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  • 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

  • Record floods kill 134 in southern Russia

    Record floods kill 134 in southern Russia

    Updated July 08, 2012 09:36:27

    Flash floods in Russia’s southern Krasnodar region have killed at least 134 people and affected nearly 13,000 in the area’s worst natural disaster in decades, officials said Saturday.

    Authorities discovered 67 bodies including that of a 10-year-old child in the district of Krymsk.

    Nine more people died in the Black Sea resort town of Gelendzhik and another two in the port of Novorossiisk over the past two days, he said.

    Gelendzhik alone received five months’ worth of rain in 24 hours, a major blow to the resort town at the height of the tourist season, the regional administration said.

    Novorossiisk, Russia’s largest port on the Black Sea, received two month’s worth of rain in 24 hours, disrupting the work of the port and forcing pipeline operator Transneft to halt crude shipments.

    Krasnodar governor Alexander Tkachev said he spoke by phone to both president Vladimir Putin and prime minister Dmitry Medvedev and pledged everything would be done to help those affected by the crisis.

    “Of course, it came as a shock to us,” he said, adding that the towns of Krymsk and Gelendzhik might have not seen a disaster on such a scale for at least 70 years.

    “We’ve never had this before.”

    Speaking on television, Mr Tkachev also expressed hope that residents would not resort to looting.

    “You can see from the air that the water in Gelendzhik nearly died down but something unimaginable is happening in Krymsk,” Mr Tkachev said on Twitter as he toured the flood-hit areas.

    Mr Medvedev has set up a commission to help the victims, his office said.

    “A rescue operation is ongoing. More bodies are being discovered,” police spokesman Zhelyabin said, adding that he expected the death toll to rise as the day went on.

    The administration of the Krasnodar region, frequently battered by seasonal rains, said earlier it was the worst flooding to hit the region in a decade.

    “Non-stop rain has turned several districts of the region into an emergency zone,” it said in a statement, adding that floods affected the homes of nearly 13,000 people.

    “The floods were very strong. Even traffic lights were ripped out,” regional police spokesman Igor Zhelyabin said.

    “Evacuations are under way,” he added.

    Authorities were now working to identify the bodies, Mr Zhelyabin said, adding: “It is hard to establish where they came from.”

    The Novorossiisk port has been partially flooded and a team has worked through the night to bring the situation under control, port spokesman Mikhail Sidorov said.

    “In some places the water level reached 1.5 metres,” he said.

    Mr Sidoriv said that floods and a landslide had affected the port’s operations and state-controlled oil company Transneft had informed it that it would halt crude shipments.

    AFP

    Topics:floods, russian-federation

    First posted July 07, 2012 22:57:32

  • Wet season turns health crisis to catastrophe

    Wet season turns health crisis to catastrophe

    Updated July 06, 2012 11:50:05

    Refugees displaced by long-running conflicts in Sudan are continuing to flee across the border to South Sudan, but a full-blown health crisis has started to develop in refugee camps as the rainy season begins.

    More than 120,000 refugees have fled from conflict in Sudan’s Blue Nile State since late last year and are coming to camps in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State that aid workers describe as “uniquely unsuited” to accommodating so many people.

    Médecins Sans Frontières said nearly nine children were dying each day at the Jamam camp, mostly from diarrhoea, even before the onset of heavy rains.

    Now, they say the mud wasteland has started to turn into a swampy flood plain. Latrines have overflowed, contaminating water on the ground, and many refugees, including children, are sleeping in wet clothes on sodden blankets.

    This week ABC News Online spoke to Vanessa Cramond, a nurse from New Zealand working for MSF in Upper Nile State, as she prepared to travel with some of the refugees to a larger camp named Batil.

    I’m standing in Jamam camp at the moment and it’s about 60 kilometres to the border where the population has crossed. That part of the road that runs from Jamam camp to the border is particularly waterlogged. Trucks and tractors haven’t been able to get through to help move people through to get them to a safer point where we can provide shelter and better access to water and food.

     

     

    Many of the refugees have left their homes with very little preparation, so they didn’t even have the normal buckets and shelter or blankets that they might have had at home. They moved fast, clearly, which means that when they arrived here they had little to ensure their and their families’ survival.

    It was quite a shocking scene, to see so many people with so very little, really struggling against the elements. This area of South Sudan is not the easiest in terms of geography. It’s really open spaces, lots and lots of surface water, and it’s the beginning of the rainy season, so it’s a really challenging environment for the people to move through.

     

     

    What we understand is that they are fleeing conflict and there have been reports from our patients of aerial attacks and things like that over the last month. There certainly are reports of people who are injured, injured family members, and people who have died.

    I think what is the most pressing for us is what we see right now, which is large numbers of people with dehydration and diarrhoea from the journey because they were unprepared and because the walk has taken some time.

    We’ve seen a huge amount of diarrhoea, a huge amount of skin infection, a huge amount of eye infection, which tells us that their ability to drink and wash and maintain their own hygiene is really limited. Alongside that there’s been a huge amount of vulnerable children in this group so we’ve also been treating severe malnutrition.

     

     

    One of the things that we’re doing is to make sure that when people are travelling that they’re well enough to travel and really encouraging those who are really vulnerable with sick children or pregnant women to rest or to come to hospital if they need to.

    Day to day, we’re helping UNHCR – as they relocate the population – to medically screen individuals and have a quick 10-second look at everybody to make sure that they’re well as they’re boarding a bus or a truck, to make sure they don’t incur any more ill health when they’re on the journey.

     

     

    We do encounter heavily pregnant women who are very close to their due date, or maybe not even close to their due date but just not doing very well. So we have a women’s health unit here in Jamam camp and we’ve been encouraging those women to come and access services here with us.

    The woman from Corinne’s photo [above] was just diagnosed with malaria, which is a risk now as we approach the rainy season here in South Sudan, and malaria and pregnancy don’t go very well together. That young woman did go into labour which was complicated by her malaria infection. Unfortunately that baby was too small to survive and died a few days later.

     

     

    We’re also caring for some very small babies that have been born on this journey. Some of these families have been walking for weeks and weeks even before they got to South Sudan and then continued their journey on this side of the border. Some babies are seven, eight, nine days old, born on the way, some before they were due.

    Often we try and encourage those families to come to the hospital where we can help control the environment and the factors that may be detrimental to the children’s health. We try to help them ensure that they gain weight and are breastfed well before they go out in to the camp.

     

     

    People are pushing past the grief to get their immediate needs met. They’re eager to get on those buses and get to that final destination. They want to get on the bus, they want to get to Batil, because they want to start this next chapter of their lives and secure their family in a safer place and make sure they have food and water and shelter.

    Once some of those core needs are met we can start to support the community with the next layer which is assimilation to a new place, dealing with grief and bereavement from the past month, things they have seen, people they have lost along the way.

     

     

    You can follow Corinne Baker as she photographs her work in South Sudan on Twitter: @RinBaker

    Topics:relief-and-aid-organisations, disasters-and-accidents, sudan

    First posted July 06, 2012 11:41:59

  • 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

  • An issue that has been long neglected

    Plumb: True sustainability achievable only with population stabilization, even 
    vtdigger.org
    With the world population now over seven billion and well on its way to reaching nine to 10 billion in just a few more decades, we should definitely be aware of the impacts of future population growth on the earth. However, population growth is also a 
    See all stories on this topic »
    US Job Growth Remains Flat
    FITSNews
    Employment growth remained sluggish in June as the American economy once again failed to create enough jobs to keep up with the growth of its population. Only 80000 jobs were created in June – up from an adjusted 77000 in May. Both of those numbers 
    See all stories on this topic »

    FITSNews
    An issue that has been long neglected
    Financial Times
    Unless countries decided also to “talk fertility down”, as Australian demographer John Caldwell put it, rapidpopulation growth was poised to undermine development. Many countries, particularly in Asia and Latin America, embarked on organised family 
    See all stories on this topic »
    China’s growth can benefit Michigan
    Battle Creek Enquirer
    It’s hard to utter the word ‘sustainability’ without following it with ‘China.’ Because it has 1.3 billion people, or one-fifth of the world’s population, most building projects are done on a grand scale — everything from skyscrapers to factories and 
    See all stories on this topic »