Author: Neville

  • Ides of March: PM, Rudd set for battle

    Ides of March: PM, Rudd set for battle

    SIMON BENSON and GEMMA JONES
    News Limited Network
    February 14, 201310:35AM

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    •Kevin 07 goes digital

    Opposition Leader Tony Abbott surprises Kevin Rudd as he says hello at Michelle Grattan’s farewell drinks Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: Gary Ramage Source: News Limited

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    A FINAL showdown between Julia Gillard and Kevin Rudd could come within weeks, as tensions in the Labor caucus rose yesterday over the leaking of a letter critical of the former PM.

    Supporters of Mr Rudd yesterday accused the Gillard supporters of circulating a damaging letter from a member of the public to the media and among the caucus.

    Claiming it was in retaliation for Mr Rudd’s public attacks over the failed mining tax, several Rudd backers claimed there was now a push within his ranks to “finish the thing before the end of March”.

    After today, Parliament is not due to return for a full sitting until March 12.

    Mr Rudd has been privately counselled by some of his key backers to pull back from his public campaign for fear it could spark another showdown before they are ready.

    And a source close to the PM said Ms Gillard would not rise to the bait and had no intention of goading the former PM while she still had the numbers behind her.

    But many in Parliament believe another challenge to Ms Gillard’s leadership is being hatched.

    MPs have been seen openly coming and going from Mr Rudd’s office this week.

  • Jewish school investigated over child sexual abuse

    Jewish school investigated over child sexual abuse

    The World Today
    By Alison Caldwell
    Posted 26 minutes ago

    Map: Sydney 2000
    Detectives in New South Wales have launched an investigation into allegations of child sexual abuse within the Jewish community in Sydney in the late 1970s and 1980s.

    A NSW Police spokesman said Victoria Police detectives had information about two individuals associated with the Yeshiva Centre at Bondi.

    Victims advocate Manny Waks, who was abused at Melbourne’s Yeshiva Centre when he was a boy, has welcomed the Sydney investigation.

    He says it was only a “matter of time” before the alleged abuse came to light.

    “I’ve been speaking to a number of alleged victims from Sydney over the last year or so,” he said.

    Audio: Listen to the interview with Manny Waks (The World Today)

    “It is not surprising at all. It was always, for me, a matter of time before victims actually stepped forward and decided to take action. It’s a really welcome development.

    “This is a global issue with the Jewish community that has never been addressed in a proper manner, and what we are seeing over the last short period is that it is now getting the attention that it has always deserved.

    “It’s not necessarily just an ultra-Orthodox issue. We are starting to see justice attained for some victims and survivors and hopefully we are in the right direction, and we’re going to see a complete cleaning house of the past.

    “Those who were involved in covering up … are directly responsible for the abuse that occurred as a direct result of them taking absolutely no action about the cases that they were aware of.

    “So all of these individuals must be held to full account.”

    Mr Waks said he was hopeful the investigation would help more victims speak out.

    “At least people are stepping forward to try to address their past abuse,” he said.

    “Of the cases that I’ve heard, mostly they have been from Melbourne. I’ve heard a number of cases from Sydney, a number of cases, two cases from Perth.

    “That’s within Australia. A victim contacted me who lives in the US but is originally from London. That was another case and there’ve been another couple of cases in Israel and the US in the past.”

    The ABC is seeking comment from the Yeshiva Centre spiritual leader Rabbi Feldman, but no reply has yet been received.

    Topics:law-crime-and-justice, religion-and-beliefs, judaism, community-and-society, sydney-2000, nsw, melbourne-3000, vic, australia

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  • Macdonald’s business partner books into mental care unit

    Macdonald’s business partner books into mental care unit

    Date February 14, 2013 72 reading now

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    Kate McClymont, Linton Besser

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    Ian Macdonald arrives at the ICAC inquiry. Photo: Nick Moir

    IAN MACDONALD’s business partner, who is considered a ”crucial witness” in a corruption inquiry is understood to have checked himself into a mental-health centre.

    John Gerathy, the business partner and lawyer of disgraced former minister Ian Macdonald, has told the Independent Commission Against Corruption he is ill and unable to give evidence.

    The Herald has learnt that Mr Gerathy, who was due to appear this week, has told investigators he will not be well enough to attend.

    Unwell … John Gerathy. Photo: Kate Geraghty

    The inquiry is investigating allegations that Mr Macdonald, as resources minister, subverted a government coal tender for the financial benefit of his friend and colleague Eddie Obeid. Mr Obeid and Mr Macdonald are both former ALP upper house members.

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    It was revealed that Mr Gerathy, who has a business called Bagman Properties, has bankrolled Mr Macdonald to the tune of more than $550,000.

    Counsel assisting the inquiry, Geoffrey Watson, SC, said Mr Gerathy was a ”crucial witness” and that it was his handwriting on documents that showed intimate knowledge of the proposed sale of Cascade Coal to publicly-listed company White Energy.

    Mr Gerathy’s document noted that the Obeids, codenamed ”The Irish”, were to receive $60 million and that Mr Macdonald was to receive $4 million from his friend Greg Jones’s $60 million share of Cascade. ”This matches perfectly with the deal done by the Obeids with Cascade, did you know that?” Mr Watson asked Mr Macdonald. When he said he did not, he was asked how would his partner Mr Gerathy know about it and not him. ”John often had many businesses and operated completely and utterly independent of me. I’m not, I don’t live in his pocket,” Mr Macdonald said.

    Financial records show that Mr Gerathy, who was appointed by Mr Macdonald to the Wine Council and the Homebush Motor Racing Advisory Board, has been making regular payments into Mr Macdonald’s’ bank account totalling $450,000. He repaid a $100,000 debt of Mr Macdonald’s.

    Six days after the ICAC issued Mr Gerathy with a notice to produce records of financial dealings with Mr Macdonald, a caveat appeared on Mr Macdonald’s property registering the money as a loan.

    ”Do you see any connection between the two? It seems a bit fishy doesn’t it?” Mr Watson asked. ”Oh, it’s not fishy,” replied the former minister.

    Mr Watson suggested once the Cascade sale came through, Mr Gerathy would be repaid ”and you’d be rolling in clover”. Mr Macdonald denied it.

    Mr Gerathy appeared briefly at the ICAC last year when he was caught by the corruption inquiry arranging for a former clerk to remove the file of Tianda Resources from his previous law firm.

    The inquiry heard damaging evidence that after Mr Macdonald appeared at a private sitting of the commission last September, he immediately rang Mr Gerathy, his good friend and business partner.

    ”Did you attempt to retrieve this file from Shaw Reynolds shortly after being told by Mr Macdonald that he had been called here and had been giving evidence?” Mr Watson asked Mr Gerathy at the time.

    ”Not, not, that is not my recollection, Mr Watson,” Mr Gerathy answered.

    The file was that of his former client, Hong Kong-based businessman Alan Fang, of Tianda Resources. Mr Fang recently told the inquiry that both the Obeids and Mr Macdonald discussed doing a coal venture before Mr Macdonald called for the tenders.

    Mr Gerathy’s former law partner told the inquiry last year that as soon as he discovered Mr Gerathy’s conveyancing clerk had beaten him to the Tianda file, he demanded it be returned immediately. When he opened it, crucial documents were missing.

    Mr Gerathy, who denied removing any material from the file, was told he would be recalled to the witness box, but because of his illness that now seems unlikely to occur.

    Mr Macdonald will return to the witness box on Thursday.

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/macdonalds-business-partner-books-into-mental-care-unit-20130213-2eddv.html#ixzz2Kp6S6F9A

  • Will EU discards ban force the hand of our disastrous fisheries minister?

    Will EU discards ban force the hand of our disastrous fisheries minister?

    Richard Benyon has frustrated marine conservation efforts at every level – whenever a sensible policy emerges, he finds a reason to knock it down
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    European parliament members of the Green Party hold ‘thank you’ placards after a voting session on the common fisheries policy basic regulation in Strasbourg. Photograph: Christian Hartmann/Reuters

    If the EU decides to ban fishing boats from discarding the edible fish they catch, it’ll land the British government in a spot of bother. It’s been using the discards issue as its excuse for justifying overfishing.

    Last week the European parliament, pressed among others by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s excellent Fish Fight campaign, voted to stop industrial fishing ships from dumping dead fish back into the water. If the proposal is accepted by the council of ministers, it will mean the end of one of the fleet’s most wasteful and destructive practices. It will also mean the end of the latest justification by our comedy environment minister for failing to protect our seas.

    In December, Richard Benyon – appointed, as a ripping practical joke, to protect our wildlife and fisheries – maintained that if British fishermen had their quotas cut (as fisheries scientists have been urging), they would dump even more fish overboard. The more fish they are allowed to catch, the better it will be for “the health of our seas”. In other words, he used the Vietnam gambit: you must destroy the place in order to save it. Through three days of bitter argument, he managed to prevent the cuts that are urgently needed to allow fish stocks to recover.

    So how will he justify caving in to the demands of the industrial fleet if discarding is banned? You can’t fault the man for creativity, and I’m sure he’ll discover another wonderful excuse.

    Whenever there’s a danger of a sensible policy emerging, he finds a clever reason to knock it down. Look, for example, at how he has managed to sabotage plans for a meaningful network of marine conservation zones.

    Back in 2004, the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution (subsequently shut down by this government), proposed that 30% of the UK’s waters should become reserves (pdf) in which no fishing or any other kind of extraction happened. Its report was followed, five years later, by a petition for the same policy, which attracted 500,000 signatures.

    So how well have we done? Ah yes – we’ve managed 0.01%. That’s the proportion of our seas – a grand total of 5 sq km – in which no industrial fishing is permitted.

    All this was supposed to change under Benyon’s watch, with the creation of 127 new marine conservation zones for England, proposed after a massive consultation exercise and hard-fought negotiations between fisherfolk and conservationists. Everything seemed to be in place. There was a strong sense among the people who have been fighting to protect our seas of “job done”. They couldn’t have been more wrong.

    To their astonishment, Benyon decided on a discard policy of another kind: he would discard the results of the public consultations and reduce the list from 127 sites to 31. Worse, far worse, there would not be a single new sq metre of sea from which all industrial activities would be excluded.

    The brave new marine conservation zones listed in the government’s consultation document will be, as some of us warned a while back, no more than paper parks: lines on a map, across which the beam trawlers, scallop dredgers, rock hoppers and all the other devices for maximising environmental destruction can continue to pass. It’s the equivalent of designating a wildflower meadow as a conservation area, then allowing the farmer to plough it up.

    This is a breathtaking betrayal, which has not, as yet, received nearly enough attention. You have until 31 March to register your objection, and I beg you to do so.

    Benyon maintains that more sites might be designated later. But some of the places not yet on his list, conservation groups warn, are so sensitive and are being destroyed so rapidly that by the time he gets round to them (if ever), it will be too late: there will be nothing left to conserve. Not that it makes a lot of difference. If none of these paper parks is to be designated as a “reference area” – which is the government’s term for a place from which damaging activities are banned – it’ll be too late whether or not they are declared conservation zones.

    What makes this unbelievably, blitheringly stupid is that it’s not even in the interests of the fishing industry. As evidence from all over the world shows, reference areas, or no take zones as they are usually called, greatly increase the total catch, even though parts of the sea become inaccessible to fishing boats. This is because they create places in which fish and shellfish can breed undisturbed, allowing their numbers to rise and then spill over into unprotected places.

    So how does Richard Benyon justify his policy? On the grounds that we don’t yet have “adequate evidence” that damage is being done by the fishing industry to the areas which were to have become marine conservation zones.

    It’s a difficult one, isn’t it? Does dragging metal rakes, chains and beams over the seabed, smashing all the sessile lifeforms, turning over boulders, scooping up the fish and other creatures in their path, damage the marine ecosystem or not? Has industrial fishing harmed the marine environment, or improved it?

    In Benyon’s defence, the government has had only 600 years in which to investigate this question. In 1376 a petition was presented to Edward III. It concerned something the petitioners called a wondryechaun, which means an object of amazement. It was, in fact, one of the world’s first beam trawls. Here’s the nub of the complaint:

    “the great and long iron of the wondryechaun runs so heavily and hardly over the ground when fishing that it destroys the flowers of the land below the water there, and also the spat of oysters, mussels and other fish upon which the great fish are accustomed to be fed and nourished.”

    The government is still considering its response.

    As the Bitter Environmentalist website points out, in this case

    “‘evidence’ really means ‘fear of’ or ‘subservience to’ commercial sectors … marine conservation has to fulfil herculean standards of evidence to stand a chance of occupying any space at sea that is now or might one day be used commercially”.

    The evidence is, in reality, abundant and overwhelming. In 2004 the Royal Commission remarked that the seas around this country “have been scrutinised in great detail since at least the mid-19th century”. Existing data were easily sufficient “to design comprehensive, representative and adequate networks of marine protected areas for UK waters.”

    Of course there’s always more to be discovered and we’ll never have a complete description of the damage being done in the UK’s murky waters, though generally the more we know, the worse it looks. But as the last government pointed out,

    “lack of full scientific certainty should not be a reason for postponing proportionate decisions on site selection.”

    As Bitter Environmentalist argues, the evidence-of-harm obstacle is an artefact of the government’s peculiar conservation policies. In other parts of world, countries which want to create marine reserves simply draw their lines on the map and ban some or all extractive industries within them. They recognise that, wherever you do it, keeping industrial fishing out allows the marine ecosystem to recover. The more sensitive the habitat, the greater the benefit.

    But in the UK, it’s all about managing “features”. First you must identify a “feature” – which means an animal or a plant or a habitat – then you must establish its conservation status, then you have to work out, if it’s in unfavourable condition, what human activity might have caused that, then you manage the human activity in order to improve the feature’s conservation status. It’s a fantastically cumbersome procedure, especially at sea, where it is harder than on land to establish the exact condition of your chosen feature.

    More importantly, it leaves the government wide open to judicial review. It places the burden of proof on the government to demonstrate that a particular kind of activity is causing a particular kind of harm, and if there’s any question about the evidence of harm, the government can be taken to court. It’s a perfectly designed system for ensuring that industrial interests can frustrate effective conservation.

    Even if any and every attempt, however marginal, to prevent particular damage to particular features within the paper parks does not come tumbling down through judicial challenges, Bitter Environmentalist points out that what we’ll end up with is a

    “piecemeal, atomised outcome [that’s] confusing to stakeholders, unenforceable for managers and ineffective for marine biodiversity.”

    Mission accomplished, in other words.

    Monbiot.com

  • The high cost of an expensive lifestyle

    The high cost of an expensive lifestyle

    Andrew Clennell
    The Daily Telegraph
    February 14, 201312:00AM

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    HOW much was enough?

    Ian Macdonald, 63, was allegedly receiving up to $25,000 a month in “loans” from his business partner John Gerathy (or $300,000 a year without tax) in addition to his parliamentary superannuation – which would have been more than $100,000 a year.

    There are allegations he received other payments for policy decisions and allegations he was to receive millions once the coal mine deal over the Obeids’ farm was through and that the Gerathy payments were to tide him over until then.

    Perhaps one of the answers to the need for such wealth could be that that the man known as “Macca” was on his third marriage; that a life in Hong Kong was expensive and that he had become used to such a lavish lunching lifestyle on the taxpayer it was impossible to give up as a private citizen.

    Another – because he had decided to maintain a house in Northbridge and an apple orchard in Orange.

    Macdonald complained yesterday his financial stress began in 2009 because his wife, Anita Gylseth, had to quit her job with the Department of Primary Industries because of adverse stories (which included that she was promoted from her $90,000 a year job as a departmental liaison officer to the minister’s office to a $110,000-a-year executive job with the department).

    But even Ms Gylseth received a $100,000 payout at the time. And Macdonald was on a $250,000 minister’s salary for another few months.

    Everyone waited for a phone intercept to suggest Macdonald was lying to ICAC, but it did not come.

    The significance that the phone taps of this inquiry only began in March 2011 – the time the Libs won office – should not be lost on anyone.

    Macdonald would have been living in Hong Kong by the time they started tapping.

    Amid it all, Macdonald continued his evidence that he found Mt Penny, the coal tenement, in an atlas, as tiny as it was, on page 121 and 127 of that document. “I’m pretty good at geography, yes,” Macdonald said.

  • Swan refuses to rule out income tax hike

    Swan refuses to rule out income tax hike

    By chief political correspondent Simon Cullen, ABCUpdated February 14, 2013, 8:57 am

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    Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan has refused to rule out increases in income tax as the Government tries to plug a revenue shortfall in its budget.

    The Government is coming under pressure to explain how it will pay for key promises, such as the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) and the overhaul of school funding, given revenue collections have fallen well short of predictions.

    Asked repeatedly this morning whether personal income taxes would rise, Mr Swan eventually told ABC Radio National: “I don’t… go into that sort of rule in rule out routine, and I’m not doing it today”.

    “What I’ll do is the responsible thing – put in place a strict fiscal policy, make sure that working Australians get a fair go, that there is incentive in the tax system, that we build up their superannuation.

    “They’re the sort of things I’ll do, and I’ll leave the speculation for everybody else.”

    His comments prompted a swift response from shadow treasurer Joe Hockey, who declared the budget was in “total chaos”.

    “They’ve got a mining tax that is hardly raising the revenue that they budgeted for, but they spent [it],” he told reporters in Canberra.

    “They’ve now got a carbon tax that is not raising the revenue they budgeted for, but they massively overspent.

    “And now, the Government’s refusing to rule out increasing the personal income tax of everyday Australians.”

    The Coalition has promised to scrap the mining and carbon taxes, and deliver a personal income tax cut.

    Assistant Treasurer David Bradbury says the Government has already delivered $47 billion worth of tax cuts, and he argues the Coalition’s policies would actually put more pressure on family budgets.

    “Joe Hockey’s plans – if you unwind the mining tax, you unwind the carbon price – is to unwind the tripling of the tax free threshold,” Mr Bradbury told Sky News.

    “He needs to explain what they are going to do in that regard.”

    Last week, the Government revealed the mining tax raised just $126 million in its first six months.

    In the budget, it was forecast to raise $3 billion during 2012-13, although that was later revised down to $2 billion.
    The NDIS is estimated to cost $14 billion annually once it is fully rolled out, and Prime Minister Julia Gillard has previous said it will involve “tough choices” when it comes to the budget.

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