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  • Griffith Green Greets KRudd

    Griffith Green Greets KRudd

    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAGreens candidate for Griffith, Geoff Ebbs, congratulates his opponent on his return to the role of Prime Minister.

    The people of Griffith can now send a message to the highest office in the land that they are sick of the political gamesmanship and want a government that is building for a long term future.”

    He said that the Labor leadership wrangle contrasts with the strong and steady leadership displayed by the Greens.

    Our leadership, like our policies, is stable over a long period and changes gradually with the broad support of the party,” he said.

    (more…)

  • Brisbane rally will remember refugee deaths

    A minute’s silence will be observed at a pro refugee rally to  be held in Brisbane at 11am, Saturday 22nd, in Brisbane Square (top of the Queen Street Mall). The rally is part of Refugee Week and is calling for immediate policy changes from the Labor government.

    A refugee known as Ahmad Ali Jafari died in detention yesterday evening after guards ignored inmate’s call for help and then took more than an hour to call an ambulance. He, along with 13 other refugees who have died in Australian detention centres in the last 3 years will be remembered at the rally tomorrow.

    Mohammad Baqiri, who was detained for nearly three years as a child on Nauru during the Howard years, will be speaking about his experience at the Brisbane rally. Other speakers include Benedict Coyne from Australian Lawyers for Human Rights and Father Pan Jordan from the Australian Tamil Congress. A range of groups are supporting the rally including church groups, ethnic groups, The Greens and Labor for Refugees.

  • Another Hazara beaten by the system

    Ahmad Ali Jafari, 20th February 1987 – 20th June 2013

    Report and tribute by Graeme Swincer, Blue Mountains Refugee Support Group

    Police inspecting Villawood

    Just before 4pm today, Thursday 20th June 2013, I said goodbye to my dear friend Ahmad Ali Jafari at Villawood Immigration Detention Centre. Little did I know it would be the last time. As usual he had served me a cup of tea and this time he had also given me copies of his documents so that I could help him write a submission to the Minister of Immigration and Citizenship. It seemed like his last hope of obtaining what he had always longed for and deserved. But he is now beyond hope. He died of a heart attack late in the evening. He survived the Taliban and long and dangerous journeys but he did not survive Australia’s hideous refugee system.

    (more…)

  • How many Iraqis died?

    How many Iraqis died?

    Pakistan-born Glasgow-based sociologist, Muhammad Idrees Ahmad, writing in the UAE journal The National on 5 April 2013, provides some answers – see True costs of Iraq War Whitewashed by fuzzy maths, republished the same day by the UK Stop the War Coalition under the headline No more fuzzy maths: how many died in the Bush-Blair war on Iraq?.

    The most commonly cited source, the UK-based online initiative Iraq Body Count (IBC), uses a passive surveillance method to estimate what it calls “violent civilian deaths”, relying mainly on media reports, initially only in the English language. Current total: between 111,842 and 122,326.
  • Recycling saves Councils money

    As environment ministers await the final economic analysis on a national container deposit system(CDS) – a just released study has confirmed significant savings for local councils.*CDS1

    “Some members of the beverage and packaging industry have attempted a scare campaign saying that councils will be disadvantaged by a CDS. However this latest study* backs up the findings of the last 5 government-initiated reports – local councils will benefit by reduced collection costs. As well there is a significant increase in value of remnant material in kerbside because the bottles and cans each have a 10cent deposit,” said Jeff Angel, National Convenor of the Alliance.

    “The study has important implications for the economic work being done for environment ministers who will soon decide whether to adopt a CDS.”

    “It calls into question the findings of a recent report by the Equilibrium group for Sustainability Victoria**, that claimed some metro councils would be financially disadvantaged by a CDS. This study stated there could be no change in collection costs. However the new data clearly shows this is wrong. It also omitted payments to MRFs made under the Boomerang model.”

    “Controversially, the Equilibrium report failed to include savings in sorting and processing in its primary findings – strangely, an appendix in this report did calculate such savings and found local councils would save a net $4.59 million per year!”

    “The beverage industry and their allies should stop disseminating misleading or incomplete analysis. The demand for a national CDS will not go away with such studies and the more there is a delay in a decision – the more industry will face the risk of multiple state based schemes as Tasmanian now looks like being the next state to go it alone.”

    * The study by Anne Prince Consultants (2012) shows that the absence of glass bottles in kerbside collection due to a CDS allows improved compaction rates and less transport and labour costs without adversely affecting resource recovery. ‘Optimum Compaction Rate for Kerbside Recyclables’

    **Equilibrium (2012), ‘The financial impacts of Container Deposit Legislation to local governments in Victoria’

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  • Water a “first world” worry

    WajirMore than half of Queenslanders are so concerned about water prices, they would consider cutting off water access at certain times of day to keep their bills down, a new Oxfam Australia study shows.

    But despite worrying about their rising household bills, 40 per cent admitted they still wasted water and took having clean, safe water for granted.

    The survey of 1000 Australians examined attitudes to water to coincide with Oxfam’s Water Appeal, which is raising funds for the international aid agency’s water, hygiene and sanitation programs for people living in poverty.

    Oxfam Australia Chief Executive Dr Helen Szoke said the research found that Australians believed water should be a basic human right for everyone.

    “It is no surprise Australians expect water to be available at reasonable prices, but we are very lucky to have clean, safe drinking water as one in nine people around the world don’t have access to safe drinking water at all,” she said.

    “In some countries, a family will survive for a day on the same amount of water we use to flush a toilet.

    “Oxfam is working with communities around the world to provide sustainable sources of clean water and education about hygiene and sanitation practices.”

    Highlighting just how unsafe water can be in other countries, the Oxfam survey also revealed nearly a quarter (23 per cent) of Queensland residents had been sick overseas, with half of those illnesses caused by drinking unsafe water.

    The majority of the people who became ill from drinking dirty water overseas took between three days and a week of annual leave (56 per cent) to recover and a further 38 per cent took between one and two days.

    Dr Szoke said communities without access to clean water and sanitation lost many more work and school days than Australian travellers, given their water-borne diseases and infections kept recurring because they were forced to continue drinking dirty water.

    In developing countries, where poverty is rife, more than 443 million school days are lost by children overseas because they are suffering water-borne diseases.

    “Providing access to a sustainable source of clean water that women don’t have to walk hours to reach will change the lives of many families living in poverty,” Dr Szoke said.

    To donate to Oxfam’s Water Appeal visit https://www.oxfam.org.au/explore/water-sanitation-and-hygiene/clean-water-saves-lives/

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