Category: General news

Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on

  • Break the seal of the confessional or go to prison, says Barry O’Farrell

    Break the seal of the confessional or go to prison, says Barry O’Farrell

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    PRIESTS and clergymen who refuse to break the seal of the confessional and name admitted paedophiles at the abuse royal commission face being jailed for six months.

    Cardinal George Pell pledged this week that confession, even if a priest admitted to being a paedophile, was “inviolable”.

    However the sweeping powers of a royal commission into the cover-up of child sexual abuse will compel priests to answer questions.

    Constitutional lawyer George Williams said yesterday he expected clergymen to face jail rather than divulge what had been confessed to them.

    “Royal commissions have the discretion to go behind the confessional if need be to compel evidence of what occurred in the confessional box,” he said.

    “You would need to think very carefully (about using the power). You would probably find priests willing to go to jail, which would be a consequence.”

    The Royal Commission Act overrides the Commonwealth Evidence Act, which allows priests and members of the clergy of any church to keep confessions confidential.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard yesterday said it was a “sin of omission” to not act when a child was at risk.Opposition Leader Tony Abbott also said priests should tell police when they knew a child was being sexually abused.

    “Everyone has to obey the law, regardless of what job they are doing, what position they hold,” he said.Attorney-General Nicola Roxon yesterday told the ABC the seal of confessional when used to guard information about child abuse was “abhorrent”.

    “Child sex abuse is a crime, it should be reported, and I know that the royal commission is going to have some very complex issues to deal with,” she said.

    Meanwhile, Premier Barry O’Farrell, a Catholic, was criticised yesterday for saying he “struggled to understand, that if a priest confesses to another priest that he’s been involved in paedophile activities that that information should not be brought to police”.

    Until August, the state government had the power to charge priests who refused to give up colleagues who admitted in confessionals to be paedophiles.

    However, state Attorney-General Greg Smith, a devout Catholic, passed on that authority to the Director of Public Prosecutions.

    Mr O’Farrell’s spokesman said yesterday the government would not be taking back that power because the DPP was independent of government and therefore the appropriate body to make the decision.

    NSW Opposition Leader John Robertson said Mr O’Farrell should have known priests could be forced to reveal the details of confessionals.

    “If (the Premier) was serious about it, he would use the laws,” he said. “He should have known this when he stood up.”

     

  • NASA study examines Antarctic sea ice increases

    NASA study examines Antarctic sea ice increases

    Posted: 13 Nov 2012 11:19 AM PST

    NASA and British Antarctic Survey scientists have reported the first direct evidence that marked changes to Antarctic sea ice drift caused by changing winds are responsible for observed increases in Antarctic sea ice cover in the past two decades. The results help explain why, unlike the dramatic sea ice losses being reported in the Arctic, Antarctic sea ice cover has increased under the effects of climate change.

    Warming temperatures will change Greenland’s face, experts predict

    Posted: 13 Nov 2012 10:48 AM PST

    Global climate models abound. What is harder to pin down, is how a warmer global temperature might affect any specific region on Earth. Researchers have now made the global local. Using a combination of climate models, they predict how different greenhouse gas scenarios would change the face of Greenland and impact sea level rise.
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  • Will Al Gore’s 24hrs of Reality campaign start to hit home?

    Will Al Gore’s 24hrs of Reality campaign start to hit home?
    Business Green
    This is an on-line, worldwide live broadcast aiming to connect the dots between global climate change and extreme weather events. It is the second global event that Al Gore has organised aiming to bring the world’s attention to the connection between
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    Hurricane Sandy increases societal awareness of climate change
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    Desai added global warming is likely to change the probabilities of extreme weather events. “We expect hurricanes to intensify, though not necessarily change in frequency with increased warming,” Desai said in an email to The Badger Herald. There are
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  • Royal commission to consider confessional seal

    Royal commission to consider confessional seal

    Updated 2 hours 53 minutes ago

    The royal commission into child sex abuse is likely to consider whether Catholic priests should be forced to tell police about crimes against children told to them in the confessional.

    There are growing calls for priests to be subject to the same mandatory reporting rules that other professions are, despite church rules that the confessional should remain secret.

    Federal Attorney-General Nicola Roxon says the idea that priests are not required to go to the police with information about child abuse is “abhorrent”.

    “Child sex abuse is a crime, it should be reported, and I know that the royal commission is going to have some very complex issues to deal with,” Ms Roxon told ABC News 24.

    “But I think we can’t afford to say that that should not be on the table, because clearly that is a concern.”

    Australia’s most senior Catholic, Sydney Archbishop George Pell, yesterday said the seal of confession was “inviolable”, a position that has put him at odds with some senior MPs who are part of the church.

    We asked our readers if priests should be compelled to reveal crimes against children told to them in the confessional, Here is what you had to say.

    New South Wales Premier Barry O’Farrell, who is a Catholic, says he cannot fathom why priests should not be required to pass on evidence of child abuse to police.

    “I think the law of the land when it comes to particularly mandatory reporting around issues to do with children should apply to everyone equally,” Mr O’Farrell told AM.

    “How can you possibly, by the continuation of this practice, potentially continue to give… a free pass to people who’ve engaged in the most heinous of acts?”

    Federal Liberal frontbencher Christopher Pyne, who is also a Catholic, believes criminal law should take priority over church rules when it comes to child abuse.

    “If a priest hears in a confessional a crime, especially a crime against a minor, the priest has the responsibility in my view to report that to the appropriate authorities,” Mr Pyne told ABC News.

    “In this case the police, because the church nor the priests should be above the law.”

    Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has backed the idea, saying there are already various legal requirements on people if they become aware of sexual offences against children.

    “The law is no respecter of persons – everyone has to obey the law, regardless of what job they’re doing, regardless of what position they hold,” Mr Abbott told reporters in Brisbane.

    Asked if that included priests as well, Mr Abbott replied: “Indeed.”

    Each state and territory has its own mandatory reporting requirements, with the South Australian rules specifically excluding disclosures made in the confessional.

    Consultations begin

     

    Ms Roxon has begun consulting with her state counterparts about the scope and scale of the royal commission, but says it is already clear that more than one commissioner will be required to do the work.

    The inquiry is likely to begin early next year, and Ms Roxon is warning it will take years, not months to finish the investigation.

    But she says people should not view it as a substitute for police action, and is urging people with evidence of child sex abuse to go to the authorities.

    “Individual matters still need to be dealt with first and foremost by the police,” she said.

    “Part of the complexity in dealing with the terms of reference is to make sure that the focus, as the Prime Minister has said, is institutional and systematic and working out ways to protect children better in the future and make sure that our institutions don’t fail them.

    “But we also need some sort of outlet for individuals who want to be able to tell their story and make sure that the commissioners are aware what happened with them.”

    The Prime Minister announced the royal commission on Monday, in the wake of explosive allegations from a New South Wales police investigator who accused the church of covering up evidence in relation to paedophile priests.

    The inquiry will cover the treatment of children in all institutions – not just the Catholic Church, which has been facing particular scrutiny.

    “We’re asking the royal commission to look at what went wrong in particular institutions,” Ms Roxon said.

    “This isn’t an inquiry just about the Catholic Church but it obviously will include them.

    “Ultimately I think the thing that’s important is to pick commissioners with high standing and appropriate experience and let them do the job that the Government and the community is asking them to do, which is sifting through what any sorts of barriers, institutional or systematic were there, that when children who had already been treated appallingly raised matters they were then let down as well by other adults.”

  • Abuse victims sceptical of Pell’s royal commission response

    Pells of ” POPULATE OR PERISH’ Fame, It has also been stated that the Catholic Church will hide behind its Confessional Box Privacy provisions in the Royal Commission when questioned.

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    Abuse victims sceptical of Pell’s royal commission response

    By Samantha Donovan and staff, ABCUpdated November 13, 2012, 8:36 pm

    Some of the victims of sexual abuse by the clergy do not believe the Archbishop of Sydney’s statement that the Catholic Church has learnt the error of its ways.

    In the wake of the Prime Minister’s decision to call a royal commission into institutionalised child abuse, Cardinal George Pell today said he believed many claims involving the church were .

    “We are not interested in denying the extent of misdoing in the Catholic Church. We object to it being exaggerated,” he said.

    “We object to it being described as the only cab on the rank.

    “We acknowledge simply with shame the extent of the problem and I want to assure you that we have been serious in attempting to eradicate it and deal with it.”

    The leader of Australia’s most powerful Roman Catholic diocese said he would cooperate with the nationwide inquiry, but told reporters the church had improved its processes in dealing with abuse allegations.

    “I have just been attempting to explain [over] the past 16 to 20 years, we have addressed [the issue], these are adequate procedures,” he said.

    “Nobody has written to me saying this procedure is inadequate or that procedure is inadequate.

    “What we have had is general smears like, with due respect, I suggest you are making that we are generally inefficient, that we’re covering up, we’re moving people around.

    “Where that is done it’s against the protocols.”

    The Melbourne response

    But in Victoria, some are still critical of the so-called Melbourne Response, which Cardinal Pell set up to handle complaints in the late 1990s.

    Cardinal Pell confirmed again today he had accompanied paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale to his court hearings several years ago.

    But he said he did not realise at the time the impression this would give to victims.

    Ridsdale, from the Wimmera region in western Victoria, was jailed in 1993 after admitting he abused more than 20 children.

    In 2006, the priest was sentenced to an extra 13 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to further charges.

    Melbourne man Stephen Woods was 14 when he was raped by Ridsdale.

    Mr Woods listened to Cardinal Pell’s comments with interest and told ABC radio’s PM program: “He seems to be setting up a narrative that the Catholic Church is now the victim, that they are the ones who are just one of many assaulters in the society.

    “Yet I can’t think of any other organisation that has had so many, even though there are many clergy, but they have had so many paedophiles.

    “And of course, tens of thousands of victims.”

    ‘Failed systems’

    Cardinal Pell said the Melbourne Response had been “very well regarded” by many.

    But that is not Mr Woods’s impression.

    “Working for (support group) Broken Rites we’ve had cause to come across a lot of people who have said that the Melbourne Response, as well as the Towards Healing, are both very failed systems,” he said.

    “They offer very small amounts of compensation and they are very lawyer-intense and very legalistically concerned.

    “So people have very often come out of it just feeling far more assaulted.”

    Mr Woods believes the Catholic Church is not responding well to news of the royal commission.

    “They still don’t get it. They just still don’t get it because I think they are afraid because so many bishops over the years have been so culpable of so many crimes, particularly cover-ups, that I think they are afraid of what’s going to come out,” he said.

    ‘No smear campaign’

    Chrissie Foster’s two daughters were raped by their parish priest when they were in primary school.

    “(Cardinal Pell) was saying there was a smear campaign against the church and there’s not a smear campaign at all,” she said.

    “People are merely telling the truth and trying to be heard about their experience with the Catholic Church; the abuse in the first instance and then the treatment from the Catholic Church, and the hierarchy and the processes after that.”

    Ms Foster was particularly struck by Cardinal Pell’s insistence that the seal of confession is “inviolable”.

    She believes it is one of the big issues for the royal commission to consider.

    “I know he was insistent on it not being looked at, but I think there needs to be mandatory reporting within the confessional about child sexual assault,” she said.

    “This canon law is the law of a foreign state, the Vatican. How can a foreign state law overrule our civil laws in Australia to protect our Australian children?

    “My daughter suicided. My other daughter binge drunk and then got hit by a car.

    “She received 24 hours care. And all the care Emma had up until she died; the church didn’t pay for that.”

    The Federal Government has released information for those who want to provide information that may be considered by the royal commission, which is likely to begin in early 2013.

  • Undersea gas leaks off Israel’s coast discovered

    Undersea gas leaks off Israel’s coast discovered

    Posted: 12 Nov 2012 06:59 AM PST

    Most of the efforts in Israel’s energy field are being directed at gas buried deep under the Mediterranean seabed. Now a new geophysical study, the first of its kind in Israel, has uncovered a system of active gas springs in the Haifa Bay seabed, at relatively shallow depths, only a few dozen meters below the surface. The study describes the entire system, from its sources under the sea floor through the natural springs emerging from the seabed.

    Scientists unravel the mystery of marine methane oxidation

    Posted: 12 Nov 2012 06:05 AM PST

    Researchers have uncovered how microorganisms on the ocean floor protect the atmosphere from methane.
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