 20 October 2024
1/2
A Sydney conference stacked with Hizb ut-Tahrir activists and sheiks who celebrated October 7 has heard that Islam will “dominate … bringing justice to every corner of the world” amid a “civilisational struggle” as its organisers lauded Yahya Sinwar as a slain hero.
One speaker, Sheik Ibrahim Dadoun – whose employer the United Muslims of Australia received about $1.65m in government funding in September – said that, despite Sinwar’s recent death, he remained “elated” and that “victory was coming”.
Separately, on Sunday, a pro-Palestine Sydney CBD rally heard how the terror group’s slain chief was “legendary”, a martyr who “died a warrior’s death”.
“In (Sinwar’s) death he became a legend, a legend to be told for centuries,” one speaker told a crowd at Sydney’s Hyde Park.
Sheik Dadoun’s latest comments came at a Saturday conference hosted by “Stand for Palestine”, an organisation launched by Hizb ut-Tahrir last October, which is run by its activists and has surged in popularity.
The day after Hamas’ October 7 attacks he told a rally that he was “elated … smiling” and that it had been a “great day”, although later claimed his words were taken out of context, and earlier this month called Israel a “bastard state”.
Billed as the “promised victory” conference, sheik Dadoun reaffirmed his elation, saying: “I will say it again I’m elated, I’m happy … I’ve never seen it, ever in my life, the shift and the tide that has occurred over the last year against the Zionist regime (sic)”.
“We are on that path to victory. We are on that path of the civilisational struggle where we’re going to see Islam dominate, where we’re going to see Islam bring justice to every corner in the world (sic).”
Sheik Dadoun applauded those who were “fighting with their blood” in the “lands of jihad”.
At the same event, sheik Mamoud al-Alzhari said “they” had made the community “scared of saying the word jihad”, appearing to praise the “mujahideen that would liberate (Al-Aqsa mosque)”.
He and Stand for Palestine’s organisers took to social media to laud the slain Hamas chief as a “champion”, saying his death would only pave the way for a new generation of Sinwars.
Sheik al-Alzhari called Sinwar “one of Gaza’s champions” who met a “noble end” and in his death another leader would “rise” while Stand for Palestine told its followers that he had “fought until the very end”, dying a martyr.
Hizb ut-Tahrir activist Amer Al-Wahwah, who runs Stand for Palestine’s WhatsApp group, said Sinwar had “led from the front … either victory or martyrdom, and both are victories” and that anything other than the “entire removal of the Zionist occupation” would be a failure.
Stand for Palestine and Hizb ut-Tahrir activist Faraz Nomani, who MC’d Saturday’s conference, said Sinwar and his death had only succeeded in “energising a nation”.
Hizb ut-Tahrir were banned in the United Kingdom earlier this year – and are proscribed in several Central Asian and Arab countries, including Egypt, Pakistan and Turkey – and the Indian government this month listed it a terrorist organisation.
After its activists infiltrated a pro-Palestine encampment at the University of Sydney, Jewish and political leaders called on Anthony Albanese to do similar, but he has resisted the calls.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21798526
>>21798523
2/2
Zionist Federation Australia president Jeremy Leibler said the group “must be banned … not because Australia rejects its views but because it threatens (its) security” and Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said sheik Dadoun’s “continued open displays of extremism” highlighted the “absurdity” of the governing awarding taxpayer funds to his employer to “promote social cohesion”.
But Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke reiterated that the UMA’s leadership had a history of working closely with the government, and multiculturalism assistant minister Julian Hill has said that political leaders had “repeatedly condemned” sheik Dadoun’s comments.
It comes after, on the one-year anniversary of Hamas’ attacks, Hizb ut-Tahrir activists organised a rally where American Khaled Beydoun told a crowd that October 7 was in some ways a “good day” because awareness of the Palestinians had increased.
The Lebanese Muslim Association – the rally had taken place outside its Lakemba Mosque – distanced itself from Mr Beydoun’s comments and some of the rally’s organisers, saying it would promote inclusion and peaceful coexistence “through moderation”.
Mr Burke cancelled the academic’s visa soon after and said he had been “on record for decades” opposing Hizb ut-Tahrir, “ever since I first objected to Liberal governments welcoming their guest speakers (here)”.
“I condemn all hate speech as I always have, in contrast to the decade where Peter Dutton’s Liberals repeatedly tried to weaken our laws against hate speech,” he said.
In the Sydney CBD on Sunday, the activist at the weekly pro-Palestine rally who said Sinwar died a “warrior’s death” also said that the terrorist’s story would “inspire resistance all around the world” and that he “sacrificed” himself to defeat Israel.
“We will never forget you (Sinwar) and we will never forget your legend … the resistance lives on,” the unidentified speaker said.
Jewish leaders said a “year of legal action and condemnation” appeared to have little effect on people celebrating October 7 or extremism, with Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin lamenting a lack of political and legal will.
“Australians remain vulnerable not only to international terrorism but to those among us being told that such atrocities are not only justified but a religious duty to carry out,” he said.
Stand for Palestine, which did not respond to questions, has gone to lengths to dispel suggestions that they are linked to – or were established by – Hizb ut-Tahrir, despite that group announcing on Facebook in October 2023 it was launching the movement, and whose activists run its media and logistic operations.
It has, however, grown since to encompass people and activists not part of the extremist group.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/yahya-sinwar-hailed-as-legend-at-sydney-conference-as-sheik-says-islam-will-dominate/news-story/f07ab0265c6ebc01fd5c29c86789ce5c
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273ca3 No.21798538
>>21789113
‘I’ve been waiting my whole life’: Delighted fans greet King and Queen
King Charles III and Queen Camilla have been welcomed by warm weather as they made their first public appearance in Australia during an intimate Sunday morning service.
LAURA CHUNG and JOANNA PANAGOPOULOS - 20 October 2024
1/2
King Charles III and Queen Camilla were greeted by warm weather as they made their first public appearance in Australia during an intimate Sunday morning service at St Thomas’ Anglican Church in northern Sydney.
Upon arrival, the royal couple were greeted by crowds that wrapped around the church’s property, hoping to catch a glimpse of them.
As Charles and Camilla made their way to the front of church, children waving Australian flags cheered and shook hands with the couple. The Queen, wearing a pale green Anna Valentine dress and straw hat, was given flowers by the church minister’s wife, Ellie Mantle, as she proceeded into the church.
Once inside, the royal couple were bathed in sunlight that poured through the door and stained glass windows. Dozens of phones pointed in their direction, while excited whispers echoed through the room.
Despite the important guests, Sunday’s service was restricted to the local congregation, with only a few special guests allowed to attend, such as Australia’s Governor-General and the Governor of New South Wales Margaret Beazley.
Bishop Christopher Edwards delivered a prayer, asking for the protection of the king and queen, along with a hope the upcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa would be prosperous.
He also asked for world peace and an end to wars.
The service also featured hymns, prayers and several readings from the Old and New Testaments (Isaiah 52:13-53:12 and Acts 8:26-40).
Finally, the church’s minister Michael Mantle thanked the King and Queen for their attendance and said it was an honour to host them.
Sunday’s service was filled with history. Upon arrival at the church, Charles passed by the corner stone of the church that was unveiled in 1881 by his great-grandfather King George V. Charles and Camilla also signed two bibles in black pen, including one that belonged to Australia’s first minister, Richard Johnson, who was also the Chaplin on the first fleet.
‘I’ve been waiting my whole life’
Mother and daughter Vallerie and Alexis Malinowski were the first in line.
“I’ve been waiting my whole life to meet King Charles,” Vallerie said.
She was 15 when she saw Charles on television for the first time, starting her long-held intrigue with the Royal family.
“From then on it was a real connection,” she said.
Alexis showed The Australian a photo aged four when she was pictured handing some wildflowers to the then-Queen.
Many of the royal enthusiasts had attended the King’s coronation in the UK last year.
At least a dozen pro-Palestinian protesters also gathered outside St Thomas’ Anglican Church ahead of the royal pair’s arrival.
The demonstrators held one large banner reading “Empire built on genocide. Not our king”, as they expressed solidarity with the Indigenous Australians, Lebanese and Palestinian people.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21798540
>>21798538
2/2
King makes parliament address
After the church service, King Charles made short journey from St Thomas’ Anglican Church to Macquarie Street in the CBD via car for a Bicentenary of the Legislative Council event.
About 200 people who lined up against a barricade along Macquarie Street were greeted with a wave by the King.
He was officially welcomed at the gates of Parliament House by Margaret Beazley AC KC, Governor of NSW, President of the Legislative Council Ben Franklin MLC and others.
In a brief speech, the King said he was “delighted” and “proud” to return to the Parliament of NSW to celebrate its bicentenary, and presented the chamber with an hour glass.
“And in the spirit of marking the passage of time, it is my great pleasure to present a small gift to the Parliament. It is, in fact, an hour glass, a speech timer, to sit in the chamber and bear witness to the Legislative Council’s next chapter,” he said.
“So with the sands of time encouraging brevity, it just remains for me to say what a great joy it is to come to Australia for the first time as Sovereign and to renew a love of this country and its people which I have cherished for so long.
“So thank you. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for making me feel so very welcome. Thank you.”
Queen Camilla did not travel into the city after greeting the thousands of royal fans gathered outside the church for a glimpse at the couple.
King Charles and Queen Camilla have events in Sydney and Canberra from October 18 to October 23.
It is Charles’ 17th visit to Australia since his first trip in 1966 at the age of 17.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/ive-been-waiting-my-whole-life-fans-greet-king-and-queen-at-church/news-story/1aa0e6c97cfb05c51aada76dd325b797
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273ca3 No.21798551
How a ‘monster’ allegedly used popular gaming platform for sadistic sextortion plot
Jessica McSweeney - October 17, 2024
A “monster” who used popular gaming and social media platforms to groom a child into committing “sadistic” violent and sexual acts is part of a growing trend, NSW Police allege.
Police will allege NSW man Jake Vandermeel connected with a “vulnerable child” on a social media platform in August 2023, and continued to converse with the girl on multiple platforms for nine months.
The 28-year-old would play online games with the girl, aged 15, for up to six hours a day at times and would convince the child to commit sexual acts and self-harm for his own gratification.
Police allege Vandermeel threatened the girl with rape, abduction and murder if she didn’t comply with his requests.
The girl eventually reached out for help through Kids Helpline, who helped her report the alleged abuse to her family and police.
Vandermeel was arrested on Wednesday at Safety Beach, around 30 kilometres north of Coffs Harbour, and charged with multiple child sex abuse offences, including using a device to engage in sexual activity with a child, to groom a child under 16 years old for sex and to cause a child to commit a sexual act.
He was formally refused bail at Coffs Harbour Local Court on Wednesday.
Vandermeel is allegedly part of a growing trend of “sadistic sexploitation”, a deviation of typical sextortion cases where instead of grooming the child for financial gain, the victims are being used for the offender’s own personal gratification.
Sex crimes squad commander Detective Superintendent Jayne Doherty described the alleged offending as “the most horrendous acts that anyone can perform against a child”.
“For investigators to sit and read almost nine months of conversations where this man is manipulating and coercing this child to commit violent acts against themselves, filming them for him. It breaks your soul a little bit,” she said.
“Yesterday, we arrested a monster.”
In September federal police issued a warning to parents over the rise in “sadistic sextortion” online with some offenders around the world forcing children to engage in specific live sex acts, animal cruelty, serious self-harm, and even live online suicide.
“Warning signs children may be engaging in harmful activity online may include increased screen-time on computers or phones, isolating themselves from friends and family or being secretive about who they are interacting with online,” AFP Commander of Human Exploitation and the AFP-led Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation Helen Schneider said.
If parents discover their child is a victim of this practice, they should immediately stop the chat, take screenshots of the messages and the profile, and report the crime to police.
If you are a young person in need of help contact Kids Helpline 1800 551 800.
https://kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/how-a-monster-allegedly-used-popular-gaming-platform-for-sadistic-sextortion-plot-20241017-p5kj4y.html
https://thenightly.com.au/australia/police/coffs-harbour-man-arrested-for-allegedly-grooming-15-year-old-girl-and-threatening-sadistic-sextortion-c-16420129
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-nsw/safety-beach-man-28-charged-with-sadistic-sextortion-of-girl-aged-15/news-story/f34e7b91f08dd0f64b5484795f2cd883
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273ca3 No.21803674
>>21789113
Lidia Thorpe disrupts King Charles’ reception to yell, ‘you are not my king!’
David Crowe - October 21, 2024
1/2
A protest over Indigenous rights has disrupted a parliamentary reception for King Charles III and Queen Camilla after Victorian independent senator Lidia Thorpe told the monarch he was not her king.
Thorpe strode up the central aisle of the Great Hall of Parliament House wearing a possum-skin cloak after the King’s address to the reception to tell him she did not accept his sovereignty.
The Victorian senator was standing at the rear of the assembled guests during the ceremonial welcome for the King and the speeches by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.
When King Charles III came to the end of his address and went to take his seat on the podium, Thorpe strode up the central aisle of the Great Hall to demand a treaty with Indigenous Australians.
“You are not our king. You are not sovereign,” she called out.
“You committed genocide against our people. Give us our land back. Give us what you stole from us — our bones, our skulls, our babies, our people. You destroyed our land. Give us a treaty. We want treaty.”
King Charles spoke quietly with Albanese as they sat on the podium while security officials stopped Thorpe and escorted her out of the Great Hall.
Liberal Senator Linda Reynolds said she had been standing next to Thorpe in the room and tried to block any disruption because she had suspected the Indigenous senator would call out during the proceedings.
“I knew she was going to do something but I thought she would do it when the King walked past at the end,” she said.
Thorpe appeared to take security officials by surprise by moving outside the areas cordoned off for the invited guests.
Former prime minister Tony Abbott, who attended the event, expressed his dismay at the protest.
“It’s unfortunate political exhibitionism, that’s all I’d say,” he said after the event.
Another of the guests, Victoria Cross recipient Keith Payne, was highly critical of Thorpe for disrupting the reception.
“I was absolutely amazed that she got through the door,” he said. “That was uncalled for and un-Australian.”
Payne, who was awarded the highest military honour for his service in Vietnam, was one of the guests who spoke with the King as the royal couple left the reception.
But another guest, businessman Dick Smith, said the disruption was an aspect of Australian democracy.
“I think that’s the wonderful part of our democracy – that she’s not going to be put in jail,” he said.
Smith has known the King for many years, beginning with a meeting in 1982 when Smith landed his helicopter on the grounds of Balmoral Castle in the United Kingdom.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21803677
>>21803674
2/2
As security staff escorted Thorpe out, the royal couple prepared to talk to some of the guests at the event.
Several hundred people had gathered in the Great Hall to welcome King Charles and Queen Camilla to the parliamentary reception hosted by Albanese and his partner, Jodie Haydon.
After signing the Parliament House visitor book in the Marble Foyer, the royal couple entered the hall to the sounds of a didgeridoo played by Bevan Smith, a local Indigenous man. They were joined by federal and state members of parliament, eminent Australians and representatives from the King’s charities who assembled for the first event of its kind since Queen Elizabeth II attended a parliamentary reception in the Great Hall in 2011.
The King and Albanese led the official party into the hall, while Haydon accompanied Queen Camilla. The procession included the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Milton Dick, and the president of the Senate, Sue Lines.
Those attending the reception included former prime minister John Howard and his wife, Janette, former prime minister Tony Abbott, former deputy prime minister Julie Bishop, horse trainer Gai Waterhouse, mining executive Andrew Forrest, Linfox founder Lindsay Fox, and Olympic slalom canoe and kayak gold medallist Jessica Fox.
The two Australians of the Year, Professor Georgina Long and Professor Richard Scolyer, also attended.
A senior Ngunnawal elder, Aunty Violet, greeted their majesties and guests with a Welcome to Country. She was joined by the Wiradjuri Echoes, a family run group that teaches Indigenous dancing and culture. The Australian National Anthem was sung by the Woden Valley Youth Choir in English and Ngunnawal.
In remarks that were televised live, the King paid tribute to the progress Australia had made since his first visit to the country in 1966.
Their majesties walked to the forecourt of Parliament House to greet members of the public before proceeding to other events.
https://www.smh.com.au/national/lidia-thorpe-disrupts-king-charles-reception-to-yell-you-are-not-my-king-20241017-p5kja5.html
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273ca3 No.21803688
>>21648351 (pb)
West Australian paedophile Dennis McKenna denied parole
Jamie Thannoo - 21 October 2024
One of Australia's most prolific child sex offenders has been denied an early release on parole.
Dennis John McKenna, 79, abused dozens of boys from 1977 to 1990 at a student's boarding lodge in the West Australian town of Katanning.
The Prisoners Review Board on Monday declined his bid for parole — two years ahead of his prison term ending.
The board has said it would not make the reasons for the refusal of parole public for the best interests of McKenna's victims.
Survivors who campaigned against his release said McKenna should never be freed from prison.
Decision praised
McKenna has been in prison for more than 20 years for abusing 28 boys while working as a warden at the St Andrew's Hostel in Katanning.
He was found guilty in 1991 of 19 offences, and was convicted for more offences in 2011 and 2015.
Victims had been told by the Department of Justice that the board was required to consider releasing McKenna.
Survivor Todd Jefferis praised the decision to reject parole.
Mr Jefferis said McKenna should never be released, let alone allowed out on parole early, because of the severity of his crimes.
"They were the most heinous crimes you can imagine committed against children," Mr Jefferis said.
Mr Jefferis said he wrote a response to the board urging its decision makers not to release McKenna early.
"We put in our submissions, and we campaigned pretty hard," he said.
"Sometimes these people get it wrong … in this case, they've got it right, they've got it very right."
Right to appeal
McKenna's abuse sparked a state inquiry in 2012 which suggested more than 20 community figures ignored complaints or failed to act.
His brother, Neil McKenna, was the senior supervisor from 1985-1990.
He was found guilty in 2012 of three offences against a female student.
The WA government announced in August that the hostel he managed, now called Katanning Residential College, would be demolished.
According to an email to victims from the Victim Notification Board, McKenna may appeal the decision or apply for parole again if circumstances change.
McKenna's sentence is due to end in in late 2026.
He will be automatically reviewed for parole six months before the end of the sentence.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-21/paedophile-dennis-mckenna-denied-parole-wa/104497728
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273ca3 No.21803697
>>21687992 (pb)
>>21695329 (pb)
Julian Assange’s dad thanks Putin for his ‘support’
Rob Harris - October 21, 2024
London: The father of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says he’s grateful to Russian President Vladimir Putin for the long-standing support of his son amid his ongoing “persecution” by Western authorities.
John Shipton, who arrived in Moscow on Sunday ahead of the BRICS international summit, told Russian state-owned news agency RIA Novosti that Putin was “the first head of state to defend Julian’s interests as a publisher and a citizen” in 2012.
He said Putin’s support came as his son was receiving “every smearing lie and calumny that the institutions of state and those hangers-on in the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia could deliver upon his head.”
“Putin defended his interests as a publisher and journalist. For that, I extend my affection to your president. And my thanks,” he said.
Shipton is in the country at the invitation of Russian journalist Mira Terada, co-chair of the BRICS Journalists’ Association. The BRICS is an alliance started by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.
Shipton also praised controversial populist, pro-Russian European leaders – Hungary’s Viktor Orban and Slovakia’s Robert Fico – and warned of the dangers of information control and the role of “colour revolutions” in destabilising several former Soviet nations.
Shipton claimed non-government organisations and news agencies, news publishers and journalists were being heavily influenced by the United States government to attempt to undermine the cohesion of the state.
“So we can see clearly what can be done to a state by controlling the information that people get through a series of colour revolutions, which happens next door to Russia in Ukraine and almost happened in Belarus, almost happened in Kazakhstan, almost happened in Georgia and so on,” he said.
Shipton, 80, said he was elated to finally be able to hug his son this year after Assange’s release from five years in a high-security British prison after a plea deal with the US Justice Department. Assange pleaded guilty and was convicted of obtaining and publishing military secrets, including details of US wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Shipton said his son was in good health now and was “repairing himself”, with his children “teaching him how to be a parent”.
Shipton, who describes himself as an anti-war activist, has been accused of being an apologist for the Putin regime. He attended a pro-Russian rally after the invasion of Ukraine, but said he was only there to speak about his son.
He also faced heavy criticism in 2013 when he led a WikiLeaks Party delegation to Syria to meet dictator Bashar al-Assad, and to hold talks with a number of high-ranking Syrian officials.
Assange has also been accused of colluding with Russia, where public opinion of him soured after the 2016 US election, when WikiLeaks published a trove of emails related to Hillary Clinton. US intelligence officials later said the emails were passed along to Assange by Russian military intelligence operatives. Whether Assange knowingly conspired with Russian intelligence remains an open question.
Shipton said he agreed with the assessment of former US independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, who criticised the plea deal Assange had to take. Kennedy branded it a “big blow to freedom of the press”.
“The US, in its pursuit of those that it does not like, is clearly quite ruthless and vindictive,” Shipton said.
“I imagine if not for the intercession of the Australian government, the Australian people and the Australian parliament, if not for that intercession [which made the plea deal possible], Julian would not have survived.”
In a separate interview with Russian television network RT, Shipton said he hoped to “offer the hand of friendship between myself and the Russian people” during his visit.
“It is only through peace between the West and Russia … that the world can live in some sort of harmony without the constant fear of destruction by atomic weapons,” he said.
https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/julian-assange-s-dad-thanks-putin-for-his-support-20241021-p5kjvr.html
https://www.rt.com/shows/rt-interview/605993-shipton-assange-father-moscow-visit/
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273ca3 No.21803724
>>21803697
Sputnik Tweet
BIG NEWS: ASSANGE’S FATHER EXTENDS GRATITUDE TO PUTIN FOR DEFENDING HIS SON IN 2012
John Shipton, Julian Assange's father, has thanked President Vladimir Putin, noting that in 2012, Putin was the first head of state to defend Assange’s rights as a publisher and journalist. At a time when Assange faced relentless smears from the US, UK, and Australia, Shipton acknowledged Putin's support.
"For that, I extend my affection to your president," he told Sputnik.
Shipton, founder of Australia's now-defunct Wikileaks Party, arrived in Moscow on Saturday night at the invitation of the BRICS Journalists Association and its co-chair Mira Terada, a human rights advocate and publicist.
https://x.com/SputnikInt/status/1847968495348122028
Assange’s Father: Vladimir Putin Became First World Leader to Defend Julian’s Interests
https://sputnikglobe.com/20241020/assanges-father-vladimir-putin-became-first-world-leader-to-defend-julians-interests-1120609958.html
—
Stella Assange Tweet
My father-in-law John Shipton does not speak for my husband. As anyone who has followed Julian already knows, Julian believes in extreme skepticism when it comes to all states with large intelligence sectors, who have committed war crimes, engaged in censorship, or sought to imprison or assassinate journalists. Our family is culturally and politically diverse and dinners are sometimes… interesting! #InterestingFamilyDinners #LoveConquersAll
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Ai34Uxnv_4s
https://x.com/Stella_Assange/status/1848260655796679162
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273ca3 No.21809128
>>21761808
>>21798523
Sydney-based marketing expert ‘salutes’ Sinwar the ‘star’
ALEXI DEMETRIADI and MOHAMMAD ALFARES - 21 October 2024
1/2
An activist who lauded slain Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar as a “warrior and legend” is a Sydney aviation industry worker who previously applauded Palestinian plane hijacker Leila Khaled.
It comes as Jewish leaders separately urged the government to block the visa of high-profile activist Shaun King on “good character grounds”, particularly given the American’s praise for Sinwar.
On Sunday, The Australian revealed how one activist at a pro-Palestine Sydney rally remembered terrorist Sinwar as a “legend to be told for centuries”. The activist – Jana Fayyad, a marketing expert in the aviation industry – did not respond to questions on Monday.
Other than calling Sinwar a “warrior”, she also “saluted” the slain Hamas chief, saying his “legend” would never be forgotten.
“The star of resistance, we will never forget you (Sinwar) and we will never forget your legend,” said Ms Fayyad, who in March described Khaled as a “liberator”.
“Long live the resistance, the resistance lives on.”
At a Melbourne rally on Sunday, pro-Palestine activist Mohammed Shaheen, flanked by BestFab steel manufacture boss Ihab Al Azhari and another activist known as Abdel-Rahman Al Qaisi, also chanted “we are your men, Sinwar”.
It comes after a Sydney conference that included Hizb ut-Tahrir activists and sheik Ibrahim Dadoun, who said that “Islam would bring justice to every corner of the world”.
Separately, Jewish leaders urged Immigration Minister Tony Burke on Monday to cancel, or block, Mr King’s visa. He was set to start an Australian tour on Tuesday in Brisbane but has since postponed it to January.
Since Sinwar’s death, Mr King has shared content calling the slain Hamas chief a “dear brother” who died a “martyr”, and told his 85,000 Telegram followers that he was a “leader, fighter, martyr”, suggesting the media should refer to the terror group and its deceased leader as “heroes”.
Mr King has toured the US with professor Khaled Beydoun, whose Australian visa was cancelled last week after telling a Sydney rally that “in some ways” October 7 was a “good day”.
AIJAC executive director Colin Rubenstein believed that on character grounds, Mr King should not be granted a visa, and nor should his planned speaking partner, Mansour Shouman, a Palestinian-Canadian journalist who has called into question the number of Israelis Hamas killed on October 7.
“These individuals make a living spreading racist lies and conspiracy theories … they threaten Australia’s social cohesion and should have failed the character test for entering Australia,” Dr Rubenstein said.
“It is in the interests not only of the Jewish community but of anyone who values Australia’s vibrant, harmonious and tolerant multicultural democracy that overseas purveyors of hate and racist untruths should not be granted entry.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21809131
>>21809128
2/2
Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said Mr King had used his platform to spread “extreme anti-Israel propaganda and boost notorious anti-Semitic accounts”.
“This includes open praise for terrorist leaders, sharing Hamas military propaganda and even re-sharing vile anti-Semitic nonsense about the ‘Jewish media’ attacking masculinity in a plot to enslave the world,” he said, adding that social harmony was already frayed, and Australia had too many “racist crackpots and online extremists” without Mr King’s presence.
Mr King is banned on Instagram, with Meta alleging it was “due to praise (of) designated entities”, although he said it was due to his content showing what was happening in Gaza.
In the US, he was accused of exaggerating his involvement in the freeing of two American hostages from Gaza, something he denies. Mr King has also been accused of fraud, including an incident where he was alleged to have held an unauthorised fundraiser in the name of a 12-year-old boy who was killed by police. He also denies those allegations.
The American activist said the previous October dates did not work for his family but that he was looking forward to touring soon.
Mr King said: “I understand that to one group Sinwar is a terrorist and to another he’s a martyr. Almost every Muslim head of state in the world publicly praised his life and death, including here in Malaysia, in Turkey, and in other nations seen as more moderate Muslim nations.
“Similarly, I see Benjamin Netanyahu as a terrorist, war criminal, and genocidal murderer, as do billions of people around the world, including the ICC, ICJ, etc, which Australia is party to.
“Will every Netanyahu supporter then be banned? Will every Israeli or Jew or conservative that ever expressed support of him have their visas revoked? Or is this just going to be a practice used against Muslims in Australia?”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/sydneybased-marketing-expert-salutes-sinwar-the-star/news-story/d6e83c3c1233e7a86d833851a82d06f1
https://www.tickettailor.com/events/legacytours/1309496?
https://www.tickettailor.com/events/legacytours
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273ca3 No.21809135
Australia strikes $7bn US deal to bolster its missile and air defence
JOE KELLY - 22 October 2024
1/2
Australia will spend $7bn over the decade to revolutionise its air and missile defence systems under a new agreement with the United States aimed at countering China’s recent investments in anti-ship ballistic missile technologies while strengthening deterrence in the Indo-Pacific.
Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy made the announcement overnight on Monday (AEDT) at the Australian embassy in Washington DC after stopovers in the UK and Belgium, declaring it represented a “revolutionary” step up in Australia’s defence capability.
Under the new arrangement – already approved by Congress – Australia will acquire the Standard Missile 2 Block IIIC (SM2 IIIC) and Standard Missile-6 (SM-6) to boost the long-range capability of the Navy’s surface combatant fleet.
The Australian government says the new missile acquisitions will hand the nation some of the most advanced air and missile defence weapons in the world. The plan is for the new missiles to be deployed progressively across the Navy’s three Hobart class destroyers and planned six Hunter class frigates.
However, no time line has been given for when the new missiles will be deployed on Australian warships with Mr Conroy saying he could not do so for “operational reasons.”
“Australia is facing the most contested geostrategic environment since the Second World War. Our relationships with allies and partners are critical,” he said. “In Washington DC, I’m meeting with US officials and industry leaders to progress efforts to strengthen our relationship and deepen our collaboration on the defence industry.”
“This is a $7bn investment in protecting Australia against modern and evolving missile threats,” he said. “These are state of the art long range missiles. In fact, they are the best air defence missiles in the world.”
Mr Conroy said Australia was the first country other than the United States to test fire an SM-6 missile, “underscoring the strength of our relationship,” and argued the new missiles would give the Australian Navy the “increased lethality the government has promised.”
Last year’s Defence Strategic Review that Australia nation could no longer rely on its remoteness for protection, and that the ADF needed to be “urgently” provided with a “layered air and missile defence capability”.
It said the ADF must have the capacity to “deter through denial any adversary’s attempt to project power against Australia through our northern approaches.”
Mr Conroy said Australia had already “briefed countries in our region about what was in the National Defence Strategy”, arguing that “people were expecting this announcement.”
Currently, the Royal Australian Navy has two missiles available to it including the Evolved Sea Sparrow (ESSM) – a short range missile that can defend against incoming missiles and aircraft. The ESSM is used by the ANZAC-class frigates.
The three Hobart-class air warfare destroyers also use the ESSM along with an earlier version of the SM-2 missile.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21809137
>>21809135
2/2
Mr Conroy explained the new SM-2 IIIC missiles would give the nation a stronger capability because they had “a thing called active seeker.”
“So earlier versions of these missiles, what happens is, you’ll have a radar on a ship. It’ll detect an incoming missile. It will fire a missile, and the radar on the ship will guide that missile to hit the other missile and destroy it,” he told The Australian. “If the missile’s got active seeker … it can either be guided in to destroy that other missile by the radar on a ship, or if, for whatever reason, the ship loses contact with the missile, it can use its active seeker to detect it itself and kill it. So it’s got its own radar.”
He also said the SM-6 was “really revolutionary” because it was a long-range air defence missile with the ability to hit targets a lot further out. “Obviously, if you hit them a lot further out, the safer you are,” he said.
“Secondly, it can also be used as an anti-ship missile. So instead of defending against planes and missiles, it can be fired to hit other ships. And thirdly, it can actually defeat ballistic missiles.”
While most missiles that are launched to hit ships drop down and fly across the surface with a range of couple of hundred kilometres, ballistic missiles can go into space and have a much higher, longer range of thousands of kilometres.
Beijing has ramped up its investments in anti-ship ballistic missiles arsenal, with the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington DC noting a few years ago that Beijing had up to 1,500 short-range ASBMs, up to 250 medium range ASBMs and up to 160 long range ASBMs.
Defence Minister Richard Marles said the acquisition was an example of the Albanese government “accelerating the acquisition of critical capabilities for the Australian Defence Force and enhancing the lethality of Navy’s surface combatant fleet.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/australia-strikes-7bn-us-deal-to-bolster-its-missile-and-air-defence/news-story/ca8f1d42bca1e3484b4550390b158331
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273ca3 No.21809147
>>21773932
>>21789284
US is on track to sell Virginia-class subs to Australia, says AUKUS supporter Joe Courtney
JOE KELLY - 22 October 2024
US congressman Joe Courtney says Washington is not pursuing an AUKUS “Plan B” whereby America would operate Virginia-class submarines out of WA instead of selling them to Canberra, warning this would see Australia effectively “conceding control over the undersea domain.”
The alternative “Plan B” proposal is contained in a paper prepared for members and committees of Congress by Ronald O’Rourke, a highly regarded specialist who has worked as a naval analyst for the Congressional Research Service of the Library of Congress since 1984 when Ronald Reagan was still US President.
Mr Courtney, the co-chair of the bipartisan AUKUS working group, said that while Mr O’Rourke was seen as a “treasure” to the US Congress he was “not infallible” and his alternative plan would involve a “pretty radical” restructure of Australia’s military force.
Under the O’Rourke model – which his CRS paper labels a US/Australian “military division of labour” – up to eight extra Virginia-class submarines would be operated out of Australia by the US Navy and used for both US and Australian missions.
This in turn would free up billions of dollars for Canberra to spend on other capabilities apart from submarines such as “long-range anti-ship missiles, drones, loitering munitions, B-21 long-range bombers, or other strike aircraft.”
However, Mr Courtney said the O’Rourke plan would come with major downsides for Canberra. “I don’t think the AUKUS plan really contemplated Australia conceding control over the undersea domain,” he said. “That sort of jumps out.”
“Having a division of labour where the US pretty much operates the attack submarines exclusively pretty much puts Australia – at least eventually – out of the submarine business once the Collins-class are retired.”
Mr Courtney represents the second district of Connecticut which includes the town of Groton, known as the “submarine capital of the world.” Groton is home to General Dynamics Electric Boat – the major submarine contractor for the US Navy – as well as the primary US submarine east-coast base, Naval Submarine Base New London.
He said he was unaware of any discussion in congress regarding the O’Rourke proposal, arguing that there had already been a “vigorous debate about the notion of selling Virginia-class submarines” to Australia.
“The US Navy, along with the help from the US embassy, really comprehensively overcame any second thoughts or doubts about doing that,” Mr Courtney said. “I think, by the end of the day, the AUKUS effort was very popular on both sides of the aisle.”
Key off-ramps are contained in the AUKUS submarine authorisations which passed the US congress in December, requiring the US President to certify the transfer of any future boats to Australia.
Under the arrangements, the President can veto a transfer if he believes it would degrade US undersea capabilities or if America was making insufficient investments in its own military capabilities.
But Mr Courtney provided an assurance that “the industrial base is going to grow.”
“There’s just no question,” he told The Australian. “If you look at the amount of money that Congress has appropriated already – going back to 2019 – I would argue this is evidence of the success of those investments.”
In order for the US industrial base to replace the submarines sold to Australia, it must increase the production of Virginia-class boats to a rate of 2.33 per year. Mr Courtney said that by the end of 2025 or 2026 America would be “closing fast in terms of (a) 2.0 Virginia production rate.”
“So I think that’s all evidence that, by the time 2032 rolls around and whenever the US President decides to make a decision on the certification, I think those off-ramps, those preconditions are going to be strongly dealt with.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/us-is-on-track-to-sell-virginiaclass-subs-to-australia-aukus-supporter-joe-courtney/news-story/3ac5f98b7541d1a71b6ddc11ac54be6d
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273ca3 No.21809164
One Nation candidates are posting conspiracy theories about QAnon and man-made storms on social media
Alex Brewster - 22 October 2024
1/2
Three One Nation candidates in the Queensland election have posted conspiracy theories to social media, including one posting about the QAnon movement.
One Nation candidate for the Gold Coast seat of Southport, David Vaughan, posted to Facebook on May 13 with a caption signed off as "Q" and hashtags including "The Great Awakening", "NCSWIC" and "Future Proves Past", all terms used by the movement's followers.
QAnon followers broadly believe a Satanic paedophilic cabal controls governments, businesses, and the media.
The acronym NCSWIC stands for Nothing Can Stop What Is Coming, referring to the belief the cabal will soon be arrested.
Mr Vaughan has also made posts to Facebook about weather manipulation.
Callum Whatmore, who is running in the seat of Waterford in Logan, has also posted about weather manipulation.
Mr Whatmore posted a video on October 5, which he captioned "Deliberate?", suggesting Hurricane Helena hit the US state of North Carolina because of human interference to access "billions of dollars of lithium" underground.
"Is this a coincidence that hurricane Helena destroyed all that area? This is the outcome of a well-orchestrated, man-made disaster, weather modification and geoengineering," part of the video said.
He declined to comment when contacted by the ABC.
Mr Vaughan shared a video on weather manipulation on Facebook in March 2022, captioning it "War".
Mr Vaughan did not directly respond to questions about his social media activity.
"I would encourage you to focus on the driving points of this election, in what matters most to the people of Southport and Queensland," he said.
Scott Philip, One Nation candidate for Bonney on the Gold Coast, has posted about another conspiracy theory known as chemtrails.
Chemtrails refer to vapour trails left in the sky by aircraft, correctly known as contrails, which are not dangerous.
On September 6, Mr Philip shared a YouTube video about a prediction by American conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.
The video, from disgraced Hollywood actor Russell Brand, talks about toxins and heavy metal chemicals in the air resulting from chemtrails causing "curious new conditions" in children.
"US government talking about stratospheric injection (chemtrails) yet another confirmed conspiracy theory. Keep looking up they'll start here in Queensland again soon," the caption from Mr Philip read.
All the posts have been deleted or had their viewing permissions changed since the ABC put questions to the party and each candidate.
One Nation declined to comment, and Mr Philip did not respond to questions from the ABC.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21809165
>>21809164
2/2
When did these conspiracy theories emerge?
Dr Mathew Marques, senior psychology lecturer at La Trobe University, said the QAnon movement became more prominent in the lead-up to the last US election.
"There are these 'Q drops', which is information released to the public as cryptic messages, giving some information from the inside about the cabal," he said.
"It's meant to generate followers and this 'great awakening' is a call to overthrow these powerful elites who are conducting these horrible things in secret against the public."
Dr Marques said weather manipulation theories had been around for much longer and had increased in popularity as natural disasters became more frequent and damaging.
"They allege there's some sort of secretive plot by government and weather agencies to harm the public through dissemination of these chemical vapour trails from airplanes," he said.
"Sometimes you might look up and see crystallised water vapour. There are theories these are used to control the public or make them more docile."
Why are conspiracies dangerous?
Mr Marques says they may sound fantastical but certain elements could appeal to anyone, and consequences can be dangerous.
"People may start to distrust authorities or governments that may have specific public health advice," he said.
"Studies show exposing people to conspiracy theories can decrease trust in institutions and aspects like democratic citizenship, intentions to vote in the future, or belief that climate change is happening."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-22/one-nation-conspiracy-theories-vaughan-phillip-whatmore/104491668
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273ca3 No.21809192
>>21761789
Donald Trump is utterly unworthy of the presidency but Kamala Harris underwhelms
TROY BRAMSTON, SENIOR WRITER - 22 October 2024
1/2
The US presidential election is the most consequential in living memory yet it remains effectively tied, with neither Vice President Kamala Harris nor former president Donald Trump with a commanding polling lead in the popular vote or seven key battleground states, underscoring just how polarised and divided Americans are.
With just 15 days until election day, there is hardly a voter who has not made up their mind about who they would vote for. Some polls show just 2-5 per cent of voters are undecided. But are they actual voters? Among actual voters, the proportion who have not made up their mind is likely to be much smaller. The contest is all but baked.
The key issue is turnout. Can Harris hold together the same coalition of voters that elected Joe Biden and Barack Obama, and also persuade “country club Republicans” repulsed by Trump to either vote for her or stay home and not vote for him? Or can Trump win over reluctant Republicans and appeal to Democratic voters grumpy with the Biden-Harris administration to not vote for her or vote for him?
Make no mistake, Trump is an utterly unworthy presidential candidate and a truly appalling and despicable person. He was found guilty on 34 criminal counts of falsifying business records related to hush-money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels, found liable for sexual assault and defamation of E. Jean Carroll in a civil case, and twice impeached by the House of Representatives.
After losing the 2020 election, Trump refused to accept the outcome. This undermined faith in the democratic process. He then worked overtime to overturn the election result and sought to persuade his vice-president, Mike Pence, not to certify the electoral college vote. Trump incited the riot at the US Capitol that resulted in death and destruction. He has contempt for the rule of law and democracy, and would seek to use authoritarian powers if re-elected.
Trump has spoken of terminating the constitution and being a dictator, turning the military against citizens, executing generals, shutting down media organisations, jailing opponents and putting former officials on trial, and pardoning more than 1000 people convicted over the Capitol riot.
If this is not enough, what should persuade Americans not to return Trump to power is character. He has boasted about sexually assaulting women, made fun of people with disabilities, accused migrants of eating dogs and cats, called Harris “retarded”, insisted Obama was not born in the US, promised to “lock up” Hillary Clinton, and dismissed many who worked for him as “dumb” and “stupid” and “traitors” to their country.
He is, as I have noted, a braggart and a bully, who defames and ridicules people, makes up juvenile names, use demagoguery and hucksterism to appeal to people with promises he cannot keep, trades on grievance, envy and xenophobia, appealing to the worst instincts in Americans. He has become increasingly unhinged, with cognitive decline evident.
Trump would risk global security with his cosy relationships with dictators Kim Jong-un, Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping. He blamed Volodymyr Zelensky for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and questioned US support for the imperilled country. He also questioned whether the US would defend Taiwan against Chinese invasion, saying they should pay more for defence.
He has no respect for alliances. His national security adviser, John Bolton, says he would withdraw from NATO. He exited the Paris climate accords and Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement. There is no guarantee he would support AUKUS as currently negotiated. His 10 per cent tariff on all imports would spark a trade war, with Australia being collateral damage.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21809193
>>21809192
2/2
All of this should, and might, make Trump unelectable. But Harris faces significant obstacles on her path to the White House. It is not, and never was, going to be easy for her. She would be the first female president. Trump has populist appeal to Americans who feel left behind.
The assassination attempts correlated with an increase in his popularity. And Harris is suffering an incumbent curse amid a cost-of-living crisis globally, with voters eager to punish governments.
Although the US economy, in terms of growth, jobs, incomes, profits and stocks, has rarely performed better, many voters are just not feeling it in the hip pocket. They are paying more for housing, food and transport than they were four years ago. Harris is attached to an unpopular President who is not an electoral asset and the White House has covered up his cognitive decline.
Immigration is a major concern, even though illegal border crossings have been rising for decades, and cultural strain is evident in Western democracies. The Middle East conflict has split the Democratic Party, with many left-wing activists refusing to support Harris over her backing of Israel. I also believe Biden’s botched withdrawal from Afghanistan marked the moment many voters lost faith in his administration.
It is also true that Harris has not outlined a compelling policy agenda. She started her campaign late and has been slow to settle on messages that resonate with voters. Harris should be doing more media appearances and press conferences. Her responses to why she shifted positions on several issues have not been effective. There is energy and enthusiasm for her candidacy but it is not moving the polling needle.
Nevertheless, Harris is the superior contender for president. She is a conventional major party nominee, with a pathway from prosecutor to attorney-general, senator and Vice-President. Her views are within mainstream centre-left tradition. Harris poses zero international risk. She supports traditional alliances and is by far preferred by Australians as the next president.
The contrast with Trump should be stark. His mental decline, risk to global security and the economy, repeated criminality and danger to democracy make him unfit to be president. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (2019-23), told Bob Woodward for his new book that Trump was a fascist. “No one has ever been as dangerous to this country,” Milley said.
Think about that. I hope Americans do.
Troy Bramston is a senior writer and columnist with The Australian. He has interviewed politicians, presidents and prime ministers from multiple countries along with writers, actors, directors, producers and several pop-culture icons. He is an award-winning and best-selling author or editor of 11 books, including Bob Hawke: Demons and Destiny, Paul Keating: The Big-Picture Leader and Robert Menzies: The Art of Politics. He co-authored The Truth of the Palace Letters and The Dismissal with Paul Kelly.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/donald-trump-is-utterly-unworthy-of-the-presidency-but-kamala-harris-underwhelms/news-story/a329a1895a42c8edac8cc90f2d709581
https://qresear.ch/?q=Troy+Bramston
>You attack those who threaten you the most.
>What does FEAR look like?
>What does PANIC look like?
>These people are stupid.
>Enjoy the show!
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273ca3 No.21814558
>>21809192
The Trump effect instils anxiety in Labor ranks
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 23 October 2024
Anthony Albanese’s signature climate change, economic, trade, foreign and national security policies face being up-ended if Donald Trump wins the November 5 election.
The Prime Minister has tied much of Australia’s investment priorities and approach to international relations with Joe Biden’s view of the world.
Under a second Trump presidency, a prospect that sends shivers down the spines of Labor MPs, the world order would be reshaped. With Trump and Kamala Harris neck-and-neck in the White House race a fortnight from election day, the probability of Albanese and his ambassador Kevin Rudd having to work with a Republican administration is growing.
Jim Chalmers’ visit to Washington DC comes at a critical point. The Treasurer, considered a future Labor leader, will have a unique opportunity to gather intel on the ground while exchanging notes with the world’s top economic minds at a time of great uncertainty.
Chalmers – who will have high-level meetings coinciding with annual G20, IMF and World Bank gatherings – recently revealed Treasury was undertaking scenario modelling to assess potential impacts of a Trump administration on the Australian economy.
Behind the scenes, Australian officials are scrambling to assess what a Trump administration could mean for the Paris Agreement, Israel’s war with Iranian-proxy terror groups, Biden’s clean energy-focused Inflation Reduction Act, AUKUS nuclear submarines, Beijing relations in the event of a US-China trade war, the Quad and broader protectionism amid ongoing Middle East and Ukraine conflicts.
Energy and Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen has flagged Australia’s 2035 emissions-reduction target, which will be informed by Climate Change Authority advice, could be delayed beyond February and potentially until after the next election. The delay is linked to whether Trump wins and overhauls US climate change and energy policy.
In typical Trump fashion, he is keeping his cards close to his chest. Dealing with a Republican-led government compared with the Biden administration would test Albanese’s foreign policy credentials months from a federal election. After replacing Barack Obama, Trump famously lambasted a US-Australia refugee resettlement agreement as a “dumb deal” following a tense 2017 phone call with then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull. It is hard to imagine Rudd – who previously described Trump as “nuts”, a “traitor to the West” and “the most destructive president in history” – would stick around long or be capable of forging a relationship with the 78-year-old as his predecessor Joe Hockey did.
Albanese’s overt wooing of Xi Jinping and Chinese officials, which has stoked concerns inside the Biden administration, will likely come under pressure if Trump returns. With Trump making clear he is focused on strengthening domestic security, how committed will he be to Biden’s Indo-Pacific shift and countering China’s regional influence in the South Pacific?
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/the-trump-effect-instils-anxiety-in-labor-ranks/news-story/09370d8f49ec64dfc23108d22ba262b2
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273ca3 No.21814588
>>21761378
Neo-Nazis pepper-sprayed after attempting to disrupt refugee rally
Cassandra Morgan - October 22, 2024
Neo-Nazis who tried to disrupt refugee protesters’ 100th night demonstrating outside the Department of Home Affairs in Docklands were pushed back by police who doused them with pepper spray.
Police dispersed a black-clothed and balaclava-clad group near a refugee encampment on Tuesday night, sending them running as demonstrators cheered.
Neo-Nazis had already disrupted the encampment twice since it began in July, according to the Tamil Refugee Council. Designated “spotters” saw about 20 men dressed in black and wearing balaclavas approach the demonstration about 6pm.
Refugee Action Collective spokesperson David Glanz said the men stood next to the rally and chanted “white power” and “hail victory”, and that refugee protesters moved to block their path in response.
A row of police officers, arms linked, advanced on the neo-Nazis, forcing them to retreat. Several police officers then surged forward dispensing pepper spray, while the rest of the officers formed a physical barrier separating the neo-Nazis from the refugee group, who continued to chant and bang drums.
The neo-Nazis returned and there was a standoff in a park for a short while – some brandished a banner that read “f-ck off we’re full” – before they left for the final time.
The group was later seen at Kirrip Park in South Melbourne, removing their balaclavas and black clothing and appearing to clean themselves up.
“In the end, the police essentially pushed them away,” Glanz said.
“Our rally continued. It was a real festival of resistance, celebrating the incredible sacrifice that refugees have made with 100 days of round-the-clock encampment.”
Victoria Police confirmed there were no arrests nor any reported injuries at the event, which was attended by about 300 refugee demonstrators.
“It is understood a group of about 20 people attended the rally just before 6pm,” said a police spokesperson.
“Officers formed a line to separate the two groups before they [police officers] were forced to deploy OC [pepper] spray.
“Police will assess the circumstances surrounding the demonstration and review vision of the incident and people involved.”
The refugees and their supporters have been steadfast in their encampment outside the Department of Home Affairs office for months, demanding the federal government put an end to their “limbo” and approve permanent visas.
At the centre of the issue is an Abbott government policy from 2014 that retrospectively meant people who arrived in Australia by boat between August 2012 and July 2013 – before the introduction of offshore processing – would not be granted permanent residency in Australia.
The policy created a “fast-track” process for assessing refugee status, and those who were found to be refugees could only ever get temporary protection visas. About 30,000 people were affected.
Labor’s policy at the last election called for the fast-track system to be abolished and, when it came into government, it gave about 20,000 people with refugee status permanent visas.
But for about 8500 people who never went through the refugee-assessment interview, whose refugee status was denied, or who have been stuck in appeals processes, there has been no resolution.
The refugees at the encampment have been “in this state of limbo for more than 12 years”, Tamil Refugee Council spokesperson Aran Mylvaganam said.
“From the day we started the encampment, the refugees brought so much energy to the campaign. They’re really desperate for a resolution.
“When the Nazis turned up, there was a bit of disruption, but they were chased away, the energy was maintained, and people continued on with the rally.
“[But] it’s obviously a horrifying experience for a lot of refugees who’ve fled similar sorts of issues in their homeland … and they are fighting for their basic rights.”
Mylvaganam said the refugees at the encampment have been subjected to other racist attacks in addition to those by the neo-Nazis.
“My hand was dislocated as a result of a racist attack earlier in the encampment,” he said.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/neo-nazis-pepper-sprayed-after-attempting-to-disrupt-refugee-rally-20241022-p5kkh3.html
https://www.9news.com.au/national/neo-nazis-gatecrash-refugee-protest-melbourne/831dfbe0-924a-4364-8328-7fe853776964
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273ca3 No.21819443
>>21768193
>>21773945
China accuses Australia of ‘systemic racism and hate crimes’ as Xi meets Putin in Russia
WILL GLASGOW - 24 October 2024
1/2
China has accused Australia of “systemic racism and hate crimes” and “hypocrisy” after an Australian diplomat raised international concerns about human rights abuses in Xinjiang and Tibet in the UN.
In some of the sharpest comments launched at Canberra by Beijing during the “stabilisation” era, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Li Jian on Wednesday evening denounced Australia for criticising China publicly.
“Out of their ideological bias, Australia, the US and a handful of other Western countries stoked confrontation at multilateral platforms for their selfish political interest,” said the Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, in response to an apparent dorothy dixer by China’s national broadcaster CCTV.
“Australia, long plagued by systemic racism and hate crimes, have severely violated the rights of refugees and immigrants, and left Indigenous people with vulnerable living conditions,” the Chinese government spokesman continued.
“Australian soldiers have committed abhorrent crimes in Afghanistan and other countries during their military operations overseas.
“These Western countries turn a blind eye to their severe human rights issues at home but in the meantime point their fingers at other countries. This says a lot about their hypocrisy on human rights,” he said.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry’s counterpunch followed accusations by China’s UN Ambassador Fu Cong that Australia and its allies and partners were resorting “to lies to provoke confrontations.”
Anthony Albanese said Australia had been “clear and consistent” with China in its concerns over Beijing’s human rights abuses.
“We, of course, will always stand up for Australia’s interests. And when it comes to China, we’ve said we’ll cooperate where we can, we’ll disagree where we must, and we’ll engage in our national interest” Mr Albanese said at a press conference in Samoa on Thursday.
“And we’ve raised issues of human rights with China. We’ve done that in a consistent and clear way,” the PM said.
Opposition foreign Affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said Australia’s ambassador to the UN had been “factual, balanced and considered”.
“Australia has acknowledged that none of us is perfect on human rights, yet that is what China pretends,” senator Birmingham said.
But he said the government’s words underscored that Foreign Minister Penny Wong had fallen “a long way short of delivering on the tough talk of sanctions” she made before the last election.
The diplomatic tussle comes as President Xi meets with Vladimir Putin at the BRICS summit in the Russian city of Kazan, a key plank in their shared efforts to increase China and Russia’s voices in the international system and reduce the clout of America and its allies.
The group’s original members include countries with strategic ties with America, such as India, and countries that are openly hostile to Washington, such as Russia.
Chinese state media has hailed the grouping, which it argues is reshaping the international system to give more clout to marginalised non-Western countries.
China’s official newsagency Xinhua noted that Xi had compared the five original members of the BRICS group, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, to the fingers of one hand.
“They are short and long if extended, but form a powerful fist if clenched together,” Xi reportedly said.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21819447
>>21819443
2/2
China’s fresh diplomatic fight with Australia — redolent of the near daily tirades it launched at the Morrison government for much of 2020 and 2021 — demonstrates the intense struggle that continues below the surface of “stabilisation”, the Albanese government’s euphemism for its modest expectations for relations with Beijing in the Xi era.
China’s president has ordered his diplomats to show “fighting spirit” when their country is criticised.
Earlier this week, Australia’s UN Ambassador James Larsen told the UN General Assembly’s human rights committee that Canberra, on behalf of its partners, had urged Beijing to implement all the recommendations made by a UN report into human rights abuses in Xinjiang, home to most of China’s Muslim Uighur population.
The Australian Ambassador noted that rather than meaningfully address the UN’s “well-founded concerns”, China had instead labelled the UN assessment “illegal and void”.
Mr Larsen called on Beijing to allow “unfettered and meaningful” access to Xinjiang and Tibet for independent observers, including from the UN, to evaluate the human rights situation.
“No country has a perfect human rights record, but no country is above fair scrutiny of its human rights obligations,” the Australian diplomat said.
“It is incumbent on all of us not to undermine international human rights commitments that benefit us all, and for which all states are accountable,” he said.
Chinese diplomats were able to blunt the criticism by rounding up countries — almost entirely members of its Belt and Road Initiative — to support its position or withhold support for the Australian motion.
Pakistan, a huge recipient of Chinese financial support, delivered a joint counter statement on behalf of 80 countries that said any issues related to Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Tibet were internal matters for China.
Australia’s joint statement was supported by Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Japan, Lithuania, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the US.
Benjamin Herscovitch, an expert on the bilateral relationship, at Australian National University, said despite the “diplomatic sparring”, both the Australian and Chinese governments would keep prioritising their respective trade and investment agendas.
“This is sharper rhetoric than we usually see from either Canberra or Beijing in the recent stabilisation era. But it’s unlikely to cause serious turbulence in bilateral ties.
“Disagreements over human rights are baked into the Australia-China relationship,” Dr Herscovitch told The Australian.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/china-accuses-australia-of-systemic-racism-and-hate-crimes-as-xi-meets-putin-in-russia/news-story/02adf3f2589f4b7f060a8137a39eb4a8
https://x.com/AustraliaUN/status/1848749122213572618
https://unny.mission.gov.au/unny/241022_UNGA79_Joint_statement_on_the_human_rights_situation_in_Xinjiang_and_Tibet.html
https://x.com/AustraliaUN/status/1848808680742887580
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273ca3 No.21819455
>>21819443
Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lin Jian’s Regular Press Conference on October 23, 2024
CCTV: Recently at the Third Committee of the UN General Assembly, in response to the so-called concerns of Australia, the US and a handful of Western countries over issues related to Xinjiang and Xizang, over 100 countries voiced support for China in various ways and opposition to interference in China’s internal affairs under the pretext of human rights. What’s China’s comment?
Lin Jian: On October 22, at the Third Committee of the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Pakistan delivered a joint statement on behalf of 80 countries. They pointed out that issues related to Xinjiang and Xizang are China’s internal affairs. They spoke against the interference in China’s internal affairs under the pretext of human rights, and stood for abiding by the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and respecting the right of people of each state to choose independently the path for development fit for their national conditions. Another 20 plus countries, by making statements either individually or collectively, expressed support for China and opposition to politicizing human rights issues and applying double standards. The fact that over 100 member states voiced their support for China’s just position demonstrates what the international community truly stands for and shows that the attempt of a handful of Western countries, including Australia and the US, to resort to political manipulation under the pretext of human rights will gain no support and will never succeed.
Promoting and protecting human rights is the common cause of humanity and requires the joint effort of the international community in solidarity. Out of their ideological bias, Australia, the US and a handful of other Western countries stoked confrontation at multilateral platforms for their selfish political interest, which undermines international fairness and justice, and is by no means what the international community wants. Australia, long plagued by systemic racism and hate crimes, has severely violated the rights of refugees and immigrants, and left Indigenous people with vulnerable living conditions. Australian soldiers have committed abhorrent crimes in Afghanistan and other countries during their military operations overseas. The US and some Western countries have a bad track record in racism, gun violence, judicial injustice, wealth gap, abuse of force, unilateral sanction, and other issues. These Western countries turn a blind eye to their severe human rights issues at home but in the meantime point their fingers at other countries. This says a lot about their hypocrisy on human rights. We urge Australia, the US and a handful of other Western countries to face up to and address their own severe human rights problems, stop the wrongful moves of politicizing human rights issues and using them as tools, and play a constructive role in international cooperation on human rights.
https://www.mfa.gov.cn/eng/xw/fyrbt/lxjzh/202410/t20241023_11513371.html
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273ca3 No.21819466
>>21819443
>>21819455
Chinese envoy criticizes Australia, US for 'double standards' on human rights, downplaying Gaza situation
Global Times - Oct 23, 2024
While Australia, the US and a handful of other Western countries turn a blind eye to their severe human rights issues at home, in the meantime they point their fingers at other countries, which says a lot about their hypocrisy on human rights, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said on Wednesday, in response to over 100 countries who have voiced support for China in various ways and opposition to interference in China's internal affairs under the pretext of human rights at the Third Committee of the UN General Assembly.
"We urge Australia, the US and a handful of other Western countries to face up to and address their own severe human rights problems, stop the wrongful moves of politicizing human rights issues and using them as tools, and play a constructive role in international cooperation on human rights," Lin said.
Australia and the US, among a few others, reached new lows in their practice of "double standards" in front of the world, by downplaying the situation in Gaza, while smearing against China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region over human rights issues, said Fu Cong, China's permanent representative to the United Nations, at the Third Committee of the 79th session of the General Assembly, on Tuesday, according to the official website of the Permanent Mission of China to the UN.
This reveals, once again, the true intentions of Australia and the US to use human rights as a pretext to interfere in China's internal affairs and curb its development, and to broadly suppress developing countries that adhere to an independent and autonomous foreign policy, Fu noted.
If the death of more than 40,000 civilians in Gaza and the starvation and the displacement of millions of women and children are not enough to awaken the conscience of a few Western countries, and is not enough for them to stop sending weapons and ammunition that have claimed the lives of countless Palestinian civilians, then "their so-called protection of human rights of Muslims is nothing but the biggest lie," said the Chinese envoy.
In terms of human rights issues, Australia and the US among a few others have no qualification to criticize other countries as they have their own severe human rights issues at home, but they always find reasons to point fingers at others, Li Haidong, a professor from the China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times on Wednesday.
In the Gaza Strip, the actions of certain Western countries are clearly fanning the flames. However, they criticize China for human rights issues, which is absurd because such criticism is heavily colored by bias, Li said.
It is clear to the whole world that China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and Xizang Autonomous Region have remained stable and prosperous, where all ethnic groups live together in harmony. The so-called assessment report on Xinjiang is fraught with lies and deception. It is purely a product of coercion of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) by the US and a few others, Fu said.
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202410/1321717.shtml
http://un.china-mission.gov.cn/eng/hyyfy/202410/t20241023_11511685.htm
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273ca3 No.21826734
>>21773932
Japanese officials observe secretive Jervis Bay exercises ahead of likely AUKUS invitation
Andrew Greene and Tim Fernandez - 25 October 2024
Cutting edge autonomous maritime technology has been showcased during secretive AUKUS exercises on the NSW south coast, with US Defence officials signalling Japan could soon be involved in the experimental maritime activity.
Military personnel from Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom have for the past three weeks participated in the tri-lateral Autonomous Warrior 2024 exercises around the Naval Base HMAS Cresswell in Jervis Bay.
The activity is a key part of AUKUS pillar two endeavours, which involve joint development of emerging military technologies that harness aspects such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing and autonomy.
The ABC can reveal several Japanese officials have also attended the event as "observers" ahead of a likely invitation for the nation to formally participate in the event next time.
"We had them come as observers to this exercise and among our four nations there was a priority that we look forward to expanding and deepening our cooperation going forward," a senior US Defence official said.
"The planning for the next exercise is underway so the full details of what their participation will be in the future hasn't yet been determined.
"But I think they will move from being an observer to being a participant in the activity".
AUKUS pact could eventually include Japan for pillar two
There has been growing speculation about Japan eventually being the first nation to be invited by the US, UK and Australia to join AUKUS pillar two for certain advanced defence technology projects.
A senior US Defence official confirmed to the ABC that Japan had been invited to the exercises as observers but next year the country could possibly be a participant.
"We look forward to expanding and deepening our cooperation going forward," the Pentagon representative said on Thursday.
"What a 'participant' means could be bringing Japanese systems and platforms, participating in that command-and-control architecture — there's a wide range of opportunities and we're really eager to explore those," the official said.
"Japan offers a unique opportunity as one of our key partners in the region to add to that capability mix so that's what we're looking for, for Japan to be part of that experimentation going forward but also part of the collaboration."
Another Pentagon official involved in the activity highlighted how "Japan has a deep industrial base in autonomous and robotic systems" which could be used in future exercises with AUKUS partners.
Allies test compatibility
Autonomous Warrior is part of the Maritime Big Game series of exercises, where AUKUS partners tested and demonstrated advanced autonomous systems.
Australian autonomous vessels developed by the Australian Defence Force were on display during the event, including the wind and solar powered scouting vessel, the Bluebottle, and the large underwater long-range payload delivery vessel, the Speartooth.
Allies were also shown a prototype of the extra-large autonomous submarine known as the Ghost Shark which was completed in April.
Department of Defence first assistant secretary of advanced capabilities, Steven Moore, said AUKUS was about getting the technology "in the hands of our defence forces as quickly as it can".
The US military tested a range of new technologies, including autonomous sea vessels and aircraft such as a high-altitude balloon, which was launched from the Beecroft Weapons Range.
One of the main objectives of the exercises was to demonstrate interoperability of the different military systems.
It was the first time AUKUS partners had tested tactical control capability — the capacity for Australia, the US or the UK to control one of their allies' autonomous vehicles remotely.
US Defence research and engineering operations lead John Pitt said the exercises were a chance to test the limits of new technology.
"We are trying to understand the edges of the technology and take it to failure so we can improve it and continue to evolve that technology," he said.
"There have been some challenges that we have overcome."
A US official said the operation was a chance to keep across the latest developments in the rapidly advancing space.
"We know globally our adversaries and our allies are developing autonomous systems and we definitely don't want to be left behind," the American official said.
"We do want to be able to counter their technology with effective technology ourselves."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-24/japan-observes-aukus-exercises-jervis-bay/104514578
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273ca3 No.21827045
>>21809192
OPINION: ‘Fascist’ Trump’s Garden party has echoes of America’s Nazi moment
Bruce Wolpe, Senior fellow at the US Studies Centre and former political staffer - October 25, 2024
1/2
It was clear, as soon as Donald Trump announced his rally in New York’s Madison Square Garden, that to Make America Great Again he would have a thunderclap echo from the infamous rally of American Nazis in that arena on February 20, 1939. That night, the Garden was packed with more than 20,000. A portrait of George Washington commanded the stage. American and Nazi flags and swastikas were on display. The crowd gave “sieg heils”.
The American Nazis gathered to keep America pure from alien influences, and to bring America closer to Hitler’s Germany and his vision of the world. James Wheeler-Hill, the Nazi party’s national secretary, was as clear as day: “If George Washington were alive today, he would be friends with Adolf Hitler.”
Trump wants to come home to Madison Square Garden to continue his fight for America First to purge the country of alien influences and radical left extremism.
The creators on an Academy Award-winning film of that 1939 event, A Night at the Garden, have written: “Every one of the characteristics of Donald Trump’s rallies is present in the film above: the same vicious denunciation of the press, the same appeals to patriotism and white nationalism, the same urging that the audience, the only ‘true’ Americans, need to ‘take their country back’ from a despised minority (just substitute ‘illegals’ or ‘liberals’ for ‘Jewish’ here).”
When Trump has been called out on his flirting with Nazis in America – when he said there were “good people on both sides” in the Nazi march and violence, leaving one dead, in Charlottesville, Virginia in 2017; when he had dinner with white supremacists and antisemites; when he instructed the extremist Proud Boys in the middle of a presidential debate with Joe Biden in 2020 to “stand back and stand by” – he denies knowing who they are, their intent, their racism. Trump never accepts that he is complicit.
But Trump has no restraint in being antisemitic. “If I don’t win this election, the Jewish people will have a lot to do with the loss.” He has described Jews as “voting for the enemy”. In his closing arguments in the campaign, Trump has declared war on “the enemy within” that must be put down with military force.
For the Jews, he makes it personal. “Any Jewish person that votes for Democrats hates their religion. They hate everything about Israel, and they should be ashamed of themselves because Israel will be destroyed.”
Trump faces his full house crowd in New York not only as a former president, but as a fascist. In recent days, two military veterans, General Mark Milley, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and John Kelly, Trump’s former chief of staff in the White House, have both gone on the record on their views of Trump’s character, and why he should never be elected to returned to power.
“Certainly the former president is in the far-right area,” says Kelly, a former general in the Marines. “He’s certainly an authoritarian, admires people who are dictators – he has said that. So he certainly falls into the general definition of fascist, for sure.”
Kelly says he heard it first-hand from Trump. “He certainly prefers the dictator approach to government … He commented more than once that, ‘You know, Hitler did some good things, too.’”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21827052
>>21827045
2/2
As chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Milley refused to deploy the armed forces to put down demonstrations in cities across America in the wake of the murder by police of George Floyd, a Black man, in Minneapolis. “No one has ever been as dangerous to this country as Donald Trump,” Milley told Bob Woodward in an interview for his new book, WAR. “Now I realise he’s a total fascist. He is the most dangerous person to this country.”
Trump loves the icons in New York. He wants to own them and to be the subject of adulation in them. The fascist candidate for president of the United States cannot wait to bring into Madison Square Garden his grievance, retribution and intent to wreak vengeance on his enemies, together with a desire for absolute power to prosecute his agenda and vanquish his opponents.
Another New York icon, legendary baseball great Yogi Berra, conjured this wisdom: “When you come to a fork in the road, take it.” It turns out that the 2020 election wasn’t the most important election since the Civil War – this one is. Trump is the divider-in-chief, incapable of bringing the country together to move forward together. His authoritarian impulses are unchecked.
“He’s certainly the only president that has all but rejected what America is all about,” John Kelly has said, “and what makes America America, in terms of our constitution, in terms of our values, the way we look at everything, to include family and government.”
Trump wants to seize and then exercise control over America’s temple of democracy. It will take an act of democracy by the American people to stop him.
Bruce Wolpe is a senior fellow at the University of Sydney’s United States Studies Centre. He has served on the Democratic staff in the US Congress and as chief of staff to former prime minister Julia Gillard.
https://www.theage.com.au/world/north-america/fascist-trump-s-garden-party-has-echoes-of-america-s-nazi-moment-20241024-p5kl6g.html
>PANIC!
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273ca3 No.21831302
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21809192
>>21827045
Former NSA director reveals insights into Trump, Obama, and Harris | Planet America
ABC News In-depth
Oct 25 2024
As his former Chief of Staff warns Trump is a fascist, his former NSA director reveals insights into Trump, Obama, and Harris. Will he also use the F-word? And what are the cyberthreats facing this election; will deep fakes change voters’ minds?
Planet America Fireside Chat - 8pm AEDT ABC NEWS
00:00 – Welcome to Planet America’s Fireside Chat with John Barron and Chas Licciardello.
00:49 – Is Trump a fascist? His former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly warns that he is.
17:00 – MAGA goes hard on a viral deepfake which falsely accuses Tim Walz of sexual abuse.
22:26 – What are the cyberthreats and deepfakes threatening the US election? We ask Admiral Mike Rogers, NSA Director under Trump and Obama.
35:51 – The issue that could open up a massive loophole in America’s gun laws The Briefing Room with Melina Wicks.
39:00 – The election is less than two weeks away and just two points is separating Harris and Trump nationally.
49:32 – Goodnight from John Barron and Chas Licciardello.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hP1uJKa8R3g
—
Q Post #585
Jan 22 2018 14:20:36 (EST)
TRUST Adm R.
He played the game to remain in control.
Q
https://qanon.pub/#585
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273ca3 No.21831333
>>21809192
>>21827045
>>21831302
Australia should be talking to Trump about AUKUS: ex-security chief Michael Rogers
Andrew Tillett - Mar 19, 2024
Australia needs to sell the benefits of the AUKUS pact for the US to Donald Trump to prevent the planned sale of nuclear-powered submarines being knocked off course, a former US security chief who served in the Trump presidency says.
Former US National Security Agency head Michael Rogers said in an interview with The Australian Financial Review that Australian officials should reach out to Mr Trump and his campaign ahead of November’s presidential election to shore up the trilateral deal between Australia, the US and UK.
“AUKUS talks about strategic investments both in the submarine manufacturing arena as well as the broader tech arena. My argument would be those are in the best interests of both nations and provide benefits to both,” said Mr Rogers, who was appointed head of the NSA under Barack Obama in 2014 and whose term ended four years later during the Trump presidency.
The Australian and British governments are expected to announce on Friday that British shipbuilder BAE Systems will build nuclear-powered submarines in Adelaide.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Defence Minister Richard Marles will host their UK counterparts David Cameron and Grant Shapps in Canberra on Thursday before heading to Adelaide for the annual AUKMIN joint talks.
Mr Marles and Mr Shapps are also expected to announce new measures boosting cooperation between the Australian and British militaries.
BAE Systems has long been touted as the builder of the submarine. It builds the Royal Navy’s submarines in England and has a big presence in Adelaide, where it is about to start building frigates for the Australian navy.
“In an increasingly complex strategic environment, the United Kingdom remains a critical partner in support of a rules-based global order,” Mr Marles said.
Under AUKUS, Australia and the UK are developing a next generation nuclear-powered submarine. The UK expects to deliver the first of its submarines in the late 2030s, while the first Australian built submarine will arrive in the early 2040s.
But before that, the AUKUS agreement calls for the US to transfer to Australia at least three and up to five Virginia class submarines.
However, concerns have been raised that the unpredictable Mr Trump and his “America First” mantra may not honour the deal if he returns to the White House.
Mr Rogers, who is visiting Australia in his role as a member of cybersecurity firm CyberCX’s global advisory board, said it was crucial for Australian officials to educate Mr Trump about Australian concerns, walk him through the AUKUS process and emphasis the important role the US president has to play in delivering the program.
“One of the points to make is AUKUS talks about investment in US infrastructure and US shipbuilding technology,” Mr Rogers said.
“There is a definite component to this that helps the United States in addition to helping Australia and the UK.
“Don’t wait until you have a winner … because remember when you are elected as president of the United States, you are trying to prepare for a whole lot of different issues. Lots of people want a piece of your time, lots of people want your attention.”
Mr Rogers said there was strong institutional support for AUKUS, pointing out the Pentagon’s past two budgets made specific references to the pact. He also downplayed that AUKUS was at risk after the most recent budget included funding to build only one new submarine in 2025.
“Let’s see what the Congress decided. If I was a betting man, we’re going to fund two Virginia class submarines in 2025, would be my guess,” he said.
Mr Rogers said the Turnbull and Morrison governments’ successful management of relations with Mr Trump during his first term in office offered pointers for how the Albanese government should handle him.
“I would argue that during President Trump’s term of office, he ultimately had a stronger relationship in many ways with Australia for example than he did with the United Kingdom which we traditionally talk about as the ‘special relationship’,” he said.
“My recommendation to my Australian teammates would be is there is a lot to learn from the past. I would step back and ask ‘How did you manage to put the US-Australian relationship in such a strong position during President Trump’s term’?”
https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/australia-should-be-talking-to-trump-about-aukus-ex-security-chief-20240319-p5fdhn
https://qresear.ch/?q=michael+rogers
https://cybercx.com.au/
https://cybercx.com.au/?s=rogers
https://qanon.pub/#585
https://qanon.pub/#1866
https://qanon.pub/#3389
https://qalerts.app/?q=Adm+R&sortasc=1
https://qalerts.app/?q=rogers&sortasc=1
https://qalerts.app/?q=NSA&sortasc=1
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273ca3 No.21839120
Anthony Albanese has plenty to fear in Queensland as Labor control of the states crumbles
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 27 October 2024
Anthony Albanese’s hopes of dramatically increasing federal Labor’s paltry five out of 30 seats in Queensland remains a pipe dream.
Federal and Queensland Labor figures will spin the positives hard, despite the ALP suffering swings across the board in losing only its second Queensland election in more than three decades.
Queenslanders have traditionally and overwhelmingly backed the Liberal National Party at federal elections, while shunning the LNP at state polls. It is fraught to link state results with federal election prospects.
Federal Labor’s best recent result in the Sunshine State was the 15 seats won by Queenslander Kevin Rudd when he turfed John Howard from office in 2007.
Albanese, up against a deeply unpopular Scott Morrison in 2022, won a dismal five seats in Queensland and lost Rudd’s former electorate of Griffith to the Greens. The Prime Minister had to wait until Western Australia results swung Labor’s way before claiming a slim majority victory.
A bright spark for Albanese is the poor performance of the Greens, which will spur ALP hopes of winning Griffith and Brisbane from Greens MPs Max Chandler-Mather and Stephen Bates. Adam Bandt has been put on notice after the Greens went backwards in both Queensland and their left-wing haven of ACT. Federal Greens MPs, who have abandoned any pretence they are environmentalists, have swung so hard to the Left that their own state and territory counterparts are blaming them for recent results.
The ALP machine will also pour resources into the Cairns-based seat of Leichhardt, where long-term LNP MP Warren Entsch is retiring. On Saturday night, Labor lost seats and copped swings in electorates based around Cairns. Another concerning factor for Albanese is the almost 70 per cent of Queenslanders who rejected his Indigenous voice referendum.
Labor strategists will be wary of Bill Shorten’s 2019 election disaster in Queensland, which delivered the ALP a sole Senate position in its worst Upper House result since 1949. At the same election, Labor’s Shayne Neumann held his Ipswich-based seat of Blair by only 2321 votes and Anika Wells clung-on in Lilley by 1229 votes.
Incoming Premier David Crisafulli ran a shockingly bad campaign but is still expected to claim majority government. Miles ran the better campaign by a country mile, albeit underpinned by scare campaigns and brazen cash splashes. At 46, Miles is expected to continue as Labor leader after saving the furniture and coming close to pulling off an unlikely win.
Crisafulli’s victory fell well short of the baseball bat swings that delivered Campbell Newman’s historic landslide 2012 election. But a win is a win, and he becomes only the second conservative leader alongside Newman to have won a Queensland election since Labor’s Wayne Goss claimed power in 1989. After three election wins and the end of the Annastacia Palaszczuk era, Queensland Labor will be confident of replicating its one-term turnaround in ousting Newman at the 2015 election.
Albanese and Peter Dutton will talk down federal implications from the Queensland election but their strategists will pore over every swing in regional, outer-suburban and inner-city electorates.
Dutton would be encouraged that Labor’s red wave of mainland governments, clinched after Chris Minns’ victory in March last year, is slowly reversing after the Northern Territory and Queensland elections.
At a federal level, it’s all about the economy, cost-of-living, housing, energy, migration and national security. Albanese will no doubt be coveting his own version of Miles’ 50c public transport fares and $1000 energy bill sweeteners.
The problem for Albanese with cash splashes is Jim Chalmers’ “inflation dragon”. If Labor is blamed for higher inflation and higher interest rates, they will bleed votes across the country.
While welcoming a rare LNP win in his home state, Dutton will need much bigger swings and more support in the cities to have any chance of ousting Albanese at next year’s election. And with the Greens on the ropes, it is surely time for Albanese and Dutton to join forces and put the radical Left-wing party last.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/anthony-albanese-has-plenty-to-fear-in-queensland-as-labor-control-of-the-states-crumbles/news-story/bac1246dc77cd2db25346d1473187e2b
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273ca3 No.21839147
>>21459264 (pb)
>>21483247 (pb)
>>21483267 (pb)
Conservative US commentator Candace Owens refused entry to Australia ahead of national speaking tour
Melissa Mackay - 27 October 2024
Right-wing American commentator Candace Owens has been refused entry to Australia for her upcoming speaking tour.
Immigration Minister Tony Burke confirmed the conservative online influencer would not be granted a visa, saying "Australia's national interest is best served when Candace Owens is somewhere else".
"From downplaying the impact of the Holocaust with comments about [Nazi physician Josef] Mengele through to claims that Muslims started slavery, Candace Owens has the capacity to incite discord in almost every direction," Mr Burke said.
Owens has almost 3 million subscribers on YouTube, where she publishes interviews and political commentary, regularly sharing conspiracy theories and criticism of social movements such as Black Lives Matter.
In July she described stories about Nazi experiments on twins in concentration camps during World War II as "completely absurd" and "bizarre propaganda".
Her speaking tour of Australia, scheduled for November, is advertised as "provocative" and appealing to audiences seeking "alternative viewpoints".
"Known for her controversial takes and unwavering stance, Candace is set to light up stages across Australia and New Zealand with her bold and unfiltered perspectives," reads a description on ticketing website Ticketek.
In an announcement video posted to her social media accounts in August, Owens said Australian audiences would hear her "discuss everything they do not want us speaking about" including "freedom of speech" and "why Christ really is king".
Tickets to Candace Owens Live range from $95 for general admission, to $1500 for a VIP package which includes a pre-show dinner, champagne reception and a meet and greet with Owens.
The show includes stops in Sydney, Perth, Melbourne, Adelaide and Brisbane.
Owens has not yet publicly responded to the visa refusal and tour promoter Rocksman has been contacted for comment.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-27/candace-owens-refused-visa-for-right-wing-speaking-tour/104524074
https://www.candacelive.com.au/
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273ca3 No.21839195
>>21780991
‘Skin you!’: Drone fires at Aussies in war zone
Ben Graham - October 26, 2024
1/2
Incredible trench footage shows fired up Australian volunteers pushing back a Russian assault in war-torn Ukraine as they come under fire from a suspected drone attack.
The clip is filmed from the helmet of a fighter and believed to be taken near Zaporizhia — a city on the Dnieper River in the southeast of the nation.
It opens with an Aussie yelling “I’m going to skin you!” before he unleashes a barrage of shots into the surrounding foliage from his trench.
The footage then shows the fighter running through the trench before firing off another intense barrage of shots and screaming with rage.
The volunteer then turns his rifle to the sky and shouts “there he is” before firing shots at a suspected Russian drone.
“F*cking c*nt,” he shouts after the shots are fired towards them.
The Aussie then ducks down into the trench to avoid incoming Russian shots.
“Missed us!” he yells, as another fighter can be heard sniggering and telling him to “relax, relax, relax.”
They appear to take the upper hand over the Russian forces in the footage. The volunteers can be seen cheering and one soldier can be seen raising his hand in the air in celebration as the clip comes to a close.
There is no precise, official figure on how many Australian volunteers are currently fighting in Ukraine, but estimates suggest that a small number of Aussies have joined the International Legion of Defense of Ukraine or other volunteer groups since the start of the conflict.
As of 2022, it was confirmed that some Australians were fighting alongside other foreign nationals, and several have died in combat. The International Legion includes volunteers from multiple countries such as France, Germany, and the Netherlands.
The Australian government has generally discouraged Aussies from travelling to Ukraine to fight, emphasising the risks and legal consequences. Nevertheless, Australians continue to volunteer in various capacities, including combat roles and humanitarian support.
North Korean soldiers spotted
The footage comes amid a major geopolitical row over international soldiers joining the conflict.
In a concerning escalation this week, a group of North Korean soldiers were spotted in Russia’s Kursk region, an area of ongoing military operations, according to Ukraine’s military intelligence service.
After training in Russia’s far east, some troops have now made their way to the western Russia region where Ukraine has maintained a strong foothold since launching an incursion in August.
In a post on its official Telegram account, the Defence Intelligence of Ukraine said the troops had been spotted in Kursk on Wednesday.
South Korea is furious about the development. It urged Russia to stop its “illegal co-operation” with Pyongyang and voiced “grave concern” on Friday as Moscow moved to ratify its defence treaty with North Korea.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned shortly after that Russia was planning to send North Korean troops into battle against his country as early as Sunday, and urged world leaders to pile “tangible pressure” on Pyongyang.
Russian politicians voted unanimously on Thursday to ratify a defence treaty with North Korea that provides for “mutual assistance” if either party faces aggression. It will now be sent to the upper house of parliament, the Federation Council, for approval.
According to South Korea and the United States, thousands of North Korean troops were training in Russia.
Ukraine said this week that North Korean soldiers had arrived in the “combat zone” in Russia’s Kursk border region.
While stopping short of confirming boots on the ground, a North Korean official said any troop deployment to Russia would be in line with international law.
The South Korean government said it “strongly urges the immediate withdrawal of North Korean troops and the cessation of illegal co-operation”.
Seoul “expresses grave concern over Russia’s ratification of the Russia-North Korea treaty amid the ongoing deployment of North Korean troops to Russia,” the South Korean foreign ministry said in a statement.
Seoul said it would work with allies to “take appropriate measures” over the move, and the country — a major arms exporter — has suggested it could revise its longstanding policy that prevents sending weapons directly to Kyiv.
The national security advisers of the United States, South Korea and Japan on Friday discussed the North Korean troop deployment, the White House said, with the officials expressing “grave concern” at the development.
“This deployment is the latest in a series of concerning indicators of deepening military co-operation between the DPRK and Russia,” US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said, using the acronym for the official name of North Korea.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21839209
>>21839195
2/2
‘Punish escalation’
Zelensky said North Korean troops could be sent to fight Ukrainian troops this weekend.
“The actual involvement of North Korea in hostilities should be met not with a blind eye and confused comments but with tangible pressure on both Moscow and Pyongyang to comply with the UN Charter and to punish escalation,” he said on social media.
A senior official within the Ukrainian president’s office said the North Korean troops could be deployed either to the Russian region of Kursk or in eastern Ukraine.
Branding the prospect “very worrying”, Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz said it showed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was facing difficulties in the war.
“It is serious and, of course, something that escalates the situation further,” he told German media while visiting India.
Putin said in an interview that aired Friday on state television that it was up to Moscow how it uses the new defence treaty’s clause on mutual military assistance.
“It’s our sovereign decision, whether we use something or not,” Putin said. “Where, how, whether we need this, or (if) we, for example, only carry out some exercises, training, passing on some experience — that’s our business.” Seoul and Washington have long claimed that the nuclear-armed North is shipping arms to Russia.
One of North Korea’s United Nations representatives said at the UN General Assembly’s First Committee on Disarmament and International Security that the country was sending neither weapons nor soldiers to help Moscow.
The allegations by South Korea and others are “nothing more than groundless rumours aimed at tarnishing the image of DPRK”, Rim Mu Song said.
South Korea’s representative flagged videos circulating online of North Korean soldiers in Russian uniforms speaking Korean, but Rim said they “again totally reject the allegation” of troop deployment.
On Friday, a diplomatic official in Pyongyang argued that his country would be well within its rights to deploy soldiers on Russian soil.
“If there is such a thing that the world media is talking about, I think it will be an act conforming with the regulations of international law,” said Kim Jong Gyu, North Korea’s vice foreign minister in charge of Russian affairs.
‘Provocation’
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has called the deployment a “provocation that threatens global security beyond the Korean Peninsula and Europe”.
Yoon also said South Korea will review its stance on providing weapons to Ukraine.
Seoul has already sold billions of dollars of tanks, howitzers, attack aircraft and rocket launchers to Poland, a key ally of Kyiv.
In June, South Korea agreed to transfer the knowledge needed to build K2 tanks to Poland, which experts have said could be a key step towards production inside Ukraine.
South Korea’s Hanwha Aerospace has signed a $1.64-billion deal with Poland to supply rocket artillery units.
North Korea has adopted a new national anthem, state media reported on Friday, another move that experts suspect will further leader Kim Jong-un’s drive to define his country as entirely separate from, and in opposition to, the South.
North Korea amended its constitution to define the South as a “hostile” state and last week blew up roads and railways that once connected the two countries.
https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/military/skin-you-wild-clip-of-aussies-in-war-zone/news-story/5143450fe2535c68374ec53d94a970b7
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273ca3 No.21839237
>>21761883
>>21761894
The Bondi ‘torture’ nanny and the grieving families
Perry Duffin - October 27, 2024
1/2
The families of people who vanished and were tortured and murdered by South American death squads accuse Australia’s attorney-general of “callous silence” after the extradition of one alleged torturer found living in Bondi was delayed two years.
Adriana Rivas was arrested in Sydney in 2019 at the request of Chilean prosecutors, accused of being involved in the kidnapping of seven people who had vanished in Santiago. The 70-year-old former nanny has spent the past five years fighting, and losing, extradition to her homeland, while languishing in immigration detention.
This month the Herald revealed Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus had ordered Rivas’ surrender, but she had immediately issued another legal challenge. She continues to deny all wrongdoing.
It came as a blow to the families of Rivas’ alleged victims who have waited two years for her surrender after she abandoned a High Court challenge in mid-2022.
“The A-G’s determination has been plagued with unreasonable delays in excess of two years,” Adriana Navarro, a lawyer representing families of those killed by the secret police, told the Herald.
There was no announcement of the long-anticipated surrender or the new challenge.
“The families and their representatives should have been informed of this decision by the A-G when made,” he said. “This secrecy at the A-G’s office is disconcerting and callous.”
Documents given to NSW courts alleged Rivas worked in the headquarters of the DINA secret police in the Chilean capital Santiago as agents rounded up, tortured and murdered left-wing enemies of US-backed dictator Augusto Pinochet.
Sarin gas, electrified bunk beds and welding torches were common inside the DINA headquarters at 8800 Simon Bolivar, where inhumane executions took place in the 1970s.
“The bodies were put inside sacks, tied up with cables to a piece of railway beam, and then thrown into the ocean by air force helicopters,” a dossier authored by Chilean authorities said.
The families of two of Rivas’ alleged victims have spoken to the Herald about their missing loved ones and the decades of sorrow they have endured, and of their determination that she face justice.
Marisol Berrios recalled the fear in her home when the bodies of prominent communists, her parents’ comrades, were washed up on beaches.
Marisol was 16 at the time and remembered falling asleep in front of the television with her father and Communist Party worker Lincoyan Berrios in December that year.
“He woke me up, took me to my bed, tucked me in, and said goodbye affectionately,” Marisol told the Herald.
“The next day, he left as usual with my mum to catch the bus to their respective workplaces. That was the last time I saw him.”
Maria Luisa Rojas’ father vanished in late 1976.
Maria’s final memories of her father, Juan Fernando Ortiz Letelier, were nervous glances on the street before DINA squads whisked him off.
“Just being able to see each other was very significant for both of us. For me, I still treasure that memory today,” Maria said in a statement released to the Herald.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21839240
>>21839237
2/2
Pinochet had seized power in a bloody coup against Chile’s democratically elected socialist president, Salvador Allende, on September 11, 1973. Thousands of his political enemies “disappeared”.
The coup, which came after years of US meddling and CIA foment, is known in Latin America as “the other 9/11”.
Berrios cited the date of the coup in her statement to this masthead, saying people such as her father died trying to bring democracy back to Chile.
“We don’t want any wife, child, grandchild, or great-grandchild to carry this wound in their lives,” Berrios said.
Rojas said Rivas must “face justice in Chile for her [alleged] responsibility in these crimes”.
“There will be no full justice until that happens,” she said. “I demand that the Australian authorities stop delaying the extradition of Adriana Rivas to Chile.”
Rivas moved to Australia in 1979 at the height of Pinochet’s rule and worked as a nanny in Bondi.
She was arrested in 2006 while visiting Chile, but allegedly absconded while on bail in 2010 and returned to Australia.
Two years later, a dusty mine shaft outside Santiago gave up its secrets; bone fragments of 11 males.
Fragments from Berrios’ and Letelier’s fathers were found in the mass grave.
“I still cannot bear to know the details of his death. The pain is too great,” Berrios said.
“It takes an unimaginable and painful exercise to come to terms with the fact that those small fragments are my father,” Letelier’s daughter added.
Rivas remained off the radar until 2014, when in an interview with multicultural broadcaster SBS she appeared to justify the use of torture to “break people” – particularly “communists”.
“It was necessary, just as the Nazis used it, and as in the United States, everyone does,” SBS quoted Rivas as saying. “It’s the only way to break people because psychologically there is no method.”
Dreyfus, in a statement, said the extradition was a matter between the Australian and Chilean governments.
Rivas, through her lawyer Dennis Miralis, denied all wrongdoing.
“Ms Rivas denies any criminal wrongdoing and has consistently maintained that she has been falsely accused of crimes she did not commit,” Miralis said in a statement.
“Under Australian, Chilean and international law, Ms Rivas is presumed innocent of these offences and is exercising her right to appeal the Australian government’s decision for her surrender to Chile under Australian law.”
https://www.theage.com.au/national/nsw/the-bondi-torture-nanny-and-the-grieving-families-20241017-p5kj1y.html
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273ca3 No.21839262
>>21803697
>>21803724
How Julian Assange’s father is derailing his chance of a US presidential pardon
Australia spent significant political capital to get Julian Assange out of prison while the US attempted to extradite him on spying charges — but now his father has intervened.
Stephen Drill - October 27, 2024
Julian Assange’s dictator-loving dad John Shipton, who has links to the Communist Party of Australia, is derailing his chances of a US presidential pardon.
The father of the WikiLeaks founder was in Russia this week praising Vladimir Putin but he has also previously met with Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad who used chemical weapons on his own people.
And Mr Shipton, 80, has been a guest of the Australian Communist Party in Perth and accepted an invitation from Ireland’s Communist Party to speak in Brussels.
Australia spent significant political capital to get Assange out of London’s maximum security Belmarsh prison in June where he was being held while the United States attempted to extradite him on spying charges.
Senator Simon Birmingham, the Liberal Party’s Foreign Affairs spokesman, said Assange and his family had shown “disregard” to the efforts made to get him back to Australia.
“Julian Assange and his family have always shown far too great a regard for autocracies like Russia while acting with disregard for the interests of the democratic nations that have afforded them basic freedoms and rights,” Senator Birmingham said.
“It is attitudes like these that underscore the folly of the homecoming welcome that Anthony Albanese accorded Julian Assange.”
Mr Albanese was criticised for releasing a photograph of him on a phone call with Assange as the WikiLeaks founder was being flown back from the Northern Mariana Islands.
Assange had pleaded guilty to “conspiring with Chelsea Manning” to release classified documents, which the United States claimed had put their sources in Afghanistan and Iraq at risk.
The trip cost almost $800,000 but taxpayers were reimbursed by a charity, which picked up the bill.
Assange’s brother Gabe Shipton has been lobbying United States President Joe Biden to grant him a pardon before he leaves office in January.
But John Shipton’s Russia propaganda visit has dented those hopes, which were already optimistic given fellow Democrat Hillary Clinton had labelled Assange a “tool of Russian intelligence” after WikiLeaks published damaging emails that derailed her 2016 election campaign.
Russia’s state owned news outlet Ria Novosti released an interview this week with Mr Shipton, where he praised Vladimir Putin.
“Your President Putin in 2012 was the first head of state to defend Julian’s interests as a publisher and a citizen,” Mr Shipton said.
He then added a slap to Australia, saying Putin supported his son at “a time when Julian was receiving every smearing lie and calumny that the institutions of state and those hangers-on in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia could deliver upon his head.”
Assange has been living in Australia with his wife Stella and their two children, who were born while he was still holed up in London’s Ecuadorian embassy.
He has not been allowed to return to the UK as part of his plea deal, which set a precedent for other people to be charged for leaking classified information.
Stella Assange distanced herself from Mr Shipton’s Russian visit this week.
“Anyone who has followed Julian already knows Julian believes in extreme scepticism when it comes to all states with large intelligence sectors, who have committed war crimes, engaged in censorship, or sought to imprison or assassinate journalists,” she wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Richard Titelius, of the Communist Party of Australia, said that Mr Shipton was not a member of the party and questioned his support for Putin.
“Vladimir Putin is no communist,” he said from Perth. “When the Communist Party in Russia was trying to campaign before the last election he set up loudspeakers to drown out their speeches.”
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/how-julian-assanges-father-is-derailing-his-chance-of-a-us-presidential-pardon/news-story/60135e0fb02d44f8bea6cafa0c7898fe
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273ca3 No.21839315
>>21773932
>>21809192
Ambassador John Bolton tells 7NEWS Donald Trump re-election could mean AUKUS subs plan torn up
‘In Star Wars terms he’s sort of a disturbance in the force. So, we are going to have a long four years if he’s elected.’
David Woiwod - 27 October 2024
Australia’s plans to acquire a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines would be torn-up if Donald Trump is re-elected next week, according to a former top Republican party security advisor.
The AUKUS defence pact would be one of the first US alliances to undergo a major review under an incoming Trump administration – with the official warning Australia not to take the agreement “for granted”.
“I think it could be in jeopardy,” former US ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton told 7NEWS.
“All Trump looks at is the balance sheet, and if he sees more US expenditure than those of other parties to the agreement, then I think there will be trouble.”
The defence bill that passed on Capitol Hill late last year requires the president of the day to give the final tick of approval before any US submarines are delivered to Australia.
And Ambassador Bolton is now encouraging America’s ally to immediately mount arguments in favour of the alliance if Trump wins the November poll.
“You’ve got to explain that these Australian submarines can patrol the Indian Ocean and the waters of the Pacific around Australia (and) southeast Asia.”
“This is an incredible addition to … American national security. That’s what he (Trump) needs to understand,” Ambassador Bolton said.
The Australian government forked out $4.5 billion dollars to help soothe US fears after lawmakers questioned America’s ability to deliver the specialised boats while meeting its own submarine production targets.
Under the first steps of the deal aimed at deterring Chinese aggression, Australia is set to receive at least three Virginia Class nuclear-powered submarines before Australian-built vessels enter service in the 2040s.
Ambassador Bolton is a veteran of the past three Republican administrations and most recently was Donald Trump’s longest serving national security advisor.
Since leaving Trump’s orbit, Bolton’s become a sharp critic of the former President and he’s now warning Australia that relations with the United States will require more work than ever if Democrats lose.
“He’s (Trump) an aberration in American politics,” Ambassador Bolton said.
“In Star Wars terms he’s sort of a disturbance in the force. So, we are going to have a long four years if he’s elected.”
The foreign policy expert also warned allies that the guardrails of experienced operatives in Trump’s first administration, won’t be returning this time around.
Adding, that leaders will need to chart their own diplomatic paths with the administration - and that goes for Australia, too.
“If the Australian Prime Minister plays golf, that’s a plus. If he doesn’t, he might want to learn.”
https://7news.com.au/news/ambassador-john-bolton-tells-7news-donald-trump-re-election-could-mean-aukus-subs-plan-torn-up-c-16518429
https://qalerts.app/?q=bolton
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273ca3 No.21846531
>>21281231 (pb)
Jewish leaders take radical cleric Wissam Haddad to court amid inaction
ALEXI DEMETRIADI - 28 October 2024
1/2
The country’s peak Jewish body has taken a radical cleric to the Federal Court after a slew of sermons referring to the Jewish community as “vile and treacherous people” and peddled anti-Semitic tropes.
The legal action is an example of the escalation of testing how, and whether, hate speech can be prosecuted in Australia.
The action comes after state and federal police recently laid charges against people who waved the flag of listed terror group Hezbollah, and high-profile restaurateur Alan Yazbek for displaying the Nazi swastika symbol.
On Friday, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry instigated proceedings in the Federal Court against extremist preacher Wissam Haddad, also known as Abu Ousayd, and his Bankstown-based Al Madina Dawah Centre.
The Australian in January revealed how the ECAJ had lodged a vilification complaint with the country’s human rights body against the preacher and the Bankstown centre, given perceived police inaction and an inability to lay charges, partly due to NSW’s “toothless” hate-speech criminal provisions.
The proceedings are made under part IIA of the Racial Discrimination Act – which outlaws offensive behaviour based on racial hatred – and brought to the court by the ECAJ’s co-chief executive, Peter Wertheim AM, and deputy president Robert Goot AO SC.
Mr Wertheim said attempts at mediation between the parties at the Australian Human Rights Commission had failed and that the court move was a last resort forced upon the Jewish community and its leaders.
“We have commenced proceedings to defend the honour of our community, and as a warning to deter others seeking to mobilise racism in order to promote their political views,” he said.
Among other things, the ECAJ is seeking declarations that Mr Haddad and his centre contravened section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act, injunctions to remove the sermons from the internet, and an order that the cleric refrain from publishing similar speeches in future.
Mr Wertheim and Mr Goot are also seeking publication of a “corrective notice” on the centre’s social media pages and costs, although no order for damages or monetary compensation is sought by the ECAJ.
Among other things, Mr Haddad, or speakers at his Al Madina Dawah Centre, have called Jewish people “descendants of pigs and monkeys”, recited parables about their killing, described them as “treacherous people” with their “hands” in media and business, encouraged jihad, and urged people to “spit” on Israel so Israelis “would drown”.
In most cases, he has claimed that he was referring to or reciting Islamic scripture.
The ECAJ separately filed a vilification complaint at the AHRC against Sheik Ahmed Zoud, who said Jewish people “ran like rats” from Hamas in the October 7, 2023 attacks.
That conciliation process remains ongoing but could be exhausted soon, and The Australian understands the ECAJ could file separate proceedings at the same court against Mr Zoud and his As-Sunnah mosque in Lakemba.
Mr Wertheim said Australia was a “multicultural success story” with different faith and ethnic communities living in “harmony and mutual respect”, and that the court move against Mr Haddad was to protect the Jewish community, but also the country’s social harmony.
“We are all free to observe our faith and traditions within the bounds of Australian law, and that should mean we do not bring the hatreds, prejudices and bigotry of overseas conflicts and societies into Australia,” he said, adding that the ECAJ had “no alternative” than to pursue court action.
“Maintaining and strengthening social cohesion is the role of governments and government agencies, but lately they have failed us. It should not fall on our community, or any other community, to take private legal action to remedy a public wrong, and to stand up to those who sow hatred.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21846534
>>21846531
2/2
Federal and state political leaders criticised that “policing” had fallen on the shoulders of Jewish leaders, with opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson calling it “profoundly unjust”, saying the Albanese government had “vacated the field”.
“Incitement to violence against another community is a crime and it should be enforced through criminal proceedings,” Senator Paterson said.
“If we had strong leadership from our Prime Minister, and if police enforced the law, the Jewish community never would have been left to fend for themselves like this amid an unprecedented anti-Semitism crisis.”
NSW senator Dave Sharma said he was “appalled” that a community organisation had been forced to bring private legal action, “not only to protect its own members but to uphold values and norms we all cherish”.
“That the ECAJ has been forced to take matters into its own hands demonstrates just how weak and conflicted this government is,” he said, adding that Australian values and social cohesion must be “fought for”.
NSW Upper House deputy president Rod Roberts said no religious or ethnic community should be having to do “their own policing”.
“Regardless of which community, it should not be their role and they shouldn’t have to do it,” the former police officer said, adding that Mr Haddad’s “inflammatory” comments harmed society as a whole.
Since the onset of the Israel-Hamas war on October 7 2023, debate has raged as to whether law enforcement agencies have the legislative tools to clamp down on hate speech.
In the past few weeks, police have successfully charged people under legislation outlawing support for terrorist groups and Nazi symbols, and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has cancelled the visas of American speakers Khaled Beydoun – for calling October 7 a “good day” – and extremist influencer Candace Owens.
“Non-direct” hate speech, however, has been harder to prosecute, given the narrow and high thresholds of both state and commonwealth legislation that outlaw very specific calls to violence, failing to capture hatred or broad incitement against an ethnic or religious community.
NSW’s hate-speech provisions, enclosed in Section 93Z of the state crime code, are subject of a Law Reform Commission review, given operability concerns.
Faith NSW chief-executive officer Murray Norman said Section 93Z had “proved ineffective and impotent”, adding that although its enactment was “well meaning” the provisions were “clearly not serving its purpose” to capture and prosecute hate speech.
Attempts to contact Mr Haddad’s legal representatives proved unsuccessful on Monday.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/jewish-leaders-take-radical-cleric-wissam-haddad-to-court-amid-inaction/news-story/cccc8c3d0c4178ffa93ffa22dd4fda01
https://qresear.ch/?q=Abu+Ousayd
https://qresear.ch/?q=Ahmed+Zoud
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273ca3 No.21853246
>>21768209
>>21793672
COVID-19 inquiry finds vaccine ‘strollout’ cost lives, eroded trust
Shane Wright and Natassia Chrysanthos - October 29, 2024
The Morrison government’s delays procuring COVID-19 vaccines cost lives and delivered a $31 billion hit to the economy, while Australians have lost trust in government and the health system is still struggling, the first wide-ranging inquiry into the national response to the virus has found.
The report, released on Tuesday afternoon, revealed more than $210 billion in federal government stimulus aimed at protecting the economy amplified the inflation pressures still working their way through the country.
Almost five years later, it said children were still suffering from mental health and academic consequences of school closures, people are now more reluctant to receive vaccines, families experienced higher levels of domestic violence, and elective surgery backlogs still plague hospitals.
The year-long inquiry, compiled by senior public servant Robyn Kruk, experienced economist Angela Jackson and infectious disease expert Catherine Bennett, found Australia had done very well in handling the pandemic.
They said it had fared well compared to other countries that experienced a larger loss of life, health system collapse and more severe economic downturns.
But there could have been less collateral damage. A new Australian Centre for Disease Control, which the Albanese government on Tuesday said would be operating by 2026, was central to their recommendations for evidence-based approaches that build trust.
The final 868-page report referenced the word trust on more than 330 occasions.
“Trust has … been eroded,” the conclusion said.
“Many of the measures taken during COVID-19 are unlikely to be accepted by the population again … We must plan a response based on the Australia we are today, not the Australia we were before the pandemic.”
It said the CDC, which will receive $252 million in funding, would strengthen the country’s resilience and preparedness because it would provide national co-ordination for future responses.
Some of the report’s most specific criticism was around the delays in procuring vaccines to protect the community.
It found the delayed vaccine rollout contributed to an increase in COVID-19 deaths as the Omicron variant swept through the country at the end of 2021.
“This meant our staged reopening occurred months later than it otherwise could have, with a direct economic cost estimated at $31 billion,” the inquiry found.
“There were also unforeseen health consequences to this timing because it meant we transitioned to ‘living with COVID-19’ as the Omicron variants became prevalent in the community.
“This led to our highest-ever number of case numbers and deaths from COVID-19, particularly among vulnerable populations and groups less likely or as yet unable to be vaccinated.”
The report found that JobKeeper, while being pivotal to the government’s economic response, led to “necessary compromises” in design that ultimately reduced value for money for taxpayers.
It said the total spending, including in the final Morrison government budget of March 2022-23, contributed to the inflation pressures that are still plaguing the economy.
“With the benefit of hindsight, there was excessive fiscal and monetary policy stimulus provided throughout 2021 and 2022, especially in the construction sector,” it found.
“Combined with supply-side disruptions, this contributed to inflationary pressures coming out of the pandemic.”
While the Reserve Bank has reviewed its key stimulus measures put in place during the pandemic, there has not been work done by the federal government apart from an early Treasury report into JobKeeper.
The report recommended the government review the $32 billion cash-flow boost to employers, HomeBuilder, the pandemic leave disaster payment, the coronavirus supplement and the early release of superannuation.
The superannuation policy, the report said, should not be used again.
“Blanket early access to superannuation was not an appropriate policy response, and in future existing financial hardship processes should be relied upon instead,” it found.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/covid-inquiry-finds-vaccine-strollout-cost-lives-eroded-trust-20241029-p5km5j.html
https://www.smh.com.au/interactive/hub/media/tearout-excerpt/36165/COVID-19-Response-Inquiry-Report.pdf
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273ca3 No.21853276
>>21853246
Anthony Albanese has failed to bash Scott Morrison and shield premiers with this Covid-19 report
SIMON BENSON - 29 October 2024
1/2
It’s little surprise that Anthony Albanese didn’t turn up for the release of inquiry findings into the Morrison government’s handling of the pandemic.
Unfortunately for the Prime Minister, it was probably more notable for its praise of Scott Morrison, describing leadership at the national level as “courageous”.
The final report handed down in Canberra on Tuesday afternoon was considered by cabinet on Monday. It has had 24 hours to pick through the 800 pages and find the worst of it.
The problem is that at least in the initial stages of the pandemic, the report found the Australian government’s response was considered world-leading.
Two words used in a background briefing to journalists were “amazing” and “remarkable”.
Unsurprisingly, it had its fair set of criticisms, of what could be done better and what should and should not be done in future. Every Australian lived through the deprivation of liberties and is now living with the consequences.
But the Prime Minister has been denied another final nail to hammer into his predecessor’s coffin, if that was the motivation when he pledged before the last election to hold a royal commission-style inquiry.
“The inquiry considers that the decisive and difficult decisions taken by the prime minister and other Australian government ministers at the outset of the pandemic demonstrated courageous leadership and actions consistent with the precautionary principle,” it said.
“The rapid response leaders implemented protected Australian lives in the first wave and set us on a path that reduced the overall negative impacts of the pandemic.
“Above all, Australia’s success in responding to the pandemic was a testament to the willingness to put community interests ahead of self-interests and to all do our bit as part of ‘Team Australia’”.
The authors of the report, Robyn Kruk, Catherine Bennett and Angela Jackson, should be congratulated for finding a way around the politically perverse restrictions that Albanese tried to put on them.
The refusal to allow them scope to examine unilateral decisions by the states was unjustifiable and politically juvenile.
Fortunately, Kruk, a former NSW health director-general who has worked for both Labor and Coalition governments, found a workaround to arrive at findings of the obvious against the states and territories.
The report was highly critical of the state lockdowns and the justifications given for them.
This goes to the issue of trust, which the report finds is one of the most critical issues governments will need to deal with in the future.
This is now evident in the vaccination rates having fallen off a cliff in the past two years.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21853278
>>21853276
2/2
The authors were especially scathing of school closures, which had never been recommended by the commonwealth in the first place. Again, a state issue.
“Different approaches being taken across the states and territories also led to distrust,” it said.
“Initially, national cabinet was united in its approach, but this unity waned over the course of the pandemic and at times there were contradictory explanations of decisions by leaders, further fuelling confusion and mistrust.
“While different approaches across states and territories could be appropriate where local conditions or different population risk profiles demanded them, some differences were not easily explained, and no rationale was provided.
“This included the operation of state border closures that states enacted unilaterally and that lacked consistency and compassion in implementation.”
In their post-report press conference, absent of Albanese, Health Minister Mark Butler and Treasurer Jim Chalmers struck sharply different tones, to the point of becoming almost comedic.
Butler tried his best to focus on the findings’ deficiencies of the national response but noted the Morrison government’s management.
Chalmers on the other hand used it to the aggressively attack the Coalition for spending too much money and creating the problem he is now being blamed for mismanaging.
The report found that the government funnelled too much stimulus into the construction sector and that the fiscal measures, recommended by Treasury and the central bank at the time, were ultimately inflationary.
It conceded Australia wasn’t alone in being trapped in the post-pandemic price and supply crisis.
But Chalmers ignores the subtext to this, which is the failure of Treasury to foresee the inflationary impacts and the absolute failure of the Reserve Bank of Australia to move sooner to rate rises.
Chalmers also ignores another important subtext – which applies to both the Coalition and Labor – that throwing money into the economy post-pandemic, knowing all this, simply added fuel to the fire.
“Australian policymakers were not alone in misjudging the nature and strength of inflationary pressures coming out of the pandemic, which have led to declines in real incomes across much of the developed world,” it said.
“Following a decade of low inflation, and based on prior pandemic experiences, inflation was not viewed as a credible risk by policymakers,” the report said.
“The policy focus on getting unemployment down as far as possible also came with real benefits for households, businesses, and government finances. However, a stronger focus on supply-side rather than demand-side policies in plans for the economic recovery would have mitigated some of the inflationary pressures.”
Overall, the report vindicated the Morrison government’s response, noting that the country was woefully unprepared to begin with. This is an indictment of all previous governments.
“Despite this lack of planning, Australia fared well relative to other nations that experienced larger losses in human life, health system collapse and more severe economic downturns,” it said.
“Our inquiry, which focused on the actions of the Australian government, has concluded that this was due to a combination of factors including early and decisive leadership and the collective efforts of the general public, community organisations, businesses, essential workers and the public service.”
Award-winning journalist Simon Benson is The Australian's Political Editor.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/anthony-albanese-has-failed-to-blame-scott-morrison-and-shield-premiers-with-this-covid19-report/news-story/46e8c9d1e7d409dca97fbd9224287a58
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273ca3 No.21853292
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21492994 (pb)
>>21660654 (pb)
>>21723645 (pb)
MRF-D 24.3 U.S. Marines, Sailors conclude six-month deployment to Australia
Marine Rotational Force - Darwin
Oct 29, 2024
U.S. Marines and Sailors with Marine Rotational Force – Darwin 24.3 participated in various exercises, operations, and training events during a six-month deployment to Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia from April to Oct. 2024. MRF-D 24.3 is part of an annual, six-month rotational deployment to enhance interoperability with the Australian Defence Force and Allies and partners and provide a forward-postured crisis response force in the Indo-Pacific. (U.S. Marine Corps video edited by Cpl. Migel A. Reynosa and Cpl. Earik Barton)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKKyBuGWm9I
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273ca3 No.21860582
>>21459189 (pb)
>>21809135
Australia to ramp up missile production as Indo Pacific enters new missile age
Kirsty Needham - October 30, 2024
SYDNEY, Oct 30 (Reuters) - Australia said it was boosting its missile defence capability amid "significant concerns" about China's test of an ICBM in the South Pacific, and will bolster weapons stockpiles and exports to security partners as the region enters a new "missile age".
Minister for Defence Industry Pat Conroy said in a speech on Wednesday that Australia was increasing its missile defence and long-range strike capability, and would cooperate with security partners the United States, Japan and South Korea, to contribute to regional stability.
"Why do we need more missiles? Strategic competition between the United States and China is a primary feature of Australia's security environment," he told the National Press Club in Canberra.
China test fired an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile in September that travelled over 11,000km to land in the Pacific Ocean to Australia's north-east.
Conroy said the Indo Pacific was on the cusp of a new missile age, where missiles are also "tools of coercion".
"We expressed significant concern about that ballistic missile test, especially its entry into the South Pacific given the Treaty of Rarotonga that says the Pacific should be a nuclear weapons free zone," he told reporters in response to a question.
Australia was deploying SM-6 missiles on its navy destroyer fleet to provide ballistic missile defence, he added.
Earlier this month, Australia announced a A$7 billion deal with the United States to acquire SM-2 IIIC and Raytheon SM-6 long-range missiles for its navy.
Australia has previously said it would spend A$74 billion ($49 billion) on missile acquisition and missile defence over the next decade, including A$21 billion to fund the Australian Guided Weapons and Explosive Ordnance Enterprise, a new domestic manufacturing capability.
"We must show potential adversaries that hostile acts against Australia would not succeed and could not be sustained if conflict were protracted," Conroy said in the speech.
Australia will spend A$316 million to establish local manufacture of Guided Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (GMLRS), in partnership with Lockheed Martin, to produce the rapidly deployable, surface-to-surface weapons for export, from 2029.
The factory will be capable of producing 4,000 GMLRS a year, or a quarter of current global production, Conroy said.
France's Thales will establish Australian manufacturing of 155mm M795 artillery ammunition, used in howitzers, at an Australian government-owned munitions facility in the small Victorian city of Benalla.
It will be the first dedicated forge outside of the U.S., with production starting in 2028, and the capacity to scale up to produce 100,000 rounds a year.
The war in Ukraine was using 10,000 rounds of 155-millimetre artillery shells a day last year, outstripping European production, he said.
"In a world marked by supply chain disruption and strategic fragility, Australia needs not only to acquire more missiles, but to make more here at home," he said.
In August, Australia said it would jointly manufacture long-range Naval Strike Missiles and Joint Strike Missiles with Norway's Kongsberg Defence in the city of Newcastle on Australia's eastern coast, the only site outside of Norway.
Australia's navy will also have Tomahawk missiles, with a range of 2,500 km (1,550 miles), by the end of the year, increasing the fleet's weapons range 10-fold.
($1 = 1.5228 Australian dollars)
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/australia-ramp-up-missile-production-indo-pacific-enters-new-missile-age-2024-10-30/
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273ca3 No.21860607
>>21466382 (pb)
New Black Hawks will be night-time visitors to Sydney
STEPHEN RICE - 29 October 2024
Many Sydneysiders turned their faces skywards on Tuesday as a formation of Black Hawk helicopters swept loud and low over the city, past the Harbour Bridge and Opera House, before turning north for a run to Narrabeen.
Residents of the Harbour City will soon become familiar with the sight and sound of the Black Hawks, as the Australian Army puts the brand-new helicopters through their paces in counter-terrorism rehearsals around the city, including at night, throughout November.
“You’ll hear noise, you’ll see low-level flying,” warned Joint Aviation Systems Division head Major General Jeremy King. “Please don’t be alarmed.”
The army has just taken delivery of 10 new Black Hawks, the first of 40 that will provide Australia’s primary utility helicopter force by the end of the decade – and bring an end to the fiasco of the loathed and often-grounded Taipan fleet.
The new-generation Sikorsky UH-60M Black Hawks are expected to cost $2.8bn in total and, so far at least, the program is running within budget.
At an exercise at the Holsworthy Army Barracks on Tuesday to welcome the new helicopters, the army’s top brass were diplomatic about the Black Hawk’s ill-fated predecessor, but close to jubilant about the new arrivals.
“We’ve moved on from the Taipan; I’m not in the business of making comparisons,” said Major General King. “We’re very happy to see an old friend back.”
The US-made helicopter is a tried and tested war horse, in which Australian troops have seen plenty of action in the past, from Afghanistan to Timor-Leste.
Watching the new Black Hawks go through their paces on Tuesday was Brenton Mellor, a veteran of tours of Afghanistan, PNG and East Timor, and now the army’s Aviation Capability Management director.
Remarkably, Colonel Mellor is a second-generation Black Hawk pilot – his father flew an early version of the same helicopter.
“It’s been an outstanding platform, and I’m very happy to see an upgraded version coming into service,” he said.
Colonel Mellor recalled an episode when Timor President Jose Ramos Horta was shot during an assassination attempt in 2008.
“We were doing an administrative role at the time, but suddenly switched within minutes to have SAS troops on board and responding to the threat,” Colonel Mellor said.
Those Black Hawks were phased out when the Howard government spent $3.5bn acquiring the European-made Taipans.
The Taipan fleet had already been grounded several times before a crash off Hamilton Island in Queensland last year killed four crew.
The helicopters are now being sold for spare parts, the airframes into scrap – nobody wants to buy them.
In October last year the US announced the acceleration of the new-generation Black Hawk fleet into Australia.
The Black Hawks will operate from Holsworthy in NSW and Oakey near Toowoomba in Queensland.
The new aircraft won’t be available for firefighting duties this summer, with the focus on making them operational for military purposes as soon as possible next year.
On Tuesday the army staged an exercise at Holsworthy for a scenario in which terrorists had occupied an Australian embassy in a foreign country, with diplomats being held hostage in the resulting siege.
A second nearby building was also occupied by terrorists.
Special forces from the 2nd Commando Regiment staged a simultaneous assault on both buildings, with Black Hawk-borne special forces scaling down to the roof of the “embassy” building while another team blasted its way into the other building. Snipers in a third Black Hawk maintained watch over the mission.
After rescuing the “hostages” both teams were successfully extracted by helicopter, those on the roof of the building by attaching themselves to rope ladders slung from the chopper overhead.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/new-black-hawks-will-be-nighttime-visitors-to-sydney/news-story/fadee4d03c09fea6ca7a2cf45831b39b
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273ca3 No.21860613
>>21773932
AFP chief talks AUKUS, election integrity and radicalisation with global security partners
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 30 October 2024
Australian Federal Police commissioner Reece Kershaw will meet British and US counterparts in Europe next week to brief them on the AFP’s new AUKUS Command, established to secure the nation’s nuclear submarine program.
The AFP, which is working closely with the Department of Defence and Australian Submarine Agency, has been tasked with shielding AUKUS secrets and protecting key personnel, technology and submariners.
Ahead of next year’s federal election, Mr Kershaw will also hold meetings with law enforcement heads of countries where elections have recently been held to discuss election integrity and the “ongoing and persistent threat of foreign interference”.
Amid a wave of extremism fanned by digital platforms, Australia’s top cop will raise domestic cases of youth radicalisation with security agency heads “who have provided the AFP with information”.
Mr Kershaw, who recently had his term extended until October 2026, will meet with Five Eyes Law Enforcement Group security chiefs in Glasgow, and also travel to Paris. “I will outline to relevant partners the AFP’s role in AUKUS, which will help protect and secure Australia’s nuclear submarine program. The AFP is working closely with the Department of Defence and the Australian Submarine Agency, and already the AFP has provided key protection to US submariners on recent visits to Western Australia,” Mr Kershaw said.
In the wake of foreign interference reports ahead of next week’s US election, Mr Kershaw said the sharing of information between security agencies was key to identifying common threats and emerging issues.
“Some law enforcement officials I will meet with have already had general elections in their countries, so their insights and experiences will be valued as Australia is due to hold a federal election by May 2025,’’ he said.
“Many agencies throughout the world are also grappling with an ongoing and persistent threat of foreign interference. Australia is no different and while the AFP has been world-leading in targeting foreign interference, it is imperative we ensure we learn from other nations’ experiences.”
Following a series of extremist-linked incidents earlier this year and rising social cohesion concerns associated with the Middle East conflict, Mr Kershaw said he would discuss the scourge of radicalisation with counterparts.
“I intend to raise Australia’s recent cases of youth radicalisation with partners and thank those who have provided the AFP with information. Our children can be entrapped by extremists who live a world away, so information sharing is key to keeping Australians safe.”
AFP assistant commissioner Dave McLean – who has responsibility for the Americas, Asia, Africa, Middle East and Europe – has been nominated by Mr Kershaw and Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus as Australia’s candidate to sit on the executive committee of Interpol.
Mr Kershaw will attend Interpol’s general assembly in Glasgow next week to participate in the vote for two Asia region positions, which are also being contested by candidates from China, India, Iran, Qatar, Vietnam and South Korea. He will discuss “high-value targets and threats impacting on Australia” in meetings with police chiefs from Vietnam, Turkey, Greece, Lebanon, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Malaysia, The Netherlands, South Africa and Colombia.
In addition to meeting Scotland’s top police officer Jo Farrell, Mr Kershaw will travel to London to address the Virtual Global Taskforce, a frontline international alliance established to counter child sexual abuse. The AFP next month assumes a three-year term as chair of the VGT, which is currently led by the UK National Crime Agency and consists of 15 law enforcement agencies.
Mr Kershaw, a former child exploitation investigator, said he was focused on ensuring “end-to end encryption does not impact the number or quality of online child exploitation reports referred to law enforcement agencies”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/afp-chief-talks-aukus-election-integrity-and-radicalisation-with-global-security-partners/news-story/cb0f3a1017198107a10fd974e7f9517d
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273ca3 No.21867683
>>21773932
Fire at BAE’s British sub plant ‘could set back AUKUS’
BEN PACKHAM and JACQUELIN MAGNAY - 31 October 2024
The Albanese government was scrambling for information on a massive fire at the UK’s main nuclear submarine plant on Wednesday that analysts warned could set back the delivery schedule for Australia’s $368bn AUKUS boats.
Huge plumes of smoke and yellow flames erupted at BAE Systems’ Barrow-in-Furness facility about 12.45am local time, with two workers taken to hospital with smoke inhalation.
Emergency services said there was “no nuclear risk” from the fire but local residents were advised to stay indoors.
The fire took hold at the site’s huge Devonshire Dock Hall, which stands 51m high, and 58m wide and is currently being expanded.
It was unclear how much damage was caused by the blaze, but at any one time there can be multiple submarines inside the plant at different stages of construction.
Strategic Analysis Australia director Michael Shoebridge said the fire came at an “awful time for AUKUS”, and could delay Australia’s already-ambitious submarine construction schedule.
“The Barrow facility is critical to the construction of the AUKUS submarines and the British navy’s current submarines, so it’s hard to see it not being a setback, not just for the UK but for all three AUKUS partners,” Mr Shoebridge said. “It comes at a time when we need the UK’s submarine industrial base to be expanding.”
United States Studies Centre defence program director Peter Dean said: “None of this can be good for the UK submarine building schedule.
“And we know the UK submarine industrial base needs to be accelerating to meet the timetables they have.”
BAE is currently working on the tail end of orders for the UK’s Astute-class submarines, as well as the new Dreadnought-class ballistic missile boats for the Royal Navy, and is drawing up plans for the SSN-AUKUS, which will form the basis of Australia’s submarine fleet. The company will build Britain’s AUKUS boats at Barrow-in-Furness, and Australia’s in Adelaide.
The Australian Submarine Agency said: “We are aware of a fire on site in Barrow-in-Furness and are in contact with our counterparts in the United Kingdom.”
BAE Systems said it was working with emergency services to deal with the fire, but declined to provide further details on the extent of the damage.
“Two colleagues have been taken to hospital having suffered suspected smoke inhalation,” the company said.
“At this time there are no other casualties and everyone else has been evacuated from the Devonshire Dock Hall and are accounted for.”
The first AUKUS submarine is due to enter service with the Royal Navy in the late 2030s, while Australia’s first boat is slated for completion in the early 2040s.
Australia has pledged $4.6bn to boost the British submarine sector’s capabilities, but there remain serious concerns over its ability to meet promised AUKUS timelines.
The British parliament’s key accountability committee warned earlier this year that the country’s ten-year submarine industry investment plan faced a £16.9bn ($32.7bn) deficit – the largest shortfall since 2012.
“Successful delivery appears to be unachievable for five (government major projects portfolio) projects, including replacement communications technology, nuclear submarine reactors, and missiles,” the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee warned in March.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/fire-at-baes-british-sub-plant-could-set-back-aukus/news-story/509227cb4e8224e7ab382133ec9d79dd
https://x.com/MarioNawfal/status/1851490666246775077
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273ca3 No.21867699
>>21839147
Far right US commentator Candace Owens lashes Australia after visa rejection
JESSICA WANG - 31 October 2024
Far-right US commentator Candace Owens has hit back after Immigration Minister Tony Burke rejected her visa on the grounds that she has the “capacity to incite discord”, lashing the government for the “petty act of vandalism”.
The controversial conservative podcaster has been widely criticised for her anti-Semitic comments, conspiracy theories and attacks on the Muslim and transgender communities.
Speaking publicly for the first time since her visa was rejected, Ms Owens lashed Mr Burke for “leaking” the results of her private application and said she was “stunned” by the process.
“I also want to make it clear to you guys that I found out at the same time that the press found out, so his office chose to leak this,” she said.
“This is supposed to be a private application process, so unless I spoke about this, no one should have known about this.”
She also claimed her application was blocked due to her coverage of attacks on Palestinians in Gaza, stating her fans would remain loyal to her.
“I just wanted to make sure that every person knows that despite me being fired, demonetised, spoken ill about, I haven’t changed my position,” she said.
“That’s what this really is, a petty act of vandalism. No one’s worried about me coming to Australia because they’re angry that they’ve put this narrative out about me and my listeners haven’t accepted it.”
Acknowledging her cancelled visa, which her team have vowed to fight through an appeal in the Federal Court, Owens also said she was disappointed she would not be able to “hug a koala” and “fight a kangaroo”.
“I did want to hug a koala, I’m not gonna lie, I did. I think koalas are really cute,” she said.
“I did also maybe kind of want to fight a kangaroo. I see a lot of these videos, they’re like jacked and like, punch people, and I was like, maybe that would be good content, but if I have to hang that up, I will hang that up.”
While it does not appear that Owens’ team have filed an appeal, an announcement on her Ticketek page states she and her event organiser Rocksman are “optimistic about a favourable outcome”.
They have also promised existing ticketholders, some who have shelled out $1500 for VIP tickets, will be refunded.
“Should the appeal be denied and cancellation become necessary, we will promptly notify all ticketholders and begin processing refunds automatically on the organiser’s behalf,” the announcement said.
A spokeswoman for Owens said the live shows across Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Brisbane had sold “tens of thousands of tickets”.
A spokesperson for the tour promoter also labelled Mr Burke’s decision as “simply dumb” and claimed it was “censorship”.
“Minister Burke’s reasoning is that he doesn’t want Australians exposed to Ms Owens’ message,” they said.
“However, whether she is in the country or not, Australians have access to her message via social media along with millions of viewers every day.
“This is clearly nothing more than political bias disguised as a public safety measure.”
In a statement released on Sunday, Mr Burke said Ms Owens’ visa was rejected on the grounds her views would harm social cohesion.
“From downplaying the impact of The Holocaust with comments about Mengele through to claims that Muslims started slavery, Candace Owens has the capacity to incite discord in almost every direction,” Mr Burke said.
“Australia’s national interest is best served when Candace Owens is somewhere else.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/far-right-us-commentator-lashes-australia-after-visa-rejection/news-story/a54f5ac92a72face3a3f7512c41b50f0
https://www.instagram.com/candaceoshow/reel/DBul363IfJJ/
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273ca3 No.21867793
>>21809192
Scott Morrison dismisses Donald Trump fears as ‘hot air’
BEN PACKHAM - 31 October 2024
Scott Morrison says fears in Australia of a Trump 2.0 presidency are the result of “hot air and hyperventilation”, but argues the nation will have to be “on its game” if the Republican candidate returns to the White House.
As Anthony Albanese and many of his global counterparts cross their fingers for a Kamala Harris victory next week, the former prime minister told The Australian there was no cause for concern over the future of the alliance or the AUKUS submarine pact under a re-elected Donald Trump.
But he said Australia would have to wait and see how it would be affected by Mr Trump’s promised tariff hikes, and warned Labor would have to dramatically recalibrate its diplomacy to deal with his “unorthodox approach” to international relations.
“Australia has to be on its game in terms of how it manages the relationship, as is always the case,” he said. “When there was a change of government last time there was a change in approach and direction, and we responded to that.”
Analysts have warned of difficult times ahead if Mr Trump is re-elected, while a recent Lowy Institute poll found 72 per cent of Australians would prefer a Harris win on November 5.
But Mr Morrison said Australia had done well under the first Trump administration and could expect to do so again.
“There’s just no real basis to why the concern would be there on the things that matter most to us, which are about the alliance and AUKUS,” he said.
“He’s on the record of supporting the alliance strongly and the genesis of AUKUS was under his administration. So I just think there’s a lot of hot air and hyperventilation around this, which is certainly not grounded in fact.”
As the Treasury and Reserve Bank brace for the impact of Mr Trump’s promised 10 per cent tariff on all imports and 60 per cent tariff on Chinese goods, Mr Morrison said it was too early to say how Australia would be affected by a second round of America First protectionism.
“I think you’ve got to see what happens and what form it ultimately takes. I mean, Australia has a free-trade agreement with the United States for a start,” he said.
He suggested the threatened tariff onslaught was part of Mr Trump’s deal-making style.
“You’ve just got to look at the difference between the excitement that’s often created around things that he says and does, and the intent, at the end of the day, of what it’s all about.”
The former prime minister’s optimism over the prospect of a second Trump presidency is in stark contrast to the pessimism of longtime analysts of US politics.
Lowy Institute executive director Michael Fullilove said the US was the most important factor in the rules-based order, but Mr Trump did not believe such rules applied to him. “He has spent his whole life flouting the rules. He is not interested in rules, laws, norms or institutions. He’s interested in deals and transactions. So the risks are great.”
Dr Fullilove said Australia’s political leaders would have to “grimace and bear it” if Mr Trump returned to office. “My advice would be don’t sneer at Trump, but don’t gush over him either, because he’s not a figure whose presidency is going to contribute to American greatness,” he said.
United States Studies Centre chief executive Michael Green said Mr Trump had put forward “the most disruptive vision for America’s role in the world of any presidential candidate in the post-war period”. “And if he did all of it, Australia would be in trouble. But he won’t,” Dr Green said.
He said the US congress would almost certainly constrain Mr Trump’s worst instincts.
“I think there will be some tariffs, more on China than on allies. But he’s not going to be able to do what he says,” Dr Green said. “He has a history of talking tough and then backing down.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/us-politics/scott-morrison-dismisses-donald-trump-fears-as-hot-air/news-story/cc56c36a143e7804f54fd8017a662579
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273ca3 No.21874825
>>21303420 (pb)
Five out of six Collins submarines out of action in critical blow to national security
BEN PACKHAM - 1 November 2024
1/2
Only one of the nation’s ageing Collins-class submarines is currently operational in a critical blow to national security, as corrosion problems, maintenance delays and long-running industrial action wreak havoc on the fleet’s availability.
Five of the six boats are out of action and there are now serious questions over the navy’s ability to extend the life of the fleet by a further ten years to bridge a looming capability gap before Australia’s nuclear submarine’s arrive.
The Australian can also reveal the Collins boats, which are approaching the end of their original 30-year lifespans, are now being used more lightly when they are available under a deliberate strategy to avoid unnecessary wear and tear.
One of the submarines, HMAS Sheean, has been stuck in maintenance at Adelaide’s Osborne yard for more than two years with unprecedented corrosion issues, while a second, HMAS Rankin, has been tied up at Osborne for at least five months awaiting upgrades.
Three of the boats - HMAS Farncomb and two others which The Australian is not naming for security reasons - are undergoing or about to undergo maintenance work at Perth’s Henderson precinct.
The remaining Collins boat, which The Australian is also not naming to preserve its operational security, has recently been deployed on exercises and is available for tasking.
It’s understood one of the boats at Henderson is due to exit maintenance in coming weeks, and could re-enter service soon subject to official clearances. Defence insists another of the boats could be pulled from scheduled maintenance in an emergency.
An industrial dispute between unions and the government’s submarine maintenance corporation ASC has exacerbated the problems, setting back work on HMAS Sheean and preventing HMAS Rankin from being lifted from the water.
The Australian Manufacturing Workers Union is leading a campaign to boost South Australian ASC workers’ pay by 18.5 per cent to match rates paid by ASC in Western Australia to keep workers from jumping to the mining sector.
Chief of Navy Mark Hammond said the dispute and its ensuing delays was likely to set back $5bn in “life of type extension” upgrades, due from 2026, by at least six months.
Vice Admiral Hammond said he was unable to confirm that all of the boats would have their lives extended for a decade, as originally planned.
“I’m going to work through that one boat at a time, because we’re talking about platforms that operate hundreds of metres under the water. So I won’t speculate about what the material state might be, boat by boat,” he told The Australian.
He said the scope of the LOTE works was yet to be locked down and was likely to be different for each boat.
Farncomb is the first boat scheduled for the LOTE upgrade. It is one of the one of the oldest submarines in the fleet, and was revealed in May to be suffering serious corrosion in different areas to HMAS Sheean, which has rust in its weapons and exhaust areas.
“I’m expecting to find age-related corrosion issues on each of the boats as they go through. Each one will be subject to a bespoke conditions-based assessment when they go into maintenance, and we will learn the lessons from each previous activity,” Vice Admiral Hammond said.
He said despite the submarines’ age, they were in relatively good condition.
“They’ve been well used, but they’ve also been well cared for throughout their lives. They are still high-end, highly-capable, lethal submarines,” he said.
But The Australian has learned the navy is limiting its use of the boats to try and keep them going for as long as possible. This was a major consideration in its decision not to send one of the submarines to RIMPAC 2024, the US’s biggest military exercise off Hawaii.
Australia has typically sent a submarine to the biennial war games but dramatically scaled-back its contribution to this year’s exercise in July, sending only a single warship and a P-8A maritime reconnaissance aircraft.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21874828
>>21874825
2/2
The latest submarine availability crunch comes as British defence giant BAE Systems and the government remain tight-lipped over the extent of the damage caused by a fire this week at the company’s shipyard in northern England, which analysts believe could setback the delivery of Australia’s AUKUS-class nuclear boats.
BAE will design and build AUKUS submarines for the UK and Australia, but its capacity to meet the program’s ambitious timelines has already been questioned due to serious capacity constraints at its UK operation.
Opposition defence spokesman Andrew Hastie said he was alarmed to hear five of the Collins boats were “sitting in the workshop, unavailable to defend our sea lanes and approaches”.
“This is a result of the Albanese government’s complete collapse in mismanagement of defence and national security,” Mr Hastie said.
Former naval officer Jennifer Parker, an adjunct naval studies fellow at UNSW Canberra, said the problems now arising with the fleet were inevitable given the failure of successive governments to plan for their replacement.
“The boats are old. It was always going to be a challenge having their life extended,” she said.
“There’s been a lot of effort put into it, but the fact is, they are small conventional submarines that were built to do coastal stuff, and that is not how we’ve operated them.”
Former senator and retired submariner Rex Patrick said the problems with the boats would get worse, and even after the LOTE upgrades they would be no match for modern submarines.
“Yes, some of the major equipment will be modernised, but there’s a lot of other equipment just waiting to fail,“ Mr Patrick said.
“And even if all goes well with the life extension, we’ll be asking our submariners to take a Collins submarine into the South China Sea, which will be the equivalent of asking them to take a pre-World War I submarine into a battle at the end of World War II.”
He said boats’ lack of availability meant they were also unable to undertake vital peacetime work, including intelligence gathering and covert monitoring of foreign military activity.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/five-out-of-six-collins-submarines-out-of-action-in-critical-blow-to-national-security/news-story/0c05777860611ab9701a3ed8614f87e4
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273ca3 No.21874854
>>21773932
>>21809192
Yes sparks will fly if Trump wins but AUKUS is safe, says Austal’s chair
BRAD THOMPSON - 1 November 2024
1/2
The chairman of navy shipbuilder Austal predicts sparks will fly over AUKUS if Donald Trump wins the US election but sees no risk of the security pact collapsing.
Richard Spencer knows what it is like to be sacked by Mr Trump. He was dumped as secretary of the US Navy by the Republican leader in 2019 after a disagreement over the disciplinary process for a Navy SEAL who was eventually convicted of posing with the corpse of an Islamic State fighter in Iraq.
Mr Spencer, who is also global chairman of former Australian treasurer Joe Hockey’s Bondi Partners, said his history with Mr Trump would have no bearing on Austal or on Bondi.
He views AUKUS as the best piece of “statecraft” in 50 years and completely rejects criticism by former prime minister Paul Keating of the military alliance between the US, the UK and Australia.
The former US marine and Wall Street veteran hosted his first annual general meeting as Austal chairman in Perth on Friday. The company has already been anointed by the Albanese government as its monopoly navy shipbuilder in the state.
Austal expects to lock in that status with the signing of a strategic shipbuilding agreement in a deal that could open the door for the company to secure about $20bn of work building heavy landing craft, frigates and other warships at Henderson, south of Perth.
Meanwhile, at its shipyard in Alabama, Austal is set to have a big role in building nuclear-powered submarines for the US Navy, on top of billions of dollars in orders for surface vessels.
Mr Spencer said AUKUS would stay on course regardless of whether Mr Trump or Kamala Harris won the US election.
“That’s for a bunch of reasons,” he said “One, just the national security aspect of it, as it pertains to both the US and our closest ally over here in Australia.
“Two, it has so much more far-reaching consequences than just national security. It really is a one plus one equals three piece. statecraft, which I think is the reason that it has such bipartisan support in the US. There’s very little downside. Whether Trump or Harris gets in, I don’t think AUKUS is in threat.”
Mr Keating argues that Australia had made itself a target by signing up for the military alliance in what is a response to China’s growing power in the Asia Pacific.
Mr Spencer said he disagreed with everything Mr Keating said apart from his point that AUKUS could not become a wealth transfer from Australia to the US.
“When you look at China it’s not a binary Cold War such as the USSR, because they are ingrained in our supply chain and our trading profiles. We’re going to have to manage China in a very different way than we ever faced before,” he said.
“But the fact remains that you have to have a strong defensive posture in order to negotiate at the table. Jim Mattis (former US secretary of defence) used to always say the reason you want a strong Department of Defence) is to give the State Department one more day.
“You want to negotiate from a position of strength. You also want to have assets out in the theatre protecting the maritime channels of trade and the undersea cables. And at the same time, you have China being quite belligerent to some of our smaller allies, and we cannot abide by that.
“We have to manage China diligently because they are a trade partner but we have to make sure that their aggressiveness in different areas doesn’t go unchecked.”
Mr Spencer said there were likely to be more flashpoints with AUKUS if Mr Trump returned to the oval office.
“You can never second guess Donald Trump. If he gets elected president I’m sure at some point sparks and arcs will fly with the Australian relationship as it will with every single allied relationship at some point,” he said.
“But I think it’ll be at the edges because the fact of the matter is AUKUS is so baked into our national security program that it could be near impossible to undo.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21874862
>>21874854
2/2
Andrew and Nicola Forrest, who became billionaires on the back of iron ore sales to China, are Austal’s largest shareholders with a 19.9 per cent.
Company founder John Rothwell, who was chairman for 37 years, recently reduced his stake to 8.8 per cent with the sale of a million shares worth about $3m at the time, to Mr Spencer.
South Korea’s Hanwha abandoned its $1bn takeover tilt of Austal in September, accusing the board of blocking its attempts to carry out due diligence.
Hanwha’s last non-binding approach was at $2.85 per share and Austal shares are now trading at $3.31.
Nine days before Hanwha officially abandoned its pursuit, Austal was awarded a $US450m ($684m) contract to build a giant shed and other infrastructure at its Alabama shipyard to support the US Navy goal of delivering one Columbia-class and two Virginia-class nuclear submarines annually.
The contract entrenches Austal as an important cog in the supply of nuclear submarines for a long time. The company aims to have the facilities built by 2026 – 12 months before the Australian Navy’s Garden Island base south of Perth is due to become a home port for Virginia-class submarines under AUKUS.
Mr Spencer said he thought the market was still digesting the significance of the submarine contract, which is essentially a grant of $US450m by the US government via General Dynamics Electric Boat – the US Navy’s trusted builder of submarines for a century.
“Does the market fully appreciate the fact that a corporate entity just received almost two thirds of its market cap as an injection from the government with no strings attached? I don’t know.” he said.
“The most important thing is it really underscores the endorsement of not only the US Navy, but of General Dynamics Electric Boat that Austal is a credible enough partner to receive this and be part of the ship building infrastructure.”
Mr Spencer said he did not see any personal conflict between taking up the role of Austal chairman on July 1 and his position at Bondi, even though Bondi had worked on a takeover offer for the shipbuilder.
“Austal engages advisers to help them out with different financial aspects of the market and the lay of the land in the market. Bondi was hired along those lines,” he said,
“And on an unsolicited basis, Joe (Hockey) and Bondi tried to put together a package to see if it would be attractive for us. It was a bridge too far for Bondi.
“They remain a very credible entity and Joe Hockey has an amazing Rolodex if, in fact, the company was to ever use Bondi again. Obviously, I’d recuse myself from any appointment.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/companies/yes-sparks-will-fly-if-trump-wins-but-aukus-is-safe-says-austals-chair/news-story/eff01fe483581388ea16b6357049786e
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273ca3 No.21874872
>>21860582
US' indoctrination leading Canberra astray: China Daily editorial
chinadaily.com.cn - 2024-10-31
In 2021, Australia's decision to join the United States and the United Kingdom to form the trilateral security alliance AUKUS triggered domestic and international concern about an accelerating arms race in the region and its consequences.
This concern intensified when the three countries announced their agreement for Australia to acquire nuclear-powered submarines with the help of its two alliance partners.
Now, the country has exacerbated the concern by announcing its intention to increase its missile defense and long-range strike capabilities.
In a speech on Wednesday, Australia's Minister for Defense Industry Pat Conroy said Canberra would invest up to 18 billion Australian dollars ($12 billion) to boost its manufacturing of missiles, including making advanced guided missile systems in the country for the first time. The Australian defense industry chief justified the move by saying that strategic competition between the US and China has become a primary feature of Australia's security environment. In other words, as a close US ally, Australia is obliged to help its ally win this competition.
Hence, to serve as a faithful US ally, Australia has to pay the US so it can arm itself to the teeth. While shelling out a huge amount to get at least eight nuclear-powered attack submarines from its AUKUS partners, the country is also bolstering its air and missile defense capabilities under a 7-billion-Australian-dollar deal with the US to acquire state-of-the-art long-range missiles.
As a country that comfortably sits tens of thousands of miles away from all the major global and regional hot spots, the acquisition of nuclear-powered subs and long-range missiles is beyond the country's defensive needs. This has called into question the purpose of AUKUS' and Australia's role in the grouping, which is displaying an increasingly aggressive character.
To make Australia's missile case stronger, Conroy cited China's test firing of an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile in September, claiming that the "Indo-Pacific" region was on the cusp of a new missile age, where missiles are also "tools of coercion".
China's Defense Ministry made it clear at the time that the ICBM test was part of its routine annual training and not directed at any country or target, and that relevant countries had been notified in advance. A Pentagon spokesperson confirmed this, saying that the US had received "some advanced notification" of the test from Beijing, and calling it "a step in the right direction … to preventing any misperception or miscalculation".
Rather than China's testing of the performance of its defense equipment as well as the training level of the troops in the face of growing hostility toward it, it is Australia's seeming eagerness to be part of the ring of steel that the US is trying to enclose China in that is accelerating the advent of a missile age in the region.
In recent years, it has become a routine practice for the US and its allies to constantly hype up a false narrative about China's so-called growing assertiveness in the Asia-Pacific region so as to give a plausible excuse for their military expenditure and bloc confrontation initiatives.
In August, the Lowy Institute, an Australia-based think tank, citing "challenges" from China, highlighted that the Pacific Islands' region is facing challenges due to "unbridled strategic rivalry" in a report titled "The Great Game in the Pacific Islands".
The US' blind pursuit of Western military supremacy to maintain its hegemony is making the regional situation increasingly volatile.
Whatever Canberra may think to the contrary, absolute security and exclusive security are simply not viable in today's interconnected world. This is evidenced by the conflicts in Ukraine and in the Middle East, which have been triggered by the US' wholehearted embrace of this outdated security mindset and manipulation of other countries willing to subscribe to its "them or us" viewpoint.
Rather than continuing to wade into dangerous waters, Canberra should reflect on the fact that it is the US and its allies that are responsible for creating the "unbridled strategic rivalry" in the Asia-Pacific region as part of their efforts to curtail China's development momentum.
https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202410/31/WS67237c7da310f1265a1cabc0.html
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273ca3 No.21874938
>>21809192
If Donald Trump defeats Kamala Harris in the US election, how should Anthony Albanese respond?
The Australian PM should make an early visit to Washington in the event of a Trump victory and prioritise the security and economic architecture of our region
Arthur Sinodinos - 31 Oct 2024
1/2
The state of American democracy will be sorely tested over coming weeks while the election outcome is determined.
Support for the candidates is almost evenly split along gender, education, race, demographic, religious and geographic lines. Final turnout will determine if there is blowout for one candidate.
America’s divisions are structural, there are very few independents left in American politics.
Former president Donald Trump has been adept at intuiting and articulating the concerns of Americans who feel like outsiders in their own country, deeply distrustful of its institutions and yearning for a return to an economic and social order in their own image.
Social media is exacerbating division and the culture and identity wars that hark back to an era of “normalcy” that was subverted by immigration, the expansion of rights without responsibilities and when free speech was not allegedly oppressed by a pervasive political correctness.
Trump supporters do not want Americans to fight for abstract principles such as the global rules-based order or on behalf of those who would sponge off America’s generosity. No more forever wars like Iraq and Afghanistan, home is the priority.
To supporters, Trump presents as the experienced deal-maker. He professes and makes a virtue of being “crazy” – a chaos theory of foreign policy. This is sold as a force for world peace as it will purportedly put other leaders off balance and keep them guessing about his intentions. Statecraft rests on the assertion of raw power among nation states, not alliances and partnerships or multilateralism.
Taiwan is chaos theory in action; the former president is keeping everyone guessing about his intentions. He has spoken of how Taiwan took the chip industry from America; maybe it will be defended if China invades, maybe not; maybe extra tariffs will be put on China if that happens but anyway it’s academic because Xi Jinping respects him and would not invade on his watch.
Ukraine would not have happened for the same reason. He can solve it with President Putin within days. According to this theory of foreign policy, autocrats are to be respected and courted. We should be friendly with Kim Jong-un, after all he has nuclear weapons.
On trade, Trump is an old-fashioned mercantilist – American surpluses good, deficits bad. The best bilateral deals tilt the playing field back in America’s favour. The North American Free Trade Agreement was tweaked into the Mexico-Canada agreement and sailed through the Congress with Democrat support. The backlash to free trade runs deep. But … there may be limited carve outs for countries such as Australia because we have a trade deficit with America and carry our weight on defence.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21874946
>>21874938
2/2
The Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese should make an early visit Washington in the event of a Trump victory. While many world leaders will be thinking the same, we have a special standing. In preparation for a visit, there should be pre-trip consultations with close partners in the region, particularly Japan.
Australia must leverage her agency, influence and impact in Washington across the political aisle. We have fought together for humane, universal values as loyal but not subservient allies and partners throughout the last century and this. The US alliance serves our national interest and sovereignty of decision-making. Australians are skilled in providing frank and fearless advice to leaders in Washington, without resorting to a megaphone.
We must prioritise discussion of the security and economic architecture of our region, which clearly links to our bilateral concerns. The conversation should be built around why that architecture matters to America. Why Americans should not underestimate the benefits to them of the lattice work of groupings among allies and partners in the Indo Pacific including Aukus, the Quad leaders’ meeting and other mini laterals involving America, Australia, Japan, Korea and the Philippines. Outreach to Asean and the Pacific islands also enhances American influence in the region (leaders turning up to regional summits matters in that regard).
Regional groupings valued by the participants will likely persist in the absence of the US. It has happened before. When America opted out of its own gold standard Trans-Pacific Partnership in the heat of the 2016 election, Australia, Japan and Canada resuscitated it as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership. While America refuses to enter into market access agreements, China has been entering into new regional trade agreements and is knocking on the door of the CPTPP.
Trade is a vital interest to countries such as Australia – we have a big stake in the multilateral trading system. Beggar-thy-neighbour tariff policies do not work and have perverse domestic effects. Cost pressures and inflation will rise, taking jobs away from other Americans. Joe Biden did not remove the Trump China tariffs and the trade deficit with China grew. More tariffs mean more misery all round.
The global rules-based order is not an abstraction. American security rests as much, if not more, on an order that is not inimical to American interests as it does on the size of her armed forces or nuclear arsenal. America’s unique advantage over China is her network of allies and partners, a coalition of like-minded democracies that stand for something other than narrow self-interest.
That advantage rests in large measure on America’s soft power – intangibles such as culture and values – which complements and legitimises the assertion of hard power. America does fall short of her own high standards from time to time and no country has a monopoly on morality. Over the longer run, however, without a moral foundation, the exercise of hard power reduces to the law of the jungle.
Not all wisdom resides in Washington and Australia has much to offer.
Arthur Sinodinos is a former Australian ambassador to the US. He is the partner and chair of the Asia Group’s Australia practice and was a former minister for industry, innovation and science
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/oct/31/us-election-donald-trump-victory-australia-impact-anthony-albanese
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273ca3 No.21875017
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21768193
>>21809192
Donald Trump's daughter-in-law suggests Kevin Rudd should not be Australia's ambassador after scathing critique of former president
One of Donald Trump’s closest confidantes has raised alarming questions over Kevin Rudd’s ability to serve as US Ambassador in a Trump presidency.
Tyrone Clarke - November 1, 2024
1/2
Donald Trump’s daughter-in-law, and a close confidante of the former president has strongly suggested US Ambassador Kevin Rudd should be replaced over his scathing criticisms of the Republican nominee.
Mr Rudd, who has served as Australia’s Ambassador in Washington since March 2023, has a long and sordid history mocking and ridiculing the 45th president of the United States.
He has labelled Trump the “most destructive president in history”, a “political liability” and a “problem for the world”.
The former prime minister’s comments caused alarm bells in Australia when Mr Trump emerged as the Republican frontrunner and the party’s eventual nominee with concerns he may fail to forge the necessary relationship required with the White House.
With five days left until the presidential election, the co-chair of the RNC – and Trump’s daughter-in-law – Lara Trump has reignited suggestions Mr Rudd will be put in the political freezer if the Republican wins.
Speaking to Sky News Australia’s Erin Molan on Friday, Ms Trump raised serious concerns with the ambassador’s previous assessments of her father-in-law.
She said Mr Rudd’s remarks were “pretty tough” and suggested he should be replaced.
“And I think the problem … is when people say those things and don't have a change of heart, it's kind of hard to have a position like that where you'd want to keep someone who said such nasty things about a person,” Ms Trump said.
“But I do think it would be nice to have a person who appreciates all that Donald Trump has gone through to want to serve our country at this moment.
“And obviously, that’s a little bit tough to take in and maybe we want to choose somebody else.”
The damning comments from a senior member of Trump’s inner circle are not the first suggestions from within his camp that there could be a frosty relationship with Ambassador Rudd.
In an interview with Nigel Farage on GB News in March, the former president himself said he had heard Mr Rudd was “a little bit nasty”.
“I hear he is not the brightest bulb, but I don’t know much about him.
“If he is at all hostile, he will not be there long.”
While the future of Australia’s representative in Washington is the sole responsibility of the government in Canberra, the comments now from two Trumps indicate Mr Rudd’s ability to work constructively with a Trump White House could be uncertain.
The former president’s claim that Mr Rudd “won’t be there long” led to growing concerns Mr Rudd won’t be able to effectively deal with a Trump White House.
Leading security expert Michael Shoebridge told Sky News Australia if Mr Rudd was to find it difficult to “advance Australia’s interests” in a Trump administration that would seriously damage his credibility in Washington.
Former Liberal party powerbroker Michael Kroger has also claimed no senior member of the Trump administration, if he was elected would “deal with Rudd or Australia”.
“This guy's completely persona non grata,” Mr Kroger said.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21875026
>>21875017
2/2
Mr Rudd was a vocal critic of the former president before taking up his post in Washington and has since deliberately softened his approach.
At the Republican Convention in July, Mr Rudd praised the former president and claimed his policy platform was “sharper and clearer” than when he was first elected.
His more recent assessment is a far cry from the stinging rebukes of Trump that Mr Rudd made during his time as an academic in the US and the UK.
At an address to the Oxford Union in 2017, Rudd said of then-President Trump that he was a “problem” for Australia and the world more broadly.
“Trump at present represents a political liability for both sides of Australian politics,” Mr Rudd said.
“This guy is a problem. He is an objective problem, for the world, for the region, for my country.”
Speaking to the Cambridge University Union in 2018, Mr Rudd provided a broad swipe of supporters of the then president, dismissing them as “angry white men”.
“If you looked at a Trump rally and how many angry white men there are in those rallies,” he said.
After leaving politics Mr Rudd took up residency in the United States where he joined numerous think tanks and served as an academic before becoming President of the American think tank Asia Society.
During that period Mr Rudd reserved his most scathing critiques of Trump for the foreign policy sphere.
In an address to the Asia Society in 2018, Mr Rudd ridiculed the then president’s foreign policy credentials and questioned his efficacy in negotiating a resolution to a trade war between the United States and China.
“Donald, as we know, is not, a leading intellectual force,” Mr Rudd said.
https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/donald-trumps-daughterinlaw-suggests-kevin-rudd-should-not-be-australias-ambassador-after-scathing-critique-of-former-president/news-story/1d0fd76506d9674f74d33e392fc6aa41
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdabuUwOUPk
https://x.com/MrKRudd/status/1497863031497564161
https://x.com/MrKRudd/status/1267660205547900928
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1653470971397824512
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1654297632624324609
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1664051704227065856
https://qresear.ch/?q=Kevin+Rudd
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273ca3 No.21881208
>>21415088 (pb)
‘Whole world on fire’: Inside one of Australia’s most extreme churches
Richard Baker - OCTOBER 31, 2024
1/3
For more than 65 years, Noel Hollins ran one of Australia’s most extreme and secretive Pentecostal churches. His teachings warned of imminent armageddon and he exerted total control over the lives of thousands of followers who believed him to be the apostle of God’s “one true church”.
From the late 1950s until his death in April at the age of 93, the baritone-voiced Hollins – standing just over 200 centimetres tall – led the Geelong Revival Centre and its network of more than 30 affiliated churches around Australia and the world.
Under Hollins, the church – which former members described as a cult – practised an extremely strict brand of Christianity.
“It’s a dangerous world. We are contrary to everything this world today pursues and follows and finds acceptable. We have to accept that it’s all war,” Hollins says in recordings leaked to a new investigative podcast, LiSTNR’s Secrets We Keep: Pray Harder.
“And I hope we see ourselves as soldiers. You can’t be neutral in warfare. If you run away from the enemy, the enemy will chase you.”
To become one of Hollins’ “Saints” – the title given to those whose souls have been saved – a person must be baptised by immersion and speak in tongues. For children born into the church, this happens when they enter their teens.
The prize, according to the church’s teachings, is eternal life, while the rest of humanity, including other Christians, burn in hell after a nuclear holocaust triggered by Russian aggression.
“The anger of the Lord is about to come on the world. When that day of the Lord’s anger comes upon us, this whole world is going to be on fire,” Hollins says in one leaked recording.
In another he says: “Vladimir Putin the other day claimed that they have a new weapon, a new missile that could destroy the Western world. Now, fancy even talking like that. What have we come to?”
Salvation carried one other condition: submission to Hollins’ authority.
Several former GRC members, many born into the church, have broken a lifetime’s silence to tell their stories as part of the investigation, putting a spotlight on the autocratic and mysterious religious group.
They say it is hard to explain to outsiders the extent of Hollins’ control over their lives and the mental anguish caused by his rules — which are displayed on a wall inside the church’s orange-brick headquarters in Geelong.
Under those rules, relationships and marriages, as well as where people could live, had to be approved by Hollins. Church families were also required to sever all contact with those who left.
Hollins also demanded unquestioning acceptance of his teachings, which emphasise traditional gender roles, prayer taking precedence over medicine and zero tolerance for same-sex relationships, as well as promoting racial theories embraced by the Ku Klux Klan.
The rules state: “Report anything definitely out of order, any strange behaviour, doctrine or situation within the Assembly … any person stood down from fellowship, temporarily or permanently, noted to be visited or comforted by Assembly members … young people who desire to pair off must notify the Pastor.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21881211
>>21881208
2/3
Celeste, who asked that her surname not be published, is a former member who joined the church as a girl and returned again as a single mother before leaving for good.
“You don’t go above Pastor [Hollins],” she said. “He is everything. He is the true prophet. He is the law.”
Other former church members accused Hollins and the pastors serving under him of practising a destructive form of coercive control, in which members are kept in a “spiritual prison” because of the threat of losing their family and salvation if they questioned anything or decided to leave.
Ryan Carey is the son of a former senior church elder and left the church a few years ago after turning 40.
He said he could no longer face raising his two daughters in a church where they could be married off to a man not of their choosing or have restrictions placed on how far they went in school or if they could work.
“The hardest thing about being in a cult is figuring out you’re in a cult,” he said.
“We were taught the world was to be feared. We weren’t really living for this life or living for the next. You grow up with a fear that virtually armageddon was going to happen. And if you weren’t right with God, you were going to burn forever.”
Carey said his decision to leave had cost him his relationship with his mother and sister, who remain in the church.
The church also faces accusations of child sexual abuse going back decades, as well as extreme physical punishment of children under Hollins’ policy of “spare the rod, spoil the child”.
Former members spoke of men in the church being empowered to discipline children through beatings, strappings and choking.
In situations where children did not have fathers at home, other church men would be appointed to provide discipline, former members claim.
“I was down at the shopping centre the other day and there was a baby. It wasn’t crying. It was screaming. Possibly mother wouldn’t buy it … a packet of Snickers or something,” Hollins says in a leaked recording.
“You know the lolly? [laugh] Just a tantrum. It wasn’t crying. It was just screaming in frustration. And then over the other side, another child started to do the same.
“All he needed was a bit of a slap on the legs. ‘Stop that, or I’ll give you something to cry about’.”
In isolated cases, children in the church have allegedly suffered life-changing injuries, including pelvic damage to a toddler and deafness in one ear to another child.
Celeste claims her autistic toddler son was beaten by a man in the church a few years ago.
“He ripped him up by his arm and just whacked him so frickin’ hard. And [my child] just screamed. And I was just sitting there mortified. But I was too scared to say anything because, well, he’s a brother [church member]. They hold higher power than us,” she said.
“I just sat there in sort of silence, but utterly shocked. And I reflect on that now. And I hate myself for it because I should’ve defended my son. But he’s crying … and he [the man] gets in front of you and said, ‘If you don’t stop crying, by the time I count to three, I’m going to smack you again.’ And he counts to three and he whacks him again.”
Celeste says she was frozen and felt powerless.
“I was just looking at my little boy, just like, ‘Oh, my goodness, I can’t. I can’t do this. I can’t hit him. I can’t be the mum they want me to be.’”
Celeste is seeking legal advice about compensation from the church to cover her son’s medical expenses from injuries she claims were sustained during the beating.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21881213
>>21881211
3/3
Another former member, Robert Lockyer, remembers his father being in tears as he whipped him.
“‘Spare the rod and spoil the child.’ That was spat out almost once a week or once a month as a sermon … that you must beat discipline into these children,” he said.
“Pastor Noel Hollins has told my dad that he must punish me. He must beat that wickedness out of me or he’ll spoil me and I’ll end up being the devil’s child.
“So my dad would get upset because I was crying and he was making me cry. He was feeling frustrated. And it was the frustration building up in him as a 60-year-old man saying, ‘Why am I whipping my son to tears?’”
Despite the teachings and incidents that former church members allege have taken place for decades in the GRC and its affiliates, Hollins and his churches have largely avoided public scrutiny.
Unlike other better-known Pentecostal churches, such as Hillsong and the Horizon Church, the GRC has no online or social media presence. The talks given by Hollins and other pastors are not made publicly available.
The former GRC members who feature in the investigation said they were sharing their private and painful stories because they want the public, authorities and politicians to know what goes on inside the insular church.
Hollins repeatedly declined requests for interviews from this masthead until his death earlier this year.
“I understand you’ve got a job to do, but I don’t wish to be a part of it,” Hollins said when contacted by telephone last year.
His replacement as church leader, Pastor Brian Griggs, has not responded to requests for comment.
The allegations of historical abuse at the church dating back 50 years are unconnected to church member Todd Hubers Van Assenraad, who pleaded guilty in August to 16 child sex abuse charges involving nine children.
This masthead does not suggest his victims were from church families nor that Hollins or the new leadership of the GRC were aware of his offending. Hubers Van Assenraad is yet to be sentenced.
The company behind the church, the Geelong Revival Centre Pty Ltd, owns property in Geelong and Ocean Grove worth more than $15 million.
The GRC is registered as a charity with the Australian Charities and Not-for-Profits Commission, meaning it gets tax exemptions.
If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline (13 11 14), the Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) and Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800).
https://www.1800respect.org.au/
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/
https://www.kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.theage.com.au/national/whole-world-on-fire-inside-one-of-australia-s-most-extreme-churches-20241029-p5km8g.html
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273ca3 No.21881239
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. Six Australians allege they were sexually assaulted by former Harrods boss Mohamed Al Fayed, as 421 people come forward with allegations
Patrick Martin and Bridget Rollason - 2 November 2024
1/2
Six Australian women allege they were sexually assaulted by late billionaire Mohamed Al Fayed, with more than 400 people contacting the legal team representing the accusers.
The Egyptian businessman, who died last year at the age of 94, is accused of multiple counts of rape, attempted rape and sexual assault by women who worked for him.
He always denied similar accusations before his death, but a BBC documentary unearthed new allegations last month.
A lawyer for the accusers, Bruce Drummond KC, told the ABC that five of the Australian women who accuse Mr Al Fayed of sexual assault were employed at Harrods, the luxury London department store Mr Al Fayed owned between 1985 and 2010.
He said the other Australian woman was working for a supplier to Harrods. All the women were in their twenties.
"It was the most wonderful thing they had, quite understandably, working for this amazing store, working for this very powerful individual who was a billionaire … then a lot of them, after they had been subjected to this horrific ordeal, fled [back to Australia]," Mr Drummond KC said.
He said the women weren't concerned that Mr Al Fayed wasn't alive to face justice.
"It's about seeing justice in their own eyes and justice for these ladies means accountability, which means that we out him for the monster he was … it means setting a precedent so young girls in the future don't go through the same thing," he said.
The legal team representing the accusers, the Justice for Harrods Survivors (JFHS), said alleged victims have come forward from the United States, Spain, Malaysia, South Africa, Japan, Denmark, Canada, Australia and the UK.
"That, in our opinion is an industrial scale abuse, abuse that could only have been perpetrated with a system that enabled the abuse to happen," he said.
"This … is the worst case of corporate sexual abuse of women the world has ever known."
He said alleged victims included the daughter of a former US ambassador to Britain and the daughter of a well-known soccer player, without providing their names.
The JFHS legal team was also investigating claims Mr Al Fayed sexually assaulted several children, including an 11-year-old.
"He's a vile monster, there's no other way to describe it," he said.
Legal action against Harrods underway
Dean Armstrong KC, who was leading the JFHS group, said that hundreds of alleged victims and some 20 witnesses had contacted the group with allegations of misconduct.
"The sheer scale of abuse perpetrated by Al Fayed, and facilitated by those around him, sadly, continues to grow," Mr Armstrong KC told a press conference in London.
He said the first statement of claim had been sent to Harrods on Wednesday, local time, officially starting the legal process.
"It will be followed by hundreds more," he said, adding that the group had received a £1 billion ($1.96b) backing from a legal firm to work through the claims.
"If we are pushed, if our survivors are pushed, into having to defend themselves in order to achieve justice, we are ready. We are resourced and we are determined," he said.
Mr Al Fayed was a household name in the UK thanks to his wealth, eccentricity and connection to Princess Diana.
His son Dodi was romantically involved with the Princess, but both were killed in a car crash in Paris in 1997.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21881245
>>21881239
2/2
'Team of enablers' allowed alleged abuses to occur
Lawyers said there were reports of Mr Al Fayed assaulting women at Fulham Football Club, which he owned for 16 years, along with abuses at his Surrey estate in England, in aircraft, at the Ritz Paris hotel and Harrods department store.
Mr Armstrong indicated on Wednesday that other sporting organisations linked to the alleged abuses would also be named in due course.
He was critical of the response to the scandal from Harrods, Fulham FC and the Al Fayed estate, calling on them all to "do the right thing".
He added he expected the "team of enablers" that allowed the alleged abuses to occur throughout the businessman's network to be named and prosecuted in the future.
Earlier this month, former Fulham Football Club captain Ronnie Gibbons came forward with allegations that she was assaulted twice by Mr Al Fayed.
In a pre-recorded message on Wednesday, she thanked all women who had come forward.
"I know by speaking out we are making it harder for this behaviour to be tolerated anywhere," she said.
A former manager of the Fulham women's team told the BBC last month that that players were not allowed to be left alone with Mr Al Fayed, after members of staff became aware that the late billionaire "liked young, blonde girls".
The club previously said the allegations aired in the BBC documentary were "disturbing".
The new owners of Harrods confirmed earlier this month that they were in talks with some 250 people seeking compensation for the alleged abuse.
Legal teams representing accusers have been critical of the Harrods compensation scheme, with lawyers saying many alleged victims don't feel comfortable returning to the store where the alleged abuse took place.
Store management previously said it was utterly appalled by the allegations.
London's Metropolitan Police said investigations were ongoing into Mr Al Fayed after some 60 people recently came forward with allegations.
JFHS lawyers said other police forces in the UK were investigating other allegations related to Mr Al Fayed.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-01/six-australians-allege-mohamed-al-fayed-sexually-assaulted-them/104546928
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=armtKVvXiiI
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273ca3 No.21881260
>>21793734
Daniel Andrews’ triple-0 call from car accident involving wife and Ryan Meuleman revealed
Daniel Andrews’ triple-0 call from a contentious car crash with his wife can be revealed for the first time as the bombshell recording raises new questions about the accident.
Stephen Drill - November 2, 2024
1/2
Daniel Andrews’ triple-0 call from his infamous car accident can be revealed, with the former premier telling emergency services “we’ve hit him.”
The audio directly contradicts a police statement the former premier made a month after the crash in which he said “the cyclist hit our vehicle” and raises further questions about the accident that has dogged the former premier for more than a decade.
The Herald Sun has audio of the phone call that Mr Andrews made following a collision with a teenage cyclist in 2013 which is at the centre of a bitter legal battle.
Mr Andrews and his wife Catherine, who was driving at the time, have consistently held that cyclist Ryan Meuleman was at fault, with Mr Andrews telling reporters in 2017 that the teen was “moving at speed’’ when he “absolutely T-boned the car”.
And in his statement to police signed on February 5, 2013 at Springvale police station, Mr Andrews said “I want to make it clear - the cyclist hit our vehicle”.
Ryan Meuleman spent 10 days in hospital as he recovered from broken ribs, a punctured lung and had some of his spleen removed after being flown to the Royal Children’s Hospital.
The story was exposed by the Herald Sun.
In the call on January 7, 2013, Mr Andrews describes the accident.
“We’ve turned right into Ridley Street and a kid’s come flying through on the bike path and we’ve hit him,” Mr Andrews says.
“He’s a teenager…I’d say he’d be……he’d be 15.”
The operator asked how many people needed an ambulance and asked where the teenager was and who was with him.
“I’m just about 10 metres away, trying to get a mobile phone signal. My wife is with him at the moment,” he said.
The operator also asked if anyone else had called an ambulance.
“Was someone else on the phone to the ambulance maybe?”, the operator said.
Mr Andrews replied: “Ahhh, I don’t think so…ahh, my wife, my wife might be.”
The operator added: “No worries….We’ve just had a job pop in from 10 Ridley Street, Blairgowrie, for a similar thing, for a bike vs car.”
Mr Andrews said: “Well, that’s the one.”
Mr Andrews had initially sought to block access to his phone records but later backflipped. Those records however are yet to be located and provided to the lawyers for Ryan Meuleman, who is suing Slater and Gordon over the way they handled his compensation claim.
Mr Andrews was opposition leader at the time of the accident.
Mrs Andrews was not breath tested and there were questions on how the police handled the incident at Blairgowrie on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula.
Mr Andrews drove the car away from the scene.
The long serving premier hit out what he claimed were “appalling conspiracy theories” in September following reports that the investigation into the crash was “deeply flawed”.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21881269
>>21881260
2/2
Ryan Meuleman’s father Peter Meuleman called on Victorian police to reopen their investigation and said it was “disturbing” to hear the audio of the phone call.
“It’s really quite a chilling piece of audio,” he told The Herald Sun.
“It makes you relive it again and again, each time I hear it I picture my son going through it. And imagining him lying on the road.
“It makes me angry. That call was made six and half minutes after the crash. That’s a big gap.
“If I was involved in an accident the first thing you do is call triple zero.
“The case is about enabling my son to move forward with his life.
“I care about vindication for my son and getting justice for my son.
“He hasn’t been capable of holding down a job. That’s the mental scarring that is the legacy of this accident.”
He responded to criticism he or his wife had not contacted the Meuleman family by responding: “Now, let’s just be really clear about this, my wife, on the night, only a few hours after the incident, spoke with police, she spoke with the Royal Children’s Hospital. They couldn’t tell her much but redirected her back to police. I think she’s had five conversations with police in a week getting an update each time of his condition. So we’ve been well informed.”
Mr Andrews has stated he was sitting in the front passenger seat of the vehicle while his children were in the rear seat when the teenager careered over the bonnet and on to the windscreen.
The Andrews’ were returning from a trip to the beach, Mr Andrews told media, and his wife had “absolutely” not been drinking.
“The police did not breath test her, no. I’ve not been involved in an accident like that before. I don’t know how usual or unusual that is,” he said.
“This was one o’clock in the afternoon. We had three little kids in the car.
“She spent quite a lot of time with the Victoria Police. They were on the scene before the ambulance.
“She’s co-operated with police, there was every opportunity and she would have not difficulty in being breath tested if they asked her to.”
Ryan, in 2013, said he had looked left and right before entering the intersection and didn’t see a vehicle approaching.
“I think it was an accident. I only saw them for a split second and they hit me. Very scary,” he said.
“She (Mrs Andrews) was yelling ‘Help’ and ‘Call an ambulance’, ‘You’ll be all right.”
This week Victorian MP David Limbrick, under parliamentary privilege, said Daniel Andrews had admitted in the call that “he hit” the cyclist, which is now being described as #bikeboyscandal.
Mr Andrews and his wife issued a joint statement on Saturday saying: “The recording confirms the previous statements we’ve made on this matter. The cyclist came flying through from the bike path at Ridley Street and T-boned our car at speed.
“This matter has been comprehensively investigated over many years by Victoria Police Professional Standards Command and IBAC. Furthermore, the cyclist’s current legal proceedings have nothing to do with us. We are not a party to them.
While we are sorry that the cyclist was injured in the accident, we did nothing wrong.”
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-victoria/daniel-andrews-triple0-call-from-car-accident-involving-wife-and-ryan-meuleman-revealed/news-story/ba541a80d142f2661a56ef09938d55de
https://x.com/BikeBoyScandal/status/1852285559395557880
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273ca3 No.21888273
>>21296698 (pb)
>>21793734
>>21881260
Daniel Andrews to be recognised by Zionist movement with Jerusalem Medal
Chip Le Grand - November 3, 2024
Former Victorian premier Daniel Andrews will on Sunday be lauded by the Zionist movement as a “true and constant friend” to the Jewish community and Israel.
Andrews will receive the Jerusalem Medal at a gathering of Jewish community, business and political leaders, which for security purposes is being held at an undisclosed location in Melbourne.
The medal is given those who make an outstanding contribution towards strengthening Jewish communities in their own country and relations with Israel.
Andrews belonged to Labor’s Socialist Left, a faction that has long been critical of Israel’s actions against Palestinian people, including military occupation and human rights violations.
However, during his 10 years as premier, Victoria made Holocaust education mandatory in secondary schools, established a trade office in Tel Aviv, prohibited Nazi symbols and gestures and was the first Australian jurisdiction to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism.
Zionist Federation of Australia president Jeremy Leibler will tell the Sunday night gathering that Andrews is “living proof that clear, consistent and principled leadership in this space is eminently possible”.
“We gather to recognise a true and constant friend to the Australian Jewish community and to Israel at a time when such friendships are more important and more precious than ever.”
Leibler nominated Andrews, Victoria’s longest serving Labor premier and celebrated for his progressive social reforms, for the award in June 2023 – prior to his retirement from politics and Hamas’ October 7, 2023 atrocities.
Previous Australian winners of the Jerusalem Medal include former prime ministers Bob Hawke, John Howard, Julia Gillard and Scott Morrison, former foreign minister Alexander Downer, Victorian state MPs David Southwick and Marsha Thomson and journalist Greg Sheridan.
Leibler will at the awards ceremony lament the fracturing of bipartisan support for Israel and the rise in antisemitism in Australia since the October 7 attacks.
“For the first time since the State of Israel was established, and in the moment that Israel and Australia faces these challenges, there is deep concern among us that the enduring, bipartisan support of Israel, and zero tolerance of antisemitism, is at risk.”
More than 1200 people were killed during Hamas’ attack on Israel in 2023, during which 250 were abducted by its militants and taken to Gaza as hostages.
Since Israel began its military operations in response to destroy Hamas and recover the hostages, the Health Ministry in Gaza reports that 43,203 people have been killed in the occupied territory.
The year-long conflict has created on ongoing, humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and prompted accusations of war crimes against Hamas and Israel’s government.
The Australian government, which since early in the conflict has called for a ceasefire, supports Palestine’s bid for full UN membership but abstained from a recent UN resolution demanding that Israel withdraw from the West Bank and Gaza.
In Australia, social ructions created by the war have split universities, arts organisations and media companies and driven a rift between Jewish philanthropists and the progressive organisations and causes they fund.
The mass doxing of hundreds of Jewish people working in creative industries prompted federal Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus to introduce legislation to outlaw the publication of private, identifying information with malicious intent.
Some protesters at weekly, pro-Palestinian rallies staged in central Melbourne have in recent weeks displayed public support for proscribed terrorist groups Hezbollah and Hamas.
Since leaving the state parliament, Andrews has agreed to lead a Zionist Federation of Australia business delegation to Israel and become a patron of the newly formed Labor Friends of Israel. Speaking at that group’s launch, Andrews noted that Israel was the only place in the Middle East which supported unionism, equal rights for women and LGBTI diversity.
“I have always supported Israel and the Jewish community,” he said when he joined the group. “I am appalled by the rise of antisemitism in Australia and want to ensure the Labor Party stays true to its values of respect and equality for all Australians.”
The Jerusalem Medal was instituted in 1990 by the World Zionist Organisation, with nominations made by the movement’s national and state-based federations.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/andrews-to-be-recognised-by-zionist-movement-with-jerusalem-medal-20241101-p5kn4w.html
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273ca3 No.21888295
>>21739533 (pb)
>>21773932
>>21874872
‘Job not done’: Don Farrell flies out to seal end of lobster, beef bans amid AUKUS concerns
WILL GLASGOW - 3 November 2024
Trade Minister Don Farrell has set off for Shanghai to press his Chinese counterpart to remove the remnants of Beijing’s $20bn trade coercion campaign as China’s state media fulminates over Australia’s “increasingly aggressive” AUKUS posture.
Late on Sunday, Senator Farrell was set to meet with China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao in Shanghai.
The two-day trip closely follows a visit to Beijing late last week by some of corporate Australia’s most senior figures, who met with Chinese leaders in the Great Hall of the People.
People familiar with the Trade Minister’s agenda said his top priorities were to get assurances that China would honour its deal to allow the resumption of Australia’s live lobster trade by the end of the year and to secure an end of bans on a clutch of Australian beef abattoirs.
“We can’t rest on our laurels. The job is not done,” Senator Farrell said before flying from Australia early on Sunday.
“I will continue to press for the full resumption of normal bilateral trade,” he said.
The visit continues the Albanese government’s increasingly regular contact with Chinese leaders and ministers and follows a visit by Jim Chalmers to Beijing in late September.
Senator Farrell’s visit comes as Chinese state media again warned Australia about the consequence of its AUKUS defence co-operation pact after the Albanese government last week announced a new plan to build a missile manufacturing hub.
China’s most authoritative English language newspaper, the China Daily, said Australia’s missile and nuclear-powered submarine acquisitions were “beyond the country’s defensive needs”.
“This has called into question the purpose of AUKUS and Australia’s role in the grouping, which is displaying an increasingly aggressive character,” the China Daily editorialised.
The party-state masthead warned that Canberra was “continuing to wade into dangerous waters”.
Tension between Australia’s huge trade relationship with China and Canberra’s concerns about Beijing’s assertive behaviour in the Indo-Pacific have continued during the Albanese government’s first term.
In September, China’s People’s Liberal Army blasted a missile over the Pacific for the first time in more than forty years hours before Dr Chalmers arrived in Beijing.
Senator Farrell’s portfolio has made him one of the most upbeat federal ministers on relations with China.
On his watch, Australia’s exports to China reached a fresh peak in 2023 of $203bn as Beijing allowed the resumption of previously blocked goods, including coal, barley and timber.
On Monday, the Trade Minister will lead Australia’s delegation at the China International Import Expo, the world’s largest import trade show.
More than 260 Australian companies will exhibit at the trade show, a record turnout.
Businesses from New South Wales, Queensland, West Australia, Tasmania, the Northern Territory and the ACT will be housed in the “Australian pavilion”.
However, continuing a legacy of Dan Andrews’ Labour government, Victorian business will instead showcase in a separate “Victoria pavilion”.
Over the weekend, Foreign Minister Penny Wong appointed former West Australian Premier Mark McGowan to the board of the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations to decidedly mixed reviews.
Along with Mr Andrews, Mr McGowan was one of the most prominent critics of the Morrison government as Australia’s relationship with China imploded in 2020.
Late last week, the Australia China Business Council led a high-level corporate delegation to Beijing for meetings with Chinese leadership figures, including Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, Chinese vice premier He Lifeng and deputy chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade Zhang Shougang.
The corporate delegation included Rio Tinto CEO Jakob Strausholm, BHP executive Geraldine Slattery, Fortescue CEO Dino Otranto, Cochlear CEO Dig Hewitt, King & Wood Mallesons chief executive partner Renae Lattey and ANZ’s China country head Thomas Horn.
“Our discussions with Chinese leaders reaffirm the importance of maintaining strong economic ties between our two countries,” said Australia China Business Council president David Olsson.
“While Australian companies are building diversified supply chains to strengthen resilience, China remains a vital partner in our economic future,” he said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/job-not-done-don-farrell-flies-out-to-seal-end-of-lobster-beef-bans-amid-aukus-concerns/news-story/f7382691c913e47ebd6313f3661fa19b
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273ca3 No.21888304
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21875017
Ambassador of Australia to the United States Kevin Rudd will remain in post regardless of US election outcome
Sky News can reveal the Australian government will not replace Kevin Rudd as Ambassador to the US regardless of the election outcome, following recent criticisms from the Trump family.
Oscar Godsell - November 3, 2024
Sky News can reveal that even if Donald Trump wins power in the US this week, Kevin Rudd will remain Australia's ambassador in Washington.
Sunday Agenda host Andrew Clennell revealed the decision to retain Mr Rudd, after Lara Trump told Sky News host Erin Molan that Rudd should be replaced if Trump wins.
The Australian Ambassador has previously been scrutinised for his assessments of Trump after he labelled the former president as “the most destructive president in history”.
Mr Rudd's outspoken criticisms of Trump have raised concerns about his ability to develop a constructive relationship with a potential Trump administration.
However, sources within the Australian government ruled out changes to the ambassadorship as it would appear as if Australia were controlled by another country.
In an interview in March, the Republican presidential candidate described Mr Rudd as “nasty” and “not the brightest bulb”.
“I don’t know much about him. If he’s at all hostile, he will not be there long,” Trump told British politician and broadcaster Nigel Farage.
Mr Rudd had been a vocal critic of the former president before he began his role in Washington but has since deliberately softened his rhetoric.
The Australian Ambassador told Sky News in July that Trump has demonstrated “greater discipline” than in the past.
“The policy line is sharper and clearer than it was last time round… The bottom line is you see greater discipline in the Trump campaign than you did back then,” Mr Rudd said.
As one of the United States’ closest allies, the dynamics of the Australia-US relationship have been bound up by the country’s electoral decision.
https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/ambassador-of-australia-to-the-united-states-kevin-rudd-will-remain-in-post-regardless-of-us-election-outcome/news-story/9576ad9b38941641f2e0bd7b3de28650
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X58KDAroXD4
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273ca3 No.21897325
>>21888273
Daniel Andrews tells Jewish donors to cut funds to antisemites
Chip Le Grand - November 3, 2024
Former premier Daniel Andrews has urged Jewish families and organisations who provide financial support to the arts, cultural and other philanthropic causes to defund recipients who refuse to denounce antisemitism.
In rare public comments since retiring as Victoria’s longest-serving Labor premier, Andrews weighed directly into the dilemma confronting Jewish philanthropists by urging them to dump their support for creative endeavours which had remained silent about, or promulgated, hatred towards Jewish people since the October 7, 2023, attacks.
The Hamas atrocities in southern Israel last year, which killed about 1200 people, and Israel’s deadly and protracted military operations in Gaza and Lebanon in response, which have killed more than 40,000, have driven a wedge between some of Australia’s leading supporters of the arts and the organisations they fund.
“If people won’t speak out against antisemitism, defund them. If people are happy to take your money while being antisemites, defund them,” Andrews told a gathering of Jewish community leaders in Melbourne on Sunday night.
“If you want to support Hamas, then get them to pay your bills, get them to fund your programs and build your buildings. I am serious. We are beyond tropes. Silence and much worse are only possible if there are no consequences.”
Andrews said no community was more generous than the Jewish community and “no state has a better developed culture, endowment and philanthropic giving than Victoria”.
“I would ask each of you respectfully, continue to review your giving. Check and check again that those who so happily benefit from your generosity are not in real terms pretend friends or worse, actually working against the Jewish community and decency itself,” he said.
Andrews made his comments after he was awarded the Jerusalem Prize, bestowed by the World Zionist Organisation, the Zionist Federation of Australia and Zionism Victoria for his “outstanding contribution” towards strengthening the Jewish community in Victoria and relationships with Israel.
Those in attendance at the Central Synagogue in Caulfield South included Israeli ambassador to Australia Amir Maimon, federal Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus, federal Labor MP Josh Burns and state Liberal MP David Southwick.
Zionist Federation of Australia president Jeremy Leibler said Andrews’ support for Israel had transcended politics and geography.
Andrews’ comments come after a series of controversies involving artists and others in the creative industries over expressions of support for Palestinians or criticism of Israel’s conduct in the war.
The former premier, a staunch supporter of Israel since he was first elected to state parliament in 2002, told the event that his views were informed by studying the history and politics of the Middle East at Monash University.
“My support for Israel has always been grounded in simple and fundamental logic,” Andrews said. “Israel is the only democracy in a despotic region. The only place with gender equality at law, the only place where people are free and safe to love who they love, criticise their government if they wish and organise in their workplaces.
“Over these last 12 months, I, like all of you, have been angered and saddened by those who know nothing of the history of this region yet opine about its future, those who know little of Israel or the Jewish people, yet feel obliged and able to criticise, and perhaps worst of all, those whose rank antisemitism has been exposed by the events of antisemitism and the conflict.
“The ferocity and brazenness of anti-Jewish and anti-Israel sentiment is like nothing that I have seen in my lifetime. It is a stain on the nation, and it shames us all.”
Andrews related the story of recently walking through the city and seeing a pro-Palestine protester wearing a rainbow T-shirt.
“She was obviously a supporter of the LGBTQI+ community, as I am. Try wearing that T-shirt in Gaza and see how that works out for you,” he said.
Andrews said he would “publicly and loudly” support any Jewish family or organisation which rescinded philanthropic funding to an organisation because of its views towards Israel or Jewish people.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/victoria/daniel-andrews-tells-jewish-donors-to-cut-funds-to-antisemites-20241103-p5knj9.html
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273ca3 No.21906160
>>21682618 (pb)
>>21695224 (pb)
>>21761808
Provocative anti-Israel T-shirt sees man arrested on Australia's most iconic beach
ASHLEY NICKEL - 3 November 2024
A man has been arrested at Australia's best-known beach for wearing an allegedly 'offensive' anti-Israel shirt.
The man, who is yet to be formally identified, was confronted by police at Sydney's Bondi Beach for wearing the 'provocative' shirt about 12.50pm on Sunday.
The shirt featured Israel's flag alongside the words 'f*ck Israel' and 'f*ck zionism'.
The scenes unfolded in front of large crowds of beachgoers who had flocked to Bondi to escape the heat as temperatures soared into the 30s on Sunday.
Australian Jewish Association chief executive Robert Gregory claimed that the man, who is understood to be the son of a former Labor minister, had allegedly been seen wearing the shirt multiple times before his arrest.
He added that many locals had encountered him in the t-shirt, as Bondi and surrounding areas in Sydney's east are the hub of the Jewish community in the city.
'The Jewish community has faced a wave of intimidation and vandalism over the past year,' Mr Gregory told Daily Mail Australia.
'This man has been repeatedly wearing a shirt designed to annoy residents in Sydney's east.
'Day after day, he is spotted in neighbourhoods where many proud Jewish people live, including Double Bay and Bondi.
'Given his background, it's hard to believe he doesn't own another shirt. Something must be seriously lacking to cause a man of that age to be so desperate for attention.'
A NSW Police spokesperson confirmed to Daily Mail Australia the man was taken to Waverley Police Station and charged with two counts of behaving in offensive manner in/near public place and one count of stalk/intimidate intend fear physical harm.
Mr Gregory claimed his shirt had caused great distress to Jewish families in Sydney's eastern suburbs.
'He presents as an ugly sight, particularly for families and children, who have been confronted by the hatred and swear words he is parading around,' he said.
The man was bailed to appear before Waverley Local Court on January 22, 2025.
Daily Mail Australia has contacted the man for comment.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14034941/Bondi-arrest-Jewish-shirt.html
https://www.instagram.com/austjewishassociation/p/DB5RmyAxF8D/
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273ca3 No.21906184
>>21860582
Satellite down: nation’s biggest ever space program dumped over multibillion-dollar cost
BEN PACKHAM - November 03, 2024
1/2
The Albanese government is poised to cancel a planned $7bn military-grade satellite communications system it gave the green light to just 18 months ago because there is no money in the Defence budget to pay for it.
US defence giant Lockheed Martin was selected in April last year to deliver what was to be the nation’s biggest-ever space project – a hardened sovereign system of three to five satellites boasting the highest-level protection against cyber and electronic warfare attacks.
But The Australian can reveal the government will announce early this week – under the cover of the Melbourne Cup and the US election – that the project will not proceed.
It’s understood the government will blame the decision on multiple factors including rising costs and advances in technology that might offer a better system.
The system was to use geo-stationary satellites to create an uncrackable data network across the Australian Defence Force, providing communications and data links for its advanced fighter jets, naval assets and the army’s land forces.
The planned long-term budget for the project was put by the government at $5.2bn to $7.2bn, but it had approved only $150m to deliver it from its decade-long, $330bn capability investment plan.
The project, which was set to create 200-300 direct jobs, was to include multiple ground stations across Australia, an advanced satellite management system, and two new operations centres. Defence Minister Richard Marles’s office declined to comment on the decision when contacted by The Australian.
But a defence industry source said: “There is no money. There needs to be money to actually start the program.”
Another source said the planned budget for the project was insufficient for Lockheed Martin to deliver it.
The company beat Airbus, Northrop Grumman and Optus to be named preferred tenderer for the project, known as JP9102. It was yet to sign a contract for the work.
The government and Defence officials are set to be grilled over its cancellation during a Senate Estimates hearing this week.
Its axing follows the government’s decision last year to cancel a $1.2bn NASA-backed satellite program to monitor climate change, natural disasters and maritime threats.
The Australian has also previously revealed Defence spent $40m of taxpayers’ money on two Airbus satellites to provide surveillance, positioning and communications capabilities before killing off the project.
Defence head of space systems Air Vice-Marshal David Scheul said last year that the project would deliver the first Australian-controlled military satellite system covering the Indo-Pacific region.
“Currently across Defence there is up to 89 capabilities which depend on satellite communications,” he said.
“Once delivered, the new system will increase the resilience, agility and flexibility of Defence’s military satellite capability.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21906188
>>21906184
2/2
Lockheed Martin has been the government’s go-to defence contractor in recent times, winning a slew of major contracts and selection to lead the government’s $74bn guided weapons and explosive ordnance program.
The company had promised a system “defined by its extensibility, agility and resilience”.
“We are bringing to bear all of Lockheed Martin’s company-wide capabilities as well as our commitment to supporting allied nations to provide an operationally proven system that meets mission needs in terms of coverage, capacity, resilience and extensibility of the constellation,” Lockheed Martin executive vice-president for space Robert Lightfoot said after the company was selected.
Australian Strategic Policy Institute senior analyst Malcolm Davis last year declared the satellite project represented the “beginning of a transition to resilient space capabilities for the ADF”, and would be one of the nation’s most important space projects.
“This will transform ADF communications, with the satellites providing high-bandwidth, high-speed digital connectivity across a vast region, from the central Indian Ocean to Solomon Islands, and from the Arctic to the Antarctic,” Dr Davis wrote in April 2023.
“This coverage will provide ADF operations across much of the Indo-Pacific region with robust command-and-control networks.”
Dr Davis wrote that the project could “firmly open the door to a larger role for Australia’s commercial space sector”. “The large satellites at the project’s core need to be seen as the beginning of a transition to resilient space capabilities for the ADF,” he wrote.
“The JP9102 satellites may, if they are based on open-architecture design or software-based systems, take advantage of future on-orbit servicing technologies that could extend their operational life and enhance their capabilities over time.”
The looming cancellation of the project is yet another blow to the government’s plans to re-arm the Australian Defence Force to prepare for a potential war with China, and comes as five of the navy’s six Collins-class submarines are out of action.
The Weekend Australian reported only one of the ageing boats is currently operational as corrosion problems, maintenance delays and long-running industrial action wreak havoc on the fleet’s availability.
There are also concerns that a fire at British defence giant BAE Systems’ yard in northern England will set back the AUKUS submarine program, which will be dependent on the UK’s submarine industry.
The government has insisted it is spending more than ever on new weapons, pledging an additional $5.7bn over the next four years in the last federal budget, and $50.3bn over the decade. But its capability investment plan has been heavily criticised for its opacity, offering few details on planned budgets and timelines.
Defence Industry Minister Pat Conroy last week announced a new factory to domestically produce 4000 missiles a year, saying it would propel the ADF into the “missile age”.
But critics warned the weapons slated for production had insufficient range and would arrive too late to make a difference to Beijing’s strategic plans for Taiwan.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/satellite-down-nations-biggest-ever-space-program-dumped-by-defence-over-multibillion-cost/news-story/7c173db01949f59c3530ce6d0a72191e
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273ca3 No.21906209
>>21888295
Chinese Commerce minister gives Don Farrell ‘personal assurances’ Australian beef, lobster bans to end
WILL GLASGOW - 4 November 2024
Don Farrell has declared trade with China could grow by another $75bn, as he called for more ambition in the economic relationship after receiving a “personal” assurance from the Chinese Commerce Minister that bans on Australian beef and lobster were likely to end before the federal election.
Speaking exclusively to The Australian on the rooftop of Shanghai’s Peace Hotel, the Trade Minister outlined a bullish outlook that departed from the government’s previous focus on “diversification” from China.
While Senator Farrell’s two-day China trip meant he missed the Adelaide event that kicked off Anthony Albanese’s re-election campaign, the factional heavyweight used the Shanghai backdrop to add to the Labor pitch.
“Trade has been a great success story over the life of this government,” he told The Australian on Monday, adding that thanks to the Albanese government’s “patience and persistence”, Australia’s trade ties could grow significantly in the coming years.
“It was $327bn last year. Why can’t it be $400bn?” he said.
“We can do that, but simultaneously we can increase our exports to other countries as a defensive mechanism.”
The Trade Minister said his department had helped to muster a record number of Australian attendees at the China International Import Expo, the world’s biggest trade show, which is been held in Shanghai this week.
Of the 250-odd Australian businesses, 100 are displaying at CIIE for the first time. About 30 of those are entirely new to the Chinese market.
”These are companies that we’ve encourage, through Austrade, my department, to get off their bums, hop on a plane and come here and sell,” the Trade Minister said.
“We know from the results last year how much trade was done. I’d expect a better result than that. Having said that, we know the dangers of putting all your eggs in the one basket. So we’re focused on other countries.”
He noted that India, Britain and Southeast Asia had been particular priorities for the government’s “China-plus” strategy.
Late on Sunday, the Trade Minister met with China’s Commerce Minister, Wang Wentao, for 45 minutes.
Senator Farrell said Mr Wang was a “very influential fellow in the Chinese constellation”, who frequently travelled with China’s President and Premier. It was their ninth meeting. “I have met with him more than any other Australian minister has met with one of their counterparts,” Senator Farrell said. “And I think, more significantly, I’ve met with him more than I’ve met with any other trade minister.”
At the meeting, the Chinese Commerce Minister said the live lobster trade would be restored in time for Australian fishermen to meet China’s lucrative Lunar New Year holiday.
“He reaffirmed the commitment of the [Chinese] Premier and the [Australian] Prime Minister to resolve all of the outstanding lobster issues before Christmas,” Senator Farrell said.
“As far as he’s concerned, everything is moving in the right direction.”
Along with the live lobster trade, two Australian beef abattoirs are all that remains of a trade coercion campaign that once ran to $20bn a year.
The Trade Minister also revealed that Chinese abattoir inspectors had been in Australia in recent weeks.
“Chinese meat inspectors routinely visit Australian abattoirs. And they’ve recently been in Australia,” Senator Farrell told The Australian.
“And I’m hopeful, for those two, the resumption will occur quickly. The minister said he would take a personal interest in the outcome of this.”
Beijing’s readout of the meeting said the two had a “pragmatic and constructive discussion” on ways to deepen the Australia-China economic and trade relationship.
This week, the leadership group of China’s top legislative body, the National People’s Congress, is meeting in Beijing to discuss a fiscal package to boost the country’s slowing economy.
Canberra and capitals around the world are closely watching the meeting.
Senator Farrell said there were still huge opportunities for Australia, even as China’s rate of economic growth slowed.
“Whatever else you might say about the Chinese economy, it’s still growing,” he told The Australian.
“The Chinese economy is worth $18 trillion. Last year it grew by 5 per cent — well that’s an extra trillion dollars.”
Pointing at the famous Shanghai skyline, Senator Farrell added: “You have a look around here.
“This is a thriving city. And thriving cities like high-quality food and wine. And we’re in a perfect position to deliver that.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/chinese-commerce-minister-gives-don-farrell-personal-assurances-australian-beef-lobster-bans-to-end/news-story/df7020e8dd856f1d12a39deee1d252a2
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202411/1322398.shtml
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273ca3 No.21906253
>>21274018 (pb)
Sydney and Melbourne airports to tackle human trafficking and modern slavery in new campaign
Clareese Packer - November 4, 2024
Major Australian airports have banded together to target human trafficking as reports of modern slavery increase by more than 10 per cent.
Sydney and Melbourne airports will now display images and messages about human trafficking on digital screens and billboards, encouraging people to report suspicious behaviour.
Pairing with anti-human trafficking organisation A21, the “Can You See Me?” campaign will educate people on the signs of human trafficking,
Signs at airports can include people avoiding eye contact and social interaction, not being in control of their own passport or documentation, acting unusually submissively, being unaware of their destination, having a language barrier with travelling companions, and wearing clothing that’s not appropriate.
Melbourne Airport chief executive officer Lorie Argus said the partnership “goes beyond just airports – it’s about people’s lives”.
“By joining forces with Sydney Airport, the AFP and A21, we’re taking a stand against modern slavery, a hidden crime that destroys people’s futures,” Ms Argus said.
“Knowing that human trafficking is a real and daily threat, we feel a deep responsibility to protect our passengers.”
Sydney Airport chief executive officer Scott Charlton said the campaign would amplify efforts of the Australian Federal Police, with the Sydney and Melbourne airports accounting for about 70 per cent of Australia’s total international passenger traffic.
“Every person who steps through our airport deserves to travel safely, without fear of exploitation,” Mr Charlton said.
The AFP received 382 reports of modern slavery – including trafficking, forced marriage, sexual exploitation and organ trafficking – in the 2023-24 financial year, which is a 12 per cent increase compared to the previous year.
About 41,000 people are also estimated to be living in modern slavery conditions in Australia, according to the Global Slavery Index.
AFP Acting Commander Human Exploitation Frank Rayner said the increase in reports “highlights the urgent need for action”.
“Airports are key environments where traffickers seek to move victims across borders,” Mr Rayner said.
“It is important to remember that traffickers have many ways of controlling a person and a person can be exploited without physical restraint or abuse.
“Engaging travellers and frontline airport staff to recognise the signs and report suspected cases will help disrupt these crimes and protect vulnerable people.“
Director of the “Can You See Me?” campaign Christian Elliot said the new images and messages would allow everyone who passed through the airports to “become a part of the solution”.
“Human trafficking hides in plain sight, but through this campaign, we are making the invisible visible, empowering travellers, staff, and the public to take action,” Mr Elliot said.
“With just one report, one moment of recognition, a life can be saved. Together, we can stop the traffickers and protect the most vulnerable among us.”
The program has already reached high traffic areas such as Times Square billboards and Heathrow Airport, with QR codes on the messaging linking people with information on how to identify and stop modern slavery crimes.
https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-advice/airports/sydney-and-melbourne-airports-to-tackle-human-trafficking-and-modern-slavery-in-new-campaign/news-story/07b95332dd0742561222f8614d1983b7
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273ca3 No.21906418
>>21274018 (pb)
>>21906253
Australia’s largest airports join forces in the fight against human trafficking
travelweekly.com.au - 4 November 2024
1/2
In an Australian first, Sydney Airport and Melbourne Airport have joined forces to launch a public awareness campaign to fight human trafficking.
The country’s two largest international airports have partnered with anti-human trafficking organisation, A21, to run the “Can You See Me?” campaign, with guidance and input from the Australian Federal Police (AFP).
This initiative will educate people on how to recognise and report the signs of human trafficking.
From today, digital screens and billboards at both airports will display images and messages, stating that slavery still exists and urging people: “If you suspect it, report it.” QR codes also link to videos and information on how to identify and stop these crimes. Digital screens in key areas will display these messages, including check-in counters, gates and baggage carousels.
Combined, Sydney and Melbourne airports cater for 68 per cent of Australia’s total international passenger traffic. While the “Can You See Me?” campaign runs over the next month, close to 7 million passengers are expected to pass through both the domestic and international terminals at the two airports.
A21 has rolled out this program in high-profile spaces worldwide – from Times Square billboards, screens at Heathrow Airport, train stations in Thailand to inflatable screens in vulnerable Cambodian communities—reaching an impressive 3.4 billion people globally.
Modern slavery is a growing issue in Australia, with the AFP receiving 382 reports in 2023/2024 financial year, a 12 per cent increase on the previous year. Cases include trafficking, forced marriage, sexual exploitation, domestic servitude, debt bondage, forced labour, deceptive recruitment and organ trafficking. The Global Slavery Index estimates 41,000 people in Australia live under conditions of modern slavery.
A united response to human trafficking
Scott Charlton, Sydney Airport CEO said: “Every person who steps through our airport deserves to travel safely, without fear of exploitation.”
“We deeply value the AFP’s dedication to catching and prosecuting traffickers and the A21 ‘Can You See Me?’ campaign will amplify their efforts by raising critical public awareness and support.
“Sydney Airport is proud to join forces with Melbourne Airport, united in our mission to tackle the scourge of modern slavery.”
Lorie Argus, Melbourne Airport CEO said: “This partnership goes beyond just airports—it’s about people’s lives.”
“By joining forces with Sydney Airport, the AFP, and A21, we’re taking a stand against modern slavery, a hidden crime that destroys people’s futures.
“Knowing that human trafficking is a real and daily threat, we feel a deep responsibility to protect our passengers.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21906443
>>21906418
2/2
Acting Commander Human Exploitation Frank Rayner from the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said: “The increase in reported cases of human trafficking and slavery in Australia highlights the urgent need for action.”
“Airports are key environments where traffickers seek to move victims across borders. It is important to remember that traffickers have many ways of controlling a person and a person can be exploited without physical restraint or abuse.
“Engaging travellers and frontline airport staff to recognise the signs and report suspected cases will help disrupt these crimes and protect vulnerable people.”
Nick Caine, A21 CEO, said: “Everyone has a role to play in the fight against human trafficking. Awareness is the first step, and we believe that through this campaign, more victims will be recognised and rescued.
“The ‘Can You See Me?’ campaign has already changed lives across the world, and we are grateful to Sydney and Melbourne airports for bringing this powerful message to Australia.”
Christian Elliott, Director of ‘Can You See Me?’ said: “As the director of the Can You See Me? campaign, I have witnessed firsthand the transformative power of awareness.”
“This initiative goes beyond just sharing information—it equips every individual who passes through Sydney and Melbourne airports to become a part of the solution.
“Human trafficking hides in plain sight, but through this campaign, we are making the invisible visible, empowering travellers, staff, and the public to take action. With just one report, one moment of recognition, a life can be saved. Together, we can stop the traffickers and protect the most vulnerable among us.”
The Rotary Clubs of Botany Randwick and Marrickville have announced that all cash collected from 11 donation boxes across Sydney Airport over the next month will be donated to A21 to support survivors of human trafficking.
Airport-specific signs & indicators of human trafficking
• Avoids eye contact and social interaction
• Is not in control of own passport/documentation
• Language barrier with their travelling companions
• Unusually submissive
• Unaware of their destination
• Clothing is not appropriate/does not fit the route of travel
Suspect trafficking might be taking place? Call 131 AFP (131 237) or use the AFP’s human trafficking online information report.
https://forms.afp.gov.au/online_forms/human_trafficking_form
If you have immediate concerns for your safety, the safety of another person, or there is an emergency, call Triple Zero (000).
https://travelweekly.com.au/article/australias-largest-airports-join-forces-in-the-fight-against-human-trafficking/
https://www.a21.org/content/australia/gr4aqw
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273ca3 No.21906707
>>21660526 (pb)
>>21773932
>>21809192
Caroline Kennedy calls for ‘AUKUS visa’ as Canberra braces for election result
Matthew Knott - November 5, 2024
United States ambassador Caroline Kennedy has called for the creation of a special AUKUS visa to ensure Australia can achieve its plan to acquire nuclear-powered submarines, as senior ministers insisted the US-Australia alliance will be in good shape regardless of whether Donald Trump or Kamala Harris wins the presidency.
As video emerged of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese saying in 2017 that Trump “scares the sh*t out of me”, deputy Liberal leader Sussan Ley accused Labor of hoping for a Harris victory when the election results are revealed on Wednesday [AEDT].
Federal politicians and policymakers were anxiously awaiting the results of the US election, with Trump widely seen as a more volatile and unpredictable contender compared to Harris, who is expected to continue the thrust of President Joe Biden’s foreign policy.
The Albanese government is insisting that Kevin Rudd will remain Australia’s top diplomat in Washington even though the former prime minister made remarks strongly critical of Trump before taking up his posting.
Pointing to the difficulties involved in the ambitious nuclear-powered submarine project, Kennedy told a Submarine Institute of Australia conference in Canberra the three nations in the alliance needed faster, easier ways for work to proceed.
“We need new ideas to make this possible, and an AUKUS visa is one way to move this along,” she said.
Such a visa could allow defence industry workers in Australia, the US and United Kingdom to easily move between the three nations to work on submarines and advanced military technologies covered by the so-called “pillar II” of AUKUS.
Asked whether he backed Kennedy’s idea, Defence Minister Richard Marles said: “We are working with the governments of the US and the UK to look at how that can be done.”
Kennedy, a close ally of Biden, has said she will step down from her role in January regardless of the election outcome.
Marles pointed to backers across the political divide in the US Congress to support his view that AUKUS will survive either a Trump or Harris victory, saying that “we do have a sense of confidence that going forward this is a program that will be supported in the United States, as it will in the UK, as it will here”.
Ley told the Coalition party room that Opposition Leader Peter Dutton had made clear he “would look forward to working with the US administration of any colour”.
“By comparison, the Labor Party and its affiliates and supporters are leaning into the Democrats and publicly doing so, and we can all contemplate what that might mean for future relations with a future US government,” she said.
The Coalition seized upon a video of Albanese criticising Trump at a musical festival in 2017 to ask if the prime minister could work effectively with the former president.
“He [Mr Trump] scares the sh*t out of me … and I think it’s of some concern the leader of the free world thinks that you can conduct politics through 140 characters on Twitter overnight,” Albanese told a Q&A at the Splendour in the Grass music festival.
Marles said Albanese had shown “that he is capable of working with anyone” and that the “alliance will be in good shape” regardless of who wins the election, adding that Rudd would be able to prosecute Australia’s interests with either a Trump or Harris administration.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the US-Australia relationship “is bigger than the events of the day” and is “shaped by enduring friendship and timeless values”.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/caroline-kennedy-calls-for-aukus-visa-as-canberra-braces-for-election-result-20241105-p5ko1j.html
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273ca3 No.21906724
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21809192
>>21906707
‘Scares the sh*t out of me’: Australian PM’s ‘juvenile’ criticism of Donald Trump resurfaces
Sky News Australia
Nov 4, 2024
Sky News host Sharri Markson has slammed Prime Minister Anthony Albanese for his “embarrassing” remarks about Donald Trump during his time as shadow transport and infrastructure minister.
Mr Albanese was filmed saying the former president “scares the sh*t out of me” during a Q&A at Splendor in the Grass in July 2017.
“Albanese was shadow transport and infrastructure minister at the time," Ms Markson said.
"He was a senior figure in the Shorten team. He should have known better than to speak in such a juvenile fashion about the then-president of the nation that Australia relies on for our national security."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omojrKwluRI
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273ca3 No.21906738
>>21773932
>>21809192
Australia, India say US election result won't impact Quad group
Kirsty Needham - November 5, 2024
SYDNEY, Nov 5 (Reuters) - Australia and India's foreign ministers said on Tuesday they were confident the Quad group of the U.S., India, Australia and Japan would continue to cooperate in the Indo-Pacific region regardless of the outcome of the U.S. presidential election.
Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong told reporters in Canberra she had met Mike Pompeo, who served as Secretary of State in the previous Trump Administration, ahead of the U.S. election and had "a very good discussion".
"One of the priorities for us to discuss was AUKUS, and we are very pleased at the sort of bipartisan support that we have seen," she said, referring to the defence technology partnership between Australia, Britain and the U.S. to transfer nuclear powered submarines to Australia.
Australia's most expensive defence project, the AUKUS deal was struck under the Biden Administration in 2023.
"In terms of the U.S. election, we will work with whomever the American people choose," she said.
China objects to the Quad grouping as an effort to contain it, while Australia, Japan, India and the U.S. say they are like-minded democracies seeking to bolster stability in the Indo-Pacific region.
The Quad leaders agreed in September to establish joint coast guard patrols and increased military logistics cooperation.
The Quad was "very valuable" in the region, Wong said. "We see it retaining its importance regardless of the outcome of the election," she added.
Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said the Quad was revived under the Trump presidency in 2017.
"When we look at the American election, we are very confident that whatever the verdict, our relationship with the United States will only grow," he said, on an official visit to Australia.
https://www.reuters.com/world/australia-india-say-us-election-result-wont-impact-quad-group-2024-11-05/
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273ca3 No.21906794
>>21809192
Donald Trump remains a clear and present danger to the US republic
TROY BRAMSTON, SENIOR WRITER - 5 November 2024
1/2
The great republic is teetering on a precipice, at a turning point moment, with no previous election more important. Kamala Harris is a conventional centre-left Democratic candidate who believes in democracy and the rule of law; Donald Trump is a populist nativist, xenophobe and misogynist who refused to accept an election outcome, tried to overturn it and incited a riot.
The choice for Americans is clear: Harris may be uninspiring and saddled with being vice-president in an unpopular administration but Trump is morally bankrupt and ethically barren, vain and narcissistic, reckless and dangerous. It is why so many lifelong Republicans, his former vice-president, staff and cabinet officials, and military leaders, cannot support his return to the White House.
The choice for citizens around the world, from Europe to Asia and Australia, is overwhelmingly Harris rather than Trump, according to surveys. Trump has no coherent foreign policy, he idolises dictators and tyrants, and would be unpredictable. His promise to levy 10-20 per cent tariffs on all imports would be ruinous for the global economy.
My view about Trump since he descended on that golden escalator in Trump Tower in July 2015 is well known to readers. He is an utterly grotesque figure, a bully and a braggart who routinely makes false and moronic statements. He boasted about sexually assaulting women and was found liable for sexual assault. He is a convicted felon. He was twice impeached, for trying to shake down Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and defying democracy.
His management of the pandemic was catastrophic – remember when he suggested injecting disinfectant, shining ultraviolet light on the skin or taking hydroxychloroquine, which the US Food and Drug Administration warned could be dangerous? He trashed historic alliances and showed no respect to democratic leaders. He massively increased debt and deficit. He failed the test of crisis leadership.
What is especially troubling is that Trump diminishes the presidency. No president is without fault or flaws. But they each respected the office, its conventions and traditions, norms and standards of behaviour, and the democratic process. They congratulated their opponents, went to inaugurations of their successors and openings of presidential libraries. Trump did none of this; Harris will.
I’ve had a fascination, even obsession, with the presidency since I was a kid. The rollcall of presidents who provided global leadership, inspired their people with heroic actions or set a moral example enthralled me. The presidency had a capacity to produce men (so far) who played an outsized role in national and international affairs and served as models to others.
Who could deny the virtues and qualities of George Washington, a man who would have been hung, drawn and quartered if the revolution failed? Or the log cabin-to-White House story of Abraham Lincoln, who abolished slavery and preserved the union, and his words that still ring true? Or Franklin Roosevelt, who saved democracy by joining the allies in World War II?
Perhaps it is the genius of Thomas Jefferson, and the moral reckoning history has given him two centuries later? The legend of Ulysses S. Grant, who failed at everything before he was given command of the Union Army, and wrote the most compelling presidential memoirs? Or the tragedy of Richard Nixon, a brilliant and visionary man, undone by petty grievances, inner demons and high crimes?
My interest is both personal and professional. I’ve been to every presidential library run by the National Archives and Records Administration, and turned over hundreds of pages of presidential records. I’ve entered dozens of presidential homes from Washington’s Mount Vernon, Jefferson’s Monticello and James Madison’s Montpelier to the residences of John Adams, Harry Truman, John F. Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan, and more.
I’ve been to Barack Obama’s White House, scored a ticket to George W. Bush’s inauguration by chance, visited presidential memorials in Washington DC, looked up at the carved faces of the presidents on Mount Rushmore and stood in Independence Hall in Philadelphia where the Declaration of Independence and US constitution were signed.
My favourite presidential memorial, and I’ve visited almost all of them, is General Grant’s mausoleum in New York. I’ve watched an animatronic Lincoln at Disneyland, walked through his house and neighbourhood in Springfield, Illinois, sat on the steps of his grand colonnaded memorial in Washington and peered into the presidential box at Ford’s Theatre where he was shot.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21906798
>>21906794
2/2
I’ve interviewed presidents Carter and George HW Bush, the children (Luci Baines Johnson) and grandchildren (Clifton Truman Daniel and David Eisenhower) of three presidents, and staff or cabinet members in every presidential administration from Stephen Hess under Dwight D. Eisenhower to John Bolton under Trump. I’ve also interviewed former Secret Service agents Clint Hill and Paul Landis.
It has been thrilling to meet or interview the finest presidential historians, from Robert Caro and Robert Dallek to Doris Kearns Goodwin and Stacy Schiff to Ron Chernow and Joseph Ellis, Richard Norton Smith and Evan Thomas, among others.
I’ve spoken to storytellers Ken Burns and Lin-Manuel Miranda, and directors Oliver Stone and Aaron Sorkin about real and fictional presidents on the big and small screens.
My crates of presidential memorabilia show no bias, nor do my shelves carrying thousands of presidential tomes. Indeed, the presidents I most admire are overwhelmingly Republicans, from Lincoln and Grant to Teddy Roosevelt, Eisenhower and Bush 41. They had integrity, credibility, authority. That is why dislike of Democrats is not sufficient justification for supporting Trump.
The US has often been divided. You can learn that by walking the cobblestoned Freedom Trail in Boston or participating in a re-enactment at Gettysburg – which I did in 2013 – or visiting the Confederate White House or Jefferson Davis’s home, Beauvoir. I’ve talked to civil rights icons John Lewis and Andrew Young about the long struggle for freedom. It is the president who often corrects course.
Trump has no respect for the presidency, its traditions and conventions, and leadership capacity. He dishonoured the presidency. Unlike Harris, he seeks to divide with a dark and violent grievance-based message rather than unite and uplift the nation with hope and possibility. It is telling that no former president or vice-president, or Republican candidate for president, has endorsed Trump.
That is why I hope, and expect, Americans will make the right decision in this most consequential of elections.
Troy Bramston is a senior writer and columnist with The Australian. He has interviewed politicians, presidents and prime ministers from multiple countries along with writers, actors, directors, producers and several pop-culture icons. He is an award-winning and best-selling author or editor of 11 books, including Bob Hawke: Demons and Destiny, Paul Keating: The Big-Picture Leader and Robert Menzies: The Art of Politics. He co-authored The Truth of the Palace Letters and The Dismissal with Paul Kelly.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/donald-trump-remains-a-clear-and-present-danger-to-the-us-republic/news-story/5cefbdaf59204fdc6651f4181fe18bfc
https://qresear.ch/?q=Troy+Bramston
—
Q Post #3931
Apr 10 2020 14:53:58 (EST)
https://twitter.com/SeekretAgent/status/1248681547827417093
The credibility of our institutions [Constitutional Law that governs our Great Land [Our Republic]], and our ability to regain the trust and faith of the American people, all depends on our ability to restore [EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER THE LAW] by prosecuting those responsible [Blind-Justice].
Treasonous acts [sedition] against the Republic [the 'People'] of the United States [START - LEAD-IN].
Infiltration [rogue] at the highest levels of our gov, media, corps, etc.
Planned & coordinated [D/ F].
This is not about politics.
Something far more sinister [evil] has been allowed to flourish through all parts of our society.
It has been protected and safeguarded.
It has been camouflaged to appear as trusted.
It has been projected [normalized] by stars.
[CLAS 1-99]
One must only look to see.
[Symbolism will be their downfall]
This is not another [4] year election.
"Be on your guard; stand firm in the faith; be courageous; be strong."
You are not alone.
We stand together.
Q
https://qanon.pub/#3931
—
Q Post #4616
Jul 28 2020 22:11:28 (EST)
NOTHING CAN STOP WHAT IS COMING.
NOTHING.
WWG1WGA!!!
Q
https://qanon.pub/#4616
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273ca3 No.21922359
>>21809192
Trump claims 'powerful mandate' after Fox News projects he has won US presidency
Steve Holland - November 6, 2024
1/2
PALM BEACH, Florida, Nov 5 (Reuters) - Republican Donald Trump claimed victory in the 2024 presidential contest after Fox News projected that he had defeated Democrat Kamala Harris, which would cap a stunning political comeback four years after he left the White House.
"America has given us an unprecedented and powerful mandate," he said early on Wednesday to a roaring crowd of supporters at the Palm Beach County Convention Center, flanked by his vice presidential running mate, Senator JD Vance, Republican leaders and members of Trump's family.
He also spent several minutes praising Elon Musk, the richest man in the world, who pumped some $120 million into backing Trump's campaign. Trump has said he will appoint Musk to lead a government efficiency commission.
Other news outlets had yet to call the race for Trump, but he appeared on the verge of winning after capturing the battleground states of Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia and holding leads in the other four, according to Edison Research.
Harris did not speak to her supporters, who had gathered at her alma mater Howard University. Her campaign co-chair, Cedric Richmond, briefly addressed the crowd after midnight, saying Harris would speak publicly on Wednesday.
"We still have votes to count," he said.
The former president was showing strength across broad swaths of the country, improving on his 2020 performance everywhere from rural areas to urban centers.
Republicans won a U.S. Senate majority after flipping Democratic seats in West Virginia and Ohio. Neither party appeared to have an edge in the fight for control of the House of Representatives where Republicans currently hold a narrow majority.
Trump went into Election Day with a 50-50 chance of reclaiming the White House, a remarkable turnaround from Jan. 6, 2021, when many pundits pronounced his political career to be over. That day, a mob of his supporters stormed Congress in a violent attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
Trump picked up more support from Hispanics, traditionally Democratic voters, and among lower-income households that have keenly felt the sting of price rises since the last presidential election in 2020, according to exit polls from Edison.
Trump won 45% of Hispanic voters nationwide, trailing Harris with 53% but up 13 percentage points from 2020.
About 31% of voters said the economy was their top issue, and they voted for Trump by a 79%-to-20% margin, according to exit polls. Some 45% of voters across the country said their family's financial situation was worse off today than four years ago, and they favored Trump 80% to 17%.
Global investors were increasingly pricing in a Trump win late on Tuesday. U.S. stock futures and the dollar pushed higher, while Treasury yields climbed and bitcoin rose - all flagged by analysts and investors as trades that favor a Trump victory.
No matter who won the election, history was in the making. Trump, 78, the only president to be impeached twice and the first former president to be criminally convicted, would also become the first president to win non-consecutive terms in more than a century and would be the oldest presidential candidate ever elected.
If elected, Harris, 60, the first female vice president, would become the first woman, Black woman and South Asian American to win the presidency.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21922374
>>21922359
2/2
TRUMP OUTPERFORMS 2020
Trump was earning a bigger share of the vote than he did four years ago in nearly every corner of the country.
By 12:30 a.m. ET, officials had nearly completed their count of ballots in more than 1,600 counties – about half the country – and Trump's share was up about 2 percentage points compared to 2020, reflecting a broad if not especially deep shift in Americans' support for the president they ousted four years ago.
He improved his numbers in suburban counties, rural regions and even some large cities that are historically bastions of Democratic support; in high-income counties and low-income ones; and in places where unemployment was comparatively high and in places where it is now at record lows.
Harris had banked on big margins among urban and suburban voters, but her support in those places was running well behind President Joe Biden's in the 2020 election.
Nearly three-quarters of voters said American democracy is under threat, according to the exit polls, underscoring the depth of polarization in a nation where divisions have only grown starker during a fiercely competitive race.
Trump employed increasingly apocalyptic rhetoric while stoking unfounded fears that the election system cannot be trusted. Harris warned that a second Trump term would threaten the underpinnings of American democracy.
Hours before polls closed, Trump claimed on his Truth Social site without evidence that there was "a lot of talk about massive CHEATING" in Philadelphia, echoing his false claims in 2020 that fraud had occurred in large, Democratic-dominated cities. In a subsequent post, he also asserted there was fraud in Detroit.
"I don't respond to nonsense," Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey told Reuters.
A Philadelphia city commissioner, Seth Bluestein, replied on X, "There is absolutely no truth to this allegation."
Trump voted earlier near his home in Palm Beach, Florida.
"If I lose an election, if it's a fair election, I'm gonna be the first one to acknowledge it," Trump told reporters.
Millions of Americans waited in orderly lines to cast ballots, with only sporadic disruptions reported across a handful of states, including several non-credible bomb threats that the FBI said appeared to originate from Russian email domains.
Tuesday's vote capped a dizzying race churned by unprecedented events, including two assassination attempts against Trump, Biden's surprise withdrawal and Harris' rapid rise.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-vs-harris-us-voters-head-polls-turbulent-campaign-concludes-2024-11-05/
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/fox-news-projects-donald-trump-defeats-kamala-harris-become-47th-president-united-states
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273ca3 No.21922390
>>21922359
Former PM Scott Morrison backs in a second Donald Trump US presidency
The former prime minister was full of praise for a likely second Donald Trump presidency, saying it would be a win for the US economy.
Joseph Olbrycht-Palmer and Jessica Wang - November 6, 2024
Former prime minister Scott Morrison has welcomed a likely second Donald Trump presidency, saying it would lead to a “rejuvenation of the US economy”.
Mr Morris said the Republican candidate had given a “stellar” performance during the election campaign.
All but declaring the win for the former businessman, Mr Morrison said Mr Trump had “won this election,” and believed a result would be called by Wednesday night Australian time.
Mr Morrison, who left politics to join a US-based security and defence think tank, dashed claims Mr Trump was a “scary” character, following unearthed 2017 footage of Anthony Albanese who said the leader “scares the sh*t out of me”.
“Vladimir Putin is scary. Xi Jinping is scary. Ayatollah Khomeini is scary. Donald Trump is not scary,” Mr Morrison told Sky News on Wednesday.
“I think the three places that will be most unhappy with this result tonight will be in Tehran, will be in Beijing and will be in Moscow.”
Mr Morrison’s prime ministership coincided with Mr Trump’s first presidency between 2018 to 2021, with Mr Morrison sharing effusive praise for the leader.
“The US is an entrepreneurial animal … and I think we’ll see great confidence come into that economy,” he said.
Mr Morrison also backed former Labor PM Kevin Rudd to continue in his role as Australia’s ambassador to the US, and said Mr Rudd had been “building those relationships across the aisle”.
Touching on international matters, Mr Morrison also said he was “confident” he would pressure Russian President Vladimir Putin to end his illegal invasion of Ukraine.
Mr Morrison said Mr Trump “won’t want to negotiate or enter into an arrangement from a position of weakness,” and expected to see the “issue resolved”.
“If Vladimir Putin thinks he’s going to get an easy ride out of Donald Trump, he’s got another thing coming,” said Mr Morrison.
“He will know very quickly that any arrangement that he ends up agreeing to isn’t the one that he has in mind right now and one that he believes he will achieve by pressing on with this murderous war.”
Ambassador’s call on US election
Earlier on Wednesday, United States’ ambassador Caroline Kennedy said relations between Australia and the US would continue to deepen regardless of who was president, calling Australia “the most trusted capable ally”.
“One of the things that I say every single day here in Australia is how strong its alliance is and how unshakeable and how much stronger it’s growing everyday,” she told the ABC.
“I have seen that first-hand since I have been here.
“So no matter who wins the election, the fundamentals are there and only getting stronger.”
She pointed to the trilateral AUKUS security pact between Australia, the US and the United Kingdom, as well as two-way trade and Australia’s role in supplying critical minerals to the US.
“So there’s just so many things to bring us together,” Ms Kennedy said.
“That’s not going to change.”
Meanwhile, questions have been looming about Australian Ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd in the event of a second Trump presidency.
The former Labor prime minister has called Mr Trump “nuts”, the “most destructive president in history” and a “traitor to the West”.
Mr Trump has called Mr Rudd “nasty” and “not the brightest bulb”.
“If he’s at all hostile, he will not be there long,” the former president said in an interview earlier this year.
The verbal barbs have prompted the opposition to question if Mr Rudd would be able to serve Australia effectively if the Republicans won.
Election eve polling put Mr Trump and Ms Harris neck and neck ahead of the vote on Tuesday (local time).
Candidate need to secure 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.
https://www.news.com.au/world/north-america/us-politics/australiaus-relationship-unshakeable-caroline-kennedy-says/news-story/32164c425f13585295e4c1bc2fc9d10b
https://x.com/ScoMo30/status/1854051687276913015
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273ca3 No.21922416
>>21922359
Donald Trump’s swing could be a harbinger of doom for Anthony Albanese’s own re-election hopes
SIMON BENSON - 6 November 2024
Hold on to your hats. Its going to be another wild ride. But for Anthony Albanese, it is going to be an especially difficult one.
This is his worst nightmare. And for Labor and its re-election hopes, the concern will be whether Donald Trump’s apparent comeback presents a harbinger for its own doom.
The Prime Minister starts dangerously behind in a relationship considered to be Australia’s most important, boxed into a position of weakness with his 2017 private remarks about Trump now very much public.
This is a potential problem for Albanese at the outset. At some point, he and Trump will have to have a difficult conversation.
The policy consequences are obvious. Trump will likely pull out of the Paris climate change talks and rewrite the international narrative on an issue central to Labor’s energy and manufacturing policy platform. Albanese’s third pillar of climate change as a national security framework with the US, signed with Joe Biden, will almost certainly be ditched.
Treasury has also modelled the consequences of a Trump presidency, considering downside risks to Australia being a second-round victim of the trade disruption Trump is threatening.
The fundamentals are unlikely to change. AUKUS will be safe, the Quad will remain and the strategic issues in the Indo-Pacific will continue to be a primary US focus.
The US result will also send a sobering message to Labor strategists. Trump was the beneficiary, at a deeper level, of yet another example of traditional left-leaning working-class voters jumping ship.
This isn’t a phenomenon confined to the US. Voter concerns over the economy were paramount, as they are here. There are Labor-held metropolitan seats vulnerable to the same breakout of discontent built on a campaign that borrowed the 1984 Reagan slogan that asked voters if they felt better off than they were four years ago. No, was the resounding answer.
Kamala Harris had no economic narrative and refused to engage on it. Many US voters believed that the economy had done well under Trump before.
Younger voters also proved that they aren’t locked in while the Democrats wrongly assumed all women voted the same way. Crime and border control were key issues, with many women in the US swinging behind Trump because of their fear of rising crime. It proves just how potent these issues are, and they are mirrored to some extent in Australia.
The result was also a warning sign that a negative campaign built around the character assassination of an opponent doesn’t always work.
Conservatives will be quick to assume the Trump victory more broadly was a rejection of wokism. There is evidence of this, with implications for the Australian domestic context.
Albanese’s immediate challenge will be to keep his troops in line in their reaction to Trump while working out a new strategy to deal with the Greens who will seek to wedge the Prime Minister over the alliance. Albanese in parliament was right when he said the election of a US president had profound consequences for the world and for Australia.
Trump’s election requires a depth of maturity from the Albanese cabinet that it hasn’t always displayed to date.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/donald-trumps-swing-could-be-a-harbinger-of-doom-for-anthony-albaneses-own-reelection-hopes/news-story/6cba7fc0bbfce9473697f66c686f3eee
https://x.com/AlboMP/status/1854076093663527414
https://x.com/PeterDutton_MP/status/1854075620072005719
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273ca3 No.21922437
>>21922359
>>21922416
Anthony Albanese Tweet
7 Jan 2021
Democracy is precious and cannot be taken for granted - the violent insurrection in Washington is an assault on the rule of law and democracy. Donald Trump has encouraged this response and must now call on his supporters to stand down.
https://twitter.com/AlboMP/status/1346929529198055424
—
Joe Biden Tweet
Let me be very clear: the scenes of chaos at the Capitol do not represent who we are. What we are seeing is a small number of extremists dedicated to lawlessness. This is not dissent, it's disorder. It borders on sedition, and it must end. Now.
https://twitter.com/JoeBiden/status/1346928275470299142
—
Anthony Albanese blames Donald Trump for US Capitol violence
sbs.com.au - 7 January 2021
https://www.sbs.com.au/programs/video/1841137219993/Anthony-Albanese-blames-Donald-Trump-for-US-Capito
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273ca3 No.21932620
>>21906724
>>21922359
>>21922416
Anthony Albanese has spoken with US president-elect Donald Trump after his election victory
Jacob Greber - 7 November 2024
Anthony Albanese has spoken to president-elect Donald Trump, following his victory in the US election.
The call took place on Thursday morning, following a press conference at Parliament House when the prime minister told reporters he was yet to make contact with Mr Trump.
Mr Albanese said it was good to speak to the president-elect and "personally congratulate him on his election victory" in a statement posted to social media.
"We talked about the importance of the alliance, and the strength of the Australia-US relationship in security, AUKUS, trade and investment," he said.
"I look forward to working together in the interests of both our countries."
Mr Trump had already spoken to a number of world leaders in the wake of his election victory.
The prime minister earlier dismissed a question about whether he needs to apologise to Trump for previously negative comments about the president-elect.
In a 2017 video taken at a music festival, Mr Albanese is asked about how he would deal with Mr Trump. "With trepidation," he responded.
"He [Trump] scares the sh*t out of me and I think it's of concern the leader of the Free World thinks that you can conduct politics through 140 characters on Twitter overnight."
Mr Albanese told reporters on Thursday he looks forward to working with president-elect Trump.
"I've demonstrated, I think, my ability to work with world leaders and to develop relationships with them, which are positive," Mr Albanese said.
US-Australia alliance is 'timeless', Wong says
Earlier in the day, Foreign Minister Penny Wong congratulated Mr Trump on the election result, describing it as a "decisive victory".
She told the ABC that she was looking forward to working with the new administration even if there were policies on which they disagreed.
"We are an alliance based on our values and history and shared strategic objectives, it's a timeless alliance," she said.
"The alliance is big enough and strong enough to comprehend differences in policy because of its history and shared objectives."
Asked about Mr Trump's plans to impose significant tariffs on imported goods, she said the former president "campaigned on change and president Trump will no doubt deliver change".
"I would first say to Australians that we should be confident in ourselves and our ability to work together to progress Australia's interests."
Shadow Foreign Minister Simon Birmingham said Australia had successfully worked through "less conventional" policies from the Trump administration before.
"President [elect] Trump has made policy commitments coming into this election, and he's won this election, and seems to have won it convincingly," he said.
"He takes an approach with policies that are sometimes less conventional than people are customarily used to, and he makes strong and bold pronouncements that are less normal and more surprising than people are used to, but we have successfully worked through those policies before."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-07/albanese-speaks-with-us-president-elect-donald-trump/104571930
https://x.com/AlboMP/status/1854320237656609027
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273ca3 No.21932643
>>21922359
>>21922390
>>21932620
Morrison backs Rudd as Australia’s man in DC despite Trump sledges
Matthew Knott and Olivia Ireland - November 7, 2024
1/2
The Albanese government has launched an energetic charm offensive aimed at locking in support for the AUKUS security pact and ensuring Australia is not hit by Donald Trump’s tariffs, as ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd scrubbed critical comments about the incoming US president from his online record.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison said Rudd should be allowed to remain in Washington despite his past criticisms of Trump, while Australia’s former ambassador to the US, Arthur Sinodinos, urged Albanese to move swiftly to meet with Trump to build a personal rapport.
Albanese spoke to Trump by telephone on Thursday morning, making him one of the first global leaders to secure a conversation with Trump since his election victory.
“We talked about the importance of the alliance, and the strength of the Australia-US relationship in security, AUKUS, trade and investment,” Albanese said on social media.
“I look forward to working together in the interests of both our countries.”
Speaking to reporters in Canberra, Albanese said he would continue to advocate for free trade even though Trump had vowed to impose tariffs between 10 and 20 per cent on all imports into the United States.
“We’re a trading nation, and we will continue to be advocates for free and fair trade,” Albanese said.
Albanese has insisted that Rudd will remain US ambassador even though the former prime minister previously excoriated Trump as “the most destructive president in history” and before his diplomatic appointment, described him as a “traitor to the West” in social media posts.
In a statement posted on Thursday morning, Rudd’s office said: “In his previous role as the head of an independent US-based think tank [the Asia Society], Mr Rudd was a regular commentator on American politics.
“Out of respect for the office of president of the United States, and following the election of President Trump, ambassador Rudd has now removed these past commentaries from his personal website and social media channels.
“This has been done to eliminate the possibility of such comments being misconstrued as reflecting his positions as ambassador and, by extension, the views of the Australian government.”
Rudd looked forward to working with Trump, his office said.
Morrison, who met with Trump several times during his prime ministership, defended Rudd, saying: “It’s up to Australia to decide [who serves as US ambassador].
“I know Kevin has been very active in engaging both sides of politics in the US and has been doing so very effectively.”
While singling out Trump’s tariff policies as Australia’s biggest challenge, Morrison said much of the “catastrophising” about a second Trump term would prove to be overblown.
“All these doomsday scenarios about him leaving NATO or capitulating to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin will turn out to be rhetorical nonsense,” he said.
Sinodinos, who served as ambassador to the US from 2020 to 2023, said it was good that Albanese had secured an early phone call with Trump.
“The question now is when they can meet and begin to build a personal relationship,” he said.
Sinodinos said Albanese’s priority should be ensuring Trump was engaged with the Indo-Pacific and retained key elements of the regional architecture developed by the Biden administration.
On Australia’s plan to acquire nuclear-powered submarines under AUKUS, Morrison said: “I don’t accept the premise that AUKUS is in any trouble … there’s no need to jump at shadows here.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21932650
>>21932643
2/2
Describing Rudd as “indefatigable”, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton told 2GB that “he’ll be ordering those MAGA hats; he will do everything he can to ingratiate himself with the Trump campaign”.
Dutton also took a swipe at Albanese’s 2017 comment at the Splendour in the Grass music festival that Trump “scares the sh*t out of me”, saying it “showed terrible judgment” and there was “a lot of repair work to do” on the US-Australia alliance.
Signalling a likely attack line ahead of the next federal election, Dutton said Trump won votes because he was seen as strong, whereas “there are a lot of people in Australia who’d really see the prime minister as being very weak”.
Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham pressed officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade about Rudd’s now-deleted posts at Senate estimates on Thursday, pointing out that some criticisms were published in “close proximity” to his appointment as ambassador.
In an especially critical post from 2020, made after protesters were forcibly removed from an area near the White House, Rudd said Trump “drags America and democracy through the mud. He thrives on fomenting, not healing, division. He abuses Christianity, church and Bible to justify violence.”
The question of Rudd’s future in Washington came up in March when Trump told Brexit champion Nigel Farage that while he did not know much about Rudd, he had heard “he was a little bit nasty” and “not the brightest bulb”.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong insisted Rudd was “absolutely” the right person to represent Australia in Washington, as he had played a crucial role in securing the passage of legislation to deliver AUKUS.
Wong said she met Mike Pompeo – who previously served as Trump’s secretary of state and may return to a senior cabinet role – during a recent visit to Washington, and received a positive response.
A 2017 social media post from Defence Minister Richard Marles has also resurfaced, arguing that “Australia should not be afraid to criticise Donald Trump when his unpredictability harms the national interest”.
Marles’ office has been asked whether he will also delete any Trump criticisms from his social media.
Michael Green, the United States Studies Centre chief executive and a former senior official in George W. Bush’s administration, said: “There is every reason to believe Kevin Rudd will stay in his post.
“He hasn’t said anything worse about Trump than J.D. Vance, and Trump’s national security staff will not want to start off the term with a fight with Australia over the ambassador.”
Vance once compared Trump to Hitler, but was subsequently chosen to be his running mate.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/rudd-scrubs-anti-trump-comments-from-the-internet-as-charm-offensive-begins-20241107-p5kolc.html
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1854149581933625432
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273ca3 No.21932686
>>21922359
>>21932643
Kevin Rudd deletes X posts critical of Donald Trump
GEOFF CHAMBERS and BEN PACKHAM - 7 November 2024
1/2
Australia’s Ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd has removed past negative comments about Donald Trump from his private X account since the Republican candidate’s election win.
DFAT deputy secretary Elly Lawson said Mr Rudd’s private office had issued a statement that “in his previous role as head of an independent US based think tank, Mr Rudd was a regular commentator on American politics”.
“Out of respect for the office of President of the United States, and following the election of President Trump, Ambassador Rudd has now removed these past commentaries from his personal website and social media channels,” she said, reading from the statement.
“This has been done to eliminate the possibility of such comments being misconstrued as reflecting his positions as ambassador and by extension, the views of the Australian Government.
“Ambassador Rudd looks forward to working with President Trump and his team to continue strengthening the US-Australia alliance.”
They included a 2020 tweet from his personal account, @MrKRudd, disparaging the former president. “The most destructive president in history,” he said at the time.
“He drags America and democracy through the mud. He thrives on fomenting, not healing, division. He abuses Christianity, church and bible to justify violence.
“All aided and abetted by Murdoch’s FoxNews Network in America which feeds this.”
Labor’s pile-ons undermine PM, Rudd charm offensive
Anthony Albanese is preparing a diplomatic full-court press to shore-up the nation’s interests amid fears Donald Trump’s America First 2.0 agenda and looming trade war with China will undermine Labor’s economic, climate change, defence and foreign policies.
With Mr Trump reclaiming the presidency and the Republicans on track to control both houses of congress, Australian diplomatic and security officials have been instructed to execute a Plan-B strategy to solidify the country’s relationship with an incoming Trump administration.
The Australian can reveal that days out from the election, senior cabinet ministers were “very confident” Kamala Harris would beat Mr Trump and that it would be “business as usual” for Australia.
But despite the optimism in government ranks, Treasury, climate change, defence, national security and diplomatic officials were ordered in recent months to prepare scenario modelling and analysis of the impacts for Australia if Mr Trump reclaimed the White House.
Given the longstanding US-Australia relationship, Mr Albanese would be expected to be among the first world leaders to speak with a victorious Mr Trump.
There is anxiety in Labor ranks about relations with a Trump administration after Mr Albanese and his ambassador to the US, former prime minister Kevin Rudd, made historic disparaging comments about Mr Trump. A senior ALP source said the Albanese government would focus on maintaining public support for the US-Australia relationship and keeping the alliance strong.
Coalition figures said the US election showed incumbency was damaging in a high-inflationary environment, that the “abortion scare campaign didn’t work”, and that Americans outside capital cities and from minority groups had come out in force for Mr Trump.
Mr Albanese, who described Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory over Mr Trump as a “triumph of hope over fear”, said in 2017 the billionaire “scares the sh.t out of me” and that he would deal with him “with trepidation”. Dr Rudd, who despite efforts to build relationships with Republicans may struggle to remain long-term as Australia’s top official in Washington, previously described Mr Trump as “nuts”, a “traitor to the West” and “the most destructive president in history”. Labor ministers have labelled Mr Trump as “barking mad”, “a sore loser” and “a big baby”.
Labor now faces a drawn out campaign to convince Mr Trump to exempt Australia from his threatened 10 to 20 per cent “universal tariff” on all imports, while bracing for the impact of his promised 60 per cent tariff hike on goods from China.
Wong says government ‘confident’ Rudd will stay
On Thursday, Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong said Australia should not be “surprised if things change” under a second Trump administration.
Senator Wong said the Albanese government was “confident” that Dr Rudd would “continue to do an excellent job” in his role.
“It doesn’t matter whether you’re Liberal, Labor, Green, whatever – Australia first,” she told ABC AM. “And that’s certainly the approach I hope political leaders will take in relation to backing in our ambassador and the government as we engage with the new administration.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21932691
>>21932686
2/2
Senator Wong was asked about what impact a potential 10-20 per cent tariff on Australian exports to the US would have, as promised by Mr Trump. “We’ve managed to avoid some tariffs on steel during the first presidency through diplomacy,” she said. “President Trump has run a campaign based on change. One of those is the one you identify.
“He’s made it clear he’s going to do things differently, so we shouldn’t be surprised if things change. But equally, Australia should be confident in ourselves, in our place in the world and our ability to work together to deliver on our interests.”
Senator Wong said the US-Australia alliance was “big enough and strong enough to deal with differences” that may soon emerge.
“It’s an alliance which has, through its history, there have been times where leaders and governments have disagreed,” she said.
“Prime Minister Howard refused additional troop requests in 2003 and 2004.
“The previous Trump administration withdrew from global commitments on climate. We did not.
“What I would say is we will continue to work with the new administration. The alliance is big enough and strong enough to deal with differences. Ultimately, we share a high degree of alignment in strategic objectives.”
With the origins of the AUKUS nuclear submarine pact and a reboot of the Quad security dialogue tracing back to the end of the first Trump administration, there are hopes Mr Trump will continue to back the key security and diplomatic arrangements.
The government is concerned that Mr Trump will pull out of the Paris Agreement for a second time and use his expected majority in congress to unwind Mr Biden’s clean energy-focused Inflation Reduction Act. The government, which has tied its clean energy and critical minerals push to Biden administration policies, is likely to rethink the scale and timing of its 2035 emissions reduction target.
Mr Albanese – whose charm offensive to stabilise ties with China has been questioned by US officials – will head to the APEC and G20 summits in South America next week where Mr Trump’s win will dominate the talks. Chinese President Xi Jinping and Mr Biden are expected to attend the summits in Peru and Brazil.
Mr Albanese on Wednesday said “the election of a new President of the United States is always a moment of profound consequence for the world, for our region and for Australia”.
“Our government will seek and build a strong partnership with whoever the American people choose as their next President. The alliance between Australia and the United States has always been bigger than individuals. It has stood tall through generations of governments from both sides of the aisle and we will work together as allies,” Mr Albanese said.
Mr Dutton said it was important for Mr Albanese and Dr Rudd to “be working day and night to establish those links and ties and deepen relationships and start new ones” ahead of Mr Trump’s inauguration in January.
The Opposition Leader said when the Coalition negotiated AUKUS with the US and Britain it was “in our mutual and collective best interests, particularly in an uncertain time”. “Whatever the outcome, we know … our relationship with the United States will endure, it will strengthen, and we will make sure that we work very closely with the incoming administration,” Mr Dutton said.
US ambassador to Australia Caroline Kennedy, who is due to leave her post in January, flew back to Canberra on the weekend to reassure Australians the relationship would remain staunch regardless of who won the election.
The government had been preparing for the prospect of a Trump win. Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles and Foreign Minister Penny Wong met with Mr Trump’s former secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, during visits to the US in recent months, while Senator Wong met with former House speaker Kevin McCarthy who is tipped to become Mr Trump’s chief-of-staff.
Dr Rudd has also been strengthening ties with Republicans in congress to shore-up the AUKUS pact. Mr Trump’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, said last week that Dr Rudd’s past comments about the former president were “nasty” and “maybe we want to choose somebody else”.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison, who struck a positive relationship with Mr Trump in office, said Labor would “have to be on its game” dealing with the returned president.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/labors-pileons-undermine-pm-and-rudd-charm-offensive/news-story/c878cab81327bc151dfc957a122e9f91
https://x.com/latikambourke/status/1854311914580705448
https://kevinrudd.com/media/statement-1
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273ca3 No.21932720
>>21922359
>>21932643
>>21932686
Kevin Rudd Tweet
Donald Trump is a traitor to the West. Murdoch was Trump’s biggest backer. And Murdoch’s Fox Television backs Putin too. What rancid treachery.
https://twitter.com/MrKRudd/status/1497863031497564161
https://archive.ph/gbMyl
Trump defends praise of Putin, makes strongest hint yet of a run for president in 2024
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/02/26/trump-2024/
—
Office of Kevin Rudd, 26th PM of Australia Tweet
The most destructive president in history. He drags America and democracy through the mud. He thrives on fomenting, not healing, division. He abuses Christianity, church and bible to justify violence. All aided and abetted by Murdoch’s FoxNews network in America which feeds this.
https://x.com/MrKRudd/status/1267660205547900928
https://archive.vn/k0HDd
Bishop of the Washington Diocese is outraged over Trump's photo-op, saying his message was antithetical to "everything that our churches stand for"
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/01/politics/cnntv-bishop-trump-photo-op/index.html
>Nothing is ever truly erased/deleted.
>These people are STUPID.
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273ca3 No.21943412
>>21466485 (pb)
>>21466485 (pb)
>>21922359
Trans rights may become Australian federal election flashpoint after Trump win
STEPHEN RICE - 8 November 2024
1/2
The right of transgender athletes to compete in women’s sport could become a live issue in Australia’s upcoming federal election after playing a critical role in the campaigns of Donald Trump and many Republican candidates in US congressional races.
Transgender rights have become a political flashpoint in Australia over the past three years, most recently with Moira Deeming expelled from the Victorian Liberal Party and Coalition frontbencher Jacinta Nampijinpa Price vowing to push back against the transgender movement and its impact on children.
Opposition leader Peter Dutton has encouraged Senator Price and Tasmanian senator Claire Chandler to express their views on transgender issues, while Ms Deeming has claimed Victorian Liberals can’t win in the state unless they adopt Mr Dutton’s “strong leadership” advancing conservative values.
Former Liberal Party candidate Katherine Deves sparked a firestorm during the 2022 federal election campaign for her outspoken views on trans women participating in women’s sport, including comments for which she later apologised.
However, senior Labor figures believe Mr Dutton is more likely than any of his recent predecessors to exploit trans issues, with Donald Trump’s aggressive campaign against trans inclusion and gender-affirming medical treatment for children highlighting the potential for winning votes from across the political spectrum.
Senator Price, now opposition Indigenous Australians spokeswoman, has nominated women’s rights in sport as a priority, saying “I don’t see why it should be controversial”. She says women like Ms Deves and Ms Deeming were “brave” and had been “thrown under the bus” in expressing concerns for women’s rights being impinged upon by transgender women.
Senator Chandler, who has long fought to keep biological males out of female sport, says the trans issue may well become a focus during next year’s federal election. “This is an issue where the left has failed women,” she told The Australian. “They’ve actively promoted a hugely unpopular stance that males have to be allowed into women’s sport and spaces. Women are really angry about it and there’s no doubt it cost the Harris campaign votes.
“It’s an issue that transcends the political spectrum, but in the US I think the left of politics has completely misunderstood the public sentiment, which is that it’s completely unreasonable that women should have to make room for men in their sports and their services, in their facilities that were designed for women.
“The majority of women who contact me about this are women who identified themselves as traditionally from the left, who feel totally abandoned by left-wing parties who are now saying women don’t even have the right to single-sex sports, bathrooms or services.
“That’s exactly what you’ve seen women saying in the US, and that even Democrat-aligned commentators are saying in the aftermath of the election.”
Mr Trump endorsed a ban on transgender athletes in women’s sports as a key campaign promise, while Kamala Harris studiously avoided the issue after becoming the Democrat nominee in July.
At a rally in Virginia on Saturday, Mr Trump welcomed onstage seven members of the Roanoke College women’s swimming team after they objected to a trans female — who had previously been a member of the men’s team — joining the squad. “The brave members of the swim team stood up to the transgender fanatics,” he said, blasting the “radical left” for its “transgender craziness”.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21943419
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21943412
2/2
During the campaign Democrats tried to steer the agenda towards abortion and women’s reproductive rights — which polls show most Americans support – while Republicans shifted the focus to trans issues, aggressively attacking gender-affirming care for children and moves to allow biological men to take part in women’s sport.
Republicans spent more than $80m in the last three months alone on advertising campaigns hammering Democrat politicians — mostly in Senate races — over their support for transgender rights. Despite claims the ads demonised trans people and ‘distracted from important issues’, Republican-linked groups aired anti-transgender TV ads more than 55,000 times in battleground states. Several Democrat candidates retreated from their stances.
In Texas, groups supporting Republican Senate candidate Ted Cruz spent $16m on ads excoriating Democrat opponent Collin Allred for his past support of transgender issues.
Mr Allred backed away from his previous comments, released an ad saying: “Let me be clear: I don’t want boys playing girls’ sports, or any of this ridiculous stuff Ted Cruz is saying.”
The reversal came too late: Mr Allred lost to Senator Cruz.
In Australia a number of high profile trans issues have exploded onto the political arena.
In August transgender woman Roxanne Tickle won a landmark ruling against a women’s-only social media app after a judge found her exclusion from the app amounted to indirect discrimination. Ms Tickle sued Giggle for Girls and its owner Sall Grover for excluding her from the app, claiming unlawful discrimination under the Sex Discrimination Act.
Federal Court judge Robert Bromwich found that “sex is changeable” and non-binary, saying the “concept of sex has broadened over the 30 years since the SDA”.
The judgement is being appealed to the High Court and has led to calls for a change to the law, including from feminist groups saying discrimination law no longer offered women the protection it was once legislated to guarantee.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/trans-rights-may-become-australian-federal-election-flashpoint-after-trump-win/news-story/12a4c290b862f82fd250cfb3771084c0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzCBBowUCtQ
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510315 No.21947349
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273ca3 No.21947856
>>21922359
>>21922416
PM’s working class problem, as Dutton eyes Trump-inspired election pathway
GEOFF CHAMBERS and DAVID TANNER - 9 November 2024
1/2
Peter Dutton’s election tactics will mirror the winning strategy of Donald Trump, focusing on inflation, the economy, immigration and disillusioned working-class voters, as the Coalition moves to tap Republican strategists to sharpen campaign messaging and ads.
The Opposition Leader will gear Coalition policies towards presenting a positive, new pathway to prosperity for Australia, contrasting with Anthony Albanese’s broken 2022 election promise that power prices and mortgages would be “cheaper” under Labor.
A key plank of Mr Dutton’s election blueprint will be to attack federal Labor claims that falling inflation is helping families pay their bills and mortgages, and to amplify the complaints of economic pain that working Australians and small business owners are feeling.
Labor’s hold on seats with a high number of tradesmen, technicians, labourers and machine operators has been eroding since Kevin Rudd’s 2007 election victory – and is now in danger of reducing further at next year’s election.
Some ALP insiders fear the Prime Minister has focused too much on the Greens since the Queensland election, and is gearing policies towards picking off a handful of Greens MPs rather than winning target Coalition seats and sandbagging marginal Labor electorates.
In a bid to shore up Middle Australia support, Treasurer Jim Chalmers is expected to unveil new cost-of-living measures ahead of next month’s mid-year budget update that will provide pre-election relief for millions of voters.
The Weekend Australian can reveal the Coalition, which has strong relationships with Republican Party officials, campaigners, pollsters and ad-makers, will seek comprehensive briefings on what worked and didn’t work during the US election campaign.
While Mr Dutton and Coalition strategists acknowledge that US and Australian politics and campaigns are different, the global experience shows the economy and inflation are dominating the minds of voters.
As in Australia, voters in the US are still living with high prices that haven’t come down due to the cumulative impacts of inflation.
Mr Trump on Friday emphasised that immigration and deportations would be his first priorities in office, and announced campaign manager Susie Wiles would be his chief-of-staff, becoming the first woman in US history to hold the post.
As the US president-elect prepares to install MAGA loyalists and China hawks to key cabinet roles, Canberra insiders are warning that Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Defence Minister Richard Marles could struggle to forge strong relationships with their new counterparts.
Sources said the Albanese government’s relationship with the incoming US administration would be tested, amid a more aggressive American posture towards China and the Albanese government’s closer ties with Beijing.
After financial markets this week pushed out predictions of a rate cut in Australia until July, following next year’s federal election, the US Federal Reserve on Friday announced its second rate cut, despite inflation remaining “somewhat elevated”.
Pressure is building on the Albanese government to convince voters that inflation is moderating fast enough, with Australians still being hit with high post-pandemic prices and businesses collapsing in record numbers.
Mr Dutton on Friday repeated a line from his May budget reply speech, based on former Republican president Ronald Reagan's 1980 campaign against Jimmy Carter, in asking Australians: “Are you better off today than you were three years ago?”
Mr Trump successfully seized on voter discontent about the economy and inflation, immigration and threats to domestic jobs and industries to reclaim states with high working-class populations including Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. Mr Trump also expanded his support base across outer-suburban, rural and minority voters.
Mr Dutton is ramping up Coalition efforts to woo grumpy voters in traditionally Labor working-class electorates, where support in recent elections for the ALP has eroded as the party moved towards Left-leaning, inner-city focused policies.
Buoyed by electoral trends and backlashes against incumbent governments in the US and Queensland elections, Coalition strategists are increasingly hopeful of winning outer-suburban and regional Labor seats. More than half of the Coalition’s 57 seats – 31 – are in the bottom 40 per cent of electorates ranked by household income, while two of Labor’s three most marginal seats – Lyons and Gilmore – are also two of its three poorest electorates on household income.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21947859
>>21947856
2/2
Across Australia’s top 30 blue-collar worker seats, the Coalition is targeting ALP-held electorates including Lyons in Tasmania, Paterson and Hunter in NSW, Bruce in Victoria and Blair in Queensland.
When Labor ousted the Howard government in 2007, it won 24 of the 30 seats with the highest percentage of blue-collar workers, census data reveals. The Coalition parties held just five and independent Bob Katter one.
Going into the 2025 election, Labor’s hold on the top 30 “tradie seats” has shrunk to 13, fewer than the Coalition, which has 15 (10 Liberal and five Nationals). The remaining two are held by Mr Katter and independent Dai Le, who took Fowler from Labor in 2022.
With polling and betting markets showing Labor falling behind the Coalition, Mr Dutton is under pressure to present a clear, positive plan showing how the Liberals and Nationals will take the country forward.
The Opposition Leader, who flagged that Labor’s immigration bungles would be a prominent election issue, said: “We’ve got to offer a message of hope. We can manage the economy well. We can get things back on track.
“If you look at the history of our country: there have been good times and bad. We live in the best country in the world and there can always be good times ahead.
“So, we have to make sure that’s the case and we’ll have a tight election coming up, but we are doing well, and we can win it.”
Asked if he believed Australians were interested in US-style populism or hardman leadership, Mr Albanese said the government’s “no one held back, no one left behind” strategy was based on making a “positive difference”.
“We are focused on making sure that we deal with some of the challenges that are there in society, both short term and longer term,” Mr Albanese said.
“In the shorter term, we’ve had a global spike in inflation and we’ve been dealing with ensuring that inflation we have halved, had a 6 in front of it now down to 2.8. We’ve done that whilst we provide cost-of-living relief for people.”
Amid concerns that government spending is keeping inflation higher for longer, Mr Dutton said Labor was telling Australians that “we’re past all of this inflationary period, don’t worry, you’ve never had it so good”.
“I just don’t think that washes because the lived experience, the reality for lots of families sitting around the kitchen tables at the moment is that they’re pulling their hair out and they can’t pay the bills and people are having to sell their homes because they just can’t afford the mortgage repayments,” he said. “I think, as it was in the US, it’s a similar story here: are you better off today than you were three years ago? And I don’t think many people say that they are.”
In addition to the blue-collar Labor electorates the Coalition is also targeting regional and outer-suburban ALP seats including Gilmore, Aston, McEwen, Werriwa, Macquarie, Bennelong, Reid, Dobell, Robertson, Parramatta, Corangamite, Tangney, Boothby, Swan, Lingiari and Solomon.
Labor, which is targeting seats including Leichhardt, Longman, Braddon and Fowler, is expected to throw significant resources into inner-city Greens seats including Griffith and Brisbane. Labor, the Liberals and Nationals will fight a three-cornered contest for the new outer-suburban Perth electorate of Bullwinkel.
Demographic and economic forces have dramatically altered Labor’s base. After the 2007 election, Labor held eight of the 30 electorates with the highest median household income. The ALP now holds 14 of the 30 wealthiest seats – despite having fewer seats overall than it did in 2007. Labor seats have been the biggest beneficiaries of rises in median household income since 2007, with 21 of the 25 seats with the largest percentage income increases held by the ALP.
Many tradies have also been pushed out of Labor heartland seats such as Blaxland, Gorton and Whitlam, and into Coalition-held seats including Nicholls, Dawson and Maranoa.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/pms-working-class-problem-as-dutton-eyes-trumpinspired-election-pathway/news-story/cc551137371d2ff9c9eb7bb1a674ef26
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273ca3 No.21947890
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. Australia proposes 'world-leading' ban on social media for children under 16
Alasdair Pal and Byron Kaye - November 7, 2024
SYDNEY, Nov 7 (Reuters) - The Australian government will legislate for a ban on social media for children under 16, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Thursday, in what it calls a world-leading package of measures that could become law late next year.
Australia is trialing an age-verification system to assist in blocking children from accessing social media platforms, as part of a range of measures that include some of the toughest controls imposed by any country to date.
"Social media is doing harm to our kids and I'm calling time on it," Albanese told a news conference.
Albanese cited the risks to physical and mental health of children from excessive social media use, in particular the risks to girls from harmful depictions of body image, and misogynist content aimed at boys.
"If you're a 14-year-old kid getting this stuff, at a time where you're going through life's changes and maturing, it can be a really difficult time and what we're doing is listening and then acting," he said.
A number of countries have already vowed to curb social media use by children through legislation, though Australia's policy is one of the most stringent.
No jurisdiction so far has tried using age verification methods like biometrics or government identification to enforce a social media age cut-off, two of the methods being trialed.
Australia's other world-first proposals are the highest age limit set by any country, no exemption for parental consent and no exemption for pre-existing accounts.
Legislation will be introduced into the Australian parliament this year, with the laws coming into effect 12 months after being ratified by lawmakers, Albanese said.
The opposition Liberal Party has expressed support for a ban.
There will be no exemptions for children who have parental consent, or who already have accounts.
"The onus will be on social media platforms to demonstrate they are taking reasonable steps to prevent access," Albanese said. "The onus won't be on parents or young people."
"What we are announcing here and what we will legislate will be truly world leading," Communications Minister Michelle Rowland said.
Rowland said platforms impacted would include Meta Platforms' Instagram and Facebook, as well as Bytedance's TikTok and Elon Musk's X. Alphabet's YouTube would likely also fall within the scope of the legislation, she added.
TikTok declined to comment, while Meta, Alphabet and X did not respond to requests for comment.
The Digital Industry Group, a representative body which includes Meta, TikTok, X and Alphabet's Google as members, said the measure could encourage young people to explore darker, unregulated parts of the internet while cutting their access to support networks.
"Keeping young people safe online is a top priority … but the proposed ban for teenagers to access digital platforms is a 20th Century response to 21st Century challenges," said DIGI Managing Director Sunita Bose.
"Rather than blocking access through bans, we need to take a balanced approach to create age-appropriate spaces, build digital literacy and protect young people from online harm," she added.
France last year proposed a ban on social media for those under 15, though users were able to avoid the ban with parental consent.
The United States has for decades required technology companies to seek parental consent to access the data of children under 13, leading to most social media platforms banning those under that age from accessing their services.
https://www.reuters.com/technology/cybersecurity/australia-proposes-ban-social-media-those-under-16-2024-11-06/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pk9aWeyd09A
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273ca3 No.21947943
>>21582936 (pb)
>>21589813 (pb)
>>21755719
‘Deeply flawed’: Truth bill on the brink in Senate showdown
David Crowe - November 9, 2024
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Key senators are blockading a divisive government plan to crack down on lies in major public debates, threatening to vote down the bill and adding to a logjam of more than 20 bills stalled in the Senate.
The new warnings put the contentious plan on a path to defeat unless the government convinces at least three independent senators to set aside their concerns about giving a federal agency sweeping power to oversee content safeguards on social media.
The setback comes as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese calls on the Senate to pass government bills including aged care changes, anti-scam measures, a school funding boost, new merger laws, the creation of an environment protection agency and housing reform.
The misinformation regime aims to give federal authorities the power to force tech giants to act on alerts about damaging falsehoods and stop them spreading before they cause serious harm, citing cases such as the misidentification of the Bondi Junction knife attacker earlier this year.
But independent senators including David Pocock, Jacqui Lambie, Tammy Tyrrell, Fatima Payman and Gerard Rennick are holding out against the plan, putting it on course for defeat even if Labor gains support from the Greens.
Senators said they were receiving hundreds of emails and calls from voters who opposed the draft law because they believed the Australian Communications and Media Authority should not have the power to check the controls on social media content.
Pocock declared his concerns on Friday afternoon ahead of a Senate committee hearing on Monday that will hear from experts about how the law might work.
“As it stands, I believe the government’s approach is deeply flawed and there would need to be wholesale changes to the bill in order for it to get my support,” he said.
Lambie said the government plan assumed it was easy to identify mis- and disinformation but experts said it was not.
“There are lots of problems with this bill and the government is rushing it. They only allowed seven working days to make submissions to the inquiry,” she said.
Rennick, who left the Liberal National Party in August and now sits as an independent, said Queensland voters were telling him they did not want a government agency to have power over claims made in public debate.
“The idea of having the government control over their version of the truth is extremely alarming,” he said.
Payman said she was aware of the concerns and would meet the Australian Christian Lobby next week to learn why religious groups opposed the draft law. She would decide her vote after more consultation.
Victorian senator David Van, who quit the Liberals to sit on the crossbench, said he was open to passing the bill because it was mainly about the power to direct platforms to take down harmful content.
“If I’m right and that’s the full extent of the powers, I’ve got no problem with that whatsoever,” he said.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21947949
>>21947943
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Communications Minister Michelle Rowland put the misinformation bill to parliament in September after a year of dispute over draft changes that drew objections from the Law Council of Australia and civil liberties groups about the threat to free speech.
The bill includes exemptions for the media and ensures that satire, parody and religious content will be protected.
To settle fears that ACMA would decide what was true or false, the government drafted the bill to leave those decisions to the social media platforms themselves, as long as they could show they had acted on complaints from the community.
Rowland insisted last month that the law posed no threat to free speech and was backed by security agencies that warned that false information was causing real damage in the community.
“Over 80 per cent of Australians are concerned about the rise of mis- and disinformation,” she said.
“The fact that it harms democracies, it harms economies, and the fact that action is needed in this area [means that] doing nothing is not an option.
“There are online harms that harm people socially. There are harms that harm economically, including in the area of scams. And there are also harms that go to our democracy.”
Coalition communications spokesman David Coleman has strongly opposed the bill on the grounds that those who wanted to silence opponents would claim a statement was misinformation and try to have it removed.
“A classic example is the Voice debate last year where the government, pretty much every day, said opinions they didn’t like were misinformation,” Coleman said last month.
“If this law had been in place, then I’m sure it would have been used and it would have had a chilling effect on that debate.”
The Law Council expressed serious concerns about the changes last year. The NSW Council for Civil Liberties said it supported new regulation to hold digital platforms accountable, but wanted amendments to improve public transparency. The Victorian Bar, the peak group of barristers in that state, said the bill should not be passed.
“While the Bar acknowledges the importance of responding to false and otherwise harmful information online, such responses ought to only make justifiable incursions into socially valuable freedom of expression,” the Victorian Bar said in a submission to the government.
“The present bill is not justifiable in this respect and will have a chilling effect. It is also likely to be ineffective and unworkable in responding to the harms to which it is purportedly directed.”
Labor has 25 senators and is hoping to gain support from the 11 Greens but needs 39 votes to pass a bill in the upper house, forcing it to find at least three independents.
The government has at least 20 bills it wants passed by the Senate as soon as possible but has only scheduled two more weeks of parliament for the year, starting from November 18.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Friday the parliament would return in February, although MPs and senators privately observed that this would depend on whether Labor chose to go to an election early in the new year.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/deeply-flawed-truth-bill-on-the-brink-in-senate-showdown-20241108-p5kp2l.html
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273ca3 No.21947984
>>21922359
>>21947890
>>21947943
Don’t get on wrong side of Elon Musk, Labor warned
NOAH YIM and GEOFF CHAMBERS - November 07, 2024
Coalition MPs are pushing for Anthony Albanese to dump Labor’s misinformation bill amid expectations the federal government’s suite of social media and online safety laws will come under further attack from US president-elect Donald Trump’s billionaire backer Elon Musk.
Amid rolling court and verbal battles between Mr Musk, owner of social media platform X, the Albanese government and eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant, the Coalition has raised concerns that Labor’s misinformation bill could lead to tensions with a Trump administration.
Ahead of this week’s election, US-based tech leaders, including Apple boss Tim Cook, directly lobbied Mr Trump about European Union laws and multibillion-dollar penalties targeting their companies.
Following his election win over Vice-President Kamala Harris, Mr Trump – who is expected to adopt a more hands-off approach to artificial intelligence than was signalled by the Biden administration – was congratulated by the chief executives of Apple, Google, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon and OpenAI.
Mr Musk’s company X has been waging legal battles with the eSafety Commissioner over the Online Safety Act. The Tesla and SpaceX founder has also attacked the Albanese government for being “fascists” in relation to the misinformation bill.
Mr Musk has called Ms Inman Grant the “censorship commissar” over her attempt to force X to take down a video of a stabbing at a Sydney church not just in Australia but across the world.
He was one of Mr Trump’s biggest financial supporters in the election and could play an influential role in the next White House. Mr Trump spent several minutes praising Mr Musk in his victory speech on Wednesday.
Mr Trump has previously said he would establish a government efficiency commission within his administration and appoint Mr Musk to lead it.
It was reported Mr Musk lobbied Mr Trump to select vice-president-elect JD Vance as his running mate.
Queensland Nationals senator Matt Canavan urged the Albanese government to either scrap or defer its misinformation bill.
“The Albanese-Trump relationship is already off to a rocky start,” Senator Canavan said. “We should be trying to reduce any unnecessary further tension.
“Donald Trump is a strong defender of the commercial interests of American companies.
“The misinformation bill is a terrible law, but it is especially unwise to threaten American companies with absurd fines of up to 5 per cent of their global revenue when we are trying to settle our relationship.
“The government should withdraw, or at least defer, its bill until it can establish a strong, working relationship with the new Trump administration.
“This is not just about X and Elon Musk. Mr Trump has repeatedly recounted the story of him speaking to the head of Apple, Tim Cook, about helping him fight a $22bn fine imposed by the EU.”
Senator Canavan said “we should be doing everything we can to remove areas of disagreement with the US so we can stabilise our important friendship in the wake of senior Labor MPs previously making unwise personal attacks on President Trump”.
Communications Minister Michelle Rowland on Thursday was asked what resistance she expected from the US to a new under-16s social media ban, especially given Mr Musk’s expanded influence under a future Trump administration.
“The sovereignty of our laws, the sovereignty of our parliament and the welfare of Australians is paramount to this government,” she said. “Every company that operates in Australia, whether domiciled here or otherwise, is expected and must comply with Australian law or face the consequences.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/dont-get-on-wrong-side-of-elon-musk-labor-warned/news-story/53198cdb05939102c6a12b9d646fbe5c
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273ca3 No.21949056
Eavesdropping air fryers ‘sending data to China’
MARK SELLMAN, The Times - November 05, 2024
Air fryers may be serving up a side of surveillance with your chicken and chips.
Three makers of the popular kitchen gadget have apps that want to record audio on your phone and send your data to China, consumer group Which? has said.
The consumer group tested four types of smart gadgets to see how invasive they were of users’ privacy. Air fryers made by Xioami, Aigostar and Cosori all wanted to record audio on users’ phones with no specified reason, as well as know the customer’s precise location, Which? said. The Aigostar and Xiaomi fryers both sent people’s personal data to servers in China and the Xiaomi app connected to trackers from Facebook and TikTok.
Among other tested devices, the Huawei Ultimate smartwatch was classed as giving invasive access to parts of someone’s phone, including precise location, the ability to record audio, access to stored files and the ability to see all the other apps installed.
All of the air fryers, watches, TVs and smart speakers that were tested required privacy consent to work properly.
The researchers said that smart TV menus were “littered with ads and thirsty for user data”. Samsung’s TV app requested eight “risky” phone permissions, including being able to see all the other apps on a phone, second only to the Huawei smartwatch, Which? said. The Bose portable home speaker and app were “stuffed with trackers, including Facebook, Google and digital marketing firm Urban Airship”, it found.
Trackers are software in an app that monitors data about your activity, including how you use the app, your location and the device you are using. This data is often sent to companies such as Facebook and Google, which use it to target users with personalised adverts.
The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) expressed concern over the findings. Slavka Bielikova, principal policy adviser at the ICO, said: “The results from Which?’s testing of smart products show that many products not only fail to meet our expectations for data protection but also consumer expectations.”
The ICO said it would issue guidance for smart device manufacturers in spring to “outline clear expectations for what they need to do to comply with data protection laws”.
Which? called on the ICO to include in its guidance clear advice on how consumers’ data can be used. It expressed concern that foreign manufacturers would take advantage of the ICO’s difficulties in enforcing compliance.
Huawei said it took consumers’ privacy “incredibly seriously”. Xiaomi said it adhered to all UK data protection laws and did “not sell any personal information to third parties”. Cosori said its smart products “must comply with GDPR [data protection laws]”. Aigostar did not comment.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/the-times/eavesdropping-air-fryers-sending-data-to-china/news-story/e072370a426f4e7695b67ca6090d5d0a
https://www.which.co.uk/policy-and-insight/article/why-is-my-air-fryer-spying-on-me-which-reveals-the-smart-devices-gathering-your-data-and-where-they-send-it-a9Fa24K6gY1c
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273ca3 No.21949128
>>21780991
>>21781017
Australia confirms donation of 14 rigid hull boats to Ukraine
Robert Dougherty - 05 NOVEMBER 2024
Australia will gift 14 rigid hull boats to the Armed Forces of Ukraine under the latest round of military support, valued at $14 million, to Ukraine.
The military support is expected to bolster Ukraine’s maritime and coastal defence, which has been an important operational domain for the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
The Australian Defence Force sea boats are expected to provide a fast and highly manoeuvrable maritime capability for Ukraine.
The announcement builds on previous contributions to Ukraine’s maritime capability, including Rigid Hulled Inflatable Boats, as announced by the Deputy Prime Minister during a visit to Ukraine earlier this year.
“Australia remains firmly committed to supporting Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression. This is in Australia’s interests, and is the right thing to do,” according to Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles.
“Ukraine has demonstrated its ability to thwart Russia’s continued attacks from the Black Sea.
“We are proud to contribute to these vital maritime defences with this new package.”
Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion, Australia has provided more than $1.3 billion in military support, and more than $1.5 billion in overall support to the government of Ukraine.
Earlier this year, Australia announced the gifting of 49 M1A1 Abrams main battle tanks to Ukraine as part of a military assistance package worth around $245 million.
The main battle tanks are expected to bolster the Armed Forces of Ukraine in its fight against Russian military forces, as well as add to the Armed Forces of Ukraine’s firepower and mobility and complement partners’ support for Ukraine’s armoured brigades.
https://www.defenceconnect.com.au/naval/15030-australia-confirms-donation-of-14-rigid-bull-boats-to-ukraine
https://x.com/AmbVasyl/status/1853573966721700194
https://x.com/UKRinAUS/status/1853567278974951882
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273ca3 No.21949152
>>21682607 (pb)
>>21682618 (pb)
>>21695254 (pb)
>>21761808
Police investigating 14 people over displays of terrorist symbols
Natassia Chrysanthos - November 5, 2024
The Australian Federal Police is investigating 14 people for displaying terrorist symbols at a pro-Palestinian protest, while it launches a separate probe into whether Australians’ commentary about events in the Middle East has crossed legal lines.
Deputy commissioner Ian McCartney revealed the investigations to a Senate estimates hearing on Tuesday, just over a month after the waving of Hezbollah flags and vigils glorifying slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah reignited political debate about free speech and appropriate protest in Australia.
McCartney said the AFP had spent 1100 hours investigating, including reviewing 90 hours of CCTV footage, after Victoria Police reported several matters to the federal agency following a pro-Palestinian protest in Melbourne in September.
As of this week, he said 14 people were under investigation for displaying prohibited terrorist symbols in public. Three search warrants had been executed against three people, a further three had been spoken to, and several mobile phones had been seized.
“If relevant thresholds are met, the AFP will provide briefs of evidence to the Commonwealth director of public prosecutions to determine if charges will be laid,” he said.
“I can reveal we are also investigating whether some discourse relating to deceased terrorists, or events in the Middle East, has reached the threshold of urging violence against groups or advocating terrorism.”
Political debate over pro-Palestinian protests erupted in the lead-up to the one-year anniversary of the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, as Labor and Coalition MPs demanded action under new laws that ban the display of terrorism symbols if they are used to spread hate, intimidate or incite violence.
AFP boss Reece Kershaw told 2GB’s Ray Hadley that Hezbollah flag waving at protests after Israel assassinated Nasrallah had been against the law and officers would take action. Australia has designated Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation since 2021.
Prosecutions would represent a high-profile national test case for the laws. NSW Police last month charged a 19-year-old woman with displaying a terrorist organisation symbol at a September 29 protest in Sydney. She entered a not-guilty plea and her case returns to court in December.
McCartney said the AFP had not diverted resources from terrorism investigations, and that 10 counter-terrorism operations this year had led to charges against 15 people. Eleven of them were under 17 years old, and many were radicalised online.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/police-investigating-14-people-over-displays-of-terrorist-symbols-20241105-p5ko45.html
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273ca3 No.21949211
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. Dozens of ex-staff at elite private school accused of historical sexual, physical abuse
Caroline Schelle - November 7, 2024
More than two dozen former Carey Baptist Grammar School staff have been accused of molesting students on campus, at camps and in teachers’ cars over three decades.
The Age early this year revealed that three survivors of alleged abuse had come forward with historical claims against three male teachers at the co-educational private school in Melbourne’s east.
Now more than 30 people have come forward alleging physical and sexual abuse at the school from the 1960s to the 1990s, according to law firm Judy Courtin Legal.
The firm confirmed 32 ex-pupils had contacted it about alleged abuse at the school, accusing 26 staff members – but not all have decided to take action.
The alleged abuse took place at the school, in teachers’ cars, on school-run camps and during “unsupervised tutoring” both on and off premises, according to complaints.
The firm is representing four former pupils who claim they were subjected to sexual abuse, grooming or serious physical assaults by former Carey staff. It said it was also in contact with two others considering taking action.
One legal proceeding filed this year involves one teacher and another male associated with the school and is expected to go to trial in August 2025, according to the firm.
An ex-student who is suing the school said the legal process added to the pain and trauma of survivors.
“Sadly, this protracted legal process only adds to the pain and trauma caused, not only by the actual abuse but also now through the legal process by the institution that let us down so gravely in the first place,” she told The Age.
Carey Baptist Grammar principal Jonathan Walter said that when allegations of historical abuse were raised, the school reached out to the school community and encouraged those affected to contact the institution directly.
“The school has heard from a number of past students in relation to these matters and we are working to support all individuals who have approached us,” he said in a statement to The Age.
“I have personally met with past students and heard their stories and experiences.”
Walter said the school reported all relevant matters to police and other reporting bodies.
The law firm said at least three people had made complaints to police about what they experienced at the school.
Principal lawyer Judy Courtin said she was not surprised by the high number of former Carey students contacting the firm.
“That the reported experiences range over more than 30 years is troubling,” she said.
“This reflects the great difficulty sexually abused children have in disclosing the abuse.”
Others who came forward to the law firm said children at the exclusive institution were told to strip and forced to walk naked through the showers while a teacher watched on.
One woman who contacted the firm said more than one teacher abused her. Her lawyer said perpetrators were good at knowing how to silence their young victims.
“Survivors though are very courageous people, and they are realising that by speaking up, they are reclaiming that power that was stolen from them as a child,” Courtin said.
Carey Baptist Grammar is one of the state’s most expensive schools, with fees for years 11 and 12 set at $40,824 in 2025.
The exclusive school – which has campuses in Kew and Donvale and sports grounds in Bulleen – has more than 2000 students and was founded in 1923.
In 2023, Carey was ranked 93rd for its VCE results, with 11.2 per cent of VCE students at the school recording study scores of 40 or over and a median VCE study score of 33.
Walter said he would listen to and assist former students on whatever “pathway they decide to take”.
“Carey places the safety of students today, and those of our past, as our number one priority,” he said.
If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline (13 11 14), the Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) and Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800).
https://www.1800respect.org.au/
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/
https://www.kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/dozens-of-ex-staff-at-elite-private-school-accused-of-historical-sexual-physical-abuse-20241101-p5kn4f.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WCO9iRf5jBc
https://qresear.ch/?q=Carey+Baptist+Grammar
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273ca3 No.21949292
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. 3D-printed guns on rise in Australia, with seizures of lethal firearms up across nation
Alysia Thomas-Sam and Mike Lorigan - 4 Nov 2024
1/2
The lethal FGC-9 semi-automatic weapon can fire up to 30 rounds without needing to be reloaded and is the most popular 3D-printed gun in Australia, based on seizures in every state and territory over the past 12 months.
Police say the gun, branded under the name ''F*ck Gun Control", is increasingly being found in the hands of organised crime groups, extremists and teenagers around the world.
These guns are deadly and far more advanced than the homemade wood and metal piece that was in 2022 used to kill former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe.
At the Australian Federal Police forensics headquarters in Canberra, the ballistics team manufactured their own FGC-9 to show 7.30 how advanced and dangerous 3D-printed guns had become.
"Its characteristics, in terms of muzzle velocity and penetration, are comparable to other firearms if it's manufactured effectively," the AFP's forensics co-ordinator, Michael Taylor, said.
It is illegal to make a 3D-printed firearm in Australia — and the possession of a digital blueprint to create one is an offence in some states.
Those convicted in NSW of possessing a blueprint face a sentence of up to 14 years in jail.
The punishment is even greater in Tasmania, with the potential of up to 21 years in jail.
The AFP has blueprints and Dr Taylor detailed a section which showed the sketch for the lower receiver of a 3D gun called the Urutau.
"These are high-powered weapons," the head of NSW Police's Drug and Firearms Squad, Detective Superintendent John Watson, told 7.30.
"We've seen incidents overseas with armed active offenders. We've already had a Port Arthur. We do not want another."
Last month, WA Police executed a search warrant in Perth's north and uncovered 21 privately made 3D-printed guns.
A week later, NSW Police seized a 3D printer, 3D-printed firearm parts and approximately 10,000 rounds of ammunition on the state's south coast.
"We've seen evidence of organised crime offering for sale and selling particular [3D-printed] guns," Superintendent Watson said.
"People with mental health issues, people living at home, people with access to firearms, they were either involved with or were licensed firearms holders … they were acting unlawfully and making their own firearms."
The issue is so urgent that every law enforcement agency around the country recently gathered with FBI representatives, legal academics and tech experts in Melbourne to discuss the increasing threat of 3D guns in the community under the national task force Operation Athena, which targets the trafficking and use of illicit firearms.
"We don't want 3D-printed weapons to become unmanageable," Superintendent Watson said.
"It is critical for us all to talk, for us to get a clear understanding of the landscape and to make sure that we are doing everything we can to continue to put the controls in place that we need."
Did Australia help shut down 3D gun maker?
In 2013, American Cody Wilson created "The Liberator" — widely regarded as one of the first 3D-printed firearms in the world.
His mission was to make blueprints for his gun available for anyone to create one using a 3D printer at home; the design file was downloaded about 100,000 times before it was taken down.
Wilson describes himself as a defence contractor for the public.
Wilson's company bills itself as "the world's largest 3D gun repository" and he is an outspoken critic of gun control.
"Politics, government and these things, the question of state, are questions of the monopolisation of the means of force and violence. I'm an advocate for distributing the means of force and violence for its political ramifications," Wilson told 7.30.
He says the only way anyone in Australia can print a gun is "if you don't ask permission". He is aware of the illegality.
Wilson said he believed the Australian government lobbied US agencies to have his website shut down completely.
"It was explained to me through export control law firms and officials who at that time worked in the Bureau of Military Affairs and Department State that Australia was pressuring both the National Security Council of the Obama administration and State Department directly to find a way to take my website down or make it inaccessible to residents of Australia," he said.
"We took The Liberator down two days after we put it up, at the request of the US State Department, and we know they were pressured by other governments, and it remained down officially for some years."
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21949306
>>21949292
2/2
The AFP said it was not "in a position to discuss" whether it had tried to take Mr Wilson's website down, but confirmed it was "looking at all opportunities and mechanisms" to manage gun control.
In 2018, Wilson and his company Defense Distributed won the right to publish their blueprints. However, he says he is still facing several lawsuits brought against him by separate US states.
"I don't think I've ever won against a state in court, but you can make that defeat take a long time and you can use your resources to create interesting alternatives to the quote-unquote defeat. That's kind of what I'm in the business of doing," he said.
In 2018 he also stepped down as director of Defense Distributed, after he was charged with an offence involving a minor. He pleaded guilty to a third-degree felony and was put on probation.
He has since been reappointed as director and believes everyone has a right to build a gun. The AFP doesn't agree.
"My view is that the ideology is not consistent with Australian values. The Australian community does not want illicit firearms flooding the streets," Dr Taylor said.
Despite the lack of gun-related deaths in Australia and the high number in the US, where ABC USA reports that as of September more than 11,000 people have died this year due to guns, he attacked Australia for having strong legislation.
'Made in the bedroom'
Despite Wilson's comments, the dangers are real. The number of 3D guns seized in Australia has increased in the past year.
3D printers have become commonplace in schools, universities and even workplaces and the guns themselves can be attractive to children.
Any colour plastic can be used — pink, purple and even Hello Kitty-branded pistols are possible.
All of these issues are major concerns for law enforcement.
"Ten or 15 years ago, I think it's fair to say that 3D-printed firearms were more looked at as being novice or a niche," Superintendent Watson said.
"We've had matters where people have been making firearms parts, either in their bedroom, in their lounge room or in rooms that are, for all intents and purposes, in a family home, yet nothing was ever reported to us.
Along with a rise in detections of 3D-printed guns during police raids, the printers used to manufacture these firearms are also being seized across the country.
Police say their focus is not on trying to regulate the use of 3D printers and parts but they haven't ruled it out as a possibility in the future.
"We would consider openly all options for mitigating illicit firearm crime, but in no way do we want to impede on legitimate industry or Australia's uptake of novel technology. So any actions taken would have to have a very balanced, balanced approach," Dr Taylor said.
"People need to be aware that the decision to manufacture illegally a firearm makes you a criminal, and that's a key thing.
"People need to understand that you're not a hobbyist, you're not a tinkerer.
"By undertaking this kind of activity, you become a criminal, and that's a key message that I would send."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-04/3d-printed-guns-rising-australia-semi-automatic/104538082
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DS_UBFz2rBY
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273ca3 No.21949348
>>21734044 (pb)
>>21761378
>>21814588
White supremacist accused of Ku Klux Klan stunt while awaiting jail term for Nazi salute
Erin Pearson - November 8, 2024
A Neo-Nazi on a warning that he was facing jail time for performing a Nazi salute was allegedly part of a group who dressed in Ku Klux Klan costumes and intimidated young women in a hardware store car park.
Jacob Hersant was on Friday jailed for one month, but then released on appeal bail, after a magistrate found he had shown no remorse for performing a Nazi salute outside the County Court building in October 2023.
Hersant, 25, was the first person in Victoria charged with performing the Nazi salute, six days after the gesture was outlawed by law.
A hearing in Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Friday heard that while awaiting sentencing, Hersant was interviewed by police over a Halloween stunt outside a Bunnings store in Port Melbourne on October 31.
He was questioned following a police “day of action” against the neo-Nazi National Socialist Network (NSN) over allegations of grossly offensive public conduct.
Three other members of the group were also arrested this week, including Thomas Sewell, 31, who appeared in court on Friday supporting Hersant.
A police spokesperson said Hersant is expected to be charged on summons over the Port Melbourne incident, while Sewell was released pending further inquiries.
In court on Friday, Hersant’s lawyer Timothy Smartt argued his client should be shown mercy over the “non-violent act” last year, when he performed the Nazi salute and said “Heil Hitler”.
Smartt said jailing his client would be a crushing sentence compared to those handed to other offenders interstate, which had resulted in fines.
But magistrate Brett Sonnet said Hersant remains a figurehead of the NSN, which promotes far-right activity, white supremacy and involuntary deportation, and his act was “egregiously offensive” to many.
“The court denounces the accused’s conduct,” Sonnet said.
“In Australia, as with most liberal democratic countries around the world, freedom of speech is not an unlimited right.”
Sonnet said he did not seek to punish Hersant for his political views, but rather his breach of the law.
In imposing his sentence, Sonnet highlighted the atrocities of war committed under Adolf Hitler’s reign in Germany before and during World War II, which resulted in the deaths of up to 80 million people.
“The embodiment of modern political evil,” Sonnet quoted from historian and biographer Ian Kershaw.
“The Nazi regime was a catastrophic failure.”
Outside court, Hersant, who had pleaded not guilty to the charge, said he planned to continue his fight all the way to the High Court. Smartt has offered to represent him for free.
Along with Sewell, Hersant’s supporters in court included fellow NSN members Nathan Bull and Joel Davis.
While refusing to answer questions about the number of members his organisation currently had, Sewell said the group was expanding and planned more action.
Last month, the NSN was behind two public protests where men dressed in black, most with their faces covered, rallied in the NSW regional town of Corowa, and at Docklands.
In Docklands, police pepper-sprayed the group when they tried to disrupt refugee protesters’ 100th night outside the Department of Home Affairs offices demonstrating against those left in limbo waiting for permanent visas to be approved.
Victorian government minister Gabrielle Williams on Friday declined to comment specifically on Hersant’s case, but said the state’s laws sent “a clear message that this behaviour is utterly unacceptable”.
“People should be held accountable for hate crimes. It’s as simple as that,” she said.
Anti Defamation Commission chairman Dvir Abramovich said sentences should truly reflect the gravity of such “vile” actions.
“Justice has spoken – loudly and fiercely. If you salute Hitler, you’ll end up saluting the prison walls and today Jacob Hersant felt the iron fist of justice,” he said.
“We didn’t just make history or win a case – we buried the Nazi salute under the weight of justice, and I say good riddance.”
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/white-supremacist-jacob-hersant-jailed-for-one-month-for-performing-nazi-salute-20241108-p5kox0.html
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273ca3 No.21949380
>>21922359
>>21922416
Labor anxiety as Trump eyes MAGA loyalists for top roles
BEN PACKHAM - November 08, 2024
Donald Trump’s determination to install MAGA loyalists and China hawks to key national security roles is looming as an early test for the Albanese government’s relationship with his administration.
Hard-right warrior and former diplomat Richard Grenell is a leading contender to become Mr Trump’s secretary of state – an appointment that could challenge Foreign Minister Penny Wong’s diplomatic skills.
The former Trump appointee as ambassador to Germany horrified counterparts in Berlin when he encouraged European conservatives to challenge the “failed policies of the left”, and underscored his pro-Trump credentials as a prominent “stop the steal” lieutenant after the 2020 election.
Trump confidant Mike Pompeo, the former secretary of state and CIA director, is one of the top candidates vying to become secretary of defence. National security sources said he would be a welcome appointment to the post, due to his strong support for the AUKUS nuclear submarine pact.
But he is also highly partisan and a leading China critic who could take a dim view of the Albanese government’s push to improve ties to Beijing.
Other prominent China hawks including former national security adviser Robert O’Brien, Tennessee senator Bill Hagerty, Florida senator Marco Rubio, and Florida congressman Michael Waltz are among the contenders to become secretary of state.
Mr Waltz, a former Green Beret, is also seen as a potential Pentagon boss along with Arkansas senator Tom Cotton, an army veteran who accused Joe Biden of doing “next to nothing to protect America from our greatest threat, Communist China”.
Mr Trump is reportedly prioritising proven MAGA Republicans for key posts after churning through more conventional appointments during his first stint in the White House, and will have little difficulty securing confirmation for his picks after winning control of the Senate.
In his first major appointment, he named his campaign manager Susie Wiles as his chief of staff. He is set to begin reviewing names for cabinet posts and other top government jobs in coming days.
Anti-vaxxer Robert Kennedy is expected to be appointed to a prominent health role, while Mr Trump has said he will appoint Tesla and Space X boss Elon Musk as his “secretary of cost-cutting”.
Senator Wong and Defence Minister Richard Marles met with Republican figures during recent US trips, including Mr Pompeo, in preparation for a potential Trump win. But there remain questions over their ability to forge the sort of close ties with the Trump team that they had with Biden administration counterparts Antony Blinken and Lloyd Austin.
One longtime watcher of US politics said they would have to be highly disciplined in their dealings with the new administration.
“I worry about Penny – not in public, but in private. She will meet a Robert O’Brien or Bill Hagerty and she will patronise them,” the source said.
Senator Wong has declared Australia is in a “state of permanent contest” with China in the Indo-Pacific, but the government has also been at pains to take the heat out of the bilateral relationship with Beijing.
A national security source said Labor’s hopes for more stable ties with Beijing were likely to clash with the Trump team’s view of “an almost existential struggle” with China that the US must win.
“Trump and his people will go beyond competing with China. They will want to prevail over China,” the source said.
National security experts believe AUKUS will not come under threat from the Trump 2.0 administration because of its value to the alliance, and the importance to the US of its expanding military footprint in Australia.
But there are concerns the Albanese government’s climate agenda could jar with Mr Trump’s determination to pull the US out of the Paris Agreement for a second time. Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said the government needed to keep a lid on its political views when dealing with the incoming US administration.
“Labor ideology must take a back seat to pragmatic and practical engagement in Australia’s national interest,” he said. “Donald Trump is proudly a disrupter and it’s important to not be spooked by that but equally to argue a strong case when it’s required.”
Anthony Albanese had his first phone call with the president-elect on Thursday, using the opportunity to highlight the importance of the US-Australia alliance.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/labor-anxiety-as-trump-eyes-maga-loyalists-for-top-roles/news-story/cdaa4aea7c4cee08b33d68c3e0d9341d
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273ca3 No.21949566
>>21809192
>>21906794
>>21922359
How does Australia work with an America led by a dangerous man?
TROY BRAMSTON, SENIOR WRITER - November 09, 2024
1/2
Donald Trump has achieved an extraordinary election victory. He is the only Republican to win the popular vote since 2004. The only former president to regain the White House since Grover Cleveland’s comeback win in 1892. The oldest elected president at age 78. And he did it as a convicted felon, adjudicated sexual abuser, twice impeached, election denier and coup plotter.
The American people returned to the presidency a man who did not accept losing the election four years ago, tried to overturn the result, incited a deadly and destructive riot at the US Capitol, refused to congratulate Joe Biden on his victory and declined to attend his inauguration or assist in the transition of power.
Trump claimed during this election campaign that there was vote fraud and “massive cheating”. But Kamala Harris did what Trump did not do. She accepted the voters’ verdict, will not challenge the result, phoned him to acknowledge his victory and will assist in the transition from one administration to another.
I wanted Trump to lose much more than I wanted Harris to win. Like conservatives Mike Pence, Mitt Romney and Dick and Liz Cheney, plus John Howard in Australia and William Hague in Britain, among many others, I judged Trump utterly unfit and unworthy to be 47th president.
I stand by that judgment but accept without equivocation that Trump won the election and did so clearly. But, having so much respect for the dignity, authority and capacity of the presidency, and utterly appalled by Trump’s lack of character, my view of him is unchanged by the result. He called Harris “retarded” and “stupid” while JD Vance called her “trash”.
In many columns, I acknowledged Trump’s appeal and argued he could not be ruled out from winning. He used grievance, envy, nativism, xenophobia, misogyny and sexism to win over voters. He tapped into important issues: the economy and immigration. He won significant support among white working-class voters and black and Latino minorities, and big votes in rural America.
This is a wake-up call for the centre-left in the US and in Australia, New Zealand, Britain and Europe: their voter base is crumbling. Harris had no persuasive plan for the economy and cost of living or to bring illegal immigration under control. The latter is a huge failure. Moreover, the centre-left needs to avoid the trap of identity politics and cultural crusades – a turn-off for moderate voters.
I also argued that Harris was an underwhelming candidate and her campaign was flawed. She failed to explain changed positions on policy or outline a compelling agenda for change. Yet Harris was a candidate for just over 100 days. Biden was a huge liability and history will judge him harshly for not exiting the race at the start of this year.
Nevertheless, it is worth noting Harris would have won if just 250,000 Americans voted differently in three states: Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania. That is, 250,000 voters out of 140 million. So, while the electoral college tally is clear, the margins of victory in these and other states are small.
Trump’s return will test the great republic. The American people have chosen a man who has contempt for democracy and the rule of law. He promised to be a dictator. He threatened to close down or investigate media companies. He wants to execute people who disagree with him, including political opponents, former advisers, military leaders and journalists.
Pence said Trump should “never be president” again. John Kelly, his former chief of staff, said Trump had “nothing but contempt” for democratic institutions. Mark Milley, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Trump was a fascist and dangerous to America. Legendary journalist Bob Woodward, who uncovered Watergate, urged Americans to heed these warnings.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21949584
>>21949566
2/2
Most countries cannot fathom what America has done. Trump has no respect for traditional alliances, whether they be Britain or in Europe or Australia and the Asia-Pacific. He prefers dictators and tyrants. He said last week that US “allies are worse than our so-called enemies”. Can you imagine Republicans Dwight D. Eisenhower or Richard Nixon or Ronald Reagan, or George HW Bush or George W. Bush saying this?
US military aid to Ukraine to resist Russia’s invasion is now under threat. Trump favours a deal between Russia and Ukraine that is likely to involve ceding land to an invader. The US could ease sanctions against Russia. Trump has threatened to withdraw the US from NATO. And he has been equivocal about halting Chinese aggression and wants Taiwan to pay more for its defence.
Trump’s pledge to levy 10 to 20 per cent tariffs on all countries and 60 per cent on Chinese imports could plunge the world into recession. Tariffs would damage our exporters and we would be collateral damage in any retaliatory trade war. Trump’s big spending promises, busting the budget and blowing out debt, and huge tax cuts are likely to be inflationary and increase global interest rates.
Australians, understandably, preferred Harris over Trump. This was the wish of every other democratic nation according to polls. The AUKUS nuclear submarine agreement, as negotiated, is at risk. Trump is likely to renegotiate this Biden-Harris deal made with Australia and Britain and make Australia pay more.
More broadly, how does Australia navigate its relationship with an America led by an addled and dangerous man who does not have a coherent foreign policy? Appeals to the “special relationship” – which almost every other country says they have with the US – will not cut it. It is a new ballgame and Australia is unprepared.
This is not the election result Anthony Albanese, Penny Wong, Richard Marles or Kevin Rudd wanted. Albanese said Trump encouraged the “violent insurrection” at the US Capitol. Wong blamed Trump for the ransacking. Marles said Australia should criticise Trump if he “harms the national interest”. Rudd accused Trump of corruption and branded him “a traitor to the West”.
It will be a wild four years with Trump back in power. Nothing is certain. He remains a despicable and disgusting man who is devoid of integrity or ethical values, is boorish and moronic, and unstable. I fear, by a narrow margin, Americans have made the wrong decision. But it is a decision they must live with and we must accept.
Troy Bramston is a senior writer and columnist with The Australian. He has interviewed politicians, presidents and prime ministers from multiple countries along with writers, actors, directors, producers and several pop-culture icons. He is an award-winning and best-selling author or editor of 11 books, including Bob Hawke: Demons and Destiny, Paul Keating: The Big-Picture Leader and Robert Menzies: The Art of Politics. He co-authored The Truth of the Palace Letters and The Dismissal with Paul Kelly.
https://qresear.ch/?q=Troy+Bramston
>To be blunt….
>GAME OVER.
>Thank you for playing.
>Have a Nice Day.
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273ca3 No.21955661
>>21922359
>>21922416
Nationals urge Peter Dutton to reconsider net zero policy following Trump re-election
GREG BROWN - 10 November 2024
Peter Dutton is facing pressure from Nationals MPs to revisit the Coalition’s support for net zero by 2050 after Donald Trump’s US election win, as the Albanese government plays down the significance of the world’s biggest economy likely pulling out of the Paris Agreement.
Nationals MPs Matt Canavan and Llew O’Brien are pushing for the Coalition to follow Mr Trump’s lead and vow to pull out of the international climate deal ahead of next year’s election, while fellow Coalition MPs Michelle Landry and Colin Boyce say there should be fresh discussions about the opposition’s commitment to the net-zero target given the implications of the US election.
Hinkler MP Keith Pitt said the pace of climate action should be slowed, while opposition veterans affairs spokesman Barnaby Joyce said “all facts need to be assessed if there are major changes”, although the former Nationals leader was quick to say the US’s formal position on Paris had not yet changed.
Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen said dumping the 2050 net-zero target would be “just about the biggest own goal you could think for our country”.
“Climate change and the need for renewable energy will continue around the planet and that is not going to change. And we’ll respond accordingly,” Mr Bowen said.
“But there is always going to be steps forward and steps back in international geopolitics when it comes to climate change. The government of Germany collapsed (last) week as well, they’re very key allies, partners of Australia’s transformation.”
Mr Bowen said there could be more global capital chasing Australian renewables projects under a Trump administration.
“If the United States changes their laws and makes it less capital-attractive for renewable energy investment, that investment is still going to occur, it just might not occur in the United States. I’m very happy for it to happen here,” he said.
“This transformation is so well under way. And in the United States … California and the other states have very clear and locked-in policies that aren’t going to change.
“California is a bigger economy than Australia is, so this is no small matter.”
Opposition climate change and energy spokesman Ted O’Brien rejected the push by Nationals MPs to reconsider net zero by 2050.
“The Coalition has always met and beaten our climate targets, and we remain committed to achieving net zero by 2050 – unlike Labor, under whom Australia’s emissions have risen and energy prices have soared,” Mr O’Brien said.
Senator Canavan said it would be good politics and economics for the Coalition to oppose net-zero emissions by 2050.
“People are desperate for leadership that focuses on Australia. There are a whole lot of people having a mental breakdown post Donald Trump being elected,” Senator Canavan said.
“But the main lesson is we just have to take care of ourselves. The global rules-based order is no more. It is dead, buried and cremated.”
Llew O’Brien said the Paris Agreement was “absolute madness”.
“We need to be taking advantage of what we have, and our advantage is coal and gas,” he said.
“My view is we should be getting out of (Paris), so within the ranks of the party that’s what I would be pushing for.”
Mr Boyce said there should be a “great debate” about whether Australia should remain a signatory to Paris.
“A whole lot of questions need to be asked in respect to all sides of politics on what the hell they think Australia is trying to achieve, given the fact the playing field has changed,” Mr Boyce said.
“If it was up to me, if I was king of the world, I would argue that Australia is achieving absolutely nothing except driving our manufacturing industry offshore and committing economic suicide doing so.”
Ms Landry said the election of Mr Trump presented an “opening for us to look at where our future is”.
“I think it is a discussion we need to have in the party room,” she said.
“I’m dead against these wind towers and solar fields. They are just wreaking havoc in regional Australia and causing us a lot of grief.
“There needs to be a total review of what is going on.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/nationals-urge-peter-dutton-to-reconsider-net-zero-policy-following-trump-reelection/news-story/27059270f87c3dd3b3f6203348cd3dcb
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273ca3 No.21955697
>>21853246
>>21853276
‘Whitewash’: New Zealand foreign minister blasts Australian COVID inquiry
Matthew Knott - November 10, 2024
New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters has blasted the Australian government’s inquiry into the handling of the pandemic while warning Canberra against taking further steps to make deporting New Zealand-born criminals easier.
The veteran politician urged Australians to “show a bit of gratitude” to Kiwi migrants for their economic contribution to the country, pointedly noting that an Australian man committed the 2019 Christchurch massacre, the worst terror attack in New Zealand’s history.
“Ned Kelly should show a bit of humility on this matter, and don’t come the raw prawn with us, to use an Aussie expression,” Peters said about the federal government’s recent efforts to allow more foreigners to be deported if they committed crimes in Australia.
The 79-year-old leader of the conservative New Zealand First Party is in his third stint as New Zealand’s deputy prime minister, having previously served in the role in Jacinda Ardern’s Labour government and Jim Bolger’s National government.
“You guys haven’t had a review, you’ve had a whitewash,” Peters said in Auckland about the Albanese government’s COVID inquiry released last month.
“And I’m out to make sure it doesn’t happen in my country … We are going to get to the truth.”
Ardern established a royal commission into the pandemic in 2022 that has since been expanded and extended under Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, who leads the conservative National Party.
As demanded by Peters, the royal commission will also examine use of vaccines and vaccine mandates, social and economic impacts of COVID policies and whether similar public health benefits could have been achieved with shorter lockdowns.
Peters said New Zealand’s tough response to COVID, while understandably strict at the beginning of the pandemic, became a “disaster” over time as “basic factual incongruities” were ignored in a bid to stamp out the virus.
Shutting schools for extended periods was a damaging decision, he said.
“Children were the least vulnerable [to the virus], and we knew that, but we shut the whole thing down,” he said.
“The cost to New Zealand is that we are still struggling to come out of that malaise. That is accentuated by our massive levels of truancy. If we hadn’t closed our primary schools, that would not have happened. But there’s an unwillingness to say we got it wrong.”
The Albanese government’s COVID-19 inquiry attracted criticism when it was announced for excluding examination of “actions taken unilaterally by state and territory governments”, but the final report proved more critical of state governments than many had expected.
Health Minister Mark Butler defended the inquiry on Sunday, describing it as a “very comprehensive, measured, sensible report that does examine a range of decisions that state governments were taking”.
“It doesn’t pull its punches at all,” Butler told Sky News.
Peters said the trans-Tasman relationship had been strained by the Albanese government’s adoption of a new immigration rule – known as direction 110 – designed to give administrative review officials more leeway to deport foreign criminals.
Peters said New Zealanders with little connection to their birth country, including those who had spent most of their lives in Australia, should not be deported in a bid to ease Labor’s political problems with immigration.
“Dare I say it: on March 15th, we had the worst terrorist event ever committed by an Australian in New Zealand,” Peters said, referring to the 2019 Christchurch massacre in which Brenton Tarrant killed 51 people in two mosque attacks.
“I hate to think that we might be being used for political purposes.”
The federal government scrapped the previous “direction 99” after it was blamed for allowing dozens of convicted criminals to be released into the community rather than returned to their country of citizenship.
Peters said Australia had been a “massive beneficiary of New Zealand’s education and skills system”, arguing that New Zealanders were the highest-earning immigrants in Australia.
“All I want from you guys is a bit of gratitude,” he said.
“I don’t want to hear no jingoistic behaviour from your politicians. Don’t come the dingo with me.”
Immigration from New Zealand to Australia has sped up dramatically in recent years, with the country recording a net migration loss of 27,200 people to Australia in 2023 as Kiwis seek economic opportunities abroad.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/whitewash-new-zealand-foreign-minister-blasts-australian-covid-inquiry-20241110-p5kpbr.html
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537568 No.21956733
Q !UW.yye1fxo ID: 239b20 No.89777 📁
Jan 19 2018 00:39:17 (EST)
Anonymous ID: 4bb19b No.89736 📁
Jan 19 2018 00:37:26 (EST)
>>89725
THANK YOU Q
FROM CANADA TOO IM SURE THIS WILL EXPOSE OUR CORRUPTION AS WELL!
>>89736
The 'CURE' will spread WW.
Have FAITH, Patriot.
Q
trips confirm
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273ca3 No.21961341
>>21922359
>>21922416
Anthony Albanese’s overseas trips undermined by Donald Trump and cost-of-living crisis
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 11 November 2024
Anthony Albanese’s attendance at the APEC and G20 summits in South America will be overshadowed by the return of Donald Trump, and comes at the worst possible time for the Prime Minister.
With all eyes on Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate and visit to the White House, APEC and G20 trade, climate change and clean-energy declarations will ultimately be symbolic rather than substantive.
While APEC and G20 leaders will promote the importance of free and open trade, world peace, fighting inequality and supporting climate change, Trump’s resurgence turns everything on its head.
The Prime Minister’s final overseas trip before next year’s election coincides with Labor falling behind in the polls, his personal support plummeting, and concerns that the cost-of-living crisis has become kryptonite for incumbent governments.
Albanese, who will miss some parliament sitting days during his unavoidable trip abroad, is confronting an increasing number of disgruntled voters who want lower interest rates, inflation to fall faster, and cheaper power and insurance bills.
For Australian households and small business owners, few of the APEC and G20 agenda items will resonate with them.
The leaders summits in Peru and Brazil include sessions covering trade and investment for inclusive and interconnected growth, innovation and digitalisation to promote the transition to a formal and global economy, sustainable growth for resilient development, sustainability, climate change and just transition, the fight against global hunger, poverty and inequalities, and global governance reform.
The waning influence of G7 Western nations over developing countries will again be on show at the G20 summit. The ambition of Western countries for bolder G20 climate change commitments has been repeatedly watered down, with China, India, Russia and other resource-rich and developing nations pushing back.
Across G20 nations, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa have strengthened ties through the BRICS bloc. In recent years, the BRICS group has offered membership or partnership status to other G20 members and guest nations including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, Malaysia, United Arab Emirates and Vietnam. Ahead of the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro, BRICS nations last month again lobbied for boosted climate finance to support developing nations.
Trump has already made clear that he will for the second time withdraw from the Paris Agreement and the Green Climate Fund. After winning the 2022 election, the Albanese government reversed Scott Morrison’s decision to freeze Australia’s contributions to the GCF, which mandates financial support for developing countries including China and India – among the world’s biggest polluters – to reduce emissions.
After Labor relentlessly attacked Morrison in the lead-up to the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, Albanese will end his term as Prime Minister having never attended a UN COP summit. Chris Bowen will again represent Australia at the COP29 summit in Baku.
With the government stalling its decision on a 2035 emissions reduction target, Labor’s likely successful bid to co-host the COP31 summit with Pacific nations in 2026 will not be the vote winner some ALP figures had hoped. Unlike the 2022 election, where Labor and the teals won city-based support on climate change, the issue has plummeted down the list of top voter priorities.
Facing the prospect of a US-China trade war, Xi Jinping will attend both summits. But the absence of Trump and Vladimir Putin minimises the impact of the APEC and G20 gatherings.
Albanese must attend the summits but has little to gain domestically by travelling halfway around the world to endorse declarations that a Trump administration threatens to up-end.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/anthony-albaneses-overseas-trips-undermined-by-donald-trump-and-costofliving-crisis/news-story/8edcca9ae5cd85f79b33cb81bc5f9e80
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273ca3 No.21961370
>>21922359
>>21853246
>>21853276
Too many journalists slipped into activist mode on Covid, and then Donald Trump
CHRIS MITCHELL - 10 November 2024
1/2
This column, forecasting a Trump election win, last week expressed surprise so many news consumers remain loyal to media sources that regularly get things hopelessly wrong, even national elections.
The left-liberal US media got Trump and the electorate wrong for nine years but last week showed little sign of understanding why. This column was reminded of the sullen faces on the ABC on election night 2019 when Liberal leader Scott Morrison beat Labor’s Bill Shorten.
A similar example here was coverage by parts of the media, but particularly the ABC, of the Covid pandemic and rules imposed by federal and state governments to deal with it. Many reporters behaved like political enforcers rather than questioning journalists.
Some at the ABC even referred to health editor Norman Swan as a “single source of truth on Covid”. Yet his public forecasts in 2020 of the imminent collapse of the hospital system were utterly wrong.
This may be why the federal government’s 871-page inquiry into Covid, released on October 29, landed with a dead cat bounce.
It led this newspaper’s front page and was allocated two full inside pages, an editorial and a commentary page led by Judith Sloan. That Saturday’s Inquirer section ran extensive analysis by Paul Kelly and Chris Kenny.
The Sydney Morning Herald covered the report with a single page one story, plus one inside comment piece by economics writer Shane Wright and an editorial. Its Saturday Review section ignored the report altogether.
The Australian Financial Review gave it similar coverage, although it did run a piece in its Saturday Perspective section. It also gave one of the pandemic’s most sensible voices, former deputy federal chief medical officer Nick Coatsworth, an opinion piece on October 31.
ABC 7.30 on October 29 ran a couple of cursory comments about the report from Canberra correspondent Jacob Greber in a wider seven-minute wrap of the day’s events in the national capital that mainly focused on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Qantas.
Coatsworth was cautious about the report’s central recommendation: the setting up of an Australian Centre for Disease Control. He pointed to the mistakes of the US CDC, especially its “overzealous guidelines on masking of young children, prolonged school closures and protracted vaccine mandates”.
“At times, the US CDC was locked in a feedback loop of ‘epidemiological fundamentalism’, a rigidity that stifled open debate and eroded public trust,” he wrote.
Sloan and Kenny argued there should have been a full-blown royal commission into the handling of Covid by all levels of government. The pandemic killed 24,000 people here, cost at least $158bn of lost GDP, pushed the national debt towards a trillion dollars and triggered a global inflationary spiral.
Yet even though its terms of reference prevented the inquiry from looking at the failures of state Labor governments, there is meat in the report for the persistent reader.
This includes barbs at Victorian hotel quarantine mismanagement, the negative effects on attitudes to vaccination, statements by the then Queensland chief health officer Jeanette Young (not named in the report) criticising the original AstraZeneca vaccine, the irrationality of school closures, their negative effects on children’s mental heath, and debacles in aged care.
The report covers hundreds of individual actions across all Covid policy areas and makes many recommendations about how to improve them. Apart from its support for a CDC, it is concerned about a lack of public trust in governments, based on the submissions and interviews it did.
This lack of trust triggered some of the worst civil disturbances in our history after Victoria’s fifth lockdown, even though for the first year of Covid, Victorians had supported the approach of then premier Dan Andrews.
The report says misinformation contributed to a loss of public trust but does not focus on the way incorrect commentary from experts often contributed to that mistrust.
It examines the closures of international and state borders, quarantine implementation, the role of the public service and the impact of the virus on groups ranging from schoolchildren to the homeless, Aboriginal Australians, women, people in aged care, those with disabilities, culturally and linguistically diverse Australians, and women.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21961374
>>21961370
2/2
If you don’t have the time or energy to read it, an easy way to understand what really happened in 2020 is to look at the testimony of US health chief Anthony Fauci before the US House Oversight and Accountability Committee.
Fauci freely admitted many of the harshest rules he oversaw had no science behind them and were simply best guesses. There had never been any work to assess the US “six feet separation” rule or mask-wearing for children.
Indeed, Coatsworth last week told this column epidemiologists knew early in the pandemic that the virus was not dangerous to children.
“In reality, the decision to close schools was not about protecting children from the disease. It was about restricting movement of adults who were driving children to schools,” he said.
The federal report says many children’s mental health was severely affected by lockdowns and millions of children’s educational results were hampered by remote learning.
Yet the ABC’s Swan told Radio National in March 2020: “We’ve just got to shut down schools … the risk to your child is low but it’s a public health measure because children spread the virus. And my feeling is we are, to be blunt, dicking around.”
Swan was a harsh critic of NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian, who tried to keep Sydney open whenever possible. He backed Andrews who locked down Melbourne longer than any city in the world.
Yet Victoria had a higher death rate by the end of the pandemic than NSW.
Worse was the performance of federal and state governments in keeping the virus out of aged care, where most deaths occurred.
Coatsworth says the medical profession needs to think carefully about its attitude to end-of-life care for the very elderly.
My sister and I were blocked from seeing our mum on her 90th birthday and had to sing Happy Birthday to her on FaceTime. We were asked not to send flowers because disinfecting them was too labour-intensive. As if flowers could transmit Covid.
For much of 2020-21, aged care visits were banned. It took a severe toll on residents’ mental health.
Yet most residents caught Covid from staff rather than from family visits.
Coatsworth said: “There’s no way we have the balance between compassion and infection control right in aged care. We’d lock facilities down in a heartbeat if a pandemic arrived tomorrow and it would be just as problematic.
“We need to come to terms with the fact that the life expectancy of someone in an aged care facility is 12 to 18 months. Is it better to keep people alive but isolated and alone or to risk them getting an infection and die in the arms of their families? We forced isolation and loneliness on tens of thousands of elderly Australians during Covid.”
Without a royal commission, the nation could easily snap back to an extreme eradication mindset at the next sign of any new disease.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/media/too-many-journalists-slipped-into-activist-mode-on-covid-and-then-donald-trump/news-story/2b5db18fbe877d4b5bf326aa3e70391d
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273ca3 No.21961394
>>21509573 (pb)
>>21510024 (pb)
>>21510053 (pb)
Snubbed: Australia’s best friend in the Pacific gets cold shoulder from Canberra
STEPHEN RICE - 10 November 2024
1/2
Solomon Islands’ most strident anti-Beijing warrior watched last week, quietly seething, as surveyors began work on the first Chinese infrastructure project in the nation’s most populous province, Malaita.
Before he was deposed as premier of Malaita last year, Daniel Suidani had banned Chinese companies from entering the province, putting him in open conflict with the pro-Beijing central government of Manasseh Sogavare, then prime minister.
Suidani even blocked the installation of Huawei mobile phone towers in his one-man war against China’s most concerted bid anywhere in the South Pacific to exert its power.
But now he sees young children being trained by Chinese police in martial arts.
The rebellious Suidani believes the values of the Chinese Communist Party are irreconcilable with those of Solomon Islands and corrosive of democracy – a heretical stance that led to his dismissal from office in February last year for refusing to accept the country’s “one China” policy.
In elections early this year the popular Suidani was swept back into parliament and Martin Fini, the pro-China premier who replaced him, booted from his seat.
Hefty bribes paid to some of Suidani’s erstwhile supporters from a CCP slush fund, a trumped-up arrest and constitutional impediments have set back his plans to be premier again, but in the meantime he remains the most effective bulwark against Beijing’s encroachment into the sprawling archipelago.
Which makes it all the more baffling that the provincial strongman is being blanked by the Albanese government.
Suidani wants to tell the Australian government why it is losing the war for the hearts and minds of his countrymen to the inducements of the CCP.
But he can’t get a foot in the door. His requests for a meeting with the Australian high commissioner in Honiara keep being fobbed off.
“We were trying to get an appointment but we haven’t got one,” Suidani told The Australian. “Maybe I’ll try again, but it’s very tough because they are always very busy.”
Suidani says the high commissioner’s office cancelled one appointment two weeks ago and he hasn’t heard from it since. He wonders if the thaw in Australia’s previously frosty relationship with China has left the Albanese government lukewarm about countering Beijing’s push for dominance in the South Pacific.
If so, he says, it’s a bad time to be backing off.
A wave of Chinese aid and investment flooded into Solomon Islands after Sogavare’s shock decision in 2019 to sever Honiara’s longstanding diplomatic ties with Taiwan and cash in on Beijing’s political and economic ambitions in the region.
China has since paid $90m a year into a “constituency development” slush fund for selected pro-Beijing members of parliament.
The switch in allegiance led to a murky security pact in which Chinese police have been deployed in the archipelago – and potentially paves the way for a Chinese military base on Australia’s doorstep. Now, says Suidani, the “small team” of Chinese police stationed in the country has grown exponentially, with Beijing’s notorious Ministry of State Security in every province, training local law enforcement in riot control and weaponry.
“We need to be very careful because every day the Chinese are going out to all the provinces and giving training to children and police officers – this is what is happening now,” he says. “The security pact with the CCP is very risky.”
Suidani acknowledges that Australia is helping with some big infrastructure projects in the Solomons and is grateful for it. But the Chinese government isn’t just financing similar projects, he says.
“You know, the way they are doing things here is quite different.
“There are other things that the Chinese cronies are doing, very little things to the people, individual families that need to be countered.”
Earlier this year, Chinese ambassador to Solomon Islands Cai Weiming was in Malaita handing out water tanks, solar lamps and fishing nets to local people.
“It may look small, but the people are seeing this happening right in front of them, so they are quickly convinced and say: ‘The Chinese see our needs and help us.’ So if we are not very careful they will certainly win the war for the hearts and minds of the people.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21961397
>>21961394
2/2
Although the mercurial Sogavare lost the prime ministership in elections held in April, his more understated successor, Jeremiah Manele, has proved to be just as trenchantly pro-Beijing.
Last week the government boasted that China was now its major infrastructure donor and largest trading partner. And Sogavare is now Finance Minister.
“Nothing has changed because the China influence in the country is huge,” Suidani says. “It is the same government as when he was prime minister.”
When Suidani was ousted from power in February last year in a move he claims was bankrolled by China, his successor opened the door to Beijing. Re-elected in April this year, Suidani has filed a High Court challenge over his removal.
“I want to set a precedent that an elected member cannot be sacked by a minister for reasons like the ‘one China’ policy,” he says.
He intends to be Premier again and believes he will get the numbers, but under parliamentary rules he can’t move a motion of no confidence in the Malaita government for a year after the election, in April next year.
In the meantime, he says, the government is doing everything it can to end his campaign. He was arrested last month, charged with unlawful assembly for allegedly masterminding protests that took place three years ago, leading to riots in which three people were killed and shops were looted and burned.
Suidani says his arrest – which took place just days before the government signed a major infrastructure agreement with China – was politically motivated.
“Some of the charges of unlawful assembly were when I wasn’t even in the country, I was in Taiwan getting medical treatment. So it is politically motivated by those who don’t want me speaking out against things that the government is doing with China.”
The bid to thwart his return to power extends to outright bribery by cronies of the Chinese government, he says, with fellow members of the Provincial Assembly promised everything from $SI300,000 ($55,000) payments, to three-tonne trucks and portable timber sawmills.
“Like everything the CCP is doing here, they don’t come out directly with their promises, they always use cronies or sometimes a government platform. But we know it is from the Chinese.”
It’s not a new tactic. Suidani himself was offered a $SI1m bribe in 2019 in exchange for switching Malaita’s diplomatic allegiances from Taiwan to China, he says.
“I said I was not for sale and they should keep their money,” Suidani says he told them.
What troubled him more was that the illicit overture from Beijing came from agents who had already infiltrated his national government.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong did not respond to requests for comment.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/snubbed-australias-best-friend-in-the-pacific-gets-cold-shoulder-from-canberra/news-story/fb4c72fbc6462a969565707918af5d5e
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273ca3 No.21961462
>>21660526 (pb)
>>21906707
U.S. Embassy Australia Tweet
On Remembrance Day in Australia and Veterans Day in the U.S., we honor those we have lost and those who have served.
Alongside @CN_Australia, Ambassador Kennedy thanks the @Australian_Navy for discovering USS Edsall, sunk off the coast of Australia during WWII. Lest We Forget.
https://x.com/USEmbAustralia/status/1855811270748106945
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273ca3 No.21961507
>>21961462
Defence Australia Tweet
Lest We Forget. Defence joins all Australians on #RemembranceDay to acknowledge, honour and remember the courage and sacrifice of those who have served our country and those who gave their lives in service to our nation. #YourADF @AWMemorial
https://x.com/DefenceAust/status/1855694443971481898
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273ca3 No.21961519
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21961462
Chief of the Defence Force Admiral David Johnston - Remembrance Day Address 2024
Defence Australia
Nov 11, 2024
On Remembrance Day we commemorate those who died in the First World War, as well as all Australian Defence Force personnel who have fought and died in wars, conflicts and peacekeeping operations.
The year 2024 marks the 106th anniversary of the signing of the Armistice between Allied forces and Germany, which ended the First World War (1914–18). On 11 November 1918, the guns of the Western Front fell silent after four years of continuous warfare. More Australians were killed and wounded in the First World War than in all subsequent conflicts combined.
As a mark of respect Australians are encouraged to pause at 11am for one minute’s silence and remember all those who died or suffered for Australia in all wars and armed conflicts.
Defence joins all Australians on Remembrance Day to acknowledge, honour and remember the courage and sacrifice of those who have served our country and those who gave their lives in service to our nation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FlloFkMvZ0o
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273ca3 No.21961532
>>21961462
For the Fallen
Laurence Binyon - 1914
With proud thanksgiving, a mother for her children,
England mourns for her dead across the sea.
Flesh of her flesh they were, spirit of her spirit,
Fallen in the cause of the free.
Solemn the drums thrill; Death august and royal
Sings sorrow up into immortal spheres,
There is music in the midst of desolation
And a glory that shines upon our tears.
They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted;
They fell with their faces to the foe.
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
They mingle not with their laughing comrades again;
They sit no more at familiar tables of home;
They have no lot in our labour of the day-time;
They sleep beyond England's foam.
But where our desires are and our hopes profound,
Felt as a well-spring that is hidden from sight,
To the innermost heart of their own land they are known
As the stars are known to the Night;
As the stars that shall be bright when we are dust,
Moving in marches upon the heavenly plain;
As the stars that are starry in the time of our darkness,
To the end, to the end, they remain.
Lest We Forget.
—
In Flanders Fields
John McCrae - 1914
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie,
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
—
We Shall Keep the Faith
Moina Michael - 1918
Oh! you who sleep in Flanders Fields,
Sleep sweet - to rise anew!
We caught the torch you threw
And holding high, we keep the Faith
With All who died.
We cherish, too, the poppy red
That grows on fields where valor led;
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies,
But lends a lustre to the red
Of the flower that blooms above the dead
In Flanders Fields.
And now the Torch and Poppy Red
We wear in honor of our dead.
Fear not that ye have died for naught;
We'll teach the lesson that ye wrought
In Flanders Fields.
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273ca3 No.21968148
>>21922359
>>21932643
>>21932686
Rudd’s fate as ambassador under new cloud as ‘village idiot’ Trump slur emerges
BEN PACKHAM and NOAH YIM - 12 November 2024
1/2
Fresh doubt has been cast over Kevin Rudd’s future as Australia’s ambassador to the United States amid revelations he branded Donald Trump “incompetent” and a “village idiot” in the wake of Mr Trump’s 2020 election loss to Joe Biden.
The comments, in videos unearthed by Sky News, will likely make it even harder for Dr Rudd to gain the confidence of the famously vindictive president-elect and his incoming administration, which has vowed retribution against Mr Trump’s critics.
Anthony Albanese again expressed confidence in his hand-picked ambassador on Tuesday, delivering a curt “yes” when asked whether Dr Rudd was still the right person to represent Australia in Washington DC.
Government sources highlight the fact that many who are now close to Mr Trump including vice-president-elect JD Vance – who once compared him to Hitler – have managed to get back into his good books after past negative comments.
But the government knows it may have to reassess its support for the former prime minister turned diplomat if he is frozen out by the Trump administration.
“Things may change in the future, of course, but at this point there is no reason to change tack,” a Labor source said.
Dr Rudd has many high-level backers, including former prime minister Scott Morrison and former ambassadors to the US Joe Hockey, Arthur Sinodinos and Dennis Richardson.
They argue he has done a good job since his appointment in March last year, highlighting his energetic lobbying of influential Republicans in congress ahead of the passage of key enabling legislation in the US to solidify the AUKUS nuclear submarine partnership.
But Dr Rudd put his past criticism of Mr Trump up in lights last week, issuing a statement saying he had scrubbed negative social media posts about the president-elect “to eliminate the possibility of such comments being misconstrued as reflecting his positions as ambassador and, by extension, the views of the Australian government”.
They included past tweets branding Mr Trump a “traitor to the West” and the “most destructive president in history”.
The New York Times covered the story on its front page under the headline “Why the Australian Ambassador Deleted Tweets Critical of Trump”.
In his newly emerged comments, Dr Rudd told Indian politician Shashi Tharoor in a January 2021 webinar that the US under the first Trump presidency had been “run by a village idiot”.
“People have seen China continuing to be competent in its national statecraft and the United States increasingly incompetent in its national statecraft under Trump,” he said.
In another video appearance, in 2022, Dr Rudd told a webinar at Duke University Mr Trump was “incoherent” and occasionally “in love with dictators”.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21968149
>>21968148
2/2
No one, apart from possibly Mr Trump himself, knows whether he will seek to punish Dr Rudd for his past comments or let bygones be bygones.
But the president-elect gave an ominous hint in March during an interview with far-right British politician Nigel Farage, branding Dr Rudd “nasty” and warning he “won’t be there long”.
Mr Trump’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, co-chair of the Republican National Committee, has also suggested Dr Rudd should be replaced.
“I think the problem … is when people say those things and don’t have a change of heart, it’s kind of hard to have a position like that where you’d want to keep someone who said such nasty things about a person,” Ms Trump told Sky News this month.
The questions over Dr Rudd’s tenure come amid high anxiety in Canberra over the president-elect’s unpredictable nature, his tariff plans that would damage Australia’s economy, and nervousness over the future of the AUKUS pact.
Former Defence official Peter Jennings said he believed Dr Rudd’s position was “untenable” and the government should move to replace him.
“It’s definitely the number one issue in terms of the bilateral relationship,” Mr Jennings told The Australian.
“From an Australian perspective, we don’t need to have this fight with the US.
“We know that Trump is a person who holds grudges. And I think the question is: Is that what we need to be defending when we come to establishing a new relationship with the president?”
He said the government needed to swiftly and decisively deal with the issue, arguing the nation’s relationship with the US was “just too vital to Australia’s security interests”.
“Frankly, had the government been thinking ahead, as they should have, this issue would never have come up; the tweets would have been deleted before Rudd started (as ambassador), and Rudd would have had his own plan in place, which doesn’t appear to be the case,” Mr Jennings said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/anthony-albanese-backs-kevin-rudd-as-us-ambassador-amid-increasing-pressure-after-new-video-emerges/news-story/fcc7a6f45871a2ea79a5204c54910370
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14069939/Kevin-Rudd-Donald-Trump-idiot-ambassador.html
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273ca3 No.21968186
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968148
'Village idiot': US Ambassador Kevin Rudd sledges Trump as 'incoherent', calls America ‘increasingly incompetent’ in newly uncovered footage
Laurence Karacsony - November 11, 2024
1/2
Newly unearthed footage shows Australia’s US Ambassador and former prime minister Kevin Rudd calling recently elected president Donald Trump a "village idiot" and "incoherent".
The comments from the years after Trump’s first term add to an ever-growing list of Mr Rudd’s public criticism and undermining of the incoming US president.
Former Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd’s 2022 appointment as US Ambassador followed his description of Trump as a “political liability”, a “problem for the world” and a “traitor to the west”.
SkyNews.com.au can now reveal footage from January 2021 which shows Mr Rudd speaking in a webinar with Dr Shashi Tharoor, an Indian politician and former diplomat, in which he compared China with the United States, calling the country he is special envoy to as "increasingly incompetent".
"The United States, in the past four years, has been run by a village idiot," Mr Rudd said.
"People have seen China continuing to be competent in its national statecraft and the United States increasingly incompetent in its national statecraft under Trump."
In June 2021, Mr Rudd made a Mar-a-Lago joke during a speech at the Harvard Asia Centre and jokingly said he would add it as a subtitle to a 2015 paper he authored on US-China relations.
“I hope to publish again soon, hopefully early next year. The future of US China relations under President Trump and the subtitle will be a call for a new tremendous piece of very big, beautiful Mar-a-Lago chocolate cake,” Mr Rudd joked to applause from the Harvard Asia Centre crowd.
“That's the working title. Any other suggestions, I’ll greatly receive. But I think it's innovative and tasty. Tremendously tasty.”
In April 2022, Mr Rudd attended a political science webinar at Duke University and described the president-elect as “incoherent” and occasionally “in love with dictators”.
“Donald Trump had a habit of wanting to shred most of the allies in terms of their political standing and cause doubted uncertainty as to whether he'd actually have their back if a crisis emerged,” he said.
“But the underpinnings of (the Trans-Pacific Partnership) was still incoherent because Trump himself was incoherent, and he waxed and waned from being in love with dictators to not knowing what he wanted from dictators.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21968190
>>21968186
2/2
Mr Rudd has heavily criticised Trump in the past and recently scrubbed his social media of comments calling the next leader of the free world the “most destructive president in history” and a “traitor to the west”.
At an address to the Oxford Union in 2017, Rudd said of then-president Trump he was a “problem” for Australia and the world.
“Trump at present represents a political liability for both sides of Australian politics,” Mr Rudd said.
“This guy is a problem. He is an objective problem, for the world, for the region, for my country.”
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who appointed Rudd to the Washington post with full knowledge of his public criticisms, has also been personally critical of the incoming President in the past.
“We have an alliance with the US, we’ve got to deal with him, but that doesn’t mean that you’re uncritical about it,” Mr Albanese said in 2017.
"He scares the sh*t out of me, and I think it's of some concern the leader of the free world thinks that you can conduct politics through 140 characters on Twitter overnight."
In an interview with Nigel Farage on GB News, the then presumptive Republican nominee for the 2024 presidential election hit back saying he has heard Rudd was “nasty” and “not the brightest bulb”.
In an interview with Sky News Australia days before the election, the president-elect’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, said it was “hard” to keep someone in a diplomatic position who had said “such nasty things about a person”.
"I do think it would be nice to have a person who appreciates all that Donald Trump has gone through to want to serve our country at this moment."
Ms Trump, who also serves as the co-chair of the Republican National Committee, suggested Trump would look to have Australia appoint "somebody else".
https://www.skynews.com.au/world-news/united-states/village-idiot-us-ambassador-kevin-rudd-sledges-trump-as-incoherent-calls-america-increasingly-incompetent-in-newly-uncovered-footage/news-story/9c439ee24d083565a8814294dabf843a
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkY5BWAdO7M
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273ca3 No.21968227
>>21831333
>>21831302
>>21922359
The uncertainty Trump creates around him ‘is his tactical advantage’, says former NSA boss Mike Rogers
ERIC JOHNSTON - 11 November 2024
1/2
Mike Rogers has worked up close with Donald Trump in the White House and says there are two important lessons to remember when you sit on the other side of the desk from the president.
The retired four-star admiral has seen a naval and military career that has spanned taking charge of destroyer-class warships in his 20s right through to running the National Security Agency, the intelligence arm of the US Department of Defence, under Trump and Barack Obama. He also headed up the Cyber Command, one of the combat commands of the US Defence Department.
“(Trump) is fundamentally two things: No.1, he likes a measure of uncertainty. He believes it gives him an advantage. He is a leader who is very comfortable with uncertainty, who in some ways almost likes to cultivate it,” Rogers says.
“And secondly, he loves eliciting a reaction, so he will often say things in part because he knows this will elicit a response.
“I remind people, you are going to have to separate what he says from what he does because they are not always the same thing.”
Rogers is speaking to The Australian on the sidelines of the UBS Australasia conference, where the former general was among the keynote speakers.
Rogers points out while Trump publicly sided with Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2018 against FBI claims of Russian interference during the election, during his first year in administration Trump implemented more sanctions against Russia than Obama had done in his entire second term.
Rogers, who also consults for former Liberal treasurer Joe Hockey’s Bondi Partners, is increasingly finding himself in demand from businesses looking to make sense of geopolitics. It never used to be like this, with business able to avoid the lane of global politics, but now it is blended like never before.
With the election that delivered the re-election of Trump less than a week old, Rogers tells The Australian the result – regardless of which way someone voted – ultimately delivered a clear outcome. This is a good thing for the US and its institutions, that the result is not in dispute.
And based on the election outcome that delivered Trump the popular vote, the Senate, and with a close contest still under way in the House of Representatives, Trump will come into office with a view that “he has been given a mandate for change”.
“That’s what I fully expect, he begins on his first day with that in his mind,” Rogers says.
The new president will take charge amid a myriad of global conflicts and unresolved tensions with China. And because many of these stresses also represent economic and cyber vulnerability, all businesses are finding themselves trying to navigate a world of geopolitical tension unlike any period before.
Rogers recalls briefings and recommendations under the Obama administration when there seemed to be defined space between where something was foreign policy and the impact on economics.
“That’s not the case today. Now we look at national security more broadly,” he says.
Actors such as Russia or China have both military clout but also technological strength and the ability to be economically disruptive. China in particular, is hyper-connected with the rest of the world, Rogers adds.
“When you live in a world in which there’s some measure of economic fragility, when you live in a world in which there are multiple single points of failure, friction, disruption becomes really challenging and really problematic, and it’s hard to isolate yourself from this disruption, from this impact, because we built these business models that are so connected,” he says.
“It’s generated great economic prosperity, but we always thought to ourselves, we could do it this way, in part because we had a high confidence level and a high assurance that there’d be no interruptions in the flow.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21968230
>>21968227
2/2
The interconnectedness of geopolitics also means the rise of cyber as a threat for all walks of business. He points out that Australia is now part of this theatre, with increased attacks similar to the scale of what happened to Medibank or telco Optus in the past year.
At NSA and CyberCom, Rogers studied cyber attacks deeply, as someone in charge of a defence response considered the attacks from all sides.
He points out in the cyber world it is much easier to play attack than defence. However, one thing often missing from the discussion around cyber is resilience.
That is to assume an adversary or bad actor gets into a network, which means to focus efforts on the speed of full recovery while slowing or isolating the extent of an attack.
The breed of cyber criminals today are not necessarily explicitly supported by states, but find tactical protection from nation states. There’s no coincidence that the single great concentration of criminal actors in cyber in the world exist in Russia, parts of Eastern Europe and China.
Why? Because those nation states generally believe the kind of activity that creates economic anxiety in the West is in their best interests, Rogers says.
As Trump prepares to take charge, what is the main international focus the new president?
Without a doubt, China and the Asia-Pacific is likely to get the most attention, Rogers says. “It’s the largest economic engine in the world,” he says. “It contains several of the largest economies in the world. It seems to offer the greatest potential for growth … it’s also at the moment where we probably have one of the most significant differences in terms of certainly the US and China.”
The military and economic influence of China makes it a risk, while trade and tariff policy represents an opportunity for the US.
This makes Australia and Japan pivotal partners in the region, which means alliances such as the Quad alliance and AUKUS will be supported.
And it won’t be forgotten that both countries’s relationships with Trump during his first administration were among the best in the world.
Russia and Ukraine represent another big area of tension, although Trump has long sought to set a different relationship with the Russians without the confrontation. Russia has significant resources, from energy to minerals, and from Trump’s view the question was never asked around how the relationship could be managed in the best interests of the US.
Finally, the Middle East, where Trump is likely to see an opportunity to bring stability. This includes wanting to finish the Abraham Accords he started working on during his first term.
Iran “is going to be a big deal for him,” Rogers adds, which also means the incoming president is likely to be outwardly more aggressive towards the country.
What should business make of all this global complexity?
Rogers says the best lesson here is drawn from his days in the military. “How you perform in a crisis is directly tied to how much time and energy you put in ahead of a crisis,” he says.
“This is the reason behind why in the military we were obsessed with training, planning and education. We tried to constantly say to ourselves, how can we better understand the world around us”.
He says the US military and its strategists didn’t always anticipate every scenario or get it all right, but the preparation in working through problems and providing flexibility around workforce and allocation of resources put them in a better position to execute.
“It’s the same in business: You’re trying to understand the risk and what’s the best way for me to mitigate it at the same time?”
“I always remind people there’s a flip side to uncertainty and unpredictability: that’s opportunity”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/economics/uncertainty-gives-trump-an-advantage-says-former-nsa-boss-mike-rogers/news-story/f5330f3a8e6a1a5abfbde27a5f09639b
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2024-11-12/bondi-partners-rogers-on-geopolitics-outlook-video
https://qresear.ch/?q=michael+rogers
https://qanon.pub/#585
https://qanon.pub/#1866
https://qanon.pub/#3389
https://qalerts.app/?q=Adm+R&sortasc=1
https://qalerts.app/?q=rogers&sortasc=1
https://qalerts.app/?q=NSA&sortasc=1
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273ca3 No.21968332
>>21922359
>>21932643
>>21932686
>>21968148
Dan Scavino Jr. Tweet
(Times Up)
(Dismiss)
https://x.com/DanScavino/status/1856245824675545479
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1854149581933625432
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273ca3 No.21974738
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Donald Trump aide Dan Scavino appears to send warning to Kevin Rudd over social media posts
Riley Stuart - 13 November 2024
A key Donald Trump aide appears to have sent the clearest message yet about what the incoming White House administration may think of Australia's Ambassador to the US, Kevin Rudd.
In an ominous post to his 2 million followers on X, Dan Scavino uploaded a GIF of sand trickling through an hourglass next to Mr Rudd's official statement on Trump's election victory.
GIFs are short moving images commonplace in social media interactions, and can be used in place of text to make a point. This one signifies when someone or something's "time's up".
Mr Scavino, who has known the president-elect for years and is his former golf caddie, served as a close assistant to Trump in his previous administration.
He had an office near Trump's in the West Wing, and is expected to feature prominently again when the billionaire takes office in January.
The ABC has contacted the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and Australia's embassy in Washington for comment on the post, which was uploaded Tuesday, local time.
Several posts on Mr Rudd's official X account criticising Trump were deleted last week after the results of the US presidential election became clear.
In one particularly scathing post from 2020, Mr Rudd — who was twice Australia's prime minister — described Trump as "the most destructive president in history".
"He drags America and democracy through the mud. He thrives on fomenting, not healing, division. He abuses Christianity, church and bible to justify violence."
In another, he described Trump as "a traitor to the West".
On top of all that, earlier this week a video of Mr Rudd describing Trump as "a village idiot" several years ago surfaced in the media.
The posts made headlines earlier this year when Trump was asked about them in an interview with his personal friend, UK politician Nigel Farage.
Trump described Mr Rudd as "nasty" and said he "won't be there long", despite the fact the president has no power over the people who countries nominate as their ambassadors.
At the time, Australia's Foreign Minister, Penny Wong, insisted Mr Rudd's position would not be in jeopardy, even if Trump won the presidential election.
While unaware of Mr Scavino's post on X, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton was on Wednesday asked about Mr Rudd's position during an interview on ABC Radio National Breakfast.
Mr Dutton said Mr Rudd has been effective in the role and his previous comments were an issue for the Labor government.
"I hope he's able to form a relationship with the new administration as he's done with the current one," he said.
Mr Rudd has served as Australia's ambassador to the US since March 2023.
In the lead-up to the US presidential election, senior diplomats told the ABC Australia could lean on former prime minister Scott Morrison in an unofficial capacity in the event of a Trump victory because the two still maintained a relationship.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-13/donald-trump-aide-appears-to-send-message-to-kevin-rudd/104593692
https://x.com/DanScavino/status/1856245824675545479
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273ca3 No.21974746
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Trump confidant warns Rudd’s future as ambassador could be bleak
BEN PACKHAM - 13 November 2024
A member of Donald Trump’s inner circle has signalled Kevin Rudd’s days as Australia’s US Ambassador could be numbered following his past attacks on the US president-elect.
Trump senior adviser Dan Scavino posted a gif on X of sand falling through an hourglass, in response to Dr Rudd’s November 7 statement congratulating Mr Trump on his election win.
The pointed warning to the former prime minister-turned-diplomat and the Albanese government follows the emergence of more negative comments about Mr Trump by Dr Rudd, including one branding him a “village idiot” after his 2020 election loss.
Mr Scavino is a close confidant of the president-elect, having served as deputy chief of staff and director of social media in his first administration and an adviser in his winning 2024 campaign.
He is reportedly in line for a senior post in the new administration, potentially returning to a deputy COS role.
Dr Rudd has many high-level backers from Australia’s political right, including former prime ministers Scott Morrison and Tony Abbott, and former ambassadors to the US Joe Hockey and Arthur Sinodinos.
But Labor believes there is a whispering campaign afoot by Australian conservatives to undermine Dr Rudd’s standing with the new Trump administration by dredging up and weaponising his past comments.
Peter Dutton said on Wednesday he supported Dr Rudd to continue as ambassador, arguing he had done good work in the role and was well respected in the US as a former prime minister.
“I hope that he’s able to form a relationship with the new administration as he’s done with the current one,” the Opposition Leader told the ABC.
He said Dr Rudd had a term to complete and his replacements would be considered by the government of the day.
ANU Professor of International Law, Don Rothwell, said Dr Rudd was not required as a serving ambassador to resubmit his credentials for approval by the incoming Trump administration, and it would be unprecedented for him to be booted from the role.
Professor Rothwell said the only way Dr Rudd could be legally removed by the US was if he was declared “persona non grata” under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.
He said such a move would be a “nuclear option” that would create a significant diplomatic rift between the countries.
“The likelihood of that occurring between Australia and the United States, even allowing for a Trump administration, would be completely exceptional,” Professor Rothwell said.
But he said it was possible an Australian ambassador could be “frozen out”, which would put the onus on Canberra to address the situation.
“Ultimately, it comes down to a question as to how effective the ambassador is if they’re not being received, not only by the senior members of the Trump administration, but also members of Congress,” Professor Rothwell said.
Anthony Albanese again expressed confidence in his hand-picked ambassador on Tuesday, delivering a curt “yes” when asked whether Dr Rudd was still the right person to represent Australia in Washington DC.
Government sources highlight the fact that many who are now close to Mr Trump including vice-president-elect JD Vance – who once compared him to Hitler – have managed to get back into his good books after past negative comments.
But Dr Rudd put his past criticism of Mr Trump up in lights last week, issuing a statement saying he had scrubbed negative social media posts about the president-elect “to eliminate the possibility of such comments being misconstrued as reflecting his positions as ambassador and, by extension, the views of the Australian government”.
They included past tweets branding Mr Trump a “traitor to the West” and the “most destructive president in history”.
The New York Times covered the story on its front page under the headline “Why the Australian Ambassador Deleted Tweets Critical of Trump”.
In his most recently emerged comments, unearthed by Sky News, Dr Rudd told Indian politician Shashi Tharoor in a January 2021 webinar that the US under the first Trump presidency had been “run by a village idiot”.
In another video appearance, in 2022, Dr Rudd told a webinar at Duke University Mr Trump was “incoherent” and occasionally “in love with dictators”.
Mr Trump gave an ominous hint on Dr Rudd’s future in March during an interview with far-right British politician Nigel Farage, calling Australia’s envoy “nasty” and warning he “won’t be there long”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/trump-confidant-warns-rudds-future-as-ambassador-could-be-bleak/news-story/65276634c9d061525c054a6b38b37965
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273ca3 No.21974754
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Ditching Rudd over Trump insults would be ‘worst possible signal’: Turnbull
Matthew Knott - November 13, 2024
Kevin Rudd’s future in Washington looks increasingly uncertain after a key Donald Trump ally sent an ominous message that the former prime minister’s days as Australia’s top diplomat in the United States are numbered.
Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull urged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to stand by Rudd, arguing the push against the ambassador was driven by News Corporation’s desire to gain revenge against Rudd for his past criticisms of Rupert Murdoch and his media empire.
Liberal senator Dean Smith broke ranks with his colleagues on Wednesday to call on Rudd to “pack his bags” after Dan Scavino, a senior adviser to Trump’s presidential campaign, posted an image on X showing sand trickling through an hourglass in response to Rudd’s official statement on Trump’s election victory.
Scavino’s post shows that Rudd’s scathing comments about Trump have been noticed by some in the president-elect’s inner circle, raising doubts about whether Rudd can remain in his post despite the strong support of Albanese and several of Rudd’s predecessors.
Scavino was responding to a post on X on November 7 in which Rudd congratulated Trump on his election victory, saying: “Australia looks forward to working with President Trump and his administration on the challenges and opportunities that our two great democracies and the wider world will face in the years ahead.”
After acting as Trump’s golf caddie, Scavino served as director of social media and deputy White House chief of staff for communications. He is expected to return to the White House in a senior role.
Rudd last week scrubbed critical comments about Trump from his online record, including posts in which he excoriated Trump as “the most destructive president in history” and described him as a “traitor to the West”.
Video has subsequently emerged of Rudd describing Trump as a “village idiot” in 2021, before he was appointed to his ambassadorial role in December 2022.
Turnbull said: “It would be the worst possible signal to send to Trump to pull our ambassador out because he was critical of Trump in the past.
“I didn’t have success with Trump as prime minister because I kissed his arse. You have to be tough.”
Turnbull said News Corporation outlets such as Sky News were campaigning for Rudd to be removed because of his past calls for a royal commission into the Murdoch media.
“This is revenge,” said Turnbull, who took over from Rudd as co-chair of the Australians for a Murdoch Royal Commission group when Rudd took up his diplomatic posting.
“This is a campaign that News Corp kicked off, and they are running a vendetta … The question for the Trump adulators in the right-wing media ecosystem in Australia is whether they want our representative in Washington to stand up for Australia or join the ranks of the Trump sycophants?”
Dennis Richardson, a former US ambassador, made a similar argument, saying Rudd should be allowed to continue his work in Washington.
“Trump has clearly been comfortable having people around him who have criticised him in the past,” he said.
“This would not have become an issue at all unless certain figures at Sky News were determined to keep it going.”
Richardson noted the focus on Rudd’s future erupted when Brexit champion Nigel Farage asked Trump about Rudd in a March interview on behalf of colleagues at Sky News Australia.
Trump said that while he did not know much about Rudd, he had heard “he was a little bit nasty” and “not the brightest bulb”.
Smith told Nine-owned radio station 6PR on Wednesday: “I don’t think that Kevin Rudd is operating from a position of strength any more. If I was the foreign minister, I’d probably ask him to pack his bags.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21974755
>>21974754
2/2
Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham called for the government to undertake a “cold, clear assessment” of whether Rudd should remain in the role.
“Ambassador Rudd and the prime minister are the ones who are in the box seat to best make the assessment in coming weeks or months about how effectively he is going to be able to continue to have the influence and get the outcomes that Australia needs,” Birmingham told Sky News on Wednesday.
Birmingham said the risks of appointing Rudd were well-known.
“We’ve wished Kevin success, we’ve celebrated where he has had success, we want to see that success continue,” Birmingham said.
“Hopefully, indeed, the type of forgiveness that has been demonstrated to those members of the new administration will be extended in this case as well, but ultimately, the PM and ambassador Rudd have to put Australia’s interests first.”
Some supporters of Rudd privately acknowledge that his position could become untenable, even if they believe the campaign against him is unfair.
The most likely scenario is that Rudd would step down after judging that someone else could be more effective in the role, rather than Albanese sacking him, the sources said.
Former prime minister Scott Morrison has backed Rudd, as have previous US ambassadors Joe Hockey, Arthur Sinodinos and Kim Beazley.
Former prime minister Tony Abbott said he would “be surprised if there is any pressure from the Americans to change our ambassador”.
”I have no reason to think that Kevin is not doing a good job at present,” Abbott said.
Trump’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, co-chair of the Republican National Committee, told Sky News before the election that Rudd’s criticisms of Trump could be a problem.
“It’s not my decision but I do think it would be nice to have a person who appreciates all Donald Trump has gone through to want to serve our country at this moment, this really critical moment in the history of America,” she said.
“Obviously, [Rudd’s criticism] is a little bit tough to take, and maybe we would want to choose someone else.”
Foreign Minister Penny Wong has insisted Rudd was “absolutely” the right person to represent Australia in Washington because he had played a crucial role in securing the passage of legislation to deliver AUKUS.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/key-trump-ally-taunts-rudd-on-social-media-20241113-p5kq6x.html
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273ca3 No.21974761
>>21922359
>>21932620
>>21949380
Trump wants ally Australia to ‘stand up to China’
The president-elect’s picks for Secretary of State and National Security Adviser both want Australia to do more to tackle China’s aggression in the Pacific.
Matthew Cranston - Nov 13, 2024
Washington | Donald Trump is expected to press Australia to take more action to curb China’s growing assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific, after appointing two China hawks to top foreign policy roles.
The president-elect this week chose Congressman Mike Waltz, a former Green Beret who has called China an “existential” threat, as national security adviser. Senator Marco Rubio, who has served on both the Senate Intelligence Committee and Foreign Relations Committee, is expected to be secretary of state.
Mr Waltz, who has urged the US to boost its deterrence against China, issued a warning on Tuesday (Wednesday AEDT) that the incoming Trump administration “will not be afraid to confront our adversaries”.
“America will keep its allies close, we will not be afraid to confront our adversaries, and we will invest in the technologies that keep our country strong,” Mr Waltz said in a statement, after previously indicating that he wants more US military presence in the Pacific.
Despite campaigning on a more isolationist “America First” policy, Trump is expected to take a tough line against China in the region during his second term in office, a stance also adopted by Democrat President Joe Biden.
Patrick Cronin, Asia-Pacific security chair at the Hudson Institute, said the two picks meant Australia could be called on more by the new Trump administration on confront China head-on, and match a stepped-up US presence in the region.
“They will fiercely oppose aggressors, press allies like Australia to do more to stand up to China, and they will always remember that the commander-in-chief may be looking for bargaining chips rather than military theories of victory,” Dr Cronin said.
Trump is ploughing ahead with the nomination of his most important cabinet posts before officially taking over the White House in January. The president-elect on Tuesday (Wednesday AEDT) that he would nominate Fox News host Pete Hegseth to be his secretary of defence and former Texas congressman John Ratcliffe to be director of the CIA, as he tapped hardliners and loyalists to his national security and foreign policy teams.
Rubio’s AUKUS focus
Senator Rubio has previously told The Australian Financial Review that Australia needs to maintain a robust approach on China through the AUKUS security pact, along with strong diplomacy in the Pacific.
At the Republican National Convention in July, where Senator Rubio met Australian ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd, he said America’s lagging submarine production levels would not prevent the sale of US nuclear-powered submarines to Australia under the AUKUS pact.
He said some of the shipbuilding projects were behind schedule because of labour disruptions and other problems.
In a separate interview, he told the Financial Review: “But I don’t think that in any way undermines the commitment that we have, particularly given our shared concerns about the threats in the Indo-Pacific from an increasingly aggressive China.”
Senator Rubio has hinted Australia needed to do more in the Pacific, a region he thought had been dangerously neglected by Western allies.
“While this and previous administrations ignored the Pacific islands, the Chinese Communist Party quietly worked to claim the allegiance of our partners in this critical area,” he said.
“In the years to come, it will be more important than ever for the United States to work closely with Australia to prevent the CCP from establishing a military presence that threatens us and our allies.”
Senator Rubio broke with a tradition of not commenting about other countries’ elections, saying on the eve of Australia’s 2022 federal vote that an increasingly assertive China should be an issue on voters’ minds.
“Canberra is one of America’s most important allies. While the future of Australia belongs to its people, I am confident that the Australian people will weigh the importance of a stable Indo-Pacific and the continued threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party.”
He has also applauded Australia’s past actions against China including a ban on telecommunications giant Huawei and calls for an inquiry into the sources of COVID-19 by the previous Morrison government.
https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/trump-signals-he-wants-ally-australia-to-stand-up-to-china-20241113-p5kq3v
https://x.com/michaelgwaltz/status/1856436089160118382
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273ca3 No.21974773
>>21922359
>>21932620
>>21961341
Anthony Albanese spruiks ‘perfect friendship’ with Donald Trump ahead of APEC, G20 summits
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 12 November 2024
1/2
Anthony Albanese will not hold formal meetings with US President Joe Biden at the APEC and G20 summits, and the Prime Minister pushed back against Coalition attacks by revealing Donald Trump told him they would have a “perfect friendship”.
Amid speculation Australian products could be impacted by trade tariffs imposed under a Trump administration, Peter Dutton on Tuesday raised concerns about Mr Albanese’s ability to broker exemptions directly with the US president-elect if local exports are targeted.
Mr Albanese – who rejected Coalition suggestions he add a stop in Florida to see Mr Trump – will fly to Peru on Wednesday for APEC leaders meetings before heading to Rio de Janeiro next week for the G20 summit.
The Australian understands Mr Albanese and Mr Biden – who have met 11 times since the 2022 election – are not scheduled for any formal catch-ups after seeing each other at the recent Quad summit in Delaware. A bilateral meeting or pull-aside chat with Chinese President Xi Jinping – who will be lauded with state visits in Peru and Brazil amid global concerns of a looming US-China trade war – is yet to be locked in.
Mr Albanese’s final overseas trip before next year’s federal election, which coincides with the government falling behind in the polls on the back of a persistent cost-of-living crisis, will be dominated by the US election aftermath and discussions around China’s flat economy, global inflation and new measures to drive economic growth.
Ahead of visiting Mr Biden at the White House this week and the arrival of world leaders in South America, Mr Trump has been finalising key posts in his administration. China hawks Senator Marco Rubio and Mike Waltz are expected to be appointed secretary of state and national security adviser. Mr Trump has already announced Republican congresswoman Elise Stefanik as incoming US ambassador to the United Nations and immigration hardliner Tom Homan as his top border official.
Mr Albanese, who will travel to Peru and Brazil with fiancee Jodie Haydon, pushed back on Tuesday against Coalition attacks that Labor would struggle to forge close relationships with Mr Trump and his administration.
“We had a terrific discussion last week. Good beginning to our relationship. He described the relationship … that we would have a perfect friendship. And I’m very confident that the relationship between Australia and the United States will continue to be very strong,” Mr Albanese said.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21974774
>>21974773
2/2
Weaponising historic negative comments about Mr Trump made by Mr Albanese, ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd and Labor cabinet ministers, Mr Dutton said Labor must “course correct” its approach to the US-Australia relationship.
The Opposition Leader cited successful Coalition negotiations, led directly by former prime ministers Scott Morrison and Malcolm Turnbull during Mr Trump’s first term, to win tariff exemptions for Australian exports.
“Now the onus will be on the Prime Minister to negotiate a similar outcome with the Trump administration, and that will be a question for him as to whether or not they’re able to craft that,” Mr Dutton said.
“I think it’s obvious that America has charted a different course now, and the government here needs to course correct and make sure that they’re working with and not against our most important ally.”
Citing other leaders who have seen Mr Trump in recent months, opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said Mr Albanese should “go up to Florida” and catch up with the president-elect following the G20 summit.
In response, Mr Albanese said: “If you have a look at the map, it’s actually not on the way.”
On arrival in Peru, Mr Albanese will hold a bilateral meeting with new Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto after missing his inauguration in Jakarta last month.
Mr Albanese, who will meet with a range of business chiefs, is expected to hold talks with other leaders during his travels including Peruvian President Dina Boluarte, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.
At the APEC summit, Mr Albanese will promote more regional economic integration and “free and open trade” across the Asia-Pacific region. At G20 meetings in Brazil, the Labor leader will promote Australia as a major power in food security.
He will promote Labor’s Future Made in Australia policy at both summits.
“These two meetings come at an important time as we work through the global inflation challenge. We are working at home and with international partners to put downward pressure on inflation and help safeguard Australia’s economy against global challenges, as well as building the new economic links that will sustain a future made in Australia,” Mr Albanese said.
The G20 summit, which overlaps with the UN COP29 climate summit in Baku, will include a focus on climate change, with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva pushing for a global climate finance target to support developing nations.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/anthony-albanese-spruiks-perfect-friendship-with-donald-trump-ahead-of-apec-g20-summits/news-story/63455fb9c6960c1bf1bccd2662a90a66
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273ca3 No.21974814
‘Free pass for sexually abusive clerics’: Catholic Church not liable, High Court rules
Cameron Houston and Holly Hales - November 13, 2024
1/2
A Catholic diocese in regional Victoria has been found not liable for the historical sexual abuse of a young boy by one of its priests, in a landmark decision that casts doubts over thousands of legal cases against religious orders nationwide.
The High Court on Wednesday overturned on appeal a previous ruling by Victoria’s Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal that had found the Ballarat diocese was legally responsible for the misconduct of its former priest, Father Bryan Coffey.
The relevant legislation did not provide a basis for imposing vicarious liability on the church because the priest could not be legally considered as an employee, the High Court found.
The matter has already come to the attention of attorneys-general at state and federal levels, with the High Court conceding that “reformulation of the law of vicarious liability is properly the province of the legislature,” according to the judgment.
The diocese and its current bishop, Paul Bird, were sued in the Supreme Court of Victoria by a man who said he was sexually assaulted by Coffey at his parents’ home in Port Fairy in 1971. The man, known in court documents as DP, was five years old at the time of the abuse.
Coffey, who is now deceased, received a three-year suspended sentence in 1999 after being convicted of charges including false imprisonment and the indecent assaults of males and females under 16.
In December 2021, Justice Jack Forrest found that the church had vicarious liability because of the close relationship between the then-bishop, diocese and community. He ordered DP receive $200,000 in damages for pain and suffering, $10,000 for medical expenses and $20,000 in other damages.
That decision was upheld by the Court of Appeal in April, following an appeal by the diocese and its lawyers.
The principal issue in the High Court appeal was whether the diocese could be held vicariously liable for abuse committed by Coffey, despite the priest not being formally employed by the diocese.
The legal principle of vicarious liability is usually reserved for employers responsible for the wrongful or negligent conduct of their employees, regardless of whether the organisation is at fault.
The Victorian courts had extended that principle to the church, ruling that Coffey was still a “servant of the diocese” and through his pastoral role had the “power and intimacy” to abuse children during visits to parishioners’ homes.
But nation’s highest court ruled the lower courts had overreached. The High Court said it had repeatedly refused to extend the boundaries of vicarious liability to include independent contractors.
“Expanding the doctrine to accommodate relationships that are ‘akin to employment’ would produce uncertainty and indeterminacy,” the judgment summary read.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21974817
>>21974814
2/2
Kim Price, a partner with Arnold Thomas Becker Lawyers, which represents about 1400 victims of historical sexual abuse, said he was “gravely concerned that this ruling now marks a return to the dark ‘Ellis Defence’ days for many survivors seeking justice”.
The Ellis defence was established when the NSW Court of Appeal ruled in 2007 that the Catholic Church does not exist in a legal sense because its property assets are held inside a special trust structure that is immune to lawsuits.
It was dismantled in Victoria by legislation introduced in 2018.
Price urged Victorian Attorney-General Jaclyn Symes to intervene again.
“We respectfully ask your government to consider introducing legislation to remedy the High Court’s ruling to bring vicarious liability of religious organisations into line with that of other organisations who have historically been responsible for the care of children,” Price said in an email to Symes on Wednesday.
A Victorian government spokeswoman said it would consider the High Court findings and any action it might take.
“We were proud to pass legislation quashing the Ellis defence, sending a clear message to child abuse survivors – we stand with you in your fight for justice and always will,” the spokeswoman said.
Lawyer Michael Magazanik, a partner at Rightside Legal which has represented dozens of clients who have successfully sued religious orders, said the High Court decision was “surprising and very sad”.
“It is now up to the government to legislate to resolve this problem so that churches and religious orders don’t get a free pass for their sexually abusive clerics,” Magazanik told this masthead.
“The High Court effectively invited the legislature to act, so when the nation’s attorneys-general meet next week they should announce a joint and urgent response.”
John Rule, principal lawyer at Maurice Blackburn, said the decision would have far-reaching implications for the ability of child-abuse survivors to hold institutions to account.
“The church has known about its priests abusing children for centuries and did nothing to stop it,” Rule said.
“Unfortunately, this decision means that in some cases, the church will be able to again evade responsibility for the scourge of child abuse in its ranks.”
Rule said the judgment put Australia out of step with other common law jurisdictions, including the UK, Canada and Ireland, which had developed the principle of vicarious liability to apply to religious orders.
Bird thanked the High Court for its “careful consideration of these complex areas of law” and said the diocese was examining the judgment and its implications.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/catholic-church-not-liable-for-abuse-by-its-priests-high-court-rules-20241113-p5kqbw.html
https://www.hcourt.gov.au/
https://eresources.hcourt.gov.au/showCase/2024/HCA/41
https://www.hcourt.gov.au/assets/publications/judgment-summaries/2024/hca-41-2024-11-13.pdf
https://qresear.ch/?q=Bryan+Coffey
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273ca3 No.21974828
>>21974814
High Court limits church liability for child abuse
Holly Hales - November 13, 2024
1/2
Australia’s highest court has freed the Catholic Church of liability over some cases of child sexual abuse by priests, potentially destroying claims by victim-survivors.
The High Court on Wednesday overturned on appeal a previous ruling by Victoria’s Supreme Court that the diocese of Ballarat was vicariously liable.
It found the relevant legislation did not provide a basis for imposing such responsibility because the priest was not a direct employee of the church.
The diocese and its current bishop, Paul Bird, were sued by a man who said he was sexually assaulted by Father Bryan Coffey at his parents’ home in Port Fairy in 1971 when he was five years old.
Coffey, who is now dead, received a three-year suspended sentence in 1999 after being convicted of charges including indecent assaults of males and females under 16 and false imprisonment.
The man, known as DP in court documents, didn’t tell anyone except for his partner about the assault until 2018.
DP made a claim for more than $1.5 million for loss of earnings as a result of the assaults, a figure described by Justice Jack Forrest in a December 2021 decision as “bold”.
Justice Forrest ultimately found the church had vicarious liability because of the close relationship between the then-bishop, diocese and community, ordering DP receive $200,000 in damages for pain, suffering and loss of enjoyment of life, $10,000 for medical expenses and $20,000 in other damages.
The principal issue in the High Court appeal was whether the diocese could be held vicariously liable for abuse committed by Coffey, despite the priest not being formally employed by the diocese.
That form of liability is usually reserved for employers responsible for the wrongful or negligent actions of their employees, regardless of whether the organisation was at fault.
The Victorian courts had extended that to the church, finding Coffey was still a “servant of the diocese” and through the role had the “power and intimacy” to abuse children.
But Wednesday’s decision ruled the lower courts had overreached.
The High Court said it has repeatedly refused to extend the boundaries of vicarious liability to include independent contractors.
“Expanding the doctrine to accommodate relationships that are ‘akin to employment’ would produce uncertainty and indeterminacy,” the judgment summary read.
“As the priest was not an employee, there could be no finding of vicarious liability on the part of the diocese.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21974831
>>21974828
2/2
John Rule, principal lawyer at Maurice Blackburn, said the decision would have far-reaching implications for the ability of child-abuse survivors to hold institutions to account.
“The church has known about its priests abusing children for centuries and did nothing to stop it,” Mr Rule said.
“Unfortunately, this decision means that in some cases the church will be able to again evade responsibility for the scourge of child abuse in its ranks.
“This decision puts Australia at odds with other common law jurisdictions like the UK and Canada who have developed the principle of vicarious liability to meet the scourge of child abuse.”
Chief executive at sexual abuse prevention charity, In Good Faith Foundation, Clare Leaney, said the decision would be a difficult for survivors to stomach.
“Today’s ruling by the High Court feels like a giant step backwards,” she said.
“We urge the federal government to legislate and act on behalf of Australian survivors to remedy this High Court decision.”
Bishop Bird thanked the High Court for its “careful consideration of these complex areas of law” and said the diocese was examining the judgment and its implications.
Another High Court ruling on Wednesday involved the Salvation Army attempting to stop a compensation claim by a survivor who said he was abused at a residential home in 1959 and 1960.
The Salvation Army was granted a permanent stay of West Australian court proceedings due to the death of the alleged perpetrator, which they said made it unable to mount a fair defence.
But the court overturned that decision.
In February the High Court rejected the Catholic Church’s bid to avoid paying damages to the father of a choirboy allegedly sexually abused by now-deceased Cardinal George Pell.
https://www.aap.com.au/news/high-court-limits-church-liability-for-child-abuse/
https://www.hcourt.gov.au/
https://eresources.hcourt.gov.au/showCase/2024/HCA/43
https://www.hcourt.gov.au/assets/publications/judgment-summaries/2024/hca-43-2024-11-13.pdf
https://eresources.hcourt.gov.au/downloadPdf/2024/HCA/43
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273ca3 No.21982179
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
The comment that proves Kevin Rudd never saw Donald Trump's comeback coming - as fresh video surfaces of Aussie ambassador to Washington mocking the US President's intelligence
MAX AITCHISON - 14 November 2024'
Kevin Rudd dismissed Donald Trump's first presidency as a period of 'episodic craziness' and asked a crowd in disbelief 'how did that happen?' in newly-unearthed video filmed less than a year before he took up his post as Australia's man in Washington.
The former Prime Minister turned Australian Ambassador to the US has in the past labelled the President-elect a 'village idiot', a 'traitor to the West' and 'the most destructive president in history'.
But a newly-discovered lecture recorded in June 2022 for the Asia Society, a think tank he headed up, has now exposed how Mr Rudd never imagined that Trump would ever return to power - and how he dismissed his Presidency as a period of 'craziness'.
'Never take a backwards step in saying we're allies with the United States,' he told the stunned crowd in Switzerland.
'For all the American pre-disposition to episodic craziness… Look at Trump: how did that happen? That was a walk on the wild side for all of us.'
Less than nine months later, Mr Rudd was controversially appointed as Australia's ambassador to the US by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
Mr Rudd now faces the seemingly uphill task of trying to curry favour and influence with an incoming Trump administration that is actively hostile towards him due to his previous comments.
It comes after Daily Mail Australia revealed on Tuesday that one of Trump's most senior campaign advisers, Dan Scavino Jr, gave an indication that Mr Rudd would not last long under the new administration.
Sharing Mr Rudd's congratulatory message to the new President-elect on X, Mr Scavino Jr posted an hour glass GIF to his two million followers - suggesting his days were numbered.
Although the US President ultimately has no power over the representatives different countries nominate as their ambassadors, they need to be able to work with the new administration to advance their nation's interests.
Daily Mail Australia has since unearthed further mocking comments Mr Rudd has made about Trump that will surely come back to haunt him.
In another Asia Society lecture, recorded in 2018, the former PM was discussing the heightening tensions between the US and China under their respective leaders Xi Jinping and Trump.
'Then enter Donald Trump. Donald as we know is not a… leading intellectual force,' Mr Rudd said to uproarious laughter from the audience.
There are growing voices calling for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to sack Mr Rudd and install someone else who can build a better relationship with Trump's new administration.
Indeed, a political insider said they thought Mr Rudd could manage with Scott Morrison's help, as his former prime ministerial colleague has kept up good relations with Trump.
'It's going to be difficult for Rudd - he has worked hard, with Morrison's help, to embed himself more with Republicans in the last 18 months,' the insider told Daily Mail Australia.
'So people in the party respect him - but Trump is Trump.
'I think most up on Capitol Hill yesterday would've said "he'll be fine" (Rudd). But that hourglass tweet changes things a bit.'
Trump has also previously signalled his disapproval of Mr Rudd, branding him 'nasty'.
'I don't know much about him. I heard he was a little bit nasty,' Trump told GB News earlier this year.
'I hear he's not the brightest bulb, but I don't know much about him. If he's at all hostile, he will not be there long.'
Several posts on Mr Rudd's official X account criticising Trump were deleted last week after it became clear he would win a second term as President.
In one particularly brutal post from 2020, Mr Rudd described Trump as 'the most destructive president in history'.
'He drags America and democracy through the mud. He thrives on fomenting, not healing, division. He abuses Christianity, church and bible to justify violence,' Mr Rudd wrote.
A spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade described Mr Rudd as a 'highly effective Ambassador'.
'He is recognised across the Australian Parliament as doing an excellent job advancing Australia’s interests in the United States,' the spokesperson added.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14076299/Kevin-Rudd-never-saw-Trump-comeback.html
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273ca3 No.21982195
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Peter Dutton ramps up pressure on Kevin Rudd, after Trump names critical aide as deputy chief of staff
Jacob Greber - 14 November 2024
Peter Dutton has escalated pressure on Kevin Rudd, saying Anthony Albanese made a "captain's pick" that has put the government "in a difficult position" after one of Donald Trump's closest advisers suggested the Australian ambassador to the United States' time was running out.
Falling short of calling for Mr Rudd's recall, the opposition leader appeared to shift from previous qualified support for the ambassador to openly speculating about the consequences of his sacking.
"The difficulty the PM is in at the moment is if he sacks Kevin Rudd, then what does he do with Penny Wong," Mr Dutton said on Thursday.
"And if he sacks Penny Wong, what does he do given he's made his own disparaging comments about president-elect Trump as well?"
Speculation about Mr Rudd's ability to work with the incoming Trump administration flared this week after close aide Dan Scavino — who the president-elect named as his deputy chief of staff this week — reposted Rudd's congratulatory message to Mr Trump alongside a GIF of an hourglass with time running out.
While the government has ruled out recalling Mr Rudd, the opposition leader's comments reflect a shift away from Mr Dutton's previous expressions of support for the ambassador.
Last week, the opposition leader described Mr Rudd as "indefatigable" and said he "will do everything he can to ingratiate himself with the Trump campaign".
On Thursday, Mr Dutton said Mr Albanese's appointment of Mr Rudd to Australia's top diplomatic posting in Washington DC in early 2023 was an issue "all of his own making".
The remarks came less than a day after opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said the Coalition still hoped Trump would extend "forgiveness" to Mr Rudd so he could continue performing effectively in the role.
In the hours after Trump's election victory became clear last week, Mr Rudd deleted a series of old tweets sharply criticising the former president.
Prior to his appointment as ambassador, Mr Rudd described Trump as a "traitor to the West" and the "most destructive president in history".
Dutton questions PM's judgement
The growing row over Mr Rudd's ability to work with one of the future Trump administration's top gatekeepers has reignited memories of a similar diplomatic stoush that saw Britain's ambassador to the US abruptly removed.
Ambassador Kim Darroch resigned from his post in mid-2019 after Trump took to Twitter to call him "wacky" and a "pompous fool".
The president's criticism and reports of a freeze between the White House and the UK's top envoy followed the publication of leaked documents in which Mr Darroch slammed the Trump administration's diplomacy as unpredictable, clumsy and inept.
"The current situation is making it impossible for me to carry out my role as I would like," Mr Darroch wrote in his resignation letter.
Mr Dutton said on Thursday that he wanted to ensure Australia had a "functioning stable relationship with our most important partner".
"I want to make sure we can have an ambassador who can work effectively with the government, whether that is [in] the US or wherever an ambassador might be appointed.
"The prime minister's made a number of captain's calls and they have been at odds with the advice he received from his closest advisers and colleagues.
"And I suppose that's a question about the prime minister's judgement."
In a separate interview with 2GB, Mr Dutton added that Mr Rudd's decision to delete earlier social media posts critical of Trump after his victory didn't "show great sincerity".
"If Kamala Harris had been elected, then I presume the comments would still be up online," he said.
Prospects of Mr Rudd's ouster could further embolden internal Labor critics of the AUKUS submarine deal.
"If Australia cannot determine who our ambassador to the USA is, then any pretence that we have a modicum of sovereign independence from the Trump administration and within AUKUS is shattered," former Labor senator Doug Cameron wrote on X.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-14/dutton-ramps-up-pressure-on-kevin-rudds-ambassador-role/104599860
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273ca3 No.21982203
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Rudd dilemma should’ve been resolved long ago - it’s too late now
PETER JENNINGS - 14 November 2024
1/2
Our relationship with the US is too important to put on hold while we debate Kevin Rudd’s lengthy record of insulting president-elect Donald Trump.
Consider the strategic issues we should be discussing with the incoming administration. On defence, how do we deter China from going to war over Taiwan in the next few years? How do we reverse the steep decline in defence capability, rather than obsess about the shape of those forces in the 2040s?
AUKUS will fail unless there is urgent action to speed it up. Australia is unprepared for building and operating nuclear submarines. British and American shipyards can’t build enough subs to meet current plans, let alone expand.
The AUKUS “Pillar Two” plan for defence technology innovation, covering everything from quantum computing to artificial intelligence, has stalled into a couple of pathetic science projects.
Industry isn’t engaged. Money isn’t flowing. Weapons aren’t getting into the hands of war fighters.
China is beating us in diplomatic influence everywhere in the Pacific, Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean region. Our neighbours are sick of Beijing’s bullying, sneering and racial contempt, but money talks. Are we are giving in to fears of our own decline?
Our critical infrastructure is riddled with Chinese-sourced malware designed to collapse the power grid, transport and IT systems in the lead-up to a conflict, yet we are becoming more dependent on Beijing. Australia’s so-called energy transition is literally being built on hackable Chinese technology.
The list of big strategic problems we should be discussing with the incoming Trump team is long.
Why then is the focus on Kevin Rudd’s tenure as ambassador?
This is yet another failure of Australian strategic imagination – a failure to understand that Trump’s return to the White House was a serious prospect, becoming more serious as the Democratic Party floundered. That realisation should have hit in 2023, when it was clear that Biden’s age would stop him mounting a re-election bid and that Trump’s re-election effort was more planned, more focused and better-supported than in 2020.
Three things should have happened. First, Albanese should have established a cabinet-level team to plan what Australia needed to do if Trump was elected. A Kamala Harris election win would have been easy to manage because it would have meant policy continuity. A Trump win means serious discontinuity. Too late to wonder now if AUKUS will survive. What did our government do? It seems that Penny Wong met Mike Pompeo last August. That’s the extent of our pre-planning for a Trump win? This points to a shocking level of complacency.
The second thing that should have happened is our embassy in Washington DC should have established its own Trump planning cell, a key focus of which should have been to make extensive contacts with the Trump network. For example, the Heritage Foundation, a major conservative think tank, developed a policy blueprint for Trump called Project 2025. In July, the ABC’s Four Corner’s program, The Plan for Power, tore this work apart, claiming it would “see the president’s power expanded like never before and allow him to target the so-called ‘deep state’”.
The ABC report provided a platform for Trump opponents to claim Project 2025 “set the US on a path to authoritarianism”.
A less-hyped assessment of Project 2025 – at least its chapters on defence, intelligence and foreign policy – is that it sets out policies Australia can happily work with. If this is anything like the “Trump plan”, we should have our response ready to go.
Maybe our embassy in Washington was working the Heritage Foundation and other Republican connections, seeking those individuals who will populate Trump’s administration. Then again, maybe not. Our diplomats usually put their first priority on dealing with incumbent governments. They see think-tanks as a much lower priority, and opposition parties as unimportant except at election time. And our government may have been too willing to accept the media’s contempt of Trump. Never underestimate your political opponents. Whatever our embassy was doing, it didn’t generate better-informed reactions in Canberra.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21982204
>>21982203
2/2
Third, Rudd should have reached out directly to Trump, starting in 2023, to clear the air about his very sharp criticisms of him. In the occasional column, I was critical of Trump too. Then again, I’m not ambassador in Washington. The sin is less about the sharp words than seeking to make amends. It’s too late now. Moreover, Rudd’s statement this week that he has recently deleted negative tweets “out of respect for the office of President of the United States” leaves a clear implication that respect for the person of Donald Trump is a different issue. To be clear, Rudd did an excellent job promoting AUKUS in congress. It’s a pity our bureaucracy wasn’t delivering more tangibly on that score in Australia.
Rudd is also way ahead of the Albanese government, Penny Wong and DFAT in his thinking on China. But the issue here is responding to Trump and his team. Preparation for their arrival is obviously lacking. Imagine that the US ambassador to Australia had been a long-term critic of a just-elected prime minister. Many would regard that as an affront to the incoming prime minister and to Australia’s sovereignty.
It would certainly affect that ambassador’s tenure.
Or, consider that an Australian ambassador in Jakarta had been a vocal critic of President Prabowo. Or, consider that anyone in our Beijing embassy breathed the faintest hint of anything other than glowing praise about Xi Jinping. We all know what would happen in these situations.
Ambassadors would be recalled or find compelling reasons to pursue other interests.
The situation we face in Washington DC is an unnecessary distraction. It could have been fixed earlier. It wasn’t. Once again, a government with no imagination and no ability to think strategically blunders into an unnecessary fight while so many other important issues are ignored.
Peter Jennings is director of Strategic Analysis Australia and was executive director of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute from 2012 to 2022. He is a former deputy secretary for strategy in the Defence Department (2009-12).
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/rudd-dilemma-shouldve-been-resolved-long-ago-its-too-late-now/news-story/f6ed3807050beb680eed29cd6c1633b4
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273ca3 No.21982218
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. Operation Ironside challenge granted special leave to appeal to the country’s Highest Court
Lucy Rutherford and Sean Fewster - November 14, 2024
Alleged crime figures have had a legal win after special leave was granted to challenge that millions of messages used in the country’s largest police sting were illegally intercepted.
Hundreds of people, from alleged drug dealers, bikies and organised crime figures, were arrested on June 7, 2021, under Operation Ironside, which involved police surveilling users of the AN0M app for illegal activity.
During an application to revoke the bail of a key AN0M player, Andrew John Benz, the court heard special leave was granted last week to appeal to the country’s Highest Court on the admissibility of the messages.
In November last year, The Advertiser revealed South Australia’s Court of Appeal had been asked to rule on the legality of millions of messages sent and received by users of the encrypted app.
In June, the Court of Appeal ruled the messages taken from AN0M to charge two men charged with firearms offences under Operation Ironside – both of whom can’t be named for legal reasons – were not illegally intercepted, backing up a Supreme Court decision.
In April last year Justice Adam Kimber ruled the Australian Federal Police had not illegally intercepted the messages but had been instead surveilling them.
SA has led the legal challenges to the Ironside arrests after the case of the two men was fast-tracked to the Supreme Court for the challenge to Ironside’s legality.
Lawyers for the two men – alleged to be senior organised crime figures – had argued the AN0M app was an illegal interception and the AFP were acting unlawfully in monitoring the conversations between their clients and others.
In separate published judgments, Justice Kimber ruled the AFP had not acted improperly during the investigation and also that the accused were not placed at an “unfair disadvantage” by having the messages admitted.
Most of the SA Ironside accused remain before the courts – some of whom won’t face trial until 2027.
On Wednesday, Patrick Schaefer, for the prosecution, told the court the appeal related to whether or not the AFP’s evidence amounted to it being intercepted as it was passing over a telecommunications system.
The court heard the hearing was anticipated to be heard in March or April.
Benz – who has pleaded guilty to two counts of large commercial drug trafficking – was allowed to remain on bail to await the outcome of the High Court decision.
The court heard Benz would also not be sentenced for his admitted drug trafficking charges until after the outcome of his trial in 2026 for multiple counts of drug trafficking and money laundering.
https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-sa/operation-ironside-challenge-granted-special-leave-to-appeal-to-the-countrys-highest-court/news-story/7d27e39393f6e4dfbb7bc050774ce1b3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GNLfB_rUWA
https://qresear.ch/?q=operation+ironside
https://qresear.ch/?q=an0m
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273ca3 No.21982228
>>21385660 (pb)
>>21446910 (pb)
Australia-Indonesia war games fire up after new defence pact
AMANDA HODGE - 13 November 2024
Australia and Indonesia have pulled off the largest, most complex war-games exercise ever conducted between the two defence forces with an amphibious landing on an east Java beach, days after Russia hailed its own first modest naval drills with our near-neighbour.
The show of joint military force, dubbed Keris Woomera, involved 2000 army, navy and air force personnel, Australian warships and F16 fighter jets, Apache and Tiger helicopters, Abrams tanks, landing craft and plenty of explosions, highlighting a military relationship in rude health off the back of an upgraded Defence Co-operation Agreement.
The four-day exercises, which culminate in live-fire drills on Saturday, were 18 months in the planning but could not have been better timed given growing concerns over the impact of Indonesian President Prabowo Subian-to’s foreign policy approach.
The new leader has had a busy few weeks since his October 20 inauguration with Indonesia signing on to BRICS, the China-led group of emerging economies, even as its navy has had to chase Chinese coastguard vessels out of its waters at the edge of the South China Sea at least three times in that time.
Last week Indonesia’s navy held its first joint exercises with Russia, while at the weekend Prabowo pledged deeper military and economic ties with China in a joint statement that seemed to acknowledge Beijing’s discredited claims over the strategic waterway, including Indonesia’s own Natuna Sea.
The apparent error set alarm bells ringing in Canberra and in Washington, where a White House spokeswoman said on Tuesday as Prabowo met President Joe Biden that the US encouraged Indonesia “to work with their legal experts” to make sure any agreements with China aligned with international law.
Australian Defence Force joint operations chief Justin Jones told The Australian that while the timing of Keris Woomera was “entirely coincidental” to political upheaval in the region and in the US where Donald Trump’s election win is likely to ramp up US-China rivalry, such exercises helped prepare the two nations to jointly address any “regional security related” issues.
“What’s been achieved here today is a step advancement in our defence relationship,” Vice-Admiral Jones said.
“This is all about the Indonesia-Australia relationship first and foremost and how far we have come over a long period. Next most important is its contribution to regional security.”
The Australia-Indonesia military relationship was already “deep and personal” but transferring skills, sharing knowledge and tactics forged even deeper trust.
“Indonesia and Australia share the longest maritime boundary as close neighbours,” Vice-Admiral Jones said. “If you think about that in terms of your neighbourhood and how important it is for your neighbours to be secure for your own security, that’s the analogy I would use for the Indonesia-Australia relationship. We are part of this region and invested in its stability and security.”
As part of the lead-up to Wednesday’s exercise, 32 Indonesian marines trained on-board the navy’s HMAS Adelaide amphibious assault ship for several weeks as it sailed from Darwin through the Tiwi Islands to East Java.
Indonesian naval doctrine commander Lieutenant General Nur Alamsyah said such military co-operation with Australia was critical to building good relations and understanding. “We are neighbours. We are always going to be connected,” he added.
Australia’s push to conclude the upgraded DCA is looking increasingly prescient as Indonesia’s defence calendar dance card fills up under Prabowo’s “friend to all, enemy of none” mantra, with would-be suitors looking to build ties with the emerging Asian power.
Australian Strategic Policy Institute senior security analyst Euan Graham said Prabowo’s foreign policy had looked “shaky” in the first weeks of his presidency, and Australia would have to learn to navigate his more “capricious approach”.
But, like every Indonesian leader before him, Prabowo would likely pursue a “multi-directional foreign policy that keeps Jakarta’s options open and avoids any “exclusive alignment”.
“That is why Prabowo approved the upgraded Defence Co-operation Agreement with Australia before he formally assumed office,” said Graham.
“Australia will never be his priority relationship, and will struggle to compete against China’s economic inroads. But Prabowo does appear to value Australia’s strategic weight in maintaining a regional balance of power.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/australiaindonesia-war-games-fire-up-after-new-defence-pact/news-story/6afdf5ec899835dcd56c5a9649f93302
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273ca3 No.21982238
>>21621214 (pb)
>>21672827 (pb)
Australia backs ‘permanent sovereignty’ of Palestinians in UN vote
BEN PACKHAM - 14 November 2024
The Albanese government has shifted Australia’s vote in the UN to recognise the “permanent sovereignty” of Palestinians over the occupied territories and of Arabs over the Golan Heights, sharpening its differences with the Biden and incoming Trump administrations on Israel.
Australia had abstained on the same question in UN votes since 2011 but switched its vote to “Yes” in a UN committee ballot on Thursday morning AEDT that will proceed to a vote in the General Assembly.
The draft resolution, on “Permanent sovereignty of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and of the Arab population in the occupied Syrian Golan over their natural resources, including land, water and energy resources”, was approved by 159-7, with 11 abstentions.
Australia also changed its position on a second question that seeks to blame Israel for a historic oil slick affecting Lebanon during the countries’ 2006 conflict, voting “Yes” after rejecting past motions on the matter. The draft resolution was carried by 161-7 with nine abstentions.
The US and Canada voted against both resolutions, while the UK and New Zealand supported them.
The votes, in the second committee stage of deliberations, follow the government’s decision to break with the US earlier this year to support Palestinian membership of the UN General Assembly, and on two key UN resolutions on the war in Gaza.
The move comes amid high anxiety inside the government over its ability to forge a good working relationship with Donald Trump and his administration, which is set to strengthen US support for Israel.
Incoming secretary of state Marco Rubio has previously rejected calls for a ceasefire in Gaza.
“On the contrary … I want them to destroy every element of Hamas they can get their hands on. These people are vicious animals who did horrifying crimes,” he said a month into the war.
Mr Trump’s pick for US ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee is also a hardline supporter of the Jewish state who has long rejected calls for a Palestinian state and once said he dreamed of building a holiday house in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said Labor’s increasing opposition to Israel in the UN came despite its pre-election pledge that there as no policy differences between the major parties on the Jewish state.
“It’s simply broken promise after broken promise as the Albanese government has dropped or changed longstanding Australian positions,” he said.
“Whether it be supporting a one-sided ceasefire that failed to hold Hamas to account or endorsing ‘the state of Palestine’s’ membership of the UN – changing years of previously consistent positions – Labor has completely undermined their own pre-election promises and Australia’s reputation for consistency.”
US diplomat Nicholas Koval, who voted on the resolutions, said they were “unfairly critical of Israel”.
“One-sided resolutions will not help advance peace. Not when they ignore the facts on the ground. One-sided resolutions are purely rhetorical documents that seek to divide us at a time when we should be coming together,” he said.
“If member states are serious about promoting the cause of peace between Israelis and Palestinians, they should seek to end the persistent bias within the United Nations against Israel.”
Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said the change in Australia’s voting behaviour exposed the widening gulf between the US and Australian positions regarding Israel and the Palestinians.
“This shift in voting won’t change much in Israel where the nation is concerned with Hamas and Hezbollah and hostages rather than the judgments passed by our government,” Mr Ryvchin said.
“But it will be noticed in Washington and certainly by Australians with a connection to the conflict, which may well be the point.”
The head of the General Delegation of Palestine to Australia, Izzat Abdulhadi, welcomed the government’s change of position on Palestinian sovereignty.
“The years before, Australia abstained on this important resolution,” he said. “(The new position) aligns with international law and the advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice, which has been recently published.”
The ICJ issued a non-binding ruling in July that Israel’s ongoing presence in Occupied Palestinian Territory was unlawful and should come to an end “as rapidly as possible”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/australia-votes-for-permanent-sovereignty-of-palestinians-in-un/news-story/167274a3b75904794bf6b8f755b7cab7
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273ca3 No.21993917
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Under fire from Trump-world, Rudd highlights his networking abilities
Matthew Knott and David Crowe - November 15, 2024
Kevin Rudd has highlighted his close ties to US politicians from across the political spectrum as the Trump adviser who taunted him about his future as Australia’s top diplomat in the United States was appointed to a senior White House role.
In his first social media post on his official diplomatic account since congratulating Donald Trump on his election victory last week, Rudd uploaded photos of him mingling with three Republican members of Congress and two Democrats at an Australian embassy event in Washington, DC.
Discussion about Rudd’s future in Washington has intensified since Trump’s election, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese insisting he is standing by his former Labor colleague and the ambassador ploughing ahead with his diplomatic duties.
“The US-Australia relationship is going from strength to strength,” Rudd said in a subsequent post with a video of the annual dinner for the Friends of Australia Congressional Caucus, a bipartisan group of congresspeople who are passionate about the US-Australia alliance.
He said the US and Australia had “a bond that has strengthened across generations and across the political aisle in both countries. And it will continue to prosper in the years ahead”.
Rudd posted photos alongside Republican congressmen Andy Barr, Pete Ricketts and James Moylan, tagging them by their social media handles.
He also posted Democratic congressman Joe Courtney, who was honoured for his work promoting the US-Australia alliance, and Democratic congresswoman Susie Lee.
Rudd last week scrubbed critical comments about Trump from his online record, including posts in which he excoriated Trump as “the most destructive president in history” and a “traitor to the West”.
Senior Trump adviser Dan Scavino posted an image on X earlier this week showing sand trickling through an hourglass in response to a post by Rudd, an apparent message that his days as ambassador were numbered.
Two days later, Trump announced Scavino would serve in the White House as his deputy chief of staff, with a statement describing him as one of Trump’s “longest serving and most trusted aides”.
After arriving in Peru for the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit, Albanese said Rudd was “doing a good job … and that’s been recognised across the political spectrum in Australia”.
However, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has not been totally supportive, describing Rudd’s position as a matter of judgment for Albanese.
Scavino, Trump’s former golf caddy, regularly travels with Trump on his private jet and has been described by Politico as “the ultimate insider” in Trump’s entourage.
“Trump frequently leans on his unassuming social media guru for affirmation and advice,” a 2019 Politico article said, adding that he “talks to the president more than just about anybody else aside from Trump’s own family members”.
Rudd has been backed by former prime ministers Malcolm Turnbull, Tony Abbott and Scott Morrison and ex-US ambassadors Joe Hockey and Arthur Sinodinos.
“It would be the worst possible signal to send to Trump to pull our ambassador out because he was critical of Trump in the past,” Turnbull said this week.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/under-fire-from-trump-world-rudd-highlights-his-networking-abilities-20241115-p5kquf.html
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1857169516460921330
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1857400406298722318
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273ca3 No.21993973
>>21922359
>>21961341
>>21974773
Anthony Albanese seeks to exploit Donald Trump's climate plans in the hope billions will flow to Australia
Brett Worthington - 15 November 2024
Australia will seek to exploit Donald Trump's plans to slash government investment in the green energy sector, in the hope it could see billions of dollars of private money redirected away from the United States.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is using a week-long trip to South America to pitch Australia as a safe and reliable country to invest in, especially if the incoming US president follows through on his climate threats.
The so-called Inflation Reduction Act was one of Democrat Joe Biden's signature policies as president, seeking to turn the US into a clean energy superpower, with a particular focus on domestic manufacturing.
But Trump has threatened to repeal that legislation, a move that analysts have warned could free up US$80 billion ($123 billion) in investment opportunities for other countries.
Mr Albanese said that would present an opportunity for Australia given its position as a resource-rich middle power.
"The Inflation Reduction Act, for example, is seeing considerable capital flow to the United States," Mr Albanese told reporters in Lima, Peru, ahead of the two-day APEC summit.
"If those incentives aren't there, then that has implications for the nature of the global economy.
"But we don't pre-empt that."
Mr Albanese will spruik Australia's credentials to business leaders ahead of formal talks with Pacific-rim countries, including China, the US, Canada, Japan and Indonesia.
"We see that Australia has great opportunity through climate action," Mr Albanese told reporters.
"We see that it's important for our environment, but I also see it as about economic opportunity.
"We have all of the resources under the ground that will drive the global economy in the 21st century — copper, vanadium, cobalt, lithium."
Donald Trump looms over summits
Mr Albanese held meetings with the leaders of Indonesia and Peru, as the leaders of China, the US and Canada arrived in Lima.
In both meetings, he spoke of the need to bolster trade throughout the region — offering a stark contrast to Trump's position on trade.
Mr Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet on the sidelines of the APEC summit on Saturday, local time, where the US president hopes he can ease growing tension between the two superpowers.
Trump is threatening to impose a 60 per cent tariff on Chinese imports into the US, which could send ripples through economies around the globe.
Leaders at the APEC summit, and next week's G20 meeting in Brazil, are widely expected to seek to try and ring-fence global trade and climate targets in a bid to buffer them from Trump's return to the White House.
They are also closely watching Mr Xi to see if China will try and fill any void left by the US withdrawal from the global community under Trump.
In his meeting with Mr Albanese, new Indonesian President Probowo Subianto spoke of the need to "de-escalate" and "lower the temperature" in relations with China throughout the Indo-Pacific.
Along with bolstering military cooperation and trade, the president said Australia and Indonesia needed to continue to work closely to tackle people smuggling.
While the US accounts for a quarter of global trade, Mr Albanese was at pains to tell reporters that relationships with China, India and Indonesia would be just as important to Australia's future.
"Increasingly, population will be a driver of economic growth. And that's why countries in our region, such as China, but also Indonesia, India and other nations, will have considerable economic growth in the future," he said.
"And that's why Australia is well positioned as a country that is located in the fastest growing region of the world in human history. That represents opportunity."
Australia is yet to announce a formal meeting between Mr Albanese and Mr Xi during their visits to South America but it is increasingly looking likely in the coming days.
"We'll make announcements at appropriate times," Mr Albanese told reporters.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-15/apec-climate-donald-trump-albanese/104603996
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273ca3 No.21994024
>>21922359
>>21993973
>>21974773
Big smiles and bear hugs as Albanese meets Biden and Trudeau, while Xi awaits
David Crowe - November 16, 2024
Lima: Anthony Albanese has been greeted with bear hugs and bro handshakes at a regional summit where he renewed his friendship with United States President Joe Biden, as world leaders brace for radical change under President-elect Donald Trump.
The prime minister approached Biden in the first moments of the formal talks at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Peru so they could have a personal conversation before the session began, while other leaders looked on.
But the prime minister did not gain a chance to talk to Chinese President Xi Jinping, who skipped the first session of the summit, with no explanation for his absence.
Biden gave Albanese a broad smile as the two talked and laughed while other leaders took their seats.
“President Biden was in good form,” Albanese said at a press conference later. “I don’t talk about the detail of private discussions, as you’d be aware, but it was friendly. I regard him as a good friend personally, but also a good friend of Australia.”
While Biden is leaving office after a stunning defeat for the Democrats and Vice-President Kamala Harris at the November 5 election, Albanese said the president was pleased to be at the summit.
“He was upbeat,” he said. “He is, of course, continuing to work in the interest of the United States.”
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greeted Albanese with a bro handshake – their arms angled up, hands locked – and turned this into a bear hug given their shared progressive politics.
Albanese also shared a bear hug with the president of Chile, Gabriel Boric, who began his career in student politics as a firebrand of the left, much like the prime minister.
The Chinese media has lauded the Australian government in recent days, with The China Daily saying Albanese had pursued “strategic autonomy” between the US and China, but the prime responded with a message about his support for the alliance with the US.
“I don’t subscribe to China Daily,” he said when asked about the report.
“The improvement in trade between Australia and China is about Australian jobs.”
Albanese emphasised that he had cemented the AUKUS agreement with the US and Britain on nuclear-powered submarines after becoming prime minister, overcoming criticism of the pact from within the Labor Party.
“It’s in Australia’s national interest to support and continue to engage with our allies in the United States,” he said. “I’m a strong supporter of AUKUS, I have engaged with my party to ensure that that support is ongoing.”
The two-day summit in Lima is shadowed by uncertainty about what Trump will do when he takes office on January 20, while Xi is holding a flurry of one-on-one meetings with regional leaders to present China as a rising power and reliable trading partner.
Xi meets Biden in Lima after the APEC summit ends on the weekend, in their last meeting before the US president steps down. Albanese is expected to speak with Xi when the two attend the G20 summit in Brazil on Monday and Tuesday. Xi is meeting the New Zealand prime minister on Saturday afternoon, local time.
Albanese met Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto on Thursday morning (Lima time) and held talks with Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.
Albanese travelled to Lima with his partner Jodie Haydon. After three days in Peru, the Australian delegation will head to Brazil for the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro, the gathering for leaders from the world’s largest economies.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/big-smiles-and-bear-hugs-as-albanese-meets-biden-and-trudeau-while-xi-awaits-20241116-p5kr4a.html
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273ca3 No.21994109
>>21922359
>>21993973
>>21994024
China tells other world leaders: be like Australia’s Anthony Albanese
WILL GLASGOW - 15 November 2024
Beijing has nominated Anthony Albanese as the leader other American allies should emulate ahead of a meeting between the Australian Prime Minister and China’s President Xi Jinping in South America.
In an editorial published on the eve of meetings of APEC and G20 leaders in Peru and Brazil, the China Daily praised the Australians PM’s “strategic autonomy” amid “unprecedented geopolitical complexity and uncertainty” after the election of Donald Trump.
The party-state masthead, Beijing’s most authoritative English language masthead, offered the Australian Prime Minister as an exemplar for other American allies as they engage in the difficult “balancing act” between their security partner in Washington and their economic relationship with China.
The party-state controlled masthead said hawkish picks in Trump’s cabinet would make this balance “not an easy one”, and suggested leaders could learn from Albanese who has talked up Australia’s trade relationship with China ahead of the summits.
“Australia, however, might offer some useful reference for those struggling to strike such a balance,” the China Daily editorialised.
“Australia’s ties with China deteriorated when the previous Australian government fell under Washington’s anti-China spell,” the masthead continued.
“But Canberra has woken up to the significance of those ties under the Albanese government and set out repairing them. The strategic autonomy the Albanese government has displayed has proved that those ties are in both parties’ interests. It is also evident that economic ties with China and the US do not have to be mutually exclusive.”
The tone setting comments from the leading Chinese masthead before the Prime Minister’s meeting with Xi suggests Beijing thinks Canberra might help it argue against Trump’s threat to impose 60 per cent tariffs on China, which is by far Australia’s biggest export market. The RBA and other economists believe, if imposed, Trump’s tariffs would slow growth in countries such as Australia with big economic relationships with China.
Trump’s nomination of uber China hawks Marco Rubio as Secretary of State and Mike Waltz as national security adviser, along with reports that Robert Lighthizer will reprise his role as tariff tsar, has Beijing braced for a turbulent four years.
However, many in China also see opportunity in Trump’s eccentric approach. Chinese media are gloating over Trump’s controversial pick of Tulsi Gabbard to be his director of national intelligence.
Nationalist masthead Guancha called the appointment a “God-level prank”, noting Gabbard, a former Democrat, now Republican, has long campaigned against the intelligence agencies she would be in-charge of if her nomination is passed by the senate. Her role would also involve liaising with America’s Five Eyes intelligence partners, including Australia.
When she ran as a Democratic candidate in 2020, Gabbard criticised the Trump administration’s trade war and argued Washington should pursue a more cooperative relationship with Beijing to better address climate change. In recent years, she became a Trump favourite for claiming the American intelligence establishment was trying to bring down the former president with the “Russia hoax” and for campaigning against her old party.
Guancha reported that some Western intelligence officials believe her appointment might lead some allies and partners “to reduce the amount of information they share with the United States”.
Chinese news portals and social media have also been mocking Trump’s other cabinet appointments, including his pick for Defence Secretary, Fox News host Pete Hegseth. A video of Hegseth throwing an axe and accidentally hitting a nearby drummer has gone viral on the Chinese internet.
“This is equivalent to [former Global Times editor-in-chief] Hu Xijin being appointed as the Minister of National Defence,” said one popular post.
Other Chinese social media users argued there was logic in Trump’s unconventional approach. “The team level seems to be disorganised and chaotic, but in fact it is very cunning and has a clear purpose. It will do anything to achieve its goal,” said one.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/china-tells-other-world-leaders-be-like-australias-anthony-albanese/news-story/d5866c67afd65739151dd635cecfeace
https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202411/14/WS6735eb55a310f1265a1cd6b5.html
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273ca3 No.21994464
>>21982238
Anthony Albanese toughens criticism of Israel in UN votes, divide with US on Middle East grows
BEN PACKHAM - November 14, 2024
1/2
Anthony Albanese has hardened Australia’s criticism of Israel in key UN votes, deepening its rift with the US on the Middle East as incoming president Donald Trump prepares to strengthen American support for the Jewish state.
Australia’s representative at the UN in New York overturned the nation’s past positions to support draft resolutions recognising the “permanent sovereignty” of Palestinians to the occupied territories’ natural resources, and demanding compensation from Israel for a wartime oil spill affecting Lebanon 18 years ago.
Australia had abstained or voted against the first resolution since 2003, and opposed the second since 2006.
The move, during UN committee ballots on Thursday (AEDT), follows the Albanese government’s decision to break with the US and abandon longstanding bipartisan support for Israel by declaring Australia could recognise a Palestinian state ahead of a negotiated two-state solution.
It comes amid high anxiety inside the government over its ability to forge a good working relationship with Mr Trump, who has installed pro-Israel hawks in key posts and is threatening to impose across-the-board tariffs and wind back action on climate change. Members of the incoming Trump administration have also warned that Kevin Rudd’s days as Australia’s ambassador to the US could be numbered, following his past negative comments about the president-elect.
Jewish groups declared the voting shift made no sense and would deepen the nation’s divide with Washington on Israel.
US diplomat Nicholas Koval said the motions were “unfairly critical” of the Jewish state and would undermine hopes for an end to the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.
“One-sided resolutions will not help advance peace,” Mr Koval said. “Not when they ignore the facts on the ground. One-sided resolutions are purely rhetorical documents that seek to divide us at a time when we should be coming together.
“If member states are serious about promoting the cause of peace between Israelis and Palestinians, they should seek to end the persistent bias within the United Nations against Israel.”
The government failed to publish its official reasons for the shift from past positions, but a spokeswoman for Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the nation voted with the overwhelming majority of UN member states.
She said the government did not agree with “everything” in the resolution on Palestinian sovereignty over land, water and energy resources in the occupied territories. But she said the vote reflected “international concern about Israeli actions that impede access to natural resources, and ongoing settlement activity, land dispossession, demolitions and settler violence against Palestinians”.
“We have been clear that such acts undermine stability and prospects for a two-state solution,” Senator Wong’s spokeswoman said. “This resolution importantly recalls UN Security Council resolutions that reaffirm the importance of a two-state solution that has had bipartisan support.”
Australia had reservations over the text of the Lebanese oil slick resolution, but voted for it to express concern over the loss of life in the current conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.
“Australia is disappointed the resolution makes no reference to the terrible and destabilising actions of Hezbollah,” Senator Wong’s spokeswoman said.
“We reiterate calls for all parties to the conflict in Lebanon to show restraint, de-escalation and comply with their obligations under international law.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21994499
>>21982238
>>21994464
Labor’s deception on Israel and the Middle East is its only constant
SIMON BENSON - November 14, 2024
1/2
The Albanese government, if nothing else, has been consistent in its foreign affairs deception over Israel.
It comes as no surprise to the Jewish community or anybody else that yet again Australia has presided over a reversal of a previously held bipartisan position.
The justification for the latest volte-face before the UN is as weak as it is implausible, considering there has been no substantive explanation for a change in the underlying circumstances since the two issues being recontested were last voted on. In fact, there was no explanation at all outside a vague rationalisation that the decision was founded in a context of the most recent conflict.
There was no mention in the resolution that the current conflict was triggered by the Hamas terrorist attack last year. And there was only disappointment from Australia that Hezbollah didn’t get a mention. Despite this, the federal government, on behalf of Australians, voted in favour of Palestinian sovereignty over all resources in the occupied/disputed territories, while also voting in favour to blame Israel for an oil slick in Lebanon arising from the 2006 conflict.
Anthony Albanese declared before the election that there would be no change of Middle East position under a new Labor government. Despite this pledge, Australia has reversed its position five times in the past two years.
This latest change of position will be noticed in the US. The question for Foreign Minister Penny Wong is: what has changed since the last time Australia voted on these questions, to prompt a reversal of position? Why the change of heart?
At the time of publication, this remained objectively unclear, despite the vote having taken place 12 hours earlier. At best, the validation was rooted in an ideological shift in position rather than factual analysis.
The UN General Assembly’s latest grudge punch on Israel has come at the worst time for the Albanese government, considering all the other substantive issues it will be forced to confront with a Trump administration, including tariffs, AUKUS and Kevin Rudd.
While Australia doesn’t get to choose the time of UN votes it surely has a choice on what its decisions will be. Forget the fact that it puts Australia completely out of alignment with Donald Trump, who has made his position clear on Israel, this latest reversal is a decision that cuts across the current Biden administration as well.
Australia has often used Canada as a proxy for its decisions to break with the US on Israel. This time Canada sided with the US.
Australia instead decided to join New Zealand and the new UK Labour government.
There is now a significant split within the Five Eyes intelligence arrangement between the US, Canada, the UK, Australia and New Zealand. More than that, it puts Australia further out of alignment with our most important strategic partner on an existential question over which, since the Whitlam government, there had rarely been an inconsistent position until a collapse in the ideological ballast of the NSW Labor Right.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21994504
>>21994499
2/2
One can only assume that having given no convincing rationale for the change of heart during the second committee meeting of the UN General Assembly, Australia signalled it no longer wanted to be in the minority when it came to votes that sought to sanction Israel. If true, this is a juvenile justification for a reversal of position on two issues where there appears to have been no demonstrable change.
It took almost 12 hours for the government to provide a response to why Australia voted the way it did. A full General Assembly vote won’t be held until later this month and a position can always be changed. In this case it is unlikely.
The short response from Wong’s office provided no explanation. “Australia voted in favour of this resolution alongside more than 155 members of the international community, including the UK, New Zealand, France, Germany and Japan,” it read. “While Australia does not agree with everything in the resolution, this vote reflects international concern about Israeli actions that impede access to natural resources, and ongoing settlement activity, land dispossession, demolitions and settler violence against Palestinians. We have been clear that such acts undermine stability and prospects for a two-state solution.”
The background to this is clear. Wong’s position is an upturning of current thinking, which holds to an antecedent that for a two-state solution to be achieved, an enduring peace needs to be brokered first. Wong has put a two-state solution as a means to peace. She clearly believes the jettisoning of previously held support for Israel on UN votes is the pathway to this outcome. But the domestic imperative can’t be discounted. Labor’s existential battle with the Greens over Palestinian politics can’t be discounted as the primary motivation in decisions that would otherwise appear bewildering.
Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council executive director Colin Rubenstein made the point that since 2006, all Australian governments had voted the other way on the oil slick question because it ignored the environmental destruction Hezbollah caused in Israel during the 2006 war. On the “permanent sovereignty” resolution, he said, Australia had voted No or abstained from this resolution since 2003.
“Voting yes for this resolution puts Australia at odds with our own position on the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, which is absurd,” Rubenstein said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/labors-deception-on-israel-and-the-middle-east-is-itsonly-constant/news-story/12a047449e15d64d0ef17bd0c32988d8
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273ca3 No.21994548
>>21922359
>>21780991
>>21949128
Ukraine defiant amid Trump uncertainty, North Korea foray
PAUL GARVEY - November 14, 2024
1/2
The uncertainty surrounding US support for Ukraine in the wake of Donald Trump’s election will not dampen the willingness of Ukrainians to fight, the country’s ambassador to Australia says.
Vasyl Myroshnychenko said the arrival of North Korean troops to fight alongside Russians should be a reminder to Australia that the implications from the war stretch well beyond Ukraine’s borders.
In Perth on Wednesday, Mr Myroshnychenko acknowledged a lack of clarity around the US role in the war in the wake of Mr Trump’s victory.
“Everybody’s asking me, what’s going to happen with a new president in America. To be frank, in short, we don’t know. Nobody knows. We try to be optimistic,” he said.
“We rely on decisive American leadership. We hope the concept that Donald Trump has presented of peace through strength is something which is aligning with our plans. But of course, we have all been very cognisant of some of the statements … made on the campaign trail, so we’ll have to see how it goes.”
Mr Trump has promised to end the war in as little as a day after he takes office. While there are concerns the incoming president could turn off the supply of weapons that has been crucial to Ukraine’s defence, Mr Myroshnychenko noted that Mr Trump had made decisions during his first presidency that had helped Ukraine, such as supplying javelin missiles and imposing sanctions on the Nordstream Two gas pipeline.
“Trump authorised the sale of anti-tank missiles to Ukraine. We didn’t get them under (Barack) Obama by the way, but we got them under Trump’s presidency and those weapons were instrumental in our ability to defend ourselves during the initial first weeks of the war,” he said.
An estimated 10,000 North Korean troops have arrived in Russia and are expected to join the fighting in Ukraine.
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong was one of 10 foreign ministers from around the world who signed a statement expressing gave concerns about the deployment of North Korean troops to Russia.
The ministers described it as a dangerous expansion of the conflict and a further breach of international law, and flagged their deep concerns about the potential transfer of nuclear or ballistic missile technology from Russia to North Korea.
Mr Myroshnychenko said the involvement of North Korean troops had taken the war to a different level and had major security and stability implications for Australia and its major trading partners, China, South Korea and Japan.
“This war is really getting closer to your shores,” he said. “We see how vulnerable the global supply chains are. Your major trading partners are in the region so any conflict there will disrupt the export routes for Australian products, and that could be a serious danger to your national security and to your economy.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21994553
>>21994548
2/2
The great unknown around North Korea’s involvement was the price of the nation’s participation, given Russia’s capacity to furnish North Korea with the missile technology it lacks.
Mr Myroshnychenko said Ukraine was starting to see signals from South Korea that they might be willing to offer Ukraine access to its major stockpiles of artillery munitions following North Korea’s move.
The war in Ukraine is now approaching its 1000th day, with the conflict taking a major toll on the country’s people, infrastructure and environment.
An estimated 25 per cent of Ukrainian territory is now covered in landmines and unexploded ordinance that, at current rates, would take some 750 years to remove.
The vast amounts of munitions have also taken an enormous environmental toll, having contaminated large swaths of once-arable land that had previously earned Ukraine the nickname of the breadbasket of Europe.
Yuri Sak, an external adviser to Ukraine’s minister for strategic industries and a former adviser to the minister of defence, said Russia was continuing to gain territory. “I’d like to say there is good news. There is no good news,” he said.
“Probably the only good news is that we’re still standing as a country, and there are friends who stand with us. That’s the only good news, because the rest of the news is bad.”
He said suggestions Ukraine should strike a deal ceding territory to Russia would at best only “postpone the inevitable”.
“At maximum it would buy Russia a bit more time so that they strike a few more agreements with rogue countries, they get few more thousand, or tens of thousands, of troops into their country, a few more missiles and a few more drones from Iran, and they will be stronger and more ready to attack us in the future.”
He said the war was taking an enormous physical and mental toll on the Ukrainian people. “We are the lucky ones because me, personally, I get to see my kids at least once every four months. But what breaks my heart is in Ukraine, meeting children like my own children who will never be able to see their parents, who will never hear another bedtime story, and nobody can give them an answer why,” he said.
“When you see photographs of little children sitting on the tombs of their parents, you just go crazy. You just think to yourself, now, after the Holocaust, after the two World Wars, after all the horrors we have seen, how is it possible we are living through this nightmare again … it is not possible to explain it.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/ukraine-defiant-amid-trump-uncertainty-north-korea-foray/news-story/4defdb87906e8334830dd06f14ebc0ee
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273ca3 No.21994583
>>21761883
>>21761894
>>21839237
Accused Chilean torturer turned Bondi nanny launches 11th hour bid to dodge extradition
STEPHEN RICE - November 14, 2024
In an unusual intervention, the Chilean government has urged Australia to speed up extradition of former nanny Adriana Rivas, accused of taking part in torture and murder under the Pinochet military dictatorship, as she launches a last-ditch legal appeal to remain in the country.
Chilean ambassador Jaime Chomali attended Ms Rivas’s renewed bid to avoid extradition in the Federal Court on Thursday, in a measure of his country’s frustration at the long-delayed case.
Ms Rivas, 70, is perhaps the most wanted fugitive in Chile, accused of participating in the kidnapping murder of Communist Party leader Victor Diaz in 1976.
She is also accused of participating in the disappearance of six of Diaz’s supporters, including Reinalda Pereira, a 29-year-old woman who was five months pregnant when she vanished. Ms Rivas has fought extradition since her arrest in Sydney in 2019.
The Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a statement on Wednesday expressed “hopes this case, which has been dragging on for many years, will be resolved as soon as possible to give a due and timely response to victims’ families in their demand for justice”.
“Our country attaches a high priority to the extradition of Ms Rivas, both from a legal point of view and in the context of the prosecution of egregious human rights violations constituting crimes against humanity,” it said.
In the case management hearing on Thursday, judge Michael Lee asked Ms Rivas’s legal team to provide particulars of the grounds upon which she relies for the appeal, while Ms Rivas requested access to the legal advice given to the Finance Minister when she made her decision, a request likely to be challenged on the basis that the documents are privileged.
Ms Rivas is also mounting a case on the legal principle of “double criminality”, that is, that the alleged crime for which extradition is sought must be a crime in both countries – arguing that in 1976 Australia did not have a strictly equivalent law relating to aggravated kidnapping. She is also relying on “confidential” health issues.
Sydney lawyer Adriana Navarro, representing the families of the victims, said they were pleased that the first hearings would likely be in March.
She noted Ms Rivas had admitted she had been trained to provide protection and support for dictator Augusto Pinochet and had stood guard outside his hotel when he visited Spain. “So you wonder what information she has about the seven victims …. We have a fairly good idea what the dictatorship did to them but their remains haven’t been found.
“The families are still grieving and can’t close this chapter in their lives. Many of them are now very frail, and yet we have this painful situation where Ms Rivas has been given 4½ years to put forward her arguments, whereas the families anxiously wait for resolution.”
Ms Rivas moved to Sydney in 1978 but unbeknown to her Bondi neighbours, she was long suspected of being an operative for General Pinochet’s secret police – the Direccion de Inteligencia National (DINA) – during the dictator’s bloody rise to power in the mid-1970s.
Ms Rivas worked as an assistant to Manuel Contreras, commander of the DINA.
Chilean prosecutors believe she was among a group of about 55 DINA agents who participated in the detention, torture and suspected murder of communist leaders at the Simon Bolivar Centre in Santiago by the notorious “ Lautaro Extermination Brigade”.
In 2006, she went to visit family in Chile but was arrested.
While on bail in 2011, she escaped to Australia.
During a 2013 interview with SBS, she denied the allegations against her but confessed to escaping from Chile and justified torture as necessary because it was “the only way to break people”.
She said her work as a DINA security agent was “the best years of my youth”.
A preliminary hearing of the case will take place on 10 March next year.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/legal-affairs/accused-chilean-torturer-turned-bondi-nanny-launches-11th-hour-bid-to-dodge-extradition/news-story/e2361f5e7834e62f0b386284e1691f8d
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273ca3 No.21994695
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. Myer Christmas window tradition cancelled over protest threat
Cassandra Morgan - November 14, 2024
Myer’s annual Christmas window unveiling has been scrapped after pro-Palestine protesters planned to disrupt the event, saying “there is no joy in genocide”.
The unveiling of the annual Bourke Street display in the CBD was expected to happen on Sunday in front of children and families.
Myer confirmed on Thursday the event had been cancelled as a result of the planned protest.
“In light of recent developments and to ensure the wellbeing and safety of customers and team members, we will no longer hold an event on Bourke Street Mall for the unveiling of our Christmas windows,” a company spokesperson said.
“Myer’s Christmas windows have long symbolised joy and community, and we remain committed to providing a safe and positive experience for all visitors.”
The windows will still open on Sunday and remain on display until January 5, the spokesperson confirmed.
The retailer’s decision came after a protest group said they planned to disrupt the event.
“We’re seeking to interrupt the fun and the joy that Myer wants us to share,” one of the organisers, Amy, told radio station 3AW on Thursday.
The protesters, who are calling for a free Palestine, planned to meet at the State Library before proceeding to Bourke Street for the window unveiling.
Amy said the demonstration would be peaceful.
“We’re not seeking to bring bombs and murder children in Bourke Street Mall. We’re seeking to raise banners and play music and blow bubbles.
“I think there are a lot of people that don’t actually know how involved our government are in this genocide.”
Victoria Police said it had repeatedly requested the group not to disrupt the event, but the group had refused to co-operate.
Officers will attend the protest on Sunday and continue to talk to the group, a Victoria Police spokesperson said.
“The Myer Christmas windows are an important tradition in Melbourne’s calendar, with families from across Victoria coming into the city to see them,” the spokesperson said.
“While we always respect the right for people to protest peacefully, we are clear that this should be done without impacting the broader community.
“It is important to make clear a separate rally planned for later in the day has changed its usual route due to the Myer Christmas windows and will not walk through Bourke Street.”
Organisers of Free Palestine Melbourne, a group that holds regular rallies in the CBD, confirmed it had changed its usual route to avoid the mall.
Anti Defamation Commission chair Dvir Abramovich described the Christmas window protest as a “toxic hijacking of a family-friendly tradition that has no place in any community”.
“Let’s not forget what these windows stand for – the magic of childhood, the love of family, and the spirit of the holiday season,” Abramovich said.
“To try to taint that is an affront to everything this city represents.”
https ://www. theage. com.au/ national/ victoria/ myer-christmas- window-tradition -cancelled-over-protest-threat- 20241114 -p5kqrv. html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJ4egDwaPTo
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273ca3 No.21994751
>>21994695
‘Christmas is cancelled’: protest threat sparks cancellation of children’s Christmas opening
JOHN FERGUSON and LILY MCCAFFREY - 16 November 2024
1/2
Hardline anti-Israel activists who shut down the opening of Myer Melbourne Christmas windows in protest over the Gaza war have been condemned by police and the Victorian Premier and prompted a vow to strengthen the state’s anti-vilification laws.
Police and Myer will escalate security at the site of the popular Christmas tradition amid concerns the campaigners could still strike at the weekend.
The windows, which change in theme each year, are considered the main Christmas attraction in Victoria for children, with more than two million people expected this year.
Furious Premier Jacinta Allan said the targeting of a children’s attraction was a new low, and business demanded a tighter rein on the protesters who have caused disruptions in central Melbourne for more than a year.
“I am furious that a small group of people have chosen to politicise a beautiful event for children,’’ Ms Allan said.
“I’m just as mad at all the others who have quietly stoked this division and egged them on. Blocking the Christmas windows won’t change a thing in the Middle East, but it will let down a bunch of kids in Melbourne.”
Ms Allan, who joined by a group of multicultural and religious leaders at Friday’s press conference, also announced Labor would introduce strengthened anti-vilification laws to parliament later this month.
Victoria Police Assistant Commissioner Tim Tully also criticised the organisers, labelling their actions disgraceful and pledging tight security around the windows.
“There’s some things which are sacred, and the Myer Christmas windows is one of those,” he said.
Mr Tully described the organisers as a splinter group, from the main pro-Palestine protest group that has organised regular Sunday marches through the city.
“The Christmas windows themselves are still going ahead and I want to reassure families coming along on Sunday that police will be there to deal with any issues that this group presents us,” Mr Tully said.
“We will be there in numbers.”
The Bourke St windows have been viewed by tens of millions of children over the decades but Myer has been forced to post security guards outside its store as police conduct intense surveillance.
Dubbed the “Crash the Christmas Windows” protest to “interrupt the Christmas windows reveal at Myer” it was organised by anti-war activist Amy Settal and shared on social media by radical pro-Palestine group Disrupt Wars.
“Christmas is cancelled and there will be no joy or frivolity while children in Gaza are massacred,” a social media post read.
The group put off its protest when Myer said it would cancel the official opening.
Myer is still closely monitoring the situation amid concerns the protesters have not fully dismissed the potential for attacking the site on Sunday.
“To ensure the wellbeing and safety of customers, team members and the broader community, we made the decision to cancel the public event to launch Myer Christmas Windows in Bourke Street Mall,’’ a Myer spokesman said.
“Our Myer Christmas windows are a proud symbol of joy and community, loved by millions who visit them each year and we remain committed to providing a safe, positive and welcoming experience for all who visit.”
Myer was concerned that had the opening been conducted there could be threats to customers and staff.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.21994763
>>21994751
2/2
Zionist Federation of Australia chief executive Alon Cassuto said the planned action would do nothing for peace.
“The Myer Christmas windows are a cherished tradition, bringing joy to the entire community no matter their religion or background,’’ he said.
“Targeting a children’s event with disruptive protests does nothing to advance peace in the Middle East.’’
Archdiocese of Melbourne archbishop Peter Comensoli said Christmas was celebrated across the affected Middle East areas.
“Families and children across the world are beginning to prepare for Christmas celebrations. Even in places like Gaza, Beirut, and Bethlehem, these preparations have started,’’ he said.?“Christmas is good news for all people.
Shoppers expressed their disappointment, including Carolina Henao, 44, who said she was “devastated” her family’s annual Christmas tradition had been spoiled.
Ms Henao, from Beveridge in Melbourne’s outer north, said she came into the city each year for the Christmas windows with her son, Valentino, 7, and husband Wilder.
“We love Christmas and we love the spirit,” she said.
Liana Nardi, of Geelong, said she enjoyed taking her four-year-old granddaughter Georgia into Melbourne to see the windows and that it was “very disappointing that something that’s been happening for so many years” had been cancelled.
Martin Johnson, 64, said the protesters were “acting like the Grinch” by “spoiling people’s Christmases”.
Ms Settal said children were never a target, and the intention was “to interrupt the media spectacle and economic gain sought by Myer”.
“Celebrating over-consumption while the historic birthplace of Jesus is under bombardment is abhorrent,” she said.
Opposition Leader John Pesutto called the protesters “thugs” and said their actions were “absolutely disgusting”.
“I’ve already said previously that a permit system for protests is worth considering and looking at, investigating the merits and demerits of that kind of system,” he said.
“It should be looked at as part of the possible measures that can be embraced in the future.
Victorian Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief Paul Guerra said the planned protests were unacceptable and put society and businesses at risk.
“We should be allowed to live our lives in Melbourne without the threats given by protesters, it’s time for this to stop,” he said.
He said protests were stopping people from coming into Melbourne’s CBD and called for the government to introduce a permit system.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/christmas-is-cancelled-protest-threat-sparks-cancellation-of-childrens-christmas-opening/news-story/f45b4c7bab64545be70175413e0cc652
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273ca3 No.21994827
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21994695
>>21994751
Pro-Palestine protest outside Myer's Christmas windows cancelled after backlash
Allanah Sciberras and Adam Vidler - Nov 15, 2024
Myer will not reverse its decision to cancel Sunday's launch of this year's Christmas windows, despite demonstrators scrapping plans to interrupt the event.
Disrupt Wars issued a statement today, insisting that the pro-Palestine protest was always intended to be "peaceful and non-violent", and confirming that families and children were never going to be targeted.
The statement came just hours after Myer cancelled the official unveiling, which had sparked backlash from all levels of government, the local council, and the public.
Disrupt Wars posted on social media last night, asking people to "bring flags, placards, banners, props, noisemakers, and lots of energy" to the opening on Sunday.
The protest action has since been cancelled.
"The intention was to interrupt the media spectacle and economic gain sought by Myer," organiser Amy Settal said.
"The children coming to see the Myer Christmas windows were never a target because children are not a target.
"In light of Myer's decision to cancel their window reveal event, planned disruptions will not go ahead."
Myer earlier said the event had been cancelled following the post.
"In light of recent developments and to ensure the wellbeing and safety of customers and team members, we will no longer hold an event on Bourke Street Mall for the unveiling of our Christmas windows," a spokesperson said.
"Myer's Christmas windows have long symbolised joy and community, and we remain committed to providing a safe and positive experience for all visitors."
Cancellation sparks backlash
Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan had earlier accused the group of "politicising Christmas".
"I am really furious that a pretty small group have chosen to politicise - what is a beautiful event at a time of year when we have the chance to reflect on what makes us strong and cohesive," she told 3AW.
"It's unacceptable that this behaviour is causing this sort of division here in Melbourne.
"People have the right to demonstrate but no one has a right to divide our community."
Allan had also posted on X, firing off comments aimed at the protesters.
"Blocking the Christmas windows won't change a thing in the Middle East, but it will let down a bunch of kids in Melbourne. Who does that help?" she wrote.
"People have a right to demonstrate, no one has a right to divide.
"We cannot let ugly protests ruin a beautiful Christmas tradition, and we cannot let violence, division and vilification ruin what makes Victoria great."
Allan said the ongoing war in the Middle East had "tested" Victoria.
"We must come out of it united, not divided," she said.
The window display will still be open from Sunday until January 5 for people to enjoy if they choose to.
Melbourne's Lord Mayor Nick Reece echoed the sentiment of the premier, telling 3AW it was an "outrage".
"It's stupid, and it won't help the cause that these protesters are trying to advance," he said.
"(The windows) been going for over 70 years. It's part of the magic of childhood in Melbourne, going along to see the windows."
Victoria Police earlier said they were aware of the planned protest.
"We have repeatedly requested they do not do this, however, the group is not co-operating with police," a spokesperson said.
"The Myer Christmas Windows are an important tradition in Melbourne's calendar, with families from across Victoria coming into the city to see them.
"While we always respect the right for people to protest peacefully, we are clear that this should be done without impacting the broader community."
The spokesperson said police would have a "visible presence" at the site on Sunday and would continue to try speak with the group planning the protest.
"It is important to make clear a separate rally planned for later in the day has changed its usual route due to the Myer Christmas Windows and will not walk through Bourke Street," the spokesperson said.
In a further comment, police confirmed they had not advised Myer to cancel the event, and that they continued to work with the shopping centre to support the staging of the "much-loved tradition".
https://www.9news.com.au/national/myer-christmas-display-unveiling-cancelled-over-protest-plans/a64082f6-747c-4a0e-b276-359d386c4c78
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9moRQjlJpnA
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273ca3 No.22001897
>>21994695
>>21994751
>>21994827
Pro-Palestine protesters gatecrash opening of Myer Christmas windows
Madeleine Heffernan - November 17, 2024
A small group of pro-Palestine protesters targeted the opening of the Myer Christmas windows in Melbourne on Sunday morning, pouring scorn on Premier Jacinta Allan for calling them “morons” days earlier.
About 10 activists wearing Palestine flags, keffiyehs and Santa hats stood outside the Bourke Street department store, blew bubbles and chanted: “While you’re shopping, bombs are dropping”, “All Zionists are terrorists” and “Myer, Myer, you hate Christmas, you make money off of Jesus”. They also held signs saying “this moron supports Palestine” and “morons for Palestine”.
There was a heavy police presence outside the store, but the protest – which attracted a few counter-protesters yelling, “Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, oi, oi, oi!” – was peaceful.
Hundreds of families flocked to Myer’s annual Christmas windows on Sunday morning.
Some visitors were oblivious to the political storm engulfing the windows display, which usually attracts about 2.4 million people from November to January.
On Thursday, Myer cancelled its launch of the display after a pro-Palestine group said it would disrupt it. Then, on Friday, the group said it would cancel its protest.
The issue rapidly turned into a political fight.
Allan called the protesters “morons” at a press conference on Friday and insisted that police had all the necessary powers to deal with unruly protesters. She also rejected the opposition’s calls for the introduction of a protest permit scheme similar to that in NSW.
“Do we really think the same sort of morons who want to disrupt a beautiful Christmas tradition for families is going to apply for a permit?” Allan said at the time.
The protesters left the Myer windows just before 11am on Sunday but promised to return.
The regular pro-Palestine march – which has attracted tens of thousands of protesters some weekends – also took place on Sunday, but police diverted it away from the usual route to avoid Bourke Street.
Melbourne Lord Mayor Nick Reece said it was unfortunate that a small group of the pro-Palestine movement chose to protest at the Christmas windows.
“But thankfully, that’s passed, and the vast great mass of Melburnians are out here taking in what is a great Melbourne tradition. It’s been going strong for 70 years.”
This year’s Christmas windows opening was more modest and had higher security than last year’s official launch, which featured a performance by singer Cody Simpson. On Sunday, a brass band performed inside the store when doors opened, and bollards were erected at the Elizabeth and Swanston street ends of Bourke Street, affecting the 86 and 96 trams.
But Melbourne couple Kelly and Brendan, together with children Dominic and Mia, said they had not been following the news regarding protests and described the Australia Zoo-themed display as fantastic.
“I love that it’s incorporated something that’s Australian,” Kelly said. “We came to see the windows, we came to see Santa with the kids.”
A Myer spokesperson said the Christmas windows were a “proud symbol of joy and community, loved by millions who visit them each year and we remain committed to providing a safe, positive and welcoming experience for all who visit”.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/pro-palestine-protesters-gatecrash-opening-of-myer-christmas-windows-20241117-p5kr82.html
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/propalestine-activists-gatecrash-opening-of-myer-christmas-windows/news-story/65e6b3509656f2a46f5b7bdf157f3718
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273ca3 No.22001902
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21994695
>>21994751
>>21994827
Protesters rallying outside Myer's Christmas windows despite cancelling plans
9 News Australia
Nov 17, 2024
Protesters are rallying outside Myer's Christmas windows in Melbourne's CBD despite a vow not to.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQ_IRMThiL0
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273ca3 No.22001910
>>21994695
>>21994751
>>21994827
'While you're shopping, bombs are dropping': Protesters heckle shoppers outside Myer's Christmas windows but main rally stays away
April Glover - Nov 17, 2024
Protesters have chanted and waved flags outside Myer's Christmas windows in Melbourne's Bourke Street Mall despite cancelling a planned pro-Palestine rally.
Extra police were out in full force today in Melbourne's CBD ahead of the quiet unveiling of the annual display, which saw fewer than 10 protesters gather outside Myer.
The Australian retail giant scrapped plans to launch its annual festive exhibit with the usual fanfare after protesters planned to flood the event.
Though organisers revealed they had axed plans to protest the Christmas unveiling, several protesters were outside Myer chanting as shoppers walked past to catch a glimpse of the display.
The protesters chanted "while you're shopping, bombs are dropping" before police arrived on the scene to scatter the group.
They returned to the window and were heard chanting "shame on you, shame on you" to passers-by.
"This is for the kids, don't ruin it for them," one aggrieved shopper told 9News.
"Have your protest, do what you want but leave children alone."
Official organisers of the weekly march for Palestine kept their word and stayed clear of Bourke Street Mall today.
Myer's cancellation sparked huge backlash towards the protesters from shoppers, the local council and multiple levels of government, including Premier Jacinta Allan.
Today reporter Kiara Parker was outside the Myer windows today and said the unveiling was set to be "much more subdued" this year following the controversy.
Pro-Palestine demonstrators had said they would avoid Bourke Street and rally elsewhere in the CBD after the criticism.
Families and avid Christmas fans are still expected to line up around the block to witness Myer's famous Christmas window dressing and see this year's theme.
Last year, the Myer Christmas windows theme was the ABC children's show Bluey.
The 2024 display will be the 69th year of Myer's beloved Christmas window decorations and it will be up until January.
The cancelled protest outside Myer intended to crash the official event and shut it down following accusations the decorations were a consumerist display.
"The intention was to interrupt the media spectacle and economic gain sought by Myer," organiser Amy Settal said.
"The children coming to see the Myer Christmas windows were never a target because children are not a target.
"In light of Myer's decision to cancel their window reveal event, planned disruptions will not go ahead."
Myer said the event had been cancelled as a direct result of the protest plans.
"In light of recent developments and to ensure the wellbeing and safety of customers and team members, we will no longer hold an event on Bourke Street Mall for the unveiling of our Christmas windows," a spokesperson said.
"Myer's Christmas windows have long symbolised joy and community, and we remain committed to providing a safe and positive experience for all visitors."
https://www.9news.com.au/national/myer-christmas-display-melbourne-police-out-in-full-force-for-department-store-window-unveiling/d541c063-f136-4470-bd54-067b5a089564
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273ca3 No.22001931
>>21994024
>>21994109
‘We have not changed our position’: PM brushes off China’s praise
GEOFF CHAMBERS - November 16, 2024
Anthony Albanese has brushed-off praise from a prominent Beijing mouthpiece by declaring he does not “subscribe” to the state-owned China Daily, as Chinese President Xi Jinping skipped the first gathering of APEC leaders in Peru in favour of one-on-one meetings.
With Mr Xi not turning-up to the first leaders’ sessions in Lima, the Prime Minister caught-up with outgoing US President Joe Biden, who is attending his final international summits before vacating the White House in January.
Mr Albanese and Mr Biden, who have met formally 11 times since the 2022 election, were photographed grinning and shaking hands ahead of the APEC leaders’ informal dialogue, also attended by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim and New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon.
Mr Xi – who will meet for the third and final time with Mr Biden in Peru on Sunday (AEDT) – held a series of bilateral meetings with key Asia-Pacific leaders, including Mr Luxon, Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong and others.
Mr Albanese, who also met with Mr Wong on the APEC summit sidelines, is expected to meet with Mr Xi at the G20 summit in Brazil. Mr Xi has launched a diplomatic blitz in South America to shore-up support from countries ahead of a likely US-China trade war, after Donald Trump pledged to hit Chinese imports with 60 per cent tariffs, and slug other imports with tariffs up to 20 per cent, including potentially Australian products.
The likely Xi-Albanese meeting follows a China Daily editorial published on the eve of APEC and G20 summits praising the Australian Prime Minister’s “strategic autonomy” amid “unprecedented geopolitical complexity and uncertainty” following the election of Mr Trump. The editorial confirms that Beijing has nominated Mr Albanese as the leader other American allies should emulate as they balance relations with China and a second Trump administration.
Ahead of attending the official APEC leaders’ reception event at the Peruvian presidential palace with fiancée Jodie Haydon, Mr Albanese on Saturday (AEDT) said “I don’t subscribe to the China Daily … I can confirm that”.
“What I’ve done with China is work in the way that we said we would before the election. We said we would cooperate where we can and we would disagree where we must and we would engage in our national interests. I’d done that without compromising any of Australia’s national interests,” Mr Albanese said.
“We have not changed our position on any of the key differences that we have. We’ve said both privately and publicly the same things.”
Mr Xi’s Chinese government was previously accused of breaching international trade rules after banning Australian exports following a breakdown in relations with the Morrison government. Since the 2022 election, Beijing has removed most of those trade bans.
Mr Albanese said Mr Biden, who hosted Mr Trump at the White House this week, was “in good form”. The pair will not meet formally at the APEC or G20 summits after recently seeing each other for Quad meetings in Mr Biden’s home state of Delaware.
“I don’t talk about the details of private discussions but it was friendly. I regard him as a good friend personally but also a good friend of Australia. He was upbeat, he was pleased to be here at APEC. He is, of course, continuing to work in the interests of the United States and he will be attending the G20 meeting,” Mr Albanese said.
The Labor leader said improving trade and economic relations with China could be achieved while maintaining close security and investment ties with the US.
“We have an alliance with the United States. It’s an important relationship for us. Our relationship with the United States is very different from our relationship with China, who has a different political system and has different values. It’s in Australia’s national interest to support and continue to engage with our allies in the United States. I’m a strong supporter of AUKUS.
“As a trading nation, we have an interest in trade and we have an interest in Australian jobs being created and boosting Australian prosperity by engaging in our region, including with our major trading partner, which is China.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/we-have-not-changed-our-position-pm-brushes-off-chinas-praise/news-story/3a0f7478a958c2668b6064b41c40293c
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273ca3 No.22001948
>>21994024
>>21994109
>>22001931
‘Meek and weak’: Former top diplomat blasts Albanese on China
Matthew Knott - November 16, 2024
1/2
Japan’s former top diplomat in Australia has launched a scathing attack on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, accusing him of being “weak and meek” in his handling of relations with China.
Shingo Yamagami, who served as Japan’s ambassador in Canberra from 2021 to 2023, also welcomed Donald Trump’s US election victory, predicting he would help deter a Chinese invasion of the self-governing island of Taiwan.
Yamagami’s comments preceded an expected meeting of Albanese and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Brazil in coming days, and a meeting between Defence Minister Richard Marles and his Japanese and US counterparts in Darwin on Sunday.
“There’s no question that Anthony Albanese has been weak and meek vis a vis China. This is common knowledge in the international community,” Yamagami told this masthead.
“Otherwise, how could China praise Anthony Albanese?”
The state-owned China Daily newspaper urged Western leaders to emulate Albanese in an editorial published on Thursday, praising him for his “strategic autonomy” in balancing relations between Beijing and Washington.
“He has done everything not to displease China and has hesitated in calling a spade a spade, which was really good for China,” said Yamagami, who previously served as head of Japan’s spy agency, the Intelligence and Analysis Service.
Albanese should have more forcefully condemned China’s increasingly assertive conduct in the South China Sea and East China Sea, he said.
Albanese, who is attending the APEC summit in Peru, defended his handling of the China relationship when asked about the China Daily editorial on Saturday.
“We said we would co-operate where we can, we would disagree where we must, and we would engage in our national interests,” he told reporters.
“I’ve done that without compromising any of Australia’s national interests. We have not changed our position on any of the key differences that we have.”
China has restored normal diplomatic relations with Australia and lifted about $20 billion worth of restrictions on imports of Australian wine, lobster, timber, barley, cotton and coal since Labor came to power in 2022.
Albanese, who has pushed ahead with the AUKUS pact despite protestations from Beijing, has previously said he was “very concerned and Australia is concerned about any unsafe and destabilising behaviour in the South China Sea”.
Yamagami believes “Trump is much better than Kamala Harris when it comes to dealing with China”.
“Unlike Albanese, and unlike former Japanese prime minister [Fumio] Kishida, Trump is eager to project the image of being strong-willed, tenacious and formidable,” he said.
“I think that will be good for all of us, because what is dangerous at this moment is for China to overestimate their prowess and become reckless and adventurous.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22001953
>>22001948
2/2
Yamagami, who attracted attention in Canberra for his hawkish commentary on China, left his posting earlier than expected last year and subsequently departed Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong was not a fan of his diplomatic style, and his close friendships with Coalition figures such as Scott Morrison and Tony Abbott raised eyebrows in Labor circles.
Now a senior fellow at the Sasakawa Peace Foundation think tank in Tokyo, Yamagami said: “I can finally speak my mind, and I can write whatever I like, without any shackles of government. It’s liberating.”
Yamagami, who will travel to Australia for a series of speeches this week, said he did not believe Albanese or Ishiba Shigeru, who became Japan’s prime minister last month, will be able to secure “the full trust of Trump” when he returns to the White House.
“Unlike Scott Morrison or [the late former Japanese prime minister] Shinzo Abe, that is not possible,” he said.
But he said Australia and Japan, as trusted US partners in the Indo-Pacific, could play a crucial role in highlighting the connection between the Taiwan Strait and the war in Ukraine.
“Xi Jinping must be very closely following the situation in Ukraine,” Yamagami said. “If he gets any reason to believe that he can invade Taiwan without any hindrance, any difficulties, that’s where the danger starts.”
Yamagami said he did not believe Trump would want to “leave his name in history as a weak president who lost Taiwan”, a view that is far from universally shared.
Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton has said Taiwan could “be toast” under a second Trump administration because the President-elect has a negative view of the island and is focused on striking a trade deal with Beijing.
Asked by Bloomberg in July whether he would defend Taiwan against China, Trump accused the island of taking semiconductor manufacturing away from the US and said: “Taiwan doesn’t give us anything.”
However, Trump has chosen several China hawks and supporters of Taiwan, including Secretary of State nominee Marco Rubio, to serve in his cabinet.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/meek-and-weak-former-top-diplomat-blasts-albanese-on-china-20241116-p5kr4r.html
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273ca3 No.22001969
>>21922359
>>21994024
Anthony Albanese lauds Australia as a future ‘renewable energy superpower’
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 16 November 2024
Anthony Albanese has told APEC leaders that climate change action, cutting emissions and embracing clean energy are central for Asia-Pacific countries “to build new sources of inclusive growth and lasting prosperity”.
Ahead of a likely G20 summit climate change showdown between advanced economies and major developing countries next week, the Prime Minister used his final APEC speech to promote Australia as a future “renewable energy superpower”.
Speaking at the APEC leaders’ retreat in Lima before flying to Rio de Janeiro for the G20 summit, Mr Albanese said “the global move to net zero represents the biggest economic shift since the industrial revolution”.
“And just as all of us have a role to play in cutting emissions and meeting the challenge of climate change, all our citizens can benefit from seizing the opportunities of clean energy,” Mr Albanese said.
“Making the move to more solar, wind and green hydrogen is essential for us to deal with the threat that climate change poses to our environment, our farmers, our forests, our oceans and rivers and our future food security.
“It’s also an unprecedented chance for our economies to build new sources of inclusive growth and lasting prosperity. My government’s ambition is for Australia to become a renewable energy superpower.”
Global action on climate change will face a major shake-up under Donald Trump, who has pledged to pull out of the Paris Agreement and Green Climate Fund for a second time, after Joe Biden returned the US to the United Nations climate change pacts.
After British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced his Labour government was committing to an 81 per cent cut to emissions by 2035, Mr Albanese on Saturday (AEDT) was coy about his own government’s new 2035 target.
“I note that Keir Starmer has just been elected, and he’s come up with the new target. When we just got elected, we came up with a new target, and that’s 43 per cent by 2030,” he said.
“We’re committing to our 2030 target. It’s legislated. 2030 comes before 2035 and we’re very focused on delivering and we’re on track to delivering that target.”
Mr Albanese on Sunday (AEDT) joined other Asia-Pacific leaders including Chinese President Xi Jinping and Mr Biden for the traditional APEC “family photo” before they head to Brazil for the G20 summit.
The G20 summit, which overlaps with the UN COP29 climate summit in Baku, will include a focus on climate change with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva pushing for a global climate finance target to support developing nations.
In his APEC speech, Mr Albanese said that Australia wants to “use our abundance of affordable and reliable energy to power a new generation of skilled jobs and advanced manufacturing at home”.
Building on the country’s track record as a trusted global energy supplier, Mr Albanese said Australia can become “an exporter of clean energy to the growing economies of the region”.
“Enabling economies undergoing rapid growth to strike the vital balance between realising the benefits of industrialisation and meeting the imperatives of decarbonisation.
“The more we can do to reduce our dependency on uncertain sources, the stronger our economies will be.
“Acting on climate change and embracing clean energy is both the most significant challenge and the biggest opportunity facing all our citizens.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/anthony-albanese-lauds-australia-as-a-future-renewable-energy-superpower/news-story/8adec2776a2a7e7f092021f891d277ac
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273ca3 No.22001983
>>21922359
>>21994024
World leaders issue warning to Trump on trade, but not by name
David Crowe - November 17, 2024
1/2
Lima: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has joined Asia-Pacific leaders in warning against new trade barriers that could slash economic growth and sacrifice jobs, in a signal to US President-elect Donald Trump to rethink his plan to force up the price of imports.
The political leaders ended a regional summit in Peru with a sharp message about the need for fair and open trade. Chinese President Xi Jinping denounced the prospect of “back-pedalling” on globalisation.
But the Chinese president said he would strive towards a “smooth transition” to the new US administration when Trump takes office in January, in a comment during a meeting with US President Joe Biden that eased fears of conflict between the world’s largest economic and military powers.
“China is ready to work with the new US administration to maintain communications, expand co-operation and manage differences,” Xi said in his opening remarks to Biden in their third face-to-face meeting in three years.
Australian officials hope to secure a meeting between Albanese and Xi within days, as they walk a diplomatic tightrope to tighten economic ties with China while cementing the security alliance with the US. Albanese spoke with Xi during a social event before a gala dinner at the Lima summit, smoothing the way for a formal meeting at the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro.
Albanese arrived in Rio on Saturday night, local time, after leaving the APEC gathering in Lima, where the Trump economic agenda clouded talks on how to lower inflation and lift growth.
In a move that sets the scene for the G20 talks in coming days, the APEC leaders said in a statement that trade must be free, open, fair, non-discriminatory, transparent and predictable.
With Biden due to step down on January 20, the final photograph at the Lima summit signalled a shift in global power as the Chinese president took a central position on the podium while his American counterpart arrived late and stood at the edge of the group.
As experts said higher tariffs would lead to higher prices and stronger global inflation, the International Monetary Fund told the APEC leaders they must tighten their budgets to avoid wasteful spending and reform their economies to boost growth.
IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva told the Lima meeting that global inflation was retreating without the economy slipping into recession, but she said many households were not feeling this good news.
“Inflation may be falling but the higher prices people feel in their wallets are here to stay,” she said.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22001985
>>22001983
2/2
A dispute over the wars in Gaza and Ukraine broke the consensus at the Lima summit after countries including Australia tried to air their concerns about the conflicts, only to be blocked by Russia and China.
Albanese supported the two wars being addressed at the APEC gathering, but the host of the meeting, Peruvian President Dina Boluarte, admitted the failure to reach an agreement.
“In the context of the 31st APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting that took place in Lima, some economies expressed their views on Russia and Ukraine and the situation in Gaza,” Boluarte said in a chair’s statement at the end of the summit.
“Some economies considered that these issues have an impact on the global economy and could be treated in APEC, while other economies do not believe that APEC is a forum to discuss these issues.”
Boluarte’s statement did not elaborate on the reasons for the impasse and did not say where each of the 21 members stood on the two wars. But the dispute repeats the troubles seen at the APEC summit last year when Muslim-majority members Brunei, Indonesia and Malaysia called for an immediate truce and an end to hostilities in Gaza.
Russian President Vladimir Putin did not attend this year’s gathering in the Peruvian capital of Lima and was represented by Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Overchuk.
Albanese raised the Gaza and Ukraine wars during the talks, while officials negotiated outside the leaders’ final session to prepare the final statements. As with last year, the officials understood that Russia and China could veto any mention of Ukraine in the final declaration.
Biden, speaking in response to Xi at their Lima meeting, said he was “very proud” of the progress between the US and China.
“These conversations prevent miscalculations and they ensure the competition between our two countries will not veer into conflict,” the US leader said.
Early cabinet appointments by Trump including China hawks Marco Rubio as secretary of state and Mike Waltz as national security adviser suggest he is readying for an adversarial stance toward Beijing.
Leaders at the summit did not name Trump in their talks, according to sources who spoke on condition of anonymity, but many of their concerns about tariffs were directed at the incoming US administration.
“We acknowledge the importance of, and will continue to work to deliver a free, open, fair, non-discriminatory, transparent, inclusive and predictable trade,” the leaders’ final declaration said.
Albanese backed the statement on free trade, confirming a longstanding position at APEC against trade barriers, but he denied it was aimed explicitly at Trump.
“It is squarely aimed at one thing, and that is Australia’s national interests. We are a trading nation and I support free and fair trade. One in four Australian jobs depends on trade,” he said on ABC TV’s Insiders on Sunday.
https://www.theage.com.au/world/oceania/dispute-over-gaza-and-ukraine-dogs-apec-as-leaders-issue-warning-to-trump-on-trade-20241117-p5kr7e.html
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273ca3 No.22002007
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese asserts Australian Ambassador to US Kevin Rudd will remain in Washington for 'year or more'
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has asserted he is no longer “scared” of US President-elect Donald Trump and maintained US Ambassador Kevin Rudd will remain in his position despite ongoing speculation.
Oscar Godsell - November 17, 2024
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has asserted Australian Ambassador to the United States Kevin Rudd will remain in Washington for a year or more despite recent speculation about his position.
In an exclusive interview with Sky News Political Editor Andrew Clennell, Mr Albanese dismissed suggestions Mr Rudd could be replaced and said he would remain for a year or more.
When asked about the future of the ambassador’s tenure, Mr Albanese said: “He's Australia's ambassador to Washington and he's doing a very important job.”
"The work that he did with AUKUS was a difficult task to get that through the Congress and the Senate.
“But when I was there, one of the things that struck me was just how extensive the links that Kevin Rudd had developed with the US Congress and the Senate were.”
Sky News recently revealed Mr Rudd attempted to draft former Prime Minister Scott Morrison to an informal special envoy role to help develop links to the Republican Party.
“Kevin Rudd has been a very good ambassador. He continues to do the job. He has developed relationships across the political spectrum in the United States,” Mr Albanese said.
The Prime Minister’s comments come amid increasing scrutiny of Mr Rudd’s role, particularly following a recent tweet from a top aide to Donald Trump.
Trump's newly-appointed Deputy Chief of Staff advisor Dan Scavino posted an image on social media last week implying that Rudd’s time as ambassador was running out.
When asked whether he had been concerned about the political implications of the tweet, Mr Albanese declined to comment.
“Well, I'm not going to comment on someone who I don't know and have never had a discussion with,” he said about the situation.
"The discussion I had with President Trump was very constructive and very positive.”
"I can work constructively. And there was a very good beginning to our relationship with a positive phone call that we had. We spoke for 10 minutes. It was one of the first phone calls that he made."
This marked a stark contrast to Mr Albanese’s remarks from 2017, when he admitted he was "scared" Donald Trump, in apparent reference to the president’s controversial rhetoric.
Clennell revisited this earlier comment and asked Mr Albanese if he still felt apprehensive.
“No, I will deal with President Trump and I'll deal with him constructively in Australia's national interest,” Mr Albanese said.
“And I'm confident that we will be able to do so.”
The Albanese government has been urged to seek exemptions to universal tariffs touted by Trump which could affect Australian trade with the US.
The former Coalition government under prime minister Malcolm Turnbull was able to convince Trump to abandon proposed steel and aluminium import tariffs in 2018.
The Prime Minister pointed to the Australia-US trade surplus as an indicator his government would be able to achieve the same.
“When I spoke with President Trump I pointed out, as I'm sure they (Turnbull, Morrison) did, that the United States has enjoyed a trade surplus with Australia since Truman was President,” he said.
“The trade between Australia and the United States is in both of our nation's interests.”
https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/prime-minister-anthony-albanese-asserts-australian-ambassador-to-us-kevin-rudd-will-remain-in-washington-for-year-or-more/news-story/3697a492c26da81d4efcc2fb071b06b1
https://x.com/DanScavino/status/1856245824675545479
https://x.com/AmboRudd/status/1854149581933625432
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273ca3 No.22002025
>>21922359
Japanese troops to join US Marines for Top End training
BEN PACKHAM - 17 November 2024
1/2
Australia has ramped up security ties with Japan amid growing fears over China’s military might, green lighting annual deployments of hundreds of Japanese troops to Darwin and a new alliance-style agreement with Tokyo and Washington to counter regional threats.
Up to 600 Japanese amphibious force personnel will join annual US Marines Corps deployments to the Top End from next year, turbocharging training with Australian personnel.
Defence Minister Richard Marles announced the measures with US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and Japanese Defence Minister Nakatani Gen on Sunday, saying a new formal commitment to consult on regional contingencies would provide “substance and a structure” to the trilateral security partnership.
“It really is a step forward in terms of the way in which the three of us will operate in a collective and co-ordinated way,” Mr Marles said following three-way talks at Darwin’s HMAS Coonawarra naval base.
The commitments came as General Austin declared he was confident the US could deliver on its promise to provide Virginia-class submarines to Australia, and Mr Marles confirmed Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries was one of two remaining contenders to build Australia’s $10bn general purpose frigates.
The inclusion of Japanese troops in the annual dry season troop rotations through Darwin comes more than 82 years after Imperial Japan’s bombing of the city. Mr Marles said the arrangement was an “important statement to the region” on the nations’ resolve to work together to meet security challenges “no matter what that circumstance is”.
As Donald Trump rattles US allies by naming anti-woke Fox News host Pete Hegseth to run the Pentagon, General Austin said he was confident the US would to be a “a really reliable and effective ally” to its partners around the world.
Addressing questions over Mr Hegseth’s fitness to lead the Department of Defence, General Austin said it was the Trump administration’s prerogative to make its own cabinet appointments.
But he declared pointedly: “This is a large enterprise, the DOD, and it often involves making life-and-death decisions on a near daily basis, and accounting for and taking care of some 2.7 million soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines, guardians, and really remaining focused on protecting the country and protecting our interests around the world.”
Despite the upheaval in Washington, Mr Marles said he expected Mr Trump’s administration to maintain American leadership in the world. “That’s very much part of how President Trump has articulated his message, and that’s what we will expect to see from that,” he said.
He said Australia would be “playing our part” in communicating to the Trump administration about “the issues that are present in our part of the world, in the Indo-Pacific”.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22002027
>>22002025
2/2
Fresh doubt was thrown over Mr Hegseth’s nomination as a 2017 sexual assault allegation by a then-17-year-old girl emerged in the US media.
But, days after opposition defence spokesman Andrew Hastie lauded Mr Hegseth‘s appointment, Mr Marles said he had heard only “positive” things about the National Guard veteran and was looking forward to building a relationship with him.
“I think we’ve seen … people coming from a range of different places and perspectives to occupy posts in government. And you know that breadth of experience can be really important,” the Defence Minister said.
US submarine production is languishing at around 1.4 boats a year – well short of the 2.3 per year needed for it to meet its AUKUS commitments without eating into its own requirements. But General Austin said investments in production, including a $5bn funding injection by Australia, would “get this done”.
Japan already considers Australia a “quasi ally”, and Mr Nakatani said the new commitments would deepen nations’ security partnership following a reciprocal agreement to streamline joint training.
“The security environment in the region is very severe right now and complex. We need to co-operate from peacetime to contingency,” he said.
In a joint statement the three nations expressed “serious concern about destabilising actions in the East and South China Seas”, including Chinese harassment of Philippines vessels.
Mr Nakatani revealed Japan was looking at deploying its F-35 stealth fighters to Australia’s Exercise Pitch Black next year, while Mr Marles said Japanese and US troops would participate in Exercise PukPuk with Papua New Guinea under a new agreement to include all three nations‘ troops in their respective regional exercises.
Japan’s Mogami frigate is up against Germany’s MEKO design, proposed by TKMS, in the race to build 11 new warships for the navy after South Korean and Spanish rivals were knocked out of the running.
Mr Marles said Australia was “very impressed” with the Japanese ship and would make a decision next year, with the first three vessels to be built overseas and the remaining eight to be constructed in Perth. The US Marine Corps rotational deployments have been under way for the past 13 years. About 2000 marines rotated through Darwin this year, with 200 typically remaining through the wet seasons.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/japanese-troops-to-join-us-marines-in-nt/news-story/d3e43b546b87234065484fa74ad1eb77
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e26d7d No.22002029
>>22002025
>Japanese troops to join US Marines for Top End training
Must be a little bit awkward at times for both sides after the Pacific War.
Peace should be the goal and the prize.
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273ca3 No.22002030
>>21974814
>>21974828
Gillard urges states to act after ‘deeply concerning’ ruling that Catholic Church is not liable in abuse case
Tony Wright - November 17, 2024
Former prime minister Julia Gillard has called on Australia’s attorneys-general to urgently consider how to deliver justice to survivors of child abuse after the High Court ruled that a Catholic diocese was not liable for the historical sexual abuse of a young boy in Victoria.
Gillard, who in 2012 established the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, said she was “deeply concerned” about the High Court ruling.
The royal commission – widely considered among the most important decisions of Gillard’s period as prime minister from 2010 to 2013 – lifted the lid on decades of child sexual abuse that had occurred in Australian institutions.
But the High Court sent shockwaves through advocates for survivors last week when it overturned on appeal a previous ruling by Victoria’s Supreme Court and its Court of Appeal that had found the Catholic Church’s Ballarat diocese was legally responsible for the misconduct of its former priest Father Bryan Coffey.
On Wednesday, the High Court found that the relevant legislation did not provide a basis for imposing vicarious liability on the church because the priest could not be legally considered an employee.
The diocese and its current bishop, Paul Bird, were sued in the Supreme Court of Victoria by a man who said he was sexually assaulted by Coffey at his parents’ home in Port Fairy in 1971. The man, known in court documents as DP, was five years old at the time of the abuse.
Coffey, who is now deceased, received a three-year suspended sentence in 1999 after being convicted of charges including false imprisonment and the indecent assaults of males and females under 16.
Last week legal experts warned that the landmark decision could cast doubt over thousands of legal cases against religious orders nationwide. Other common law jurisdictions, including Britain, Canada and Ireland, have developed the principle of vicarious liability to apply to religious orders.
Gillard, contacted by this masthead for comment, made it clear yesterday that she was taken aback by the High Court’s decision.
“I am deeply concerned about the implications of this High Court ruling, and I believe attorneys-general must urgently consider how best to ensure survivors can attain justice,” she said.
Kim Price, a partner with Arnold Thomas and Becker Lawyers – which represents about 1400 victims of historical sexual abuse – last week urged Victorian Attorney-General Jaclyn Symes to intervene.
“We respectfully ask your government to consider introducing legislation to remedy the High Court’s ruling to bring vicarious liability of religious organisations into line with that of other organisations who have historically been responsible for the care of children,” Price said in an email to Symes on Wednesday.
In 2018, the state government introduced legislation to dismantle the Ellis defence in Victoria.
The Ellis defence was established when the NSW Court of Appeal ruled in 2007 that the Catholic Church does not exist in a legal sense because its property assets are held inside a special trust structure that is immune to lawsuits.
A spokeswoman for the state government last week said it would consider the High Court findings and any action it might take.
“We were proud to pass legislation quashing the Ellis defence, sending a clear message to child abuse survivors: we stand with you in your fight for justice and always will,” she said.
Bird last week thanked the High Court for its “careful consideration of these complex areas of law” and said the diocese was examining the judgment and its implications.
If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline (13 11 14), the Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) and Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800).
https://www.1800respect.org.au/
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/
https://www.kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/federal/gillard-urges-states-to-act-after-deeply-concerning-ruling-that-catholic-church-is-not-liable-in-abuse-case-20241116-p5kr5e.html
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e26d7d No.22002033
>>22001948
>>22001953
>'Meek and weak’: Former top diplomat blasts Albanese on China
>“There’s no question that Anthony Albanese has been weak and meek vis a vis China. This is common knowledge in the international community,” Yamagami told this masthead.
>“Otherwise, how could China praise Anthony Albanese?”
Ow.
Sending a message.
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273ca3 No.22002060
>>21831302
>>21831333
>>21968227
Former NSA chief Mike Rogers believes Donald Trump will question AUKUS but ultimately support it
CAMERON STEWART - November 14, 2024
Australia should expect Donald Trump to question the AUKUS submarine pact but he is likely to eventually back it when he sees its value to the US, according to the former head of America’s largest intelligence agency.
Admiral Mike Rogers, who headed the National Security Agency during Mr Trump’s first term and who worked closely with the then president, says Australia must prepare to make the case about key aspects of its alliance with the US to the transactional new president. This includes the AUKUS plan to buy Virginia-class submarines from the US, a plan that has received pushback from some Republicans who will now control both the Senate and the house.
“I do believe the new president is going to ask the following question: Tell me what value AUKUS generates for the US,” Admiral Rogers told The Australian in an exclusive interview in Adelaide.
“I think there’s a good case to be made: Hey, look, we’re seeing jobs, we’re seeing capital, flow into the US … it sends a broader message to the entire region about the commitment of Australia, the US and Great Britain to the Indo-Pacific and it clearly signals to China we intend to be strong players,” he said.
“Those are all positives but I do expect he will not come in with a view of ‘Well, of course, it’s the thing to do. It’s what my predecessor wanted.’ That’s not the way, in my experience, he normally works. But I do believe that ultimately he will accept it, in part because I think he can make a pretty compelling case that is generating value for the US.”
Admiral Rogers said Australia would also need to make its case to the incoming president about why it should be exempted from his new plan to impose 10 per cent on all imports into the US, just as Australia did to avoid Mr Trump’s steel and aluminium tariffs in 2018.
“He has shown in the past a willingness on a case-by-case basis, if there can be a compelling argument – but the compelling argument often has to include, how would this benefit the US?’
Admiral Rogers said believed Mr Trump would begin his second term with greater confidence about what was possible to achieve because he had a better understanding of how the system worked. He said Mr Trump’s appointments so far in his new administration were people he knew personally and people who he knew backed the mandate for change that he won from the electorate.
“(They are) reflective of his ideology and his view, president Trump’s view of the world,” said Admiral Rogers, who is in Adelaide to speak at the Sohn Hearts & Minds Conference on Friday.
“He’s less interested in what’s your pedigree, what’s your CV? That doesn’t seem to be the biggest factor. If you look at his appointments, his view to me is ‘Look, I’ve just been given a mandate to make significant changes and so I’m going to start off in a way that will enable me to make changes within the structure much quicker, much more efficiently’.”
As a former head of the NSA, Admiral Rogers concedes Mr Trump is sceptical about aspects of the US intelligence community, which he calls a part of the “deep state”.
“He truly believes there are elements working in the government, who are actively opposed to (his) vision, who are trying to defeat his initiatives. And he starts this term with a view of ‘I’m going to make sure there’s people in place who understand my ideology or my viewpoint, who are committed to executing that viewpoint’.”
Admiral Rogers said in his previous dealings with the then president, he never felt any pressure from Mr Trump to tailor intelligence assessments in any way and he said the agencies were able to make their own assessments in the correct manner. “That’s the way our system works,” he said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/us-politics/former-nsa-chief-mike-rogers-believes-donald-trump-will-question-aukus-but-ultimately-support-it/news-story/cde241472084b1d4116ef2e37f51e27c
https://qresear.ch/?q=michael+rogers
https://qanon.pub/#120
https://qalerts.app/?q=Adm+R&sortasc=1
https://qalerts.app/?q=rogers&sortasc=1
https://qalerts.app/?q=NSA&sortasc=1
>Why is ADM R so important?
>Who wanted him fired?
>Why?
>Why wasn’t ADM R replaced by POTUS when taking office?
>Why is this relevant?
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273ca3 No.22008499
Veteran broadcaster Alan Jones charged over indecent assault allegations
STEPHEN RICE - 18 November 2024
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Veteran broadcaster Alan Jones has been charged for indecent assault and touching offences spanning more than two decades.
NSW Police charged the former 2GB radio host with 24 offences against eight victims, after arresting him at his luxury Circular Quay apartment around 7.45am on Monday morning.
Jones has been granted conditional bail, and will appear in the Downing Centre local court on December 18.
The charges included 11 counts of aggravated indecent assault (victim under authority of offender), nine counts of assault with act of indecency, two counts of sexually touching another person without consent and two counts of common assault.
Assistant commissioner in charge of state crimes Michael Fitzgerald revealed in a press conference the youngest of Jones’ alleged victims was 17 years old.
“I wish to commend the victims and their bravery in coming forward,” he said. “They fully are aware, as are the investigators, that the hard work is just beginning, and they have given their statements fully aware that they will go before the courts.”
Fitzgerald said police believe more people will come forward with allegations against Jones.
“The strike force will continue, and (officers are) currently talking to people and will continue to talk to people,” he said.
Police granted Jones bail under the strict conditions that he surrender his passport and not enter any airport. He is required to remain living in Sydney, and is not allowed to contact any complainant or witness in relation to the ongoing police investigation.
He is also not permitted to disclose the identities of alleged victims to the media or any third party, except for his lawyers.
Fitzgerald said police will allege Jones knew some of the alleged victims personally and some professionally.
“We’ll also allege that some of the victims when the alleged offence took place, was the first time that they ever met the accused,” he said.
Jones was “calm” when approached by police at his home on Monday morning, and quickly sought legal advice.
Lawyers for Jones left the police station just moments before police announced he had been charged.
High profile solicitors Chris Murphy and Bryan Wrench departed Day Street police station just before 3pm.
As he walked down the street, Mr Murphy, known for his bulldog-like approach to defending his clients, threatened to have a television journalist charged for apparently “striking” him.
“I told you before, if you strike me again I’ll have you charged, get back,” he said.
Mr Wrench arrived at Jones’ harbourside apartment at about 9am after the radio icon had been taken into custody.
Jones was led into a waiting police car just after 11am, and arrived ten minutes later at Day Street police station in central Sydney.
Police also executed a search warrant at the apartment as a number of detective arrived with large plastic containers.
Mr Jones was the subject of a series of stories in Nine Newspapers alleging that he preyed on young men during his career.
In March this year, the NSW State Crime Command’s Child Abuse Squad established Strike Force Bonnefin to investigate alleged indecent assaults and sexual touching incidents between 2001 and 2019.
The first accuser, a man called Brad Webster who did not want his real name to be used, was 20 when he started working for the radio host at 2GB.
Mr Webster alleges Jones touched his genitals as he drove him home from 2GB Studios, which he says was one of his job requirements.
Lawyers representing Jones say he denies all accusations, telling the Sydney Morning Herald that: “Our client denies ever having indecently assaulted the persons referred to in your letter, and your suggestion that he has is scandalous, grossly offensive and seriously defamatory of him.”
Jones again reiterated his denial in a five-minute video released in March.
“I’m not going to dwell here on the allegations made about me other than I refute them entirely and the inferences associated with them,” Jones said. “But the get-Jones campaign is nothing new in my life.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22008506
>>22008499
2/2
At a press conference in Wollongong, NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb said the efforts of the strike force would remain ongoing following Jones’s arrest.
“This is a result of a very long, thorough, protracted investigation. The investigators will have more to say about that at a media conference this morning, but let me say I did visit the Strike Force some weeks and months ago to look at the work that they have been doing,” Ms Webb said.
“It is very complex and protracted, and I know that those officers have been working tirelessly to lead to today’s operation.”
She urged anyone who believes they had been a victim of Jones to come forward.
“There’s no such thing as a matter that’s too old to be investigated,” Ms Webb said.
“What I’d say to victims is that there is no better time to come forward than now, and you will be listened to, and we will take your matter seriously.”
NSW Premier Chris Minns, appearing alongside Ms Webb and Police Minister Yasmin Catley, said it was inappropriate for him to comment.
“I can understand the interest in the topic, but it’s just not appropriate for me to comment on it,” he said. “This is a major investigation. The police are obviously involved, and we need to be in a position to let them do that job. So I’m not going to offer a running commentary on it.” Fellow 2GB anchor Ray Hadley briefly commented on Jones’s arrest prior to his show this morning, saying he “had been aware of things happening behind the scenes for some time.”
“After working with Alan Jones for over three decades my relationship with him soured five years ago over allegations which have been aired in the Sydney Morning Herald previously,” Hadley said.
Despite this, Hadley said he is unable to provide more information due to his “need…to be circumspect.”
“I want to ensure that justice is served here and that commentators such as myself do not interfere with the process.”
However, Hadley said that, “At some time in the future those reasons why I’m not commenting on it today will become patently obvious to everyone. Patently obvious, (but) in the meantime I will say no more.”
Hadley said he had been “quoted before” in the media regarding his relationship with Jones, and what was said is “still valid”.
Hadley said that his relationship with Mr Jones was already “strained over other matters” but the pair ceased contact after Hadley spoke with Mr Webster, stating “from the day I spoke to Bradley our relationship was severed”.
Later in the show, Hadley confronted “narks” who speculated he was leaving 2GB due in part to the allegations against Mr Jones.
“This has had nothing to do with my decision, nothing whatsoever to do with my decision, it’s completely devoid of the decision I’d taken,” Hadley said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/alan-jones-arrested-over-indecent-assault-allegations/news-story/e74c1739bb23b28d3ff2545c7bb2c943
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/alan-jones-breaks-his-silence/video/8f67485edb6dc726ec9fbad8a74feaa9
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273ca3 No.22008509
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>22008499
Alan Jones charged with 24 offences against eight victims over two decades
Kate McClymont - November 18, 2024
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Alan Jones has been charged with 24 offences against eight alleged victims spanning two decades after a lengthy police investigation into allegations of indecent assault and sexual touching.
The broadcaster and former Wallabies coach was arrested at his luxury Circular Quay apartment at 7.45am on Monday over allegations he indecently assaulted, groped or inappropriately touched multiple young men. Jones was driven in an unmarked police car to Day Street police station, where he re-emerged hours later after being granted bail.
Jones has been charged with 11 counts of aggravated indecent assault, nine counts of assault with an act of indecency, two counts of sexually touching another person without their consent and two counts of common assault.
Police said Jones knew some of his alleged victims personally, some professionally, and in some circumstances the alleged abuse took place the first time they met Jones. The youngest of the alleged victims was aged 17 at the time of the alleged offences.
At 5.10pm, a frail-looking Jones, flanked by his lawyers, was met by a waiting media pack as he left custody. Wearing a green tracksuit and matching shoes and using a walking stick, Jones did not answer reporters’ questions as he was ushered to a waiting car.
His lawyer, Chris Murphy, told reporters Jones “denies any misconduct”.
“Nothing has been tested. Nothing has been proven. Alan Jones will assert his innocence appropriately in the courtroom,” Murphy said.
Jones was granted bail with restrictions on his travel and contact with alleged victims. He will face Downing Centre Local Court on December 18.
As part of his bail conditions, Jones has surrendered his passport and must not leave the state or country. He is also prohibited from contacting any complainant or witness related to the investigation into his alleged crimes.
For the past nine months, detectives from Strike Force Bonnefin, run by the State Crime Command’s Child Abuse Squad, have been conducting a top-secret investigation into Jones.
The strike force was formed after a lengthy investigation by the Herald and The Age, which revealed in December that Jones had used his position of power, first as a teacher and later as the country’s top-rating radio broadcaster, to allegedly prey on a number of young men.
“I wish to commend the investigators of Strike Force Bonnefin [for] their tenacity and hard work … Historical matters such as this are incredibly hard to investigate,” Assistant Commissioner Michael Fitzgerald said.
“I wish to commend the victims [for] their bravery in coming forward. They are fully aware, as are the investigators, that the hard work is just beginning. They have given their statements fully aware they will go through the courts.
“The reports in the Herald and The Age did result in victims coming forward and the creation of Strike Force Bonnefin but … a number of witnesses have been assisting police over the years.”
Jones wore matching green pants and a green jacket as he sat beside a detective, grasping his walking stick, in the back of the white Hyundai SUV.
Another detective pushed through the waiting media pack when she exited the car’s passenger seat outside the police station. Photographers and camera operators swarmed the car as Jones sat expressionless inside.
The car idled for a few seconds before continuing into the station’s garage. Police said Jones was “calm” when arrested and immediately sought legal advice.
Electronic devices were taken into evidence by police.
NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb said the arrest came after a “very long, thorough, protracted investigation” and she expected more people may come forward with allegations.
“I did visit the strike force some weeks and months ago to look at the work that they have been doing. It is very complex and protracted, and I know that those officers have been working tirelessly to lead today’s operation,” she said.
“I can’t speculate in this particular case, but what is often the case is when it is known – the full circumstances and those parties involved – other people may come forward, and we are anticipating that other people may come forward.”
Premier Chris Minns said he understood the public interest in the case, but added he would not offer running commentary.
In 1965, Jones was a 23-year-old teacher at Brisbane Grammar, where he is alleged to have put his hands down the pants of a student and squeezed his testicles. The student said when he was struck in the groin by a cricket ball, Jones – who was teaching English as well as coaching cricket – held his testicles for “maybe 30 seconds to a minute”.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22008513
>>22008509
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At Jones’ next school, The King’s School in the Sydney suburb of Parramatta, a student alleged Jones put his hand down his athletic shorts.
During his 35 years as the most successful and feared broadcaster of his generation, Jones is also alleged to have indecently assaulted young men.
One former 2GB employee has alleged he was repeatedly indecently assaulted by Jones.
Brad Webster (not his real name) told the Herald and The Age last year: “If I went to the police, Jones could be charged. What he did to me was a criminal offence. He cannot die without people knowing what he’s done.”
Jones was 65 when Webster was hired at age 20 to do menial jobs including driving the radio star from the station’s Pyrmont studios to his apartment in the Circular Quay building, dubbed The Toaster.
“During those 10 minutes, it would be wandering hands and then it just gradually became him grabbing my dick … you’re driving, you’re absolutely trapped … he’d go the grope, he’d rub my penis,” Webster said.
Jones is also alleged to have kissed him in the lift and exposed himself in the apartment.
Like many others, Webster knew he would be destroyed if he complained.
“Jones was more powerful than the prime minister,” said Webster. “He could pick up the phone to John Howard and demand for things to be done.”
One former radio producer, who asked not to be named due to fear of reprisals, said that, while he didn’t see Jones touching anyone’s genitals, “I did see inappropriate behaviour and I saw it on a number of occasions.”
The producer said Jones’ petting and pawing of young men was “uninvited”, “predatory”, “brazen” and “absolutely confronting”.
Jones, he said, “would be all over them – he wouldn’t take his hands off them”.
He said the young men, including staff, waiters and singers on Jones’ show, “would be very embarrassed and very uncomfortable”.
Several men from the arts community have alleged that Jones assaulted them at his apartment overlooking the Sydney Opera House.
One, a musician, said he didn’t say anything to anyone because Jones was immensely powerful and no one wanted to risk getting the broadcaster offside. “You get on the wrong side and he’ll ruin you,” he said.
In 2008, a young waiter who was 22 at the time said he was working at a Kiama restaurant when an inebriated Jones grabbed and fondled his penis without consent.
The late tech entrepreneur Alex Hartman, who died in 2019, told four journalists Jones indecently assaulted him as a teenager. “I was his prey … I know I am not the only one, and this will come out somehow.” Hartman also claimed that Jones “forces himself on young men and uses his power in a predatory way”.
In January 2017, a then-schoolboy told the Herald and The Age he was invited to spend a weekend at Jones’ Fitzroy Falls property in the NSW Southern Highlands. The broadcaster had taken an interest in the boy’s family following numerous difficulties, including the death of the boy’s sister.
The boy later gave a statement to police in which he alleged that he and Jones, who was 75 at the time, watched a movie before Jones passionately kissed him on the lips and placed his left hand on the boy’s buttocks. After pushing Jones away, he told the police that he went to the bathroom “with my loofah and soap and began scrubbing my mouth, inside and out, as much as I could”.
He later told his mother that someone with “power and money” had done “something to him which he shouldn’t have”.
Jones denied the allegations raised by the Herald and The Age in December 2023 and threatened to sue. He is yet to commence legal action.
In March, he released a video in which he claimed medical ailments had kept him from appearing on the conservative ADH (Australian Digital Holdings) TV, which broadcasts to a small audience via social media platforms.
“The get-Jones campaign is nothing new in my life,” Jones said in the video.
Although Jones announced in the video that he had “every intention of returning to broadcasting”, he has not been on air since the Herald and The Age raised the allegations last year.
https://www.theage.com.au/national/alan-jones-arrested-over-allegations-he-indecently-assaulted-young-men-20241118-p5krdu.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lotsqdYsihE
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273ca3 No.22008519
>>22008499
How Alan Jones rose to power grilling the most powerful
Kate McClymont - November 18, 2024
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Over 35 years, Alan Jones established his position as Australia’s most influential radio host, quizzing eight prime ministers and 11 NSW premiers and dominating Sydney’s airwaves with 226 consecutive rating wins.
He regularly courted controversy, clashed with politicians and wielded great power. On Monday Jones was arrested over allegations that he indecently assaulted, groped or inappropriately touched multiple young men.
After a nine-month investigation by Strike Force Bonnefin, detectives swooped to arrest Jones at his Circular Quay home.
The strike force was formed following a lengthy investigation by The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, which revealed in December that the 83-year-old had used his position of power over an almost 60-year period to allegedly prey on a number of young men.
Who is Alan Jones?
Alan Belford Jones was born in Oakey, Queensland, in 1941 and was schooled in Toowoomba. He graduated from Queensland and Oxford Universities with majors in English and French language, literature, politics and education. He became a teacher, working in the Queensland public school system before he joined Brisbane Grammar in 1963 as English and French master. He worked at the prestigious school for six years and helped coach the student rugby union team. From 1970 to 1975, Jones was an English teacher and rugby coach at The King’s School, Parramatta.
Jones also had political ambitions. In the mid-1970s, he joined the Country Party (now the Nationals), worked as speechwriter and adviser for its then-leader Doug Anthony, and stood for preselection for the federal seat of Eden-Monaro. He lost.
In 1978, he stood as the Liberal Party candidate in a byelection for the NSW seat of Earlwood. He lost again. The next year, he stood for Liberal preselection for the federal seat of North Sydney but lost a third time. In 1979, he joined Malcolm Fraser’s staff as the prime minister’s speechwriter until 1981.
As a rugby union coach, Jones led Manly to victory in Sydney’s Shute Shield in 1983. He was appointed coach of Australia in 1984. Under Jones, the Wallabies won 86 out of 102 matches over four years, including Australia’s first Bledisloe Cup win in 39 years in 1986. He had a less-successful stint coaching the Balmain Tigers from 1991 to 1993.
His broadcasting career began in 1985 when he was made mornings presenter at 2UE by then kingmaker John Brennan, who had met Jones at a Wallabies function the year before. Jones turned a poorly rating breakfast show into the most listened-to program in Australia.
He left 2UE in 2002 and ratings plummeted. His new employer, 2GB, soon became Sydney’s most popular AM station.
Clashes and controversy
In May 2020, Jones announced his retirement from 2GB on doctor’s advice. Behind the scenes, Jones was being forced out on commercial grounds as advertisers had boycotted his program. Nine Entertainment, 2GB’s new owner (and the owner of the Herald and The Age) was alarmed at the estimated $20 million advertising loss following an angry tirade by Jones about then-New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern. Jones told his audience in August 2019 that then-prime minister Scott Morrison should “shove a sock down her throat” and he hoped Morrison “gets tough here with a few backhanders”.
For many, it brought back Jones’ extraordinary 2012 attack on Julia Gillard in which he called for Australia’s first female prime minister to be put in a “chaff bag” and dumped at sea, also claiming that her father had “died of shame”.
There has been much criticism over the years. In 2014, Jones was forced to apologise to NSW chief scientist Mary O’Kane for suggesting the mining industry might have influenced a report she produced on coal seam gas; he was criticised in 2018 for dropping the N-word when describing senator Mathias Cormann; and later for his aggressive treatment of Opera House chief executive Louise Herron over her opposition to projecting the barrier draw for The Everest horse race onto the iconic sails.
Jones’ employers were also hit with a defamation payout of nearly $3.75 million over his wrongful claims the Wagner family in Queensland was responsible for the deaths of a dozen people in the 2011 Grantham floods.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22008522
>>22008519
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But way back in 1988 his career was almost derailed following his arrest in a public toilet in London’s Soho district, a well-known gay beat. The charges of “outraging public decency” and “committing an indecent act” were subsequently dropped.
In 1999 and again in 2004, he was swept up in the cash-for-comment inquiry. In 2000, an Australian Broadcasting Authority inquiry heard Jones and fellow Sydney broadcaster John Laws had accepted hidden sponsorships to promote clients on air. Regulations were changed to make personal sponsorships more transparent.
Political clout
Eight prime ministers and 11 NSW premiers served during Jones’ media career – he grilled them all.
He wielded his influence and was a passionate supporter of former Liberal prime minister Tony Abbott and an unrelenting critic of his successor Malcolm Turnbull.
“He played a big role in Turnbull going down,” said one source who saw Jones’ campaign against Turnbull close up.
Former federal Labor leader Bill Shorten got short shrift during the 2019 federal election, earning a battering over the party’s policies on energy, electric cars and negative gearing.
In NSW, his clashes with premiers were frequent, with Mike Baird in 2015 enduring particularly searing treatment over the banning of the greyhound industry (a decision that Baird eventually overturned).
Former Labor premier Bob Carr says he kept going on Jones’ show because “so many people listened to him”.
On Jones’ final 2GB show in 2020, Abbott and the former federal Labor leader-turned-NSW upper house MP Mark Latham walked into his Southern Highlands home studio with champagne to celebrate. Prime minister Scott Morrison did one final interview. NSW deputy premier and Nationals leader John Barilaro phoned in saying he was the “friend of the farmer and tradie”. NSW police commissioner Mick Fuller thanked him for his support of the police.
Beyond radio
Jones joined Sky News Australia in 2013 as co-host of a program with Graham Richardson, then hosted Jones & Co in 2016 before finally helming his own nightly show in July 2020 after leaving 2GB.
In early November 2021, Jones’ contract was not renewed by Sky News. The next month he signed with the James Packer-backed Australian Digital Holdings TV, which broadcasts to a small audience via social media platforms. He last appeared on ADH TV in November last year.
Health concerns
In 2008, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer and made a full recovery after surgery.
Jones spent much of the early part of 2022 on the operating table for “unconscionable” nerve pain, and again in November. He has not been broadcasting since the Herald and The Age revealed allegations of indecent assault in December last year, which he denies. Jones left Australia in the period between the allegations being aired and Christmas, but reportedly returned in February. In a five-minute video given to News Corp mastheads in early March, the then 82-year-old said he had planned to resume hosting duties on ADH TV in mid-February but could not due to a recent health diagnosis.
“I have every intention of returning to broadcasting eventually. It is what I do. My work is my life. I could have retired but as I’ve often said if you stop you drop. However, I won’t be returning just now because of my latest medical assessments.”
If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline (13 11 14), the Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636) and Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800).
https://www.1800respect.org.au/
https://www.lifeline.org.au/
https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/
https://www.kidshelpline.com.au/
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/how-alan-jones-rose-to-power-grilling-the-most-powerful-20241118-p5kre8.html
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273ca3 No.22008527
>>21922359
>>21994024
Donald Trump, tariffs to top Anthony Albanese’s G20 talks with Xi Jinping
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 18 November 2024
Chinese President Xi Jinping will hold a third bilateral meeting with Anthony Albanese at the start of the G20 summit, with the leaders expected to discuss the aftermath of Donald Trump’s election victory, tariff war fears and strengthening the China-Australia trade relationship.
Just over 12-months after Mr Xi hosted the Prime Minister in Beijing for their second meeting, the pair will sit down in Rio de Janeiro at a time of heightened anxiety for China over the scale of Mr Trump’s threatened 60 per cent tariffs on Chinese imports.
Mr Albanese, who is not seeking a meeting with Mr Trump following the G20 summit, will not hold formal talks with outgoing US President Joe Biden, who on Monday (AEDT) became the first American leader to travel to the Amazon.
Amid concerns Australian products could be slugged with tariffs of up to 20 per cent, Mr Albanese has pledged to seek a positive outcome for local goods with a Trump administration, while not interfering between the US and China.
After meeting with Mr Xi, Mr Albanese will hold talks with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who last week committed his Labour government to a 2035 target cutting emissions by 81 per cent. The meetings will run from late Monday (AEDT) into Tuesday. Mr Albanese will join G20 host and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Tuesday (AEDT) at the launch of the Global Alliance against Hunger and Poverty.
Following the APEC meeting in Peru and G20 summit in Brazil, Mr Albanese is planning to return to Canberra by Thursday and attend this week’s final parliamentary sitting day.
Next week is the final parliamentary sitting week before the Christmas break and election year.
Ahead of the two-day G20 leaders’ summit, the Prime Minister and fiancee Jodie Haydon attended Sunday mass at the Catedral Metropolitana de Sao do Rio de Janeiro, a massive Catholic Church in the heart of the beachside city with 64m high stained glass windows.
After arriving early in Rio de Janeiro following the APEC summit in Lima, Mr Albanese had no public engagements on Sunday, as he prepared for a series of key bilateral meetings.
In May, The Australian revealed Mr Albanese had begun attending mass at St Christopher’s Cathedral in Canberra after re-engaging with his faith following the passing of his mother and his rise as opposition leader and Prime Minister.
The Labor leader reportedly no longer refers to himself as a nominal Catholic but as a “flawed Catholic” who occasionally attends mass.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/donald-trump-tariffs-to-top-anthony-albaneses-g20-talks-with-xi-jinping/news-story/e32621385b08859fd0ec8c00dc8613b4
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273ca3 No.22008537
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21660526 (pb)
>>21906707
>>21922359
RFK Jr’s vaccine views ‘dangerous’, cousin Caroline Kennedy warns Australian audience
Outgoing US ambassador to Australia discusses Trump’s pick for health secretary, and concedes climate action under president-elect may not be as ‘fast’
Paul Karp - 18 Nov 2024
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The outgoing US ambassador to Australia, Caroline Kennedy, has labelled her cousin Robert F Kennedy Jr’s views on vaccines “dangerous”.
After a speech to the National Press Club in Canberra, Australia on Monday, Caroline Kennedy took aim at a number of Trump administration appointees including Tulsi Gabbard, warning that her appointment would “obviously … be of great concern”.
Donald Trump has nominated RFK Jr to oversee US health agencies, despite his propagation of anti-vaccine conspiracy theories, and Gabbard to be director of national intelligence, despite her being a vocal supporter of Russia.
Caroline Kennedy told reporters that as an ambassador, she’s “not supposed to comment on politics and now you’re asking me to also comment on family”.
“But, yes, I think Bobby Kennedy’s views on vaccines are dangerous … but I don’t think that most Americans share them. So we’ll just have to wait and see what happens.
“But certainly he’s – you know, I grew up with him. So, I have known all this for a long time and others are just getting to know him.”
She noted her uncle Ted Kennedy “spent 50 years fighting for affordable healthcare in the Senate”, work that the former president Barack Obama built on with the Affordable Care Act.
“My Aunt Eunice started the Special Olympics and the national institute of maternal and child health is now named after her.
“So I would say that our family is united in terms of our support for the public health sector and infrastructure and has the greatest admiration for the medical profession in our country, and Bobby Kennedy has got a different set of views.”
Asked about Gabbard – a vocal supporter of Russia who Democratic lawmakers have said “poses a threat to US national intelligence” – and whether Australia should trust the US with sensitive intelligence, Caroline Kennedy replied that “there are thousands of people who work in our intelligence agencies and work closely with Australia and we have no more trusted or capable ally and that’s going to continue”.
“So let’s see what happens with President Trump’s appointments. They have been … making waves, headlines … let’s just calm down and wait and see what happens.
“But obviously that would be of great concern and we’ll see who … actually gets confirmed.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22008540
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>22008537
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Asked if the appointment of Mike Huckabee as ambassador to Israel could pave the way to annexation of the West Bank, Kennedy said she “can’t speculate” on the Trump administration’s Middle East policy.
“But obviously I was present at a campaign rally in 2008 where Governor Huckabee got a mobile phone from God almighty and he talked with him on the phone in front of a large audience. I don’t know.”
Trump’s election has caused consternation in Australia, which hopes to be exempted from tariffs due to the US trade surplus with its Indo-Pacific ally, and is increasingly entwined militarily with the US due to the Aukus alliance for the acquisition of nuclear submarines.
Kennedy, a usually media-shy ambassador, delivered the off-the-cuff answers after a speech arguing that Aukus was necessary as a deterrent to maritime disruption, citing Philippine and Vietnamese ships “rammed and sunk by Chinese coastguard vessels”.
“The long delays and higher prices that are resulting from the Middle East conflict are insignificant compared to the global consequences of a conflict in this region.
“Aukus is an existential investment in Australia’s sovereignty and way of life and you can’t put a price on that.”
Kennedy noted the Aukus alliance had “bipartisan support” in the US, including among the incoming Republican Congress majority.
On international efforts to combat climate change, Kennedy argued “the green energy transition is under way” and supported by the private sector. She said efforts were “multi-faceted” but conceded they might not be as “fast” under the Trump administration.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/nov/18/caroline-kennedy-rfk-jr-cousin-vaccines-donald-trump-cabinet-health-secretary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LDxHBKvLAqM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upGkVeDHuMM
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273ca3 No.22008558
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>21922359
>>22008537
Caroline Kennedy urges calm on Donald Trump in farewell address as US ambassador to Australia
Stephen Dziedzic - 18 November 2024
The outgoing US ambassador Caroline Kennedy has tried to reassure Australia about the implications of a second Trump presidency, while declaring that the Albanese government's nuclear-powered submarine plan is an "existential investment in Australia's sovereignty."
The ambassador also criticised the vaccine scepticism embraced by her cousin Robert F Kennedy Jr, who Donald Trump has tapped to be the head of the US health agency, labelling her cousin's views "dangerous".
Ms Kennedy made the remarks during a wide-ranging speech at the National Press Club, just weeks before she departs from Canberra.
She was peppered with questions about Trump's trade, climate, security policies and cabinet picks, including Mr Kennedy, who has been criticised for spreading misinformation and making false claims about vaccines.
Cousin's views 'dangerous'
"I think Kennedy's views on vaccines are dangerous, and I don't think most Americans share them," she said.
The ambassador said that included other members of the Kennedy family, who were "united" in support of the medical system.
"My uncle Teddy [Kennedy] spent 50 years fighting for affordable health care in the Senate and it's something that our whole family is so proud of, that President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act and built on the work that my uncle had done over many years," she said.
"I would say that our family is united in terms of our support for the public health sector and infrastructure, and has the greatest admiration for the medical profession in our country.
"Bobby Kennedy has got a different set of views."
There are deep anxieties in Canberra over some of the president-elect's other cabinet picks, including former Democratic congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, who has been tapped as director of national intelligence despite accusations that she has spouted Kremlin propaganda.
The ambassador stressed there were "thousands of people" working in US intelligence agencies and suggested the Senate might block many of Trump's nominees.
"Let's just calm down and wait and see what happens," she said.
"Obviously that would be of great concern [but] we'll see who actually gets confirmed."
AUKUS 'existential' for Australia's sovereignty
Ms Kennedy also delivered a forceful defence of AUKUS, and brushed off questions about whether the huge price tag to deliver nuclear-powered submarines could be justified, pointing to Chinese aggression in the region.
"To those who still question whether AUKUS is necessary, ask the Philippines and Vietnam what it's like to have your ships rammed and sunk by Chinese 'coastguard' vessels, or Japan what happens when missiles land close to shore," she said.
"AUKUS is an existential investment in Australia's sovereignty and way of life, and you can't put a price on that."
There are also deep concerns in Canberra about the implications of Trump's broader trade and climate policies, including fears that his plan to massively ramp up tariffs on Chinese goods could spark a global trade war.
It is not yet clear if Australia will be able to negotiate an exemption from Trump's declaration to massively expand tariffs on all exports to the US.
Ms Kennedy said she could not predict what the Trump administration would do, but suggested Australia had a strong case to mount for an exemption, pointing to Malcolm Turnbull's successful efforts to protect Australia from steel tariffs in 2018.
"There's a lot of things that get said in the campaign but I think that if you look at the positive side of it … you'll see that I think Australia has a very privileged position, and that's because we work so closely together across the board," she said.
'No turning back' on climate even if Trump pulls out of Paris
The ambassador also suggested that global momentum on the clean energy transition would make it difficult for the Trump administration to seriously disrupt cooperation on climate change — despite the president-elect's promise to unwind green subsidies and pull the US out of the Paris Agreement.
"The green energy transition is underway. The private sector supports it. There's no turning back," she said.
"Our work in critical minerals, which started under the first Trump administration, is going to continue and become increasingly necessary. It fits with our geopolitical assessment but it also is critical to addressing climate.
"There are plenty of areas at which we can continue to cooperate to address this challenge. Maybe not as fast or in different ways, but … I think the work is going to continue even if it changes some emphasis."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-18/caroline-kennedy-urges-calm-on-donald-trump/104614324
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWosjtVHdGg
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273ca3 No.22014905
>>21922359
>>21994024
>>22008527
Xi Jinping moves to lock-in Anthony Albanese on trade at G20
GEOFF CHAMBERS - 19 November 2024
1/3
Xi Jinping has urged Anthony Albanese to join him in transforming the China-Australia relationship into a more mature, stable and fruitful partnership that will project “stability and certainty to the region and the wider world” in the wake of Donald Trump’s election victory.
The Chinese President – who has assembled the Communist Party’s highest-ranking officials in South America to launch a charm offensive of world leaders at the APEC and G20 summits – told the Prime Minister that their discussions in Beijing last year had been “very productive over the past year and more”.
Mr Xi and Mr Albanese met at the Chinese president’s Rio de Janeiro hotel, where the Communist leader is receiving world leaders offsite from the G20 summit. Mr Albanese was brought in to meet Mr Xi immediately after British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
The third bilateral meeting between Mr Xi and Mr Albanese ran for about 30 minutes before the leaders headed in their motorcades to the G20 opening session. Mr Xi’s diplomatic full court press comes amid fears in Beijing of a US-China trade war after Mr Trump pledged to impose 60 per cent tariffs on all Chinese products.
Marking the 10th anniversary almost to the date since he addressed the federal parliament in 2014, Mr Xi told Mr Albanese “we have maintained close communications at all levels, actively promoting the implementations of our common understandings, and made positive progress”.
“Ten years ago today, I was on a state visit in Australia. And on this very day, during which our two sides agreed to establish a comprehensive strategic partnership. And over the past decade, we have made some progress in China-Australia relations and also witnessed some twists and turns. That trajectory has many inspirations to offer,” Mr Xi said.
“Now, our relations have realised a turnaround and continues to grow, bringing tangible benefits to our two peoples. So, this is the result of our collective hard work in the same direction, and should be maintained with great care.
“I wish to work with you, Mr Prime Minister, to make our comprehensive strategic partnership more mature, stable and fruitful and eject more stability and certainty to the region and the wider world.”
Mr Xi was flanked at the meeting by his most senior ranking officials, including influential Foreign Affairs Minister Wang Yi, powerful Communist Party official Cai Qi, Finance Minister Lan Fo’an, Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, People’s Bank of China governor Pan Gongsheng and National Development and Reform Commission chair Zheng Shanjie. Mr Albanese was joined by foreign policy adviser Kathy Klugman and senior Prime Minister & Cabinet first assistant secretary Pablo Kang.
In opening remarks before the meeting, Mr Albanese thanked Mr Xi for his “tremendous hospitality when I visited Beijing last year”.
“Since then, there has been further encouraging progress in the stabilisation of our relationship. We’ve resumed a range of dialogues. And the tempo of bilateral visits is increasing.
“Trade is flowing more freely to the benefit of both countries and to people and businesses on both sides. We continue to explore opportunities for practical co-operation in areas of shared interest, including on our energy transition and climate change,” Mr Albanese said.
“Our whole region will benefit from the prosperity that can flow from peace, security and stability in our region. That is why our direct discussions to build deeper understanding on the issues that matter to us are so important.”
Mr Albanese said the rise of China had underpinned the fastest growing region in the world’s history and helped lift the “living standards of hundreds of millions of people through increased economic activity”.
Shortly after the meeting concluded, Beijing mouthpiece China Daily published multiple positive pieces and revealed Mr Xi told the Prime Minister that China and Australia must “strengthen coordination and cooperation, and oppose protectionism”.
Mr Xi is understood to have focused on momentum in the Australia-China relationship and the need to expand ties and investment. The Chinese President’s language was distinctly different compared to their meeting in Beijing 12-months ago.
During last year’s meeting, Mr Xi declared that China and Australia are “embarking on the right path of improvement”. At the G20 meeting, Mr Xi told Mr Albanese that we’ve “realised a turnaround”.
Mr Xi, according to the China Daily, told Mr Albanese “there is no fundamental conflict of interests between China and Australia”.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22014912
>>22014905
2/3
“Noting that both China and Australia are supporters and defenders of economic globalisation and free trade, he urged the two sides to promote the sharing of opportunities and benefits among various countries via opening up, so as to realize common development,” the article said.
“Noting that the two sides should be firm in expanding the pattern of mutually beneficial and win-win cooperation, Xi said China is willing to import more quality Australian products, encourage Chinese companies to invest and do business in Australia, and hope that Australia will provide a fair, transparent and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies.”
The China Daily articles also revealed what Mr Albanese said in the meeting.
“Albanese said, the Australia-China relationship has made encouraging progress in various areas, including trade, bringing tangible benefits to the two peoples. The Australian side stays committed to the one-China policy, opposes “decoupling”, advocates promoting economic globalization, and hopes to strengthen cooperation with China in such areas as energy transition and climate change.
“Noting that China’s development has made important contributions to the long-term stability and growth of the Asia-Pacific region, Albanese said that Australia appreciates China’s important role in APEC and other multilateral mechanisms, supports China’s role as the host of APEC in 2026, and stands ready to strengthen multilateral communication with China to promote regional peace, stability, prosperity and development.”
In a readout released by the Prime Minister’s Office four hours after the meeting, a spokeswoman said the leaders met for a “stocktake of progress in stabilising relations between Australia and China, including through restoring trade and increasing engagement between our ministers and officials”.
Under existing annual leaders’ meeting arrangements, Mr Xi invited Mr Albanese to visit China next year.
“Leaders agreed on the importance of dialogue, bilaterally and across the Indo-Pacific region. PM Albanese set out Australia’s views on issues affecting regional and international peace, stability and prosperity.”
“They discussed opportunities for practical co-operation in areas of shared interest, including on energy transition and climate change. The PM raised a range of bilateral points, including consular matters as well as people to people links.”
Australian lobsters banned under China’s trade retaliation against the Morrison government are expected to be back on sale in China by year’s end coinciding with the Chinese Lunar New Year. Almost all of the trade bans, excluding a handful of beef producers, have been lifted by Beijing.
Mr Albanese, who was sat between Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz at the G20 summit, spoke with Joe Biden, Emmanuel Macron and Narendra Modi shortly after arriving following the Xi meeting.
While the thawing in the China-Australia relationship under the Albanese government has seen trade flows and high-level diplomatic exchanges resume, Mr Albanese is under pressure to not overstep the mark in overbalancing either the US or Chinese relationships.
The unpredictable style of Mr Trump – who has threatened to slap 60 per cent tariffs on Chinese imports and tariffs of up to 20 per cent on all other imports – has plunged Mr Albanese and Mr Xi into uncertainty ahead of the Republican leader’s second inauguration on January 20.
Mr Albanese and senior government ministers have celebrated China’s lifting of bans on almost $20bn worth of Australian products, after the trade sanctions were imposed indiscriminately and in breach of World Trade Organisation rules as political payback against the former Morrison Coalition government.
In a predictable move last week, Beijing’s China Daily mouthpiece published a gushing editorial praising Mr Albanese’s “strategic autonomy” amid “unprecedented geopolitical complexity and uncertainty”.
The editorial, released amid growing concerns Australia’s ambassador to the US, Kevin Rudd, would struggle to function in his role under a Trump administration, suggested leaders of other US allies should follow Mr Albanese’s lead in balancing relations with China and a second Trump administration.
US ambassador to Australia Caroline Kennedy used a speech on Monday to declare America’s commitment to the Pacific, AUKUS and Quad partnership won’t change in a second Trump presidency.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22014915
>>22014912
3/3
“The United States is a Pacific nation and what happens in this region is of vital national security, economic security, energy security to us,” the outgoing ambassador told the National Press Club in Canberra. “As we have seen with the Quad, as we have seen with critical minerals, and as we have seen … with AUKUS, across the board, the United States has made commitments over many decades and those are not going to change, and our national interest is not going to change.”
In the dying months of his presidency, Joe Biden on Monday (AEDT) made a significant announcement to approve the use of US-supplied long-range missiles by Ukraine in strikes inside Russia.
Mr Biden’s decision on the eve of the G20 summit in Brazil, green-lighting the longstanding request from Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky, has been interpreted as a late-term power play to wedge Mr Trump ahead of his January inauguration.
Mr Trump, who has an open channel to Russian President Vladimir Putin and claims he will end the Ukraine war, is expected to dramatically cut overseas US military commitments under his America First 2.0 agenda.
Mr Biden, who turns 82 on Wednesday, is also moving to amplify his climate change agenda at the G20 summit after becoming on Monday the first US president to visit the Amazon. He used the trip to warn that his successor would try, and likely fail, to stop the global rush towards clean energy.
The US, backed by allies including Australia and Britain, will use the G20 summit to rally support in condemning Russia over the invasion of Ukraine and use of North Korean troops, and seek a consensus to de-escalate conflict in the Middle East. In response, China and Russia are expected to lead their G20 allies in blocking or watering down resolutions across a range of issues including Ukraine, the Middle East and climate change.
Ahead of a series of G20 meetings, including with the British Prime Minister, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Mr Albanese kept a low profile on Sunday, attending mass at a local cathedral with fiancee Jodie Haydon.
In his first speech to G20 leaders on Tuesday (AEDT), Mr Albanese will push them to back stronger action on Ukraine and the Middle East, and condemn “the illegal and immoral actions of Russia”.
In a speech linking the conflicts to surging global inflation and energy prices, Mr Albanese will use the first G20 session on the “fight against hunger and poverty” to say food security and global hunger are directly connected with international conflicts.
After joining a failed push at the APEC summit in Peru to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and support calls for de-escalation in Gaza, Mr Albanese will team up with G20 Western powers demanding stronger action from world leaders.
Mr Albanese will say “while peace alone does not guarantee prosperity – conflict always brings poverty”.
“When we are grappling with the big geopolitical and global economic challenges facing our nations we must never lose sight of their impact on our citizens and their daily lives,” he will say.
“Because the hard truth is that in times of global turmoil, it is always those who have the least who are hurt the most. We see that in the shocking loss of innocent life in the Middle East.
“We see it in the ongoing toll that Russia’s invasion is taking on the brave people of Ukraine.”
Mr Albanese will say the G20 presents an opportunity for the international community to “call for a de-escalation of the violence in the Middle East”, and call on world leaders to “condemn the illegal and immoral actions of Russia and indeed North Korea, which is now committing troops to the invasion of a sovereign nation, while its own people starve”.
“Just as we all know that there is a direct connection between these conflicts and a worldwide surge in inflation and energy prices, we should be very clear about the link between international conflict and global hunger,” he will say.
“Because there can be no food security without national and regional security. And while peace alone does not guarantee prosperity, conflict always brings poverty.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/xi-jinping-moves-to-lockin-anthony-albanese-on-trade-at-g20/news-story/3e9c04650c1bf2c48d857368982e4efa
https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202411/18/WS673b5bd4a310f1265a1ce278.html
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273ca3 No.22014937
Penny Wong ‘gravely concerned’ as Australian Gordon Ng sentenced to seven years in Hong Kong pro-democracy crackdown
WILL GLASGOW - 19 November 2024
1/2
Australian Gordon Ng has been sentenced to more than seven years as part of the biggest crackdown on Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement since Beijing imposed a national security law on the former British colony in 2020.
Ng was one of 47 democracy campaigners - dubbed the “Hong Kong 47” - who were charged with conspiring to commit subversion for their involvement in an attempt to win a majority in the city’s local elections.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong said the Australian government was “gravely concerned” by the sentence, which was delivered in Hong Kong hours after Chinese President Xi Jinping told Anthony Albanese to take “great care” of relations with Beijing.
“Australia has expressed our strong objections to the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities on the continuing broad application of national security legislation, including in application to Australian citizens,” Senator Wong said in a statement issued shortly after the sentencing on Tuesday.
“We call for China to cease suppression of freedoms of expression, assembly, media and civil society, consistent with the Human Rights Committee and Special Procedure recommendations, including the repeal of the National Security Law in Hong Kong,” she said.
“This is a deeply difficult time for Mr Ng, his family and supporters. Our thoughts are with them following the sentencing,” the Foreign Minister added.
“The Australian government has advocated at senior levels in support of Mr Ng’s best interests and welfare and has sought consular access to Mr Ng. We will continue to do so,” she said.
Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said the sentence was “appalling and unacceptable”.
“The Albanese government has the Coalition’s strong bipartisan support to emphatically pursue Australia’s rejection of the persecution and detention of Gordon Ng and other pro-democracy advocates in Hong Kong,” Senator Birmingham said.
“The draconian national security laws imposed by the Chinese government have stifled freedoms for which Hong Kong was renowned, and the Coalition again urges the restoration of those rights which had previously been guaranteed by the Basic Law and Sino-British Declaration,” he said.
“The crackdown on these freedoms in Hong Kong reverberates around the world, including in Australia through the bounty the Chinese government still holds over two other Australian residents. That action must be dropped – against them and other defenders of democracy around the world.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22014943
>>22014937
2/2
Ng was among five people singled out as organisers of the informal election primary that led to the subversion charges. He and pro-democracy politicians Au Nok-hin, Andrew Chui and Ben Chung received sentences of up to seven years three months.
Benny Tai, identified as the plan’s “mastermind”, received a 10-year sentence.
Forty-seven people were initially charged after they were arrested in January 2021, making this case the largest by number of defendants. Two were acquitted in May.
Leticia Wong, a former district councillor for a since-disbanded pro-democracy party who attended the sentencing, told AFP that she found the terms were “encouraging people to plead guilty and testify against their peers”.
“For those who refused to be tamed, punishment is obviously heavier,” Wong said.
The aim of the election primary, which took place in July 2020, was to pick a cross-party shortlist of pro-democracy candidates to increase their electoral prospects.
If a majority was achieved, the plan was to force the government to meet the 2019 protesters’ demands – including universal suffrage – by threatening to veto the Hong Kong city budget.
The three senior judges handpicked by the government to try security cases said the group would have caused a “constitutional crisis”.
On Wednesday, media tycoon Jimmy Lai – publisher of Apple Daily, a masthead loathed in Beijing – will testify in court in Hong Hong in his collusion trial. He has been in prison for almost four years and has pleaded not guilty.
Last year Hong Kong police put a $HK1m ($191,800) bounty on Melbourne-based Australian lawyer Kevin Yam and Ted Hui, a former Hong Kong politician who now lives in Adelaide, in another precedent-breaking application of the Beijing-authored National Security Law.
Posters of Yam and Hui remain plastered on walls of Hong Kong International Airport.
Ten foreign judges have retired from Hong Kong’s appeals bench since the national security law was introduced.
In June, Canadian judge Beverley McLachlin and British judges Lawrence Collins and Jonathan Sumption quit the court, citing “the political situation” in the city.
Four of the six remaining foreign judges on the appeals bench are Australian: Robert French, Patrick Keane, James Allsop and William Gummow.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/penny-wong-gravely-concerned-as-australian-gordon-ng-sentenced-to-seven-years-in-jail-by-hong-kong-court/news-story/d81b34cd0c4b1d48cd1238ac80b1ad3d
https://www.smh.com.au/world/asia/australian-man-gordon-ng-sentenced-in-hong-kong-to-more-than-7-years-jail-20241119-p5krup.html
https://qresear.ch/?q=+Gordon+Ng
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273ca3 No.22022442
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
Ambassador Kevin Rudd declares ‘we’re ready’ for a second Trump presidency
CAMERON STEWART - 20 November 2024
Kevin Rudd has declared Australia ‘is ready’ to work closely with Donald Trump and his new administration to bolster an alliance which has never been more important or relevant.
Australia’s ambassador in Washington said that in a world of ‘many challenges’ Australia welcomed an active and engaged United States in the Indo Pacific and was ready to deepen that regional engagement under the new president.
In his first detailed public comments since Mr Trump’s election, Mr Rudd portrayed Australia as an ally that was willing to actively pursue closer ties with the new US administration and to be seen to be proactively contributing to the broader alliance.
“We live in a world of many challenges, and we are clear that the region we want, the interests we have and the values we share require and call for our two nations to work together, and that is what we’ll continue to do with President Trump and his incoming administration,’ Mr Rudd told the United States Studies Centre’s International Strategic Forum in Sydney via video from Washington.
Mr Rudd, who has been forging contacts with senior Republicans across the US over the past year said his embassy was well prepared to engage positively with the incoming administration.
“Here at the embassy, we’ve been working hard through the course of the last year to ensure that we were well prepared for this moment, and the bottom line is we’re ready,’ he said. “The team here at the Embassy and the government of Australia are ready to work closely with the new Trump administration to continue to realise the benefits of what is a very strong economic and security partnership.’
Both sides of politics have strongly backed Mr Rudd’s ongoing tenure as ambassador, dismissing claims by critics that Mr Rudd’s previous critical comments about Mr Trump before he became the ambassador should disqualify him from continuing in the role.
Mr Rudd’s message to the famously transactional new president was that Australia would enhance the value of an already strong alliance through the development of the AUKUS submarine deal, which he described as ‘a great venture.’
“The fundamental value of Aukus for all three parties is that it makes all three countries stronger than we would have been without. It strengthens all three countries’ ability to deter threats, and it grows the defence industrial base and creates jobs in all three countries,’ he said.
In a clear message to the incoming president, he portrayed Aukus, and Australia’s commitment to invest more than $3 billion into the production cycle for US Virginia-class submarines, as an example of Australia’s willingness to be a proactive contributor to the alliance.
“Australia’s plans to purchase nuclear power submarines from the United States will represent a large-scale purchase from American industry. That’s a significant defence deal,’ he said. “And on top of that, we’re already investing into the US submarine industrial base to expand the capacity of their shipyards. Put these things together, and it represents a strong, positive message for America, one that shows Australia is a valuable and committed, Frank ally and partner.”
Mr Rudd made no mention of China but said that in a world of ‘many challenges’ that “Australia’s close relationship with the United States has never been more relevant or more important.” He paid tribute to America’s role in maintaining stability in the Indo Pacific by remaining actively engaged in the region, militarily, economically and diplomatically. He praised “The strong and enduring contribution of the United States to the stability and prosperity of the wider Indo Pacific region.’
“We know that regional balance is best maintained when we work together in ways that also enhance our combined capabilities. So we welcome the US deepening its engagement with Indo Pacific partners and allies, and will continue working together to promote peace and security,’ Mr Rudd said.
“The election of the president of the United States is an important moment for the world. It’s important for our region. It’s important for Australia.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/ambassador-kevin-rudd-declares-were-ready-for-a-second-trump-presidency/news-story/a1c926f2b46eb9f4538dfcb0668a0e8d
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/world/kevin-rudd-declares-were-prepared-for-a-second-trump-presidency-following-controversy/news-story/4bb49df85b4b0ba517948815fd68ae01
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273ca3 No.22022455
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
>>22022442
Rudd operates as ‘foreign minister’ in DC: Top Biden adviser
Matthew Knott and Peter Hartcher - November 20, 2024
1/2
US President Joe Biden’s top adviser on Asia has issued a ringing endorsement of Kevin Rudd, declaring the Australian ambassador operates like a foreign minister in Washington while Penny Wong focuses on matters closer to home.
Kurt Campbell, Biden’s deputy secretary of state, said Trump should sideline Republican Party hawks who want to overthrow the communist regime in Beijing because such a push would damage relations between the superpowers.
Campbell said the world was entering “an acute moment of strategic competition” as Trump returned to the White House, predicting that Chinese President Xi Jinping would feel nostalgic for the days of Biden’s more “rational” presidency.
Campbell’s remarks to a forum in Sydney came after Rudd insisted he and his fellow diplomats in Washington were ready to deal with the incoming Trump administration after a top adviser to the president-elect suggested Rudd’s days in the US capital were numbered.
Former Australian Defence Force chief Angus Houston called for Australia to dramatically lift its spending on defence to 3 per cent of gross domestic product, up from the current 2 per cent, at the same conference.
Trump will expect allies like Australia to do more heavy lifting on defence, said Houston, who led the government’s defence strategic review.
Campbell, who will depart the White House along with Biden in January, praised Wong as a “fine foreign minister”, but said she was often busy with her duties in Asia and the Pacific.
Giving Rudd “great credit” for advancing Australia’s interests in Washington, Campbell said that Australia’s US ambassador operates almost like a “foreign minister in his or her own realm here in Washington”, speaking via videolink at a forum organised by the University of Sydney’s United States Studies Centre.
In a striking remark, Campbell said that “no country is better at strategic capture than Australia”, adding: “Most Australians don’t realise how much agency Australia has in Washington.”
Campbell urged Trump to continue deepening ties with the Pacific, describing it as “the place where we can expect some strategic surprise”.
“China is relentless,” he said. “They want to build bases, they want to extend their power there.
“We’re going to have to do more, and we have to do more with Australia and New Zealand.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22022459
>>22022455
2/2
Alluding to a much-discussed Foreign Affairs essay by former Trump adviser Matt Pottinger and former Republican congressman Mike Gallagher, in which they argued American competition with China must be “won, not managed”, Campbell said: “We have to work with the China we’ve got.”
He said Beijing was “clearly worried” about Trump’s threats to impose 60 per cent tariffs on Chinese goods, given they would have an “upending” effect on the global economy.
In a video message to the same forum, Rudd said: “Here at the embassy, we’ve been working hard through the course of the last year to ensure that we were well prepared for this moment.
“And the bottom line is: we’re ready.
“The team here at the embassy and the government of Australia are ready to work closely with the new Trump administration to continue to realise the benefits of what is a very strong economic and security partnership.”
After Trump’s election victory, Rudd scrubbed critical comments about Trump from his online record, including posts in which he called him “the most destructive president in history” and a “traitor to the West”.
Senior Trump adviser Dan Scavino subsequently posted an image on X showing sand trickling through an hourglass in response to a post by Rudd, an apparent message that he would not remain long as ambassador.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has declared that Rudd will remain in place as Australia’s top diplomat in the US, and he has been backed by predecessors Joe Hockey, Arthur Sinodinos and Dennis Richardson, as well as former prime ministers Scott Morrison and Tony Abbott.
Rudd suggested that the AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine pact would survive a change in administration because it “strengthens all three countries’ ability to deter threats, and it grows the defence industrial base and creates jobs in all three countries”.
Sinodinos told the forum that Trump would expect Australia to spend more on defence even though the country is regarded as “a strong ally”.
“I don’t expect that necessarily offsets the pressure to do more,” he said.
“It’s in our interest to do more for our own sake and as a member of the alliance.”
Sinodinos said that Australia, the US and the United Kingdom should put Telsa founder and Trump ally Elon Musk in charge of AUKUS if that was what was required to secure the future of the pact.
“If Musk can deliver AUKUS, we should put Musk in charge of AUKUS, and I’m not joking, if new thinking is needed to get this done,” Sinodinos said.
In a farewell speech at the National Press Club this week, departing US ambassador Caroline Kennedy made a full-throated defence of the AUKUS pact, describing it as an “existential investment in Australia’s sovereignty and way of life”.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/we-re-ready-kevin-rudd-declares-he-will-work-well-with-donald-trump-20241120-p5ks48.html
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273ca3 No.22022463
>>21922359
>>21932686
>>21968332
>>22022442
Donald Trump must not turn his back on Australia while China rises: Kurt Campbell
CAMERON STEWART - 20 November 2024
US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell has urged the incoming Trump administration not to turn its back on Australia and the Indo Pacific, warning that China is “relentless” in its bid to build military bases and extend its power in the region.
In a strongly worded warning to the Albanese Government, Mr Campbell also urged it to be proactive in trying to persuade Donald Trump that ongoing engagement with allies like Australia was a better strategic choice than a more isolationist America.
“This is a time right now to be innovative, to be optimistic, to work, to make the argument about why common purpose is in our best interests, and why the United States should not withdraw from the world, from partnerships to work more closely than ever with Indo Pacific partners. Nowhere is that more important than Australia,” Mr Campbell told a United States Studies Centre International Strategic Forum in Sydney via video from Washington.
“The hope will be that the next administration will resist the temptation to go inward and to put its interests uniquely first, and to recognise that we are stronger working with allies and partners,” said Mr Campbell who will leave the job when Mr Trump becomes president on January 20.
Mr Campbell said America’s ongoing engagement in the Indo-Pacific had never been more important given China’s increasingly hegemonic behaviour in the region.
“I think it’s the place where we can expect some strategic surprise. China is relentless. They want to build bases. They want to extend their power there. We’re going to have to do more, and we have to do more with Australia and New Zealand,” Mr Campbell said.
He said that while much had been achieved so far in the AUKUS nuclear submarine pact, the “hard yards lie ahead.”
“I would very much like to see AUKUS continue to thrive. There are a few voices that have raised questions about AUKUS (in the US), but I think most of that, frankly, is contrarian,’ he said.
But he said he was an optimist because there was “deep bipartisan support for engagement” in the Indo-Pacific within the Republican Party which will control both houses of Congress.
“I’m confident that these powerful, purposeful senators and leaders in the House (who) have made a career of advocating for American engagement in the Indo-Pacific, my hope is their arguments, their persuasiveness and their perspective will have a big impact on how the (Trump) administration adjudicates its way forward,” he said.
Mr Campbell said he was concerned that proposed budget cuts to the State Department would limit America’s ability to increase or even maintain its current diplomatic focus on the Indo Pacific and he hoped that incoming secretary of state Marco Rubio would seek to rectify this recognising it is a “moment of acute strategic competition in the region.”
In order to better support Australia and the common strategic goals of the two countries, Mr Campbell said there needed to be “more diplomatic engagements, more US aid, more peace corps” because “all those things are going to be important.”
Mr Campbell said the US and Australia needed to deal with the “China we have” rather than the China we might want.
He believed it was wrong for some opinion-makers in the US to take extreme or unrealistic positions on China, for example to talk about the desire to ultimately topple the Chinese Communist Party.
He said such views make the ability to find “common purpose” with China more difficult.
“I think ultimately we have to deal with the China that we have and construct a diplomacy accordingly,” he said.
Mr Campbell, who sat in on the meeting between Joe Biden and Chinese president Xi Jinping in Peru last week, believes China is worried about the threat of large tariffs which Mr Trump has promised to levy against Chinese imports.
“Clearly the Chinese are worried about the possibility of massive sanctions, which could have a real effect, not just on the global economy, but their economy,” Mr Campbell said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/donald-trump-must-not-turn-his-back-on-australia-while-china-rises-kurt-campbell/news-story/5feb21f4e563419a2227816540daf3e3
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273ca3 No.22022506
>>21922359
>>21922416
Labor won’t make Kamala Harris’ mistakes against Trump, ALP boss says
James Massola - November 20, 2024
Labor’s national secretary has vowed the party will not repeat the mistakes of Kamala Harris’ US election campaign and will instead focus on the economy in his first closed-door briefing to MPs since the failed Indigenous Voice referendum.
Paul Erickson gave the private speech to the federal caucus in Canberra on Tuesday morning, outlining the lessons the ALP had learned this year when incumbent governments in the United States, United Kingdom, India and France were either booted out of office or had their majorities slashed.
Erickson, who heads the party’s organisational wing, gave a scathing assessment of Harris’ presidential campaign, according to three MPs who were present but spoke on condition of anonymity.
“You have to have a policy offering that is about the future, and we think that in the US, for example, Kamala Harris just campaigned against Trump – ‘Vote for me as I’m not him’ – and didn’t put forward enough of an alternative plan for the next four years,” one source recalled Erickson saying. “That’s not a mistake we will make.”
One of the key lessons from the global swing away from incumbents was that the economy mattered most to voters and, Erickson argued, “Labor is placed well to campaign on its economic record.”
“If you look at unsuccessful campaigns around the world, they haven’t focused enough on the economy,” Erickson said.
Another lesson, he said, was that “ordinary people and their voices can be just as powerful as a message from a political party”.
Harris’ campaign made extensive use of celebrity endorsements, including rappers Cardi B and Eminem.
US voters approved of Trump’s economic record in his first term, Erickson said, “particularly on the pre-COVID economy, and that is not the case when people think back to the Morrison government or [Opposition Leader Peter] Dutton’s record as a minister”.
He said Labor needed to argue that its economic and industrial relations policies had contributed to wage rises and that the cost-of-living relief it had delivered would be at risk under a Coalition government.
Australians have consistently rated the Coalition as better economic managers in the Resolve Political Monitor conducted for this masthead over the last year, despite Labor running budget surpluses.
Erickson spoke for about 45 minutes and received about 15 questions from MPs on Labor’s strategy ahead of the federal election, due by May 2025.
They included queries about the party’s preparedness for an online and social media campaign, whether Labor could retain its blue-collar base when those voters deserted Democrats in the US, policy areas, including housing, and whether a negative campaign against Dutton would work.
Erickson said Labor’s attacks on Dutton in two byelections held earlier in this term of parliament had worked as people remembered his record as health minister.
He argued Labor could hang on to its blue-collar base by pointing out that its economic, workplace and cost-of-living policies would benefit them, while it would seek to deliver its message to young men through podcasts and other non-traditional media.
Erickson declined to comment.
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/labor-won-t-make-kamala-harris-mistakes-against-trump-alp-boss-says-20241119-p5krzo.html
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273ca3 No.22022526
>>21773932
Chris Bowen’s UK-US nuclear energy pact COP out leaves AUKUS partners surprised
DENNIS SHANAHAN - 19 November 2024
1/2
The Albanese government has been forced to defend “outlawing” nuclear energy and faced accusations of being an “international embarrassment” after rejecting an invitation from its AUKUS security pact partners to join a global move to speed up the spread of civilian nuclear energy.
At the COP29 climate change talks in Baku, Energy Minister Chris Bowen rebuffed an appeal from the UK and the US to sign the nuclear agreement, aimed at decarbonising industry from March next year.
The rejection was despite a British government statement that Australia was expected to join along with more than 30 other nations.
UK Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said his country was “reversing a legacy of no nuclear being delivered and moving forward with its advanced nuclear-reactor program”.
“Nuclear will play a vital role in our clean energy future. That is why we are working closely with our allies to unleash the potential of cutting-edge nuclear technology,” Mr Miliband said.
Later he altered his ministerial statement and dropped all reference to Australia when it became a political issue.
Peter Dutton said Australia had become an “international embarrassment” under Anthony Albanese’s energy policy, after the government refused to sign the Generation IV International Forum nuclear agreement with its closest allies.
Minerals Council of Australia chief executive Tania Constable said the refusal to renew membership of a key international nuclear-technology development forum was “a missed opportunity that undermines the strength of these critical partnerships”.
Mr Bowen’s rejection of the US-UK invitation occurred as Richard Marles, as Acting Prime Minister, and Jim Chalmers launched a Parliamentary attack on the Coalition’s nuclear plans describing them as risky and delivering “the most expensive form of energy in the world”.
The Opposition Leader, who is still yet to release the Coalition’s nuclear-energy costings, urged South Australian Labor Premier, Peter Malinauskas and “the adults” within the Labor Party to “stand up … and try and provide some direction for a directionless Prime Minister”.
“We know the US and the UK expected Australia to sign up to the nuclear agreement,” Mr Dutton said. “We know that at COP28 there were 31 countries that signed up to a tripling of energy derived from zero-emissions nuclear technology. Australia is starting to become an international embarrassment under Chris Bowen and Mr Albanese.
“The government has a train-wreck problem here when it comes to their energy policy and we now have Chris Bowen internationally embarrassing us with our international partners and our closest allies in the United States and the United Kingdom – both of them left-of-centre governments.”
Mr Dutton used Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s comment that emissions targets can’t be achieved without nuclear technology, to declare Australia “can’t achieve the outcomes that we want for our economy or for the environment without nuclear power”.
When Mr Dutton asked Mr Marles in parliament whether Australia would sign up to the nuclear agreement with Australia’s allies, the Acting Prime Minister said: “I can confirm that the Australian government will not be signing that agreement. For Australia, pursuing a path of nuclear energy would represent pursuing the single most expensive electricity option on the planet.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22022532
>>22022526
2/2
In the Azerbaijan capital , after rejecting the nuclear invitation, Mr Bowen said Australia was “accelerating our transformation to lock in our place as an indispensable part of the global net-zero economy to help other countries to decarbonise”.
He said the government’s approach to climate change “makes economic sense at every level from the household budget to the nation’s economy”.
Ms Constable said the refusal to talk about nuclear energy was evidence of “outdated thinking” and a continued priority “of politics over progress”. “Worse still, the government argues nuclear energy would take too long, while now actively ensuring Australia is excluded from an international forum designed to speed up development and innovation,” Ms Constable said. “This guarantees we will fall even further behind the rest of the world.”
The UK and the US had expected Australia to sign the agreement as well as “willing parties” including Canada, France, Japan, South Korea, South Africa, China and Switzerland. But, through the statement from his office, Mr Bowen rejected the UK invitation. “Australia is not signing this agreement as we do not have a nuclear-energy industry,” it said. “Nuclear power is outlawed in Australia. We will continue to work closely with our international partners to reach net zero.
“Our international partners understand that Australia’s abundance of renewable energy resources makes nuclear power, including nuclear power through small modular reactors, not a viable option for inclusion in our energy mix for decarbonisation efforts.”
Mr Bowen also argued that Australia’s longer hours of sunshine compared with the UK meant that Australia had solar-power advantages and nuclear energy was not viable for Australia.
“Put simply, London has only 1633 hours of sunshine in an average year. By comparison, Australia’s least sunny capital city is Melbourne with 2362, while our sunniest capital city is Perth has 3229,” Mr Bowen’s statement said.
“We will remain as observers to this agreement to continue to support our scientists in other nuclear research fields,” the statement said.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/australia-expected-to-join-ukus-nuclear-energy-pact/news-story/db9446ae1e543eed022fe813f711a9e4
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273ca3 No.22022557
>>22014937
Jimmy Lai tells HK court he was in the business of ‘delivering freedom’ as Canberra unites to condemn Beijing
WILL GLASGOW - 20 November 2024
1/2
Pro-democracy news publisher Jimmy Lai has told a Hong Kong court he was in the business of “delivering freedom” as he spoke for the first time in a foreign collusion case that has been condemned across Australia’s political spectrum.
Speaking in court on Wednesday, the most high profile figure in Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement said he started his media business after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.
“I thought it was a good opportunity for somebody like me, a businessman who has made some money, to participate in delivering information which I think is freedom,” Lai, 76, told the court.
“To participate in delivering freedom was a very good idea for me at that time … the more information you have, the more you are in the know and the more you are free.”
Sounding weary as he swore an oath on the bible, Lai’s voice grew stronger as he gave testimony.
He said the newspaper he founded, Apple Daily, became popular because it shared the core values of Hong Kong people, such as “rule of law, freedom, pursuit of democracy, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of assembly.”
Lai is accused under the national security law Beijing imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 of colluding with foreign forces, a charge that could carry a sentence of up to life in prison. He has pleaded not guilty.
The highly politicised trial in a territory once known for its respected legal system has drawn condemnation from liberal democracies around the world and across the full spectrum of Australian politics.
In an unusual demonstration of cross party solidarity, Labor, Coalition and Greens senators joined to condemn Beijing for its persecution of Lai and called for his “immediate and unconditional” release.
“I know that many Australians who have visited and grown to admire and love Hong Kong over the years … for its vibrancy, its energy and its entrepreneurialism and, most particularly, its liberal institutions and freedoms, are distressed by the path that Hong Kong is taking,” said Liberal senator Dave Sharma.
Labor senator Deborah O’Neill, who joined Senator Sharma to propose the “matter of public importance”, said the Hong Kong media mogul had been charged for acts many “would simply refer to as journalism”.
“As a fellow Catholic, I note he is being denied the sacrament of Holy Communion,” the Labor senator added.
Greens senator Jordon Steele-John, a frequent critic of Australian foreign policy, told the Chinese government “the world is watching”.
“Jimmy Lai has been held in maximum solitary confinement in a security prison in Hong Kong for almost four years. This is inhumane,” the Greens senator said.
“He is being tried on trumped-up charges arising from his peaceful promotion of democracy, his journalism and his human rights advocacy. His trial, like so many in Hong Kong since the passage of the authoritarian national security law, lacked procedural and judicial fairness, with hand-picked judges and evidence obtained via torture,” he said.
One Nation senator Malcolm Roberts joined the Greens senator in criticising Beijing, as did Coalition senators Claire Chandler and David Fawcett, and Labor senator Tony Sheldon.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22022560
>>22022557
2/2
Lai’s trial is being held a day after the sentencing of the “Hong Kong 47”, a group of pro-democracy politicians, activists and concerned citizens.
Among them was Australian Gordon Ng, who was sentenced to more than seven years in prison for running a Facebook page that encouraged people to vote in a primary process being run by opposition parties in Hong Kong.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong criticised the sentencing, which was delivered hours after Xi Jinping met with Anthony Albanese at the G20.
Beijing dismissed that as a “smear” on China that sought to “undermine” Hong Kong’s rule of law.
“The Central Government firmly supports the Hong Kong SAR in safeguarding national security and punishing all acts that undermine national security in accordance with the law, and firmly opposes the interference of certain Western countries in China’s internal affairs,” said Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian late on Tuesday.
Ten foreign judges have retired from Hong Kong’s appeals bench since the National Security Law was introduced.
In June, Canadian judge Beverley McLachlin and British judges Lawrence Collins and Jonathan Sumption quit the court, citing “the political situation” in the city.
Four of the six remaining foreign judges on the appeals bench are Australian: Robert French, Patrick Keane, James Allsop and William Gummow.
Senator Sharma, who previously served as an Australian diplomat, called for those four to “urgently reconsider their roles”.
Speaking in the Senate, he urged the four Australian judges to “reflect on how their continued service on this court confers a legitimacy on Hong Kong’s respect for the rule of law which is, clearly, unwarranted.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/canberra-unites-in-condemnation-of-beijing-as-jimmy-lai-takes-the-stand-in-hong-kong-court/news-story/1c418f918d5e543b8d9e159550b1822b
—
Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lin Jian’s Regular Press Conference on November 19, 2024
AFP: Hong Kong’s High Court today sentenced 45 people to jail over subversion, which has quickly drawn international condemnation, including from the United States and Australia. What is the Foreign Ministry’s comment on the sentencing as well as the international reaction?
Lin Jian: Hong Kong is a society under the rule of law. To abide by the law and bring lawbreakers to justice is a basic principle. No one should be allowed to use “democracy” as a pretext to engage in unlawful activities and escape justice. Certain Western countries while forgetting the fact that they uphold their own national security through relevant judicial procedures, have made unwarranted criticisms over the fair enforcement of the national security law by Hong Kong’s court. This severely violates and tramples on the spirit of the rule of law. The Central Government firmly supports the Hong Kong SAR in safeguarding national security and punishing all acts that undermine national security in accordance with the law, and firmly opposes the interference of certain Western countries in China’s internal affairs and their attempt to smear and undermine Hong Kong’s rule of law by using relevant case.
https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/xw/fyrbt/lxjzh/202411/t20241119_11529299.html
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273ca3 No.22022574
>>21906184
>>21947984
SpaceX launches classified Optus satellite for ADF
BEN PACKHAM - 19 November 2024
1/2
Elon Musk’s SpaceX has launched a secret communications satellite for the Australian Defence Force, weeks after the Albanese government cancelled a $7bn military space program.
SpaceX sent the Optus satellite into orbit on one of its Falcon 9 rockets on Tuesday (AEDT), cutting its video feed of the launch “at the customer’s request” before the payload was deployed.
US space industry media sites said the “secretive military communications satellite” was headed into geostationary orbit some 36,000km above earth – the same orbit Defence Minister Richard Marles recently warned was now vulnerable to anti-satellite weapons.
“SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 rocket at sunset with a payload that has been shrouded in secrecy to the point of not disclosing any specifics of the mission, and not using its original name,” Spaceflight Now reported.
The satellite was launched under an opaque $405m contract between Defence and Optus signed in 2022.
A Defence spokeswoman said the satellite was “an important element of Defence’s assured access to space-enabled communications” and would “complement our future multi-orbit satellite capabilities”.
The launch caught Australian space experts by surprise. Flinders University space expert Joel Lisk said: “It’s all very secretive, which is interesting. National security satellites are inevitably clouded in some degree of confidentiality.”
Dr Lisk said the value of the Optus contract was not big enough to suggest the launch was a replacement for the planned military-grade satellite program cancelled this month.
Defence analyst Bec Shrimpton said she believed it was related to an existing military satellite service provided to the ADF.
“Yes it is highly secretive; yes it’s no doubt classified,” Ms Shrimpton said. “That will be because it is supporting a military capability.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22022579
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. >>22022574
2/2
The satellite was dubbed by US media as Optus-X after the term was used by the US Federal Aviation Administration in its flight schedule. Optus declined to provide further details.
“Optus has procured a spacecraft on behalf of another organisation,” a spokesman said. “We respect the privacy of our customers and do not provide comment on these matters.”
The Australian revealed on November 4 that the government had axed the nation’s biggest space program – a military-grade satellite network that was to have been delivered by US defence giant Lockheed Martin. The program, known as JP9102, would have put three to five satellites into geostationary orbit to connect all of the ADF’s capabilities in real time.
The government said it would instead pursue a multi-orbit system, which would include low-earth orbit satellites like those used by Mr Musk’s Starlink network.
Mr Marles said the government had decided to go with a more “resilient” option, because “we do see capabilities which enable satellites to literally be shot out of the sky”. His comments were met with scepticism in the space sector, with experts privately arguing geostationary satellites were the gold standard for military use and were far safer than those closer to earth.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/spacex-launches-classified-optus-satellite-for-adf/news-story/911c9508e692930d0517128b6e59bec3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9a0aMJ7Lyo
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273ca3 No.22022601
>>21922359
>>22008537
Former celebrity chef Pete Evans to publish cookbook with RFK Jr
Nick Ralston - November 20, 2024
Former celebrity chef turned conspiracy theorist Pete Evans has teamed up with anti-vaxxer and Donald Trump’s pick for US health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, to produce a new cookbook for children.
In the book, titled Healthy Food for Healthy Kids, Evans has created 120 paleo- and keto-friendly meals for children that will be published by Kennedy’s Children’s Health Defence, one of the largest US anti-vaccine groups.
“So pleased and thankful that Robert Kennedy Jr set this up for me with his Children’s Health Defence team,” Evans posted on Telegram, the Daily Mail reported, before the post was removed.
“Stay tuned for more.”
The book, which is available for pre-order, will be released in January 2025. In 2015, another children’s paleo cookbook co-authored by Evans was dumped by publisher Pan Macmillan after dietitians and doctors widely criticised it. The book, Bubba Yum Yum: The Paleo Way, recommended feeding infants a DIY baby formula made from bone broth.
Evans’ latest cookbook came after he met Kennedy in January 2020 just before the outbreak of COVID-19 when he was invited to Kennedy’s home in Los Angeles to film an interview with him. The two became known during the pandemic for regularly posting debunked conspiracy theories about COVID-19.
That was the same year that Evans was dumped from his $800,000 a year gig as co-host of Sevens’ My Kitchen Rules, and that he was fined $25,000 by the Therapeutic Goods Administration for selling a device called a “BioCharger”. The device, which critics mocked as a “glorified lava lamp”, claimed it could help with the “Wuhan coronavirus”. The TGA said this claim had no apparent foundation.
Kennedy, who ran for president as a Democrat, and then as an independent before endorsing Trump was selected last week as the president-elect’s choice as health and human services secretary. His nomination has alarmed people concerned about his record of spreading unfounded vaccine fears. He has long advanced the debunked idea that vaccines cause autism.
“I always have thought it would be so great if he and Trump teamed up, and now it has happened,” Evans posted on his Instagram days after Kennedy endorsed the then-Republican nominee.
“I have little doubt that the 2028 president will be Robert Kennedy Jnr.”
Kennedy, the son of Democratic icon Robert Kennedy, has run the Children’s Health Defence since 2018. The organisation says its mission is “ending childhood health epidemics by eliminating toxic exposure”.
The group’s social media accounts were removed from Facebook and Instagram in 2022 for spreading medical misinformation. In an email to its followers, the group said the accounts were taken down for 30 days and accused the apps of censorship.
In 2021, the Centre for Countering Digital Hate named the Children’s Health Defence as one of the “Disinformation Dozen”, the top 12 superspreaders of misinformation about COVID-19 on the internet.
https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-america/former-celebrity-chef-pete-evans-to-publish-cookbook-with-rfk-jr-20241120-p5ks80.html
https://qresear.ch/?q=Pete+Evans
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273ca3 No.22022612
YouTube embed. Click thumbnail to play. Police investigate alleged abuse of boys inside South Australia’s notorious Magill Training Centre
‘There was no one watching over the people watching over us.’
Hannah Foord - 19 November 2024
A top-secret police investigation has been launched into alleged historical abuse against children inside South Australia’s most notorious youth prison.
One alleged victim, who was held in the Magill Training Centre in the ‘90s when he was 10 years old, spoke to 7NEWS about his experience.
Only now, decades later, does he feel strong enough to share his story.
“They put the fear of God into us kids that were in there, so that we didn’t come forward,” he said. “We were too scared.”
The boy was locked up with his alleged abusers and recalls being dragged from his cell in the middle of the night, bashed and repeatedly raped.
“In my case it was three separate staff members, and it was more like a weekly thing or a couple of times a week,” he said.
Dozens of former prisoners allegedly fell victim, with many now demanding compensation from the government.
Andrew Carpenter from Websters Lawyers is representing at least six.
“They all operated in code names, which goes to show what kind of paedophile ring was working there. They shut this centre down and then nothing,” Carpenter said.
“Many people are coming forward from different decades explaining the same instances. I don’t think we’ve hit the tip of the iceberg.”
It’s taken three decades for these harrowing claims to be properly investigated.
7NEWS can reveal a secret top-level police taskforce was launched in 2023.
The prison was shut down in 2012 by the UN, which described the facility as “living human rights abuse”.
The alleged victim who spoke to 7NEWS says he is concerned similar abuse is still happening in dark corners and blind spots of youth facilities.
“That’s where the kids are vulnerable, where there’s no witnesses, there’s no cameras,” he said.
“People got keys to the cells and there was one person on at nighttime by themselves looking after kids.
“There’s nothing to stop people doing that. In Magill there wasn’t.
“There was no one watching over the people watching over us when we were little, and we were in there.”
Police are yet to make any arrests.
https://7news.com.au/news/police-investigate-alleged-abuse-against-boys-inside-notorious-sas-magill-training-centre-c-16804741
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JLx65kRgk8o
https://archive.vn/5filx#20855565
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7e0799 No.22022656
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7e0799 No.22022663
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7e0799 No.22022666
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273ca3 No.22030056
>>21761808
Video shows hooded figures walking to scene of anti-Israel attack in Sydney
STEPHEN RICE and LIAM MENDES - 21 November 2024
1/3
Video of two hooded figures walking towards the scene of an anti-Israel arson and vandalism attack has been obtained by The Australian, as a police strike force ramps up its hunt for the perpetrators of the hate crime in a prominent Jewish area of Sydney’s eastern suburbs.
The footage captures the pair walking in the darkness at 12.22am in Trelawney St, Woollahra, just minutes before a car was torched in nearby Wellington St and nine others vandalised with anti-Israel graffiti.
One of the figures in the footage appears to be carrying a bag or jerry can as the pair walk towards the intersection of Fullerton St, where an apartment building was graffitied with the words “f.ck Israel’.
Police and fire crews arrived at Wellington St shortly before 1am after receiving multiple reports of a car on fire. Fire crews were able to extinguish the blaze, but the car was destroyed.
At a press conference on Thursday police said two hooded men wearing dark clothing and face masks were captured on CCTV fleeing the scene, but did not release any footage.
The Prime Minister said the attack was “disturbing” and “deeply troubling”, as police described the vandalism as “a hate crime”.
“There is no place for anti-Semitism in Australia,” Anthony Albanese said.
“Conflict overseas cannot be made a platform for prejudice at home. I have trust in our law enforcement agencies to deal with this.”
A large number of cars in surrounding streets had been spray-painted with the words “f..k Israel,” causing an estimated $70,000 of damage.
It is understood no one was injured in the attack.
The door of a unit complex in Ocean Street was also graffitied as was the Matt Moran-owned restaurant Chiswick. The celebrated restaurateur arrived at the premises on Thursday morning, grim-faced, to inspect the damage.
Mr Moran told The Australian: “It’s incredibly disappointing to see this amount of vandalism – there’s no place for it in our community. We are cooperating with the relevant authorities in their investigation.”
The restaurant had been cleaned and would open as normal, he said.
Some cars were also tagged with the words “PKK is coming”, possibly a reference to the Kurdish separatist group fighting for autonomy from Turkey. The group is designated as a terrorist organisation in Australia.
The Turkish Embassy is located in Ocean St, Woollahra, close to the scene of the arson attack.
The Federation of Democratic Kurdish Society of Australia released a statement condemning “this senseless and violent act of anti-Semitism”.
“The Kurdish nation has a historical bond with the Jewish nation and we support our Jewish community during this difficult moment,” the federation said.
“We are strong and resilient communities that say out loud Australia is no place for anti-Semitism and no place for extremes and those who want to divide us.”
Police have requested anyone with information or dash cam footage to come forward and have set up Strike Force Mylor to track down those responsible, declaring “hate crime will not be tolerated”.
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22030079
>>22030056
2/3
Forensic teams have cordoned off several crime scenes. Police said “a number of exhibits” had been left at the scene by the offenders.
NSW Premier Chris Minns said “the antisemitic attack in Woollahra last night was absolutely deplorable. It is unacceptable, un-Australian, and it will not be tolerated.”
Local resident Elliott Spira, a member of the Jewish community who woke to find cars vandalised on his doorstep, said he was “sad and disappointed but not surprised” by the attack.
“I feel less and less safe since the October 7 attacks – there’s a lot of resentment and anger, a lot of hatred has come out of the woodwork, “ Mr Spira said.
“As a father, it’s pretty horrible, a lot of parents are worried about the future their kids will grow up in and this is just pouring kerosene on that fire for me.
“I’m glad my son doesn’t understand what’s going on – he’s too young to ask questions, but it’s a pretty horrible reality.
“There hasn’t been a strong message from the Labor government. Anthony Albanese and Penny Wong, they’ve really emboldened and haven’t taken a strong enough position against this type of behaviour, that you can do this sort of thing and get away with it.
“My wife and I have a lot of concern for our young ones, wanting to make sure they’re afforded the same opportunities we are, so if you think about how much the average Australian worries about cost of living and so on, imagine waking up and finding this outside your building. It’s a big middle finger right at you, and not a great feeling. I’m worried about what it will be like for my boy growing up.”
Another resident Yaacov Hellman, also a member of the Jewish community, said he had woken early to the sound of police sirens.
“It’s supposed to be a safe and inclusive area and I just hope the police can figure out who’s done this and bring them to justice.
“It’s a really nice community area and this just flies in the face of that. It shows that there are people out there who are going to step out of the boundaries to try to get their message across and it’s going to end up having the opposite effect.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22030083
>>22030079
3/3
Anti-Defamation Commission chair Dvir Abramovich called for a national plan to combat the rising scourge of anti-Semitism.
“This morning, I woke to devastating news that shakes me to my core,” Dr Abramovich told The Australian. “This was no random act of destruction – this was a chilling, premeditated hate crime, targeting a proud and vibrant Jewish community.
“Make no mistake: this is not just an attack on property. This is an attack on people. An attack on families. An attack on our democracy, our values, and everything Australia stands for.
“History has taught us that silence emboldens hate. All elected leaders must condemn this evil. The Jewish community stands united, strong, and unshaken. We have faced hatred before, and each time we have emerged stronger. This time will be no different.”
The NSW Jewish Board of Deputies said it was closely liaising with the authorities.
“This is the latest escalation in a campaign of intimidation and harassment targeted at the Jewish community”, said president David Ossip.
“There cannot be any tolerance for criminal behaviour like this, which undermines social cohesion and is antithetical to the Australian values we all hold dear.
“The Jewish community will not be intimidated by such acts of criminality and anti-Semitism.”
The Israeli embassy in Australia said “words are no longer enough” and called for urgent action in the wake of the attack.
“We stand with the Jewish community and call for immediate measures to protect and uphold the rights and safety of all citizens,” the embassy said in a statement.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/car-set-ablaze-others-vandalised-in-antiisrael-attack-in-sydney/news-story/5fdc368f7c3c549b0abdec8e670762b2
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273ca3 No.22030122
>>21947890
>>21947943
>>21947984
Government introduces social media age ban Bill to parliament
The billionaire owner of X Elon Musk has called out the Albanese government’s new social media to stop young teenagers accessing social media.
Joseph Olbrycht-Palmer - November 21, 2024
Billionaire Elon Musk has taken to his own social media platform X to slam the Albanese government’s Bill to ban social media for kids under 16.
If passed, social media companies could be slapped with fines of up to $50m if they fail to do enough to verify a user’s age on their platforms.
The world-first legislation, introduced into parliament on Thursday, would also create a legal definition of social media.
But Mr Musk, who has been named by President-elect Donald Trump to head a new department of government efficiency, has weighed in saying it “seems like a backdoor way to control access to the internet by all Australians”.
The Bill will likely get a warm welcome in parliament.
There has been broad bipartisan support for restricting minors’ access to social media for some time, with states and territories mulling their own bans.
Though, the Bill is not without critics.
Independent MP Zoe Daniel warned on Thursday morning that it could unintentionally make platforms “less safe”.
“My biggest concern about it really is that it doesn’t substantively change what the platforms need to be doing on their platforms, and there may be an unintended consequence that the platforms actually become less safe,” she told the ABC.
“If you were to create a system where the platforms have to take responsibility, mitigate risk and be transparent about how they’re doing that and what tools they’re using, then that sort of provides, potentially, an environment where everyone can be in a safe space.
“What we’re doing is saying, ‘Well, we’re going to lock everyone under 16 out, and then everyone else can do whatever they want in there’.
“And also, we know that some people under 16 will get in. I don’t think that that’s really a good pathway to go down.”
Meanwhile, Snapchat is expected to be captured in the definition of social media under Australian law.
Snapchat lets users exchange photos, videos and messages rather than offering a posting board-type feature, such as Facebook, Instagram or X
There was some uncertainty around whether Snapchat could escape the proposed ban by arguing it was a messaging service and not a social media platform.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has likened the ban to age restrictions on alcohol, acknowledging people can get around it but arguing that it sets a standard.
The laws would come into force 12 months after passing.
The eSafety commissioner would be responsible for enforcing the legislation.
https://www.news.com.au/technology/online/social/government-to-introduce-social-media-ban-bill-to-parliament/news-story/5b39a10ea927f39db0d3138672848887
https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1859479797329535168
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273ca3 No.22030132
>>21947890
>>21947943
>>21947984
>>22030122
List of apps to be banned for teens
A full list of apps that teens will be banned from under new laws has been released.
Samantha Maiden - November 21, 2024
1/2
Teenagers will be banned from using Tiktok, Snapchat, Instagram, X and Reddit until the age of 16 in Australia under new laws to be rushed through Parliament but will still be able to use message services including WhatsApp.
Communications Minister Michelle Rowland confirmed on Thursday that the new laws will come into force in late 2025.
But they will not be ‘grandfathered’ which means that a 13 year old who currently has a TikTok or Instagram account will theoretically be forced to delete the app until they are older when the new laws come into effect.
The Snapchat ban, first revealed by news.com.au, is set to cause uproar among younger Australians who are heavy users of the site amid questions of how difficult it will be to stop children finding a way around the ban.
But kids will also still be able to use YouTube and Google classroom under the landmark changes designed to limit the harm that social media is causing teenagers.
The new laws will require social media platforms to take reasonable steps to prevent under 16s from having accounts.
The law places the onus on social media platforms – not parents or young people – to take reasonable steps to ensure these protections are in place.
“We know social media is doing social harm,’’ Mr Albanese said in a statement.
“We want Australian children to have a childhood, and we want parents to know the Government is in their corner
“This is a landmark reform. We know some kids will find workarounds, but we’re sending a message to social media companies to clean up their act.”
Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland said the government was acting on its commitment to keep children safe online
The Bill and the associated rules will ensure young Australians have continued access to messaging and online gaming, as well as access to services which are health and education related, like Headspace, Kids Helpline, and Google Classroom, and YouTube.
“We need to create a strong incentive for compliance and increasing the maximum penalties for online safety breaches to up to $49.5 million brings our penalty framework into line with other laws,’’ she said.
Snapchat faces the cut
Snapchat will be included in world-first reforms in Australia to restrict teenagers’ social media use after a backlash over fears the messaging service could find a loophole to escape the big changes.
News.com.au has confirmed exclusively that the new legislation, to be unveiled on Thursday, is designed to capture Snapchat.
Snapchat lets users exchange photos, videos and messages and leaves younger teenagers being subjected to a constant stream of messages and updates 24-7.
Concerns it would not be included exploded last week after Communications Minister Michelle Rowland said Snapchat could fall within the definition of a ‘messaging service’ and therefore be exempt from the age limit.
“Snapchat under the Online Safety Act, depending on how it’s defined, could fall within that definition (of a messaging service) … We are very prepared to go through having a process of criteria and seeing how this fits against it.”
Shadow Communications Minister David Coleman insisted that Snapchat must not be exempted from the laws.
“For many Australian families, Snapchat has had a devastating impact on their children,” Mr Coleman said.
“The idea of having social media age limits without those limits applying to Snapchat is outrageous. It is extraordinary that the Minister is saying that Snapchat could be exempted from the laws.
“The Minister must rule out exemptions for Snapchat today.”
(continued)
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273ca3 No.22030143
>>22030132
2/2
Queensland Catholic Secondary Principals Association director Dan McMahon had also warned that Snapchat should not be allowed to skirt the ban.
“I’ve gotta say I’m a bit gobsmacked by that, I find that extraordinary,” Mr McMahon told ACA on Thursday.
“Of all the social media platforms that I deal with … Snapchat is one of the most common ones.
“Not everyone on Snapchat is an online bully, but in my experience every online bully uses Snapchat.
“It’s just such a great tool to weaponise harm.”
Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland MP will introduce the Albanese Labor Government’s new social media reforms to parliament on Thursday.
“The Albanese Government is introducing world leading legislation to establish 16 as the minimum age for access to social media,” she told news.com.au.
“This reform is about protecting young people and letting parents know we’ve got their backs.
“Social media has a social responsibility for the safety and mental health of young Australians.
“The legislation places the onus on social media platforms, not parents or children, to ensure protections are in place.
“Ultimately, this is about supporting a safer and healthier online environment for young Australians.”
But concerns remain over the effectiveness of social media bans for teenagers with predictions many will find a way to dodge the new rules.
The legislation will introduce tough new penalties of up to $50 million dollars for companies that systematically breach this legislation as well as violations of enforceable industry codes and standards.
It will also require regulated entities to take reasonable steps to prevent young people under the age of 16 from having an account.
The Minister will be empowered to exclude specific classes of services from the definition, including messaging services, online games, and services that primarily function to support the health and education of users
It will also contain robust privacy provisions, including requiring platforms to ringfence and destroy any information collected.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese first flagged the bans in September insisting the goal was to “get our kids off their devices and on to the footy fields or the netball courts to get them interacting with real people having real experiences.”
“And we know that social media is doing social harm,” he said.
“We want to make sure we get it right, but we want to make sure as well that we act which is why we have said we will introduce legislation before the end of this year.
Mr Albanese said that social media companies needed to show some social responsibility.
“We need to act as a society. When my son was young this was an issue more than a decade ago,” he said.
“If it was easy it would have been done around the world. But just because something is hard doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t try.
“We want to work with parents to work with companies, to work with state and territory governments to make sure that we act in this area.”
The Prime Minister declared in September that “enough is enough” as it was announced the government would bring in age limits for social media accounts for kids to protect against the damage caused by social media giants including Snapchat, Instagram and Facebook.
“We know that technology moves fast. No Government is going to be able to protect every child from every threat – but we have to do all we can,’’ the Prime Minister said.
“Parents are worried sick about this. We know they’re working without a map – no generation has faced this challenge before.”
https://www.news.com.au/technology/online/social/snapchat-will-be-included-in-worldfirst-australian-reforms-to-restrict-teenagers-social-media-use/news-story/2687d589a9657948ed20026e367f55f0
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