Author: Sam Navin

  • Busting the Budget – Brisbane style

    budgetbuster1
    Photo of the protest march by Sam Navin.

    One day before the senate sits to vote on key budget measures proposed by the Liberal National Abbott government, thousands of Australians all over the country,  protested to bust the budget.

    In Brisbane, over a thousand men, women and children took to the streets yelling chants such as “ Stop Corporates getting fatter, workers rights matter,” and “ Stealing from the sick and poor, send this budget out the door”.

    Treasurer Joe Hockey’s budget has slashed funding for public hospitals, resources for Aboriginal services, public funding for universities, payments  for unemployed people under the age of 30 for six months in year, and ‘re-assessment’ of eligibility for people on disability pension.

    Representing the aboriginal community, Sam Watson, an aboriginal elder addressed the masses by commencing his speech with a moment of silence, recognizing the elders of the land and the cause for action.

    “Abbot and Hockey have stolen money from our resources and we’re going to fight back for it,” Mr. Watson said.

    According to recent polls more than 65% of the population are against the budget and are hoping for the senate to block decisive sections of the budget and to target the deeply unpopular and unfair elements in the budget. This will force the Tony Abbot government to either agree to the amendments or witness the defeat of the entire budget with the consequential shut down of much of the government.

    Peter Simpson, the Queensland branch secretary for Electrical Trades Union, assured the people about the role of the trade unions in the community and reassured the people that they were fighting for the rights of the common man.

    “If anyone thought this wasn’t a class struggle, you’re kidding yourself ,” Mr Simpson said.

    “Class warfare begins with a fight against Abbot’s budget attacks and should move on to demand free public healthcare, increase in funding for public hospitals, abolition of anti-strike laws, removal of tertiary education tuition fees and increase in low rent public housing,” he said.

    “ I grew up in a society where the strong and powerful, looked after the weak and needy.

    “ If this budget passes through, it is the end of our culture.

    “Start getting involved in these fights so we can beat Abbot and his cronies.”

    budgetbuster2In the university sector, the biggest reform is the deregulation of university fees, which will allow universities to determine the cost of a degree.

    According to the architect of HECS loan system, Bruce Chapman, this could result in the cost of a degree tripling, leaving students with debts of more than $120,000. Thus, for many, this debt will become a form of financial servitude.

    Duncan Hart, representing the National Union of Students, illuminated the mass with the knowledge that this plan was a massive Americanization of the education system.

    “The Abbot government has thrown away $24 Billion on fighter jets and say that they can’t afford education. This is despicable because these hypocrites got their education for free and their children and getting it for free, but they want us to pay and fall into debt,” Mr Hart said.

    “We ordinary people need to get out there and make Abbot sweat,” he said.

    Treasurer Joe Hockey’s budget, will also be cutting funds for public hospitals and this will make people pay a $7 fee per person for each doctor’s visit.

    According to the Queensland nurses union, Australians will end up with a more expensive American style system of privatized health care, where if you don’t have the money, you don’t get the care.

    Dr Brian Senewiratne, a consultant physician, conveyed that the introduction of co-payments will harm those who require care the most – the elderly, the poor and those with chronic diseases.

    “ I was going through the budget last night and for the first time in 40 years as an Australian, I felt ashamed. I love Australia, I love Australians, Australians are clever and one of the nicest people in the world but I can’t understand why 21 million people can’t select 100 people with brains to represent them in the parliament,” Dr Senewiratne said.

    “ Consider the situation of a poor mother with 4 children. If one child catches pneumonia and then unfortunately the rest of them contracts it from that one, which is inevitable. She has to pay, $7 per child and what if she doesn’t have that money? What if, the situation becomes more serious and they send her to Princess Alexandria Hospital where each bed costs $700 per day?,” he added.

    “ What happens to the $7 she has to pay? $5 is taken by Abbot.”

    Adrian Skerritt, from the Cloudland Collective encouraged the people to pressurize the government by claiming that such rallies have demonstrated that the budget is a horrible lie and he estimated that if an election was held next week, the polls demonstrate that Tony Abbot and his government would be history.

    “ If the rich don’t like a law, they buy an outcome to suit their selfish interests,” Mr. Skerritt claimed.

    “I worry that change in the government will not be enough. Unless we do something about a more profound change, nothing will progress. The task is to organize a society that does not have this shocking levels of inequality,” he said.

    Economist Prof. Richard Holden argues that Australia does not have a debt crisis. The Commonwealth net debt is about 11% of the GDP, the third lowest in OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) where the average is 50%, and low by historical standards.

    Jason, a trainer, believes that the whole debt crisis is an elaborate illusion to mislead the people, and that the LNP is seeking to change the balance in favor of capital investment at the expense of public health, education and the standard of living of working people and their families.

    “My message to the people is to take a good, hard look at yourself. The Howard government put a lot of people in debt, so now people have mortgages to pay. Families require a two income family structure to survive. I know that most people don’t want to risk their job by joining a fight against the government, but if this keeps going on, they’re going to lose their jobs anyway.

    “In a two income family, if one loses their job, they’re going to suffer. They’re going start losing their houses, they’re going start finding it harder to get jobs and it’s going to affect their kids education. So people need to examine their situation, they need to stop being selfish and self- centered and look at the big picture instead of branding protesters as troublemakers or hippies,” he concluded.

  • Change of focus for film festival

    Michael Hawkins, Chayan Sarkar, movie Vihir
    Chayan Sarkar with APSA Executive Chairman Michael Hawkins

    This year, a new initiative called the Brisbane Asia Pacific Film Festival (BAPFF) will take over the Brisbane International Film festival (BIFF), that was run by the Queensland government through the Screen Queensland for over 22 years.

    Screen Queensland has agreed to support Brisbane Marketing in its endeavors to start marketing a new film festival called BAPFF, which will be run in conjunction with the APSA to showcase the best of APSA and the best of Asia-Pacific filmmakers and culture.

    The eight year old Asia-Pacific Screen Awards, which is readily acknowledged as the highest accolade for films in the Asia pacific region, is headquartered in Brisbane and is an initiative of the Brisbane City Council.

    APSA Executive Chairman Michael Hawkins believes that BAPFF will strengthen APSA’s profile both in the Asia Pacific region and locally while providing an opportunity for business ventures particularly as the host city of G20 summit.

    “People wanting to invest in Brisbane want to be comfortable that their culture is understood, recognized and respected. Therefore the BAPFF is providing a platform for cultural exchange and is particularly important to educate Brisbane people about the cultures from abroad,” Mr. Hawkins explained.

    “We are focusing on great movies that tell stories of cultural diversity and stories of different countries,” he said.

    “We’ll have great content from India, China, Korea, Japan and other power houses of the Asia-Pacific film making industries. Each of those cultures will be very well represented while our jury president this year is the Iranian filmmaker and 3 time APSA winner, Asghar Farhadi”.

    Whilst speaking about the endeavors of the BAPFF, Mr. Hawkins also acknowledged his support for the various film festivals from the Asia Pacific region, and especially commented on the success of the first independent, Indian International Film Festival of Queensland (IIFFOQ) which will be concluded at QUT on 2nd July, 2014.

    A jury headed by Mr. Martin Brown, the lead producer of the movie Moulin Rouge that won the Golden Globe for Best Picture of 2001, will be selecting the winners for the Indian film festival.

    This year, the IIFFOQ showcased a wide variety of acclaimed independent Indian films, including the movie Vihir (The Well), an Amitabh Bachchan production, which received a standing ovation at the Berlin International Film Festival.

    Mr. Chayan Sarkar, a filmmaker, is the man responsible for organizing Mr. Amitabh Bachchan’s iconic 2011 visit to QUT to receive his Honorary Doctorate in recognition of his contribution to global creative industries, and is also responsible for developing the Indian Film Festival.

    “This year’s film festival is the beginning of a wonderful cultural transaction between the Queensland government and India. We hope to carry on this tradition on a larger scale in the coming years, to introduce Australians to the profound treasure chest of Indian cinema,” Mr. Sarkar said.

    Mr. Sarkar’s latest venture ‘The Sleeping Warrior’, depicts the subtle connection between Hindu spirituality and the Australian Aboriginal spirituality, and has won many accolades from critics and the Aboriginal community, but is yet to be released in Australia.

  • First-ever Indian Film Festival opens in Brisbane

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    Cutting the cake – Councillor Andrew Wines (far right) looks on.

    The first ever Indian international Film Festival of Queensland was inaugurated today afternoon at QUT, with Councilor Andrew Wines, Deputy Chairman of the Brisbane Lifestyle Committee, cutting the elegantly decorated cake  amidst a gathering of delegates and Indian movie enthusiasts.

    The five day festival is being organized by the Queensland University (QUT) in collaboration with the Queensland government and the Brisbane City Council.

    Representing the Brisbane city council and the Queensland government, Councilor Andrew Wines highlighted the council’s commitment to film and India.

    “The Indian International film festival of Queensland is important to strengthen the economic bonds between India and the Queensland government,” Councilor Wines said during his inaugural speech.

    The festival will be screening a series of selectively chosen independent movies at QUT and Event Cinemas, Myer Centre Elizabeth street.

    Chayan Sarkar, the founder and the artistic director of the event, said that the Queensland and Victorian audience are continuing to appreciate independent Indian movies that do not fare commercially well.

    “The movies I’ve chosen for the festival are handpicked for their simplicity and meaningful content,” Mr Sarkar said.

    ” These movies are critically acclaimed films that are not mainstream, but have the capacity to be appreciated beyond India,” he added.

    Anne Demy Geroe, an ex Brisbane film festival director, expressed the belief that film festivals such as these exposes of the audience and filmmakers to the wide variety of good quality cinema.

    “Many festivals choose the latest films to attract more media attention, but Chayan has chosen good content rather than new content,” she said.

    As a part of the ceremony, a young Indian dancer, Tanya Unni, showcased her talent in mohiniyattam, a south Indian dance style, and enthralled the audience by enacting an Indian mythological story through her dance.

    After the inauguration, a short film called ‘Dancing in the Rain’ was screened at QUT and the Australian premier for the feature film ‘Manjunath’ was held at Event Cinemas.

    ‘Dancing in the Rain’ is a modest film which packed a subtle message that ‘the solution for every problem is hidden within the problem itself, all you need is a different outlook’.

    Meanwhile ‘Manjunath’ is a true story about an individual’s fight against the oil mafia which continues to plague the country, while conveying that ‘fighting for a cause you truly believe in, is worth dying for’.

    For more details about the festival, visit http://www.iiffoq.com/

  • Brisbane rallies for refugees

    refugeerally1Hundreds of angry Australians protested against the Abbot regime today, demanding justice for Reza Berati, a 24 year-old Kurdish refugee who was murdered at Australia’s Manus island detention centre.

    On February 17, the guards of the security company, G4S, at Manus island, backed up by the PNG police, unleashed a murderous rampage against the detainees with sticks and machetes murdering Riza Berati and injuring 77 other asylum seekers.

    As a part of the world refugee day, refugee rights groups rallied against the government at the King George Square, stipulating respect for refugee rights and the immediate closure of the Manus Island and Nauru offshore detention centers.

    The protestors held Prime minister Tony Abbot and Immigration minister Scott Morrison responsible for the appalling treatment of asylum seekers, by ranting “Morrison, Abbot, Shame on you, refugees are people too.”

    While Phil Monsour, a singer and a song writer, chanted “Who killed Reza Berati?,” in between his song, the protestors replied in chorus “The Australian government and G4S”.

    He received the loudest cheer from the crowd after he sang the song ‘Black fellow, White fellow’, which was proposed as an alternative national anthem.

    King George Square was flooded with individual home crafted signs welcoming the asylum seekers to Australia.

    Raymond Ferguson, the national secretary of the Australia democratic people’s republic for friendship and culture society supported the refugees by exclaiming that the activities of the government in Nauru and Manus island were barbaric.

    “The Australian government must shut down the detention centers and bring the refugees back to Australian soil, so that their legitimacy can be due processed in accordance with the UN convention on human rights of refugees,” he said.

    When asked if Australia has the resources to support over 2400 refugees, he replied: “Of course Australia has the resources to support these refugees. We do have the resources, to carry out the process of determining whether or not they’re legitimate asylum seekers in a proper humanitarian way.”

    During his speech, Dave Andrews, an interfaith community worker, conveyed that the biggest threat to loving our neighbors as ourselves, is fearing our neighbors.

    “Australians fear boat people because our forefathers came as boat people and took over this country from the first people, hence we fear that people who are coming by boat will take over our nation,” Mr. Andrews said.

    “If we’re going to deal with this issue, we need to deal with our fear first”.

    Ros McLennan, the assistant General Secretary of the Queensland Council of Unions, and a mother of two expressed her concerns about the treatment of women and children on the Nauru and Manu islands detention centers.

    “I want Australians to be better, kinder and fairer. I want Australians to turn off the sitcom culture and to get tuned into what’s happening around them,” she commented.

    The greens made an appearance, promoting that the only way to help the refugees is to make sure they don’t feel the need to board a dangerous boat in the first place, by setting up safe official ways for them to seek asylum in Australia.

    Meanwhile, the members of the Trotskyist platform handed out flyers to remind the public, about the greens coalition with the Gillard ALP government without demanding the slightest commitment from the government to ease the war on refugees.

    Amnesty International has accused the Nauruan government of human rights violations, after repeated requests to visit the island by the UN human rights inspectors and Amnesty international were rejected by the Nauru justice minister David Adenga.

    Even though the government refuses to grant access to journalists or human rights organizations, that have tried to report about the conditions in these offshore detention centers, the ABC recently reported the assault of children by the Nauru guards.