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

  • Lives lost after rescue plea denied

    A DAMNING INDICTMENT ON OUR GOVT. ALL NATIONS SHOULD BE INVOLVED IN MARITIME RESCUES. THIS SHOWS THE FLAWS IN POLICIES RELATING TO ASYLUM SEEKERS. AGAIN “WHERE IS OUR COMPASSION” MEANWHILE THE BOATS ARE STILL COMING.

    Lives lost after rescue plea denied

    Date
    July 8, 2012
    • 4 reading now
    • 1

    Natalie O’Brien

    The boat bound for Australia, which sank off East Java killing hundreds of Iranian and Afghan refugees.

    Wrecked … the boat was towed to East Javan waters. Photo: Jumai Evan Junardi

    Australian authorities refused to co-ordinate the search and rescue for the asylum seeker boat known as the Barokah, which sank in December killing about 200 people, despite pleas for help from Indonesia.

    Documents obtained by The Sun-Herald under freedom of information reveal that Australia’s maritime authority told Indonesia’s search and rescue agency that it was up to them to lead the mission into the maritime tragedy, which resulted in the biggest loss of life since the SIEV X in 2001 in which 353 people drowned.

    There is growing debate about the responsibility to respond to safety of life at sea emergencies under international conventions after a boat in distress on its way to Australia on June 19 was left to drift for days before it capsized killing 90 people.

    53 dead immigrants from the Middle East were victims of the Barokah motorboat that sank in the Prigi sea, Trenggalek, East Java buried in a grave Putat Jaya general cemetery. Surabaya, Indonesia.

    Middle Eastern victims of the Barokah are buried in Putat Jaya cemetery. Photo: Robertus Pudyanto

    A spokeswoman for the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) said the decision about the Barokah was made because the boat was inside the Indonesian search and rescue zone. She said the agency offered support for planning and drift modelling.

    The boat broke up in high seas about 40 nautical miles south of Prigi Beach in Java. Most of the survivors, many of whom spent hours in the water clinging to debris, were rescued by passing fishermen.

    The documents, obtained from Customs and Border Protection, also reveal that customs officials provided a different account of the story to Senate estimates briefings in February. Customs did not reveal AMSA’s refusal to coordinate the rescue, instead saying that Indonesia’s search and rescue agency, Basarnas, had ”initially declined an offer from AMSA to assist with the search and rescue effort”.

    A spokeswoman for the maritime authority denied there had been any direction from government about its response to distressed asylum seeker boats, maintaining its policy is consistent and in accordance with the relevant conventions and international practices.

    ”The operational circumstances may vary from incident to incident and it is these operational factors that shape the actual response,” a spokeswoman said.

    A spokesman for the Federal Minister for Transport, Anthony Albanese, said where an incident occurs in another country’s search and rescue region, AMSA would normally act to provide assistance rather than lead the response itself.

    ”The requirement for coordination of effort becomes more compelling with incidents close to the Indonesian coast than it is further offshore towards Christmas Island,” he said.

    The head of Basarnas, Vice Marshal Daryatmo, recently told The Sydney Morning Herald that the agency was hopelessly under-equipped for ocean rescue and needed help from Australia if it was to save asylum seekers from dying at sea.

    At the time of the December 17 sinking of the Barokah, little information was revealed about what Australia knew about the boat and the Minister for Home Affairs, Jason Clare, blamed the tragedy on people smugglers. But the freedom of information documents show that Australia’s People Smuggling Intelligence Analysis Team knew a boat was due to leave from that location and an informant told the Australian Federal Police about the sinking. That information did not filter through Customs to Basarnas until nearly two hours later. A further hour and 45 minutes later Basarnas, which already knew about the sinking, unsuccessfully asked AMSA to coordinate.

    As the search for survivors continued two days later, the Indonesians again asked for help. This time, the documents reveal, AMSA asked Defence and Customs to assist and an Orion plane was sent out along with an Armidale Class Patrol Boat, and Customs DASH 8 aircraft. Mr Clare referred to the incident this week as an example of ”where we received a call saying that there is a vessel sinking, a vessel in distress … working with Indonesia, we work as hard as we possibly can to save lives …”

    He foreshadowed a shake-up of the policy, saying that ”meetings will take place over the next few weeks between AMSA and Basarnas on how they can work more closely together”.

    The Barokah case echoes the sinking of the boat on June 19, when AMSA left Basarnas in charge of the search and rescue operation of the leaking asylum seeker vessel.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/lives-lost-after-rescue-plea-denied-20120707-21nry.html#ixzz201FitnGY

  • Responsibility for election comment is taken by the editor, Neil Breen, 2 Holt St, Surry Hills 2010 lABOR/GREENS ALLIANCE

    LIKE a bad marriage, the relationship between the Labor Party and the Greens has soured to the point of complete dysfunction.

    For nearly two years Julia Gillard has attempted to make the alliance work, at great political cost to her government.

    Now, NSW ALP secretary Sam Dastyari says the Greens should no longer automatically get preference deals with Labor given their recent behaviour on the asylum seeker issue.

    Australian Workers Union national secretary Paul Howes and Labor powerbroker goes further in his The Sunday Telegraph column today, decrying the Greens as a toxic force in our democracy that should be completely rejected by the Labor side.

    Why so passionate?

    Because the Greens have made it completely clear their deal with Labor is worth less than nothing.

    Greens leader Christine Milne appears to have no compunction in crippling any hope of a solution to the government’s greatest problem: the widespread community concern about asylum seekers risking their lives on boat journeys to Australia.

    The Greens’ pig-headed intransigence will cost more lives.

    Julia Gillard has a right to feel miffed — and she must now acknowledge that she erred badly in forming an alliance with the Greens back in September 2010.

    Back then, when she secured Greens’ lower-house support by promising to introduce carbon pricing, in direct contradiction of her election promise, the Prime Minister must have anticipated a rocky ride.

    The Greens’ then-leader Bob Brown promised to ensure supply and oppose any motions of no-confidence in the government from other parties or MPs.

    Gillard’s side of the bargain was the carbon tax.

    The Greens got what they wanted.

    But all Gillard got was a massive political headache.

    Her popularity has copped a hammering.

    And the huge political capital invested by her government in getting it through has not been rewarded by the Greens.

    They have done her over on the asylum seeker issue.

    The first clause of the agreement the government and the Greens signed back in 2010 says: “This agreement establishes a basis for stable and effective government”.

    The Greens’ refusal to compromise on the issue, which has effectively aligned them with Tony Abbott, makes a mockery of the agreement.

    Waves of rickety asylum seekers boats are coming in unprecedented numbers, and will continue to, because people smugglers know the current government is impotent.

    Every rational Australian agrees the issue must be urgently solved to avoid more people dying needlessly at sea — but the Greens, despite the display of tears, don’t seem to care.

    When the carbon tax bill passed in November last year, Senate leader Eric Abetz said the Labor Party had sold its policy soul to the Greens for the sake of staying in power.

    In hindsight, Julia Gillard might well agree.

    She might have thought it was essential to get the Greens involved in her minority government — but the truth is that the Greens were never going to go with Tony Abbott, on that topic at least.

    Gillard should have white-knuckled it, accepted that the momentum for carbon tax was completely gone by the time of the 2010 election, and kept the Greens in their rightful place — as a minority party, not a part of the government.

    Responsibility for election comment is taken by the editor, Neil Breen, 2 Holt St, Surry Hills 2010

    lABOR/GREENS ALLIANCE

  • Milne defends ‘mainstream’ Greens after Labor attack

    The last 3 state election results were not favourable to the greens. they

    were prefenced out in Victoria and went backwards in Queensland. In NSW they shot theselves in the foot with the BDS Fiasco, and only won one seat.

    Milne defends ‘mainstream’ Greens after Labor attack

    Updated July 07, 2012 23:00:16

    Greens leader Christine Milne has defended her party’s policies as mainstream after a Labor powerbroker called on his party to dump the Greens to the bottom of preferencing at the ballot box.

    New South Wales Labor secretary Sam Dastyari says Labor must send a clear message to the electorate and distance themselves from the Greens, who he has described as “extremists not unlike One Nation”.

    The NSW Labor secretary told The Weekend Australian that the Labor Party must stop treating the Greens like family and place them last in preferencing in seats where it is in Labor’s best interests to do so.

    Mr Dastyari, who leads the faction which counted former senator and Labor powerbroker Mark Arbib among its numbers, will move the motion at next weekend’s New South Wales conference.

    His comments come after Victorian Labor yesterday decided to preference Family First ahead of the Greens in a state by-election for the seat of Melbourne.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard owes her minority government in part to an alliance with the Greens, who helped give her the numbers to take power after the 2010 election.

    However, Labor’s relationship with the Greens has proven to be somewhat of a poisoned chalice for the Prime Minister, whose negotiations with the Greens included having to back-flip on her promise not to introduce the hugely controversial carbon tax.

    Senator Milne was central to those negotiations and says the “outburst” from Mr Dastyari could hurt Ms Gillard at the ballot box.

    She says the Greens represent mainstream views and Mr Dastyari’s comments are an “attack on the Labor base”.

    Senator Milne also pointed the finger at Labor’s powerbrokers, saying “the faceless men are a part of the Labor disease … not the cure.”

    “Labor Party people across the country will be horrified to think that if they vote for Labor they don’t know if they will be electing a Coalition person or a Family First person,” she said.

    “What it shows is the faceless men in the Labor party do not have any principle any more, or any idea of what Labor stands for other than winning office.

    “I think this attack from Sam Dastyari is actually an attack on the Labor base.”

    But Assistant Treasurer David Bradbury says the Greens hold very different values to the Labor Party.

    Mr Bradbury says preferences are a matter for the state organisation – but the parties are not the same.

    “I didn’t receive any preferences from the Greens at the last election, and I’m certainly not out there canvassing or expecting anything from them in the future,” he said.

    “We will stand on Australian Labor Party values. That’s what we’re about and that’s what we’re delivering in Government.”

    Keeping “extremism” in check

    Mr Dastyari said he could not see how the Greens had “any chance” of keeping the extremist elements within the party in check after Bob Brown’s departure.

    “The Greens are to the Left what Pauline Hanson and One Nation are to the Right, and they share ridiculous, albeit different, economic agendas,” the NSW Labor Secretary told The Weekend Australian.

    But Senator Milne says Labor are aligning themselves with the real extremists by preferencing the conservative Family First ahead of the Greens.

    “That’s where the extremism is in Australian politics and the Greens actually represent mainstream values and mainstream opinion,” she said.

    New South Wales Greens MP John Kaye says the party does not rely on Labor preferences.

    “Sam Dastyari is clearly looking for some relevance and the standard tactic is to beat up on the Greens,” he said.

    “The reality of preferencing the Liberals, Family First, the Christian Democrats is not only unprincipled for a party that claims to be progressive, but it’s also not in their best interests.”

    ABC/AAP

    Topics:federal-government, elections, alp, greens, australia

    First posted July 07, 2012 19:34:12

    Updated July 07, 2012 23:00:16

    Greens leader Christine Milne has defended her party’s policies as mainstream after a Labor powerbroker called on his party to dump the Greens to the bottom of preferencing at the ballot box.

    New South Wales Labor secretary Sam Dastyari says Labor must send a clear message to the electorate and distance themselves from the Greens, who he has described as “extremists not unlike One Nation”.

    The NSW Labor secretary told The Weekend Australian that the Labor Party must stop treating the Greens like family and place them last in preferencing in seats where it is in Labor’s best interests to do so.

    Mr Dastyari, who leads the faction which counted former senator and Labor powerbroker Mark Arbib among its numbers, will move the motion at next weekend’s New South Wales conference.

    His comments come after Victorian Labor yesterday decided to preference Family First ahead of the Greens in a state by-election for the seat of Melbourne.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard owes her minority government in part to an alliance with the Greens, who helped give her the numbers to take power after the 2010 election.

    However, Labor’s relationship with the Greens has proven to be somewhat of a poisoned chalice for the Prime Minister, whose negotiations with the Greens included having to back-flip on her promise not to introduce the hugely controversial carbon tax.

    Senator Milne was central to those negotiations and says the “outburst” from Mr Dastyari could hurt Ms Gillard at the ballot box.

    She says the Greens represent mainstream views and Mr Dastyari’s comments are an “attack on the Labor base”.

    Senator Milne also pointed the finger at Labor’s powerbrokers, saying “the faceless men are a part of the Labor disease … not the cure.”

    “Labor Party people across the country will be horrified to think that if they vote for Labor they don’t know if they will be electing a Coalition person or a Family First person,” she said.

    “What it shows is the faceless men in the Labor party do not have any principle any more, or any idea of what Labor stands for other than winning office.

    “I think this attack from Sam Dastyari is actually an attack on the Labor base.”

    But Assistant Treasurer David Bradbury says the Greens hold very different values to the Labor Party.

    Mr Bradbury says preferences are a matter for the state organisation – but the parties are not the same.

    “I didn’t receive any preferences from the Greens at the last election, and I’m certainly not out there canvassing or expecting anything from them in the future,” he said.

    “We will stand on Australian Labor Party values. That’s what we’re about and that’s what we’re delivering in Government.”

    Keeping “extremism” in check

    Mr Dastyari said he could not see how the Greens had “any chance” of keeping the extremist elements within the party in check after Bob Brown’s departure.

    “The Greens are to the Left what Pauline Hanson and One Nation are to the Right, and they share ridiculous, albeit different, economic agendas,” the NSW Labor Secretary told The Weekend Australian.

    But Senator Milne says Labor are aligning themselves with the real extremists by preferencing the conservative Family First ahead of the Greens.

    “That’s where the extremism is in Australian politics and the Greens actually represent mainstream values and mainstream opinion,” she said.

    New South Wales Greens MP John Kaye says the party does not rely on Labor preferences.

    “Sam Dastyari is clearly looking for some relevance and the standard tactic is to beat up on the Greens,” he said.

    “The reality of preferencing the Liberals, Family First, the Christian Democrats is not only unprincipled for a party that claims to be progressive, but it’s also not in their best interests.”

    ABC/AAP

    Topics:federal-government, elections, alp, greens, australia

    First posted July 07, 2012 19:34:12

  • Milne defends ‘mainstream’ Greens after Labor attack

    Milne defends ‘mainstream’ Greens after Labor attack

    Updated July 07, 2012 23:00:16

    Greens leader Christine Milne has defended her party’s policies as mainstream after a Labor powerbroker called on his party to dump the Greens to the bottom of preferencing at the ballot box.

    New South Wales Labor secretary Sam Dastyari says Labor must send a clear message to the electorate and distance themselves from the Greens, who he has described as “extremists not unlike One Nation”.

    The NSW Labor secretary told The Weekend Australian that the Labor Party must stop treating the Greens like family and place them last in preferencing in seats where it is in Labor’s best interests to do so.

    Mr Dastyari, who leads the faction which counted former senator and Labor powerbroker Mark Arbib among its numbers, will move the motion at next weekend’s New South Wales conference.

    His comments come after Victorian Labor yesterday decided to preference Family First ahead of the Greens in a state by-election for the seat of Melbourne.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard owes her minority government in part to an alliance with the Greens, who helped give her the numbers to take power after the 2010 election.

    However, Labor’s relationship with the Greens has proven to be somewhat of a poisoned chalice for the Prime Minister, whose negotiations with the Greens included having to back-flip on her promise not to introduce the hugely controversial carbon tax.

    Senator Milne was central to those negotiations and says the “outburst” from Mr Dastyari could hurt Ms Gillard at the ballot box.

    She says the Greens represent mainstream views and Mr Dastyari’s comments are an “attack on the Labor base”.

    Senator Milne also pointed the finger at Labor’s powerbrokers, saying “the faceless men are a part of the Labor disease … not the cure.”

    “Labor Party people across the country will be horrified to think that if they vote for Labor they don’t know if they will be electing a Coalition person or a Family First person,” she said.

    “What it shows is the faceless men in the Labor party do not have any principle any more, or any idea of what Labor stands for other than winning office.

    “I think this attack from Sam Dastyari is actually an attack on the Labor base.”

    But Assistant Treasurer David Bradbury says the Greens hold very different values to the Labor Party.

    Mr Bradbury says preferences are a matter for the state organisation – but the parties are not the same.

    “I didn’t receive any preferences from the Greens at the last election, and I’m certainly not out there canvassing or expecting anything from them in the future,” he said.

    “We will stand on Australian Labor Party values. That’s what we’re about and that’s what we’re delivering in Government.”

    Keeping “extremism” in check

    Mr Dastyari said he could not see how the Greens had “any chance” of keeping the extremist elements within the party in check after Bob Brown’s departure.

    “The Greens are to the Left what Pauline Hanson and One Nation are to the Right, and they share ridiculous, albeit different, economic agendas,” the NSW Labor Secretary told The Weekend Australian.

    But Senator Milne says Labor are aligning themselves with the real extremists by preferencing the conservative Family First ahead of the Greens.

    “That’s where the extremism is in Australian politics and the Greens actually represent mainstream values and mainstream opinion,” she said.

    New South Wales Greens MP John Kaye says the party does not rely on Labor preferences.

    “Sam Dastyari is clearly looking for some relevance and the standard tactic is to beat up on the Greens,” he said.

    “The reality of preferencing the Liberals, Family First, the Christian Democrats is not only unprincipled for a party that claims to be progressive, but it’s also not in their best interests.”

    ABC/AAP

    Topics:federal-government, elections, alp, greens, australia

    First posted July 07, 2012 19:34:12

  • Bandt slams NSW ploy to distance Labor from Greens

    Bandt slams NSW ploy to distance Labor from Greens

    Date
    July 8, 2012
    • 7 reading now
    • 13
    stephanie-peatling

    Stephanie Peatling

    The Sun-Herald political correspondent

    View more articles from Stephanie Peatling

    Labors's numbers men ... are shooting themselves in the foot

    “Labor’s numbers men … are shooting themselves in the foot” says Greens deputy leader Adam Bandt. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

    THE deputy leader of the Greens has hit back at ”Labor factional heavies”, accusing them of working harder to ensure a Coalition victory than supporting the minority government.

    ”Labor’s numbers men are in a desperate downward spiral and when they’re not undermining their Prime Minister they’re shooting themselves in the foot,” Adam Bandt told The Sun-Herald.

    He was responding to comments by the NSW secretary of the Labor Party, Sam Dastyari, who said Labor should consider putting the Greens last on its preference flows, as it did with One Nation.

    ”Labor’s factional heavies are so worried about being seen to work with the Greens and implement our better plan that they’re prepared to help Tony Abbott’s cause by prolonging the parliamentary deadlock [in relation to asylum seekers],” Mr Bandt said. ”These Labor numbers men are destabilising this minority Parliament, undermining their leader and moving Tony Abbott one step closer to The Lodge.”

    Mr Dastyari will move a motion at next weekend’s NSW party conference calling on Labor to ”no longer provide the Greens party automatic preferential treatment in any future preference negotiations”.

    The decision by Mr Dastyari – without the prior knowledge of the Prime Minister, Julia Gillard – to try and distance Labor from the Greens comes at a difficult time in the relationship of the two parties. Labor has a minority government because of the support it has from the Greens and other independent MPs.

    On the one hand Labor is trying to keep its more progressive supporters from turning to the Greens while on the other it is wary of being painted by the Coalition of being beholden to the Greens.

    The federal Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott, said the push to end the traditional preference arrangement showed ”the faceless men were ultimately calling the shots”.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/bandt-slams-nsw-ploy-to-distance-labor-from-greens-20120707-21nrf.html#ixzz1zz9HJU5

    Date
    July 8, 2012
    • 7 reading now
    • 13
    stephanie-peatling

    Stephanie Peatling

    The Sun-Herald political correspondent

    View more articles from Stephanie Peatling

    Labors's numbers men ... are shooting themselves in the foot

    “Labor’s numbers men … are shooting themselves in the foot” says Greens deputy leader Adam Bandt. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

    THE deputy leader of the Greens has hit back at ”Labor factional heavies”, accusing them of working harder to ensure a Coalition victory than supporting the minority government.

    ”Labor’s numbers men are in a desperate downward spiral and when they’re not undermining their Prime Minister they’re shooting themselves in the foot,” Adam Bandt told The Sun-Herald.

    He was responding to comments by the NSW secretary of the Labor Party, Sam Dastyari, who said Labor should consider putting the Greens last on its preference flows, as it did with One Nation.

    ”Labor’s factional heavies are so worried about being seen to work with the Greens and implement our better plan that they’re prepared to help Tony Abbott’s cause by prolonging the parliamentary deadlock [in relation to asylum seekers],” Mr Bandt said. ”These Labor numbers men are destabilising this minority Parliament, undermining their leader and moving Tony Abbott one step closer to The Lodge.”

    Mr Dastyari will move a motion at next weekend’s NSW party conference calling on Labor to ”no longer provide the Greens party automatic preferential treatment in any future preference negotiations”.

    The decision by Mr Dastyari – without the prior knowledge of the Prime Minister, Julia Gillard – to try and distance Labor from the Greens comes at a difficult time in the relationship of the two parties. Labor has a minority government because of the support it has from the Greens and other independent MPs.

    On the one hand Labor is trying to keep its more progressive supporters from turning to the Greens while on the other it is wary of being painted by the Coalition of being beholden to the Greens.

    The federal Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott, said the push to end the traditional preference arrangement showed ”the faceless men were ultimately calling the shots”.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/bandt-slams-nsw-ploy-to-distance-labor-from-greens-20120707-21nrf.html#ixzz1zz9HJU52

  • Greens alliance under siege

    Greens alliance under siege

    Updated: 09:29, Saturday July 7, 2012

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s close link to the Greens Party has reportedly been challenged by the party’s New South Wales secretary Sam Dastyari.

    According to a report in the Weekend Australian, Mr Dastyari says Labor should consider preferencing the Greens last at the federal election.

    Mr Dastyari describes the Greens as extremists not unlike ‘One Nation’ and says Labor must stop treating them like part of the family.

    The report says the call was made without consulting the Prime Minister.

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