Confirmed Support for J'accuse 1. Mr Julian Burnside

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Confirmed Support for J'accuse 1. Mr Julian Burnside Confirmed support for J’Accuse 1. Mr Julian Burnside AO QC 2. Mr George Newhouse Special Counsel 3. Ms Claire O’Connor Barrister 4. Mr John Menadue AO 5. GetUp! Australia 6. Marist Fathers Justice Prace and Integrity of Creation 7. Sisters of Mercy Parramatta 8. Conference of Leaders of Religious Institutes (NSW) Social Justice 9. Marist Sisters Social Justice Committee 10. Margaret Ursula Eldridge AM 11. Bridge for Asylum Seekers 12. Balmain Uniting Church 13. Dr Rosie Scott Author 14. Mr Thomas Keneally AO Author 15. Anglican Social Responsibilities Commission 16. International Social Service Australia 17. Combined Refugee Action Group Geelong 18. Queenscliff Rural Australians for Refugees 19. Victorian Immigrant and Refugee Women’s Coalition 20. Refugee Rights Action Network WA 21. Rural Australians for Refugees Daylesford and District 22. Sisters of St.Joseph Sydney NSW 23. Lindfield Killara Parish Social Justice Committee 24. Southern Highlands (NSW) Greens 25. Dawn O’Neil AM 26. Frederika E Steen AM 27. Mr Arnold Zable Author 28. Gunawirra 29. Dorothy Hoddinott AO 30. Ms Jessie Taylor Barrister 31. Labor for Refugees 32. Ms Linda Jaivan Author 33. ‘concerned Australians’ 34. St John’s Social Justice Group Mitcham VIC 35. Tasmanian Asylum Seeker Support 36. Melbourne Catholic Migrant and Refugee Office 37. Frenchs Forest Parish Social Justice Group NSW 38. Combined Churches Social Justice Group Whitehorse VIC 39. Kon Karapanagiotidis OAM Asylum Seeker Resource Centre 40. Associate Professor Michael Griffith Australian Catholic University 41. Professor Allison Weir Australian Catholic University 42. Professor Spencer Zifcak Australian Catholic University 43. Professor Jude Butcher AM Australian Catholic University 44. Dr Diane Gosden Australian Catholic University 45. Dr Janet Hunt Australian National University 46. Professor William Maley AM Australian National University 47. Dr Elizabeth Trusswell Australian National University 48. Emeritus Professor Ian Cowan Australian National University 49. Emeritus Professor Barry Hindess Australian National University 50. Dr David Headon Australian National University 51. Ms Frances Milne Balmain for Refugees 52. Isobel Blackthorn Bega Valley Rural Australians for Refugees 53. George Winston AM Blue Mountains Refugee Support Group 54. Mr David Hair Bosco Social Justice Group 55. Sister Suzette Clark Catholic Religious Australia 56. Ms Anne Lane Catholics in Coalition for Justice and Peace 57. Ms Liz Jones CEO La Mama Theatre Melbourne 58. Mr Michael Moore CEO Public Health Association of Australia & President Elect of the World Federation of Public Health associations 59. The Hon Alastair Nicholson AO Chair, Children’s Rights International RFD QC 60. Jacquie Tinkler Charles Sturt University 61. Dr Donna Bridges Charles Sturt University 62. Dr Choong-Siew Yong Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist, Newcastle NSW & past President of the NSW Australian Medical Association 63. Sister Myree Harris OAM Coalition for Appropriate Supported Accommodation for People with Disabilities & Gethsemane Community Inc. 64. Dr Lisa Hartley Curtin University 65. Dr Sky Croeser Curtin University 66. Ms Raya Stanton Daydawn Advocacy Centre 67. Professor Emeritus Sue Kenny Deakin University 68. Dr Gwenda Davey AM Deakin University 69. The Very Reverend Dr Peter Catt Dean St John’s Anglican Cathedral Brisbane 70. John Mendoza Director ConNetica & Adjunt Professor, University of the Sunshine Coast 71. Ms Catherine Norman Director Multicultural Health Service, Hunter New England Area Health Service 72. Dr Paul Bauert OAM Director of Paediatrics, Royal Darwin Hospital 73. Dr Olivia Ball Director, Remedy Australia 74. Mr Anthony Craig DLP Democratic Labour Party of Australia Federal Executive Spokesperson for West Papua Human Rights and Democracy 75. Dr Barri Phatarfod Doctors for Refugees 76. Dr Richard Kidd Doctors for Refugees 77. Professor Ray Jureidini Doha, Qatar 78. Dr Jennifer Cramer Edith Cowan University 79. Dr Louise Earnshaw Enterprise Exchange International 80. Ms Misha Coleman Executive Officer Australian Churches Refugee Taskforce 81. Dr Michael Brisco Flinders University 82. Mr Allan Asher Former Commonwealth and Immigration Ombudsman 83. Mr Simon Tatz Former Director of Communications, Mental Health Council of Australia 84. Mr Nick Cowdery Former NSW Director of Public Prosecutions 85. Kuranda Seyit Forum on Australia’s Islamic Relations 86. Dr Mick Leahy Geelong Interchurch Social Justice Network 87. Ms Heather Gridley Honorary Fellow, Victoria University 88. Mr Paul Bottrill House of Welcome Sydney 89. Dr Niko Leka Hunter Asylum Seeker Awareness 90. Ms Helen Wilson Illawarra Greens 91. Ms Irene Wilson Inclusive Catholics Victoria Inc. 92. Dr Susan Hawthorne James Cook University 93. Dr Vacy Vlazna Justice for Palestine Matters Sydney 94. Professor Emeritus David Legge LaTrobe Univeristy 95. Emeritus Professor Joseph Camilleri LaTrobe University 96. Ms Robyn Yucel LaTrobe University 97. Associate Professor Adam Schembri LaTrobe University 98. Dr Anthony Jukes LaTrobe University 99. Dr Gabrielle Hodge LaTrobe University 100. Dr Maureen Long LaTrobe University 101. Dr Stefan Schnell LaTrobe University 102. Sr Francis Mansour LCM Little Company of Mary Refugee Project 103. Sister Libby Rogerson Loreto Sisters Australia & South East Asia 104. Ms Catherine Rytmeister Macquarie University 105. Dr Ashley Lavelle Macquarie University 106. Dr Glenn Carruthers Macquarie University 107. Dr Elizabeth Schier Macquarie University 108. Dr Jonathan McGuire Macquarie University 109. Reverend Subramaniam Manopavan Minister Uniting Church Aspley QLD 110. Professor Louise Newman AM Monash University 111. Emeritus Professor Graeme Smith Monash University 112. Professor Leon Piterman AM Monash University 113. Professor Sue Webb Monash University 114. Dr Miriam Faine Monash University 115. Associate Professor Mary Lou Monash University Rasmussen 116. Dr Graham Parr Monash University 117. Adjunct Professor Gerald Burke Monash University 118. Professor Jane Kenway Monash University 119. Dr Narelle Warren Monash University 120. Associate Professor Lucas Walsh Monash University 121. Professor Mark Wallace Monash University 122. Professor Ilana Snyder Monash University 123. Dr Rosalyn Black Monash University 124. Dr Dani Barrington Monash University 125. Dr Michaela Riddell Monash University 126. Dr Stephen Saunders Monash University 127. Dr David Zyngier Monash University 128. Adjunct Associate Professor Susan Monash University Feldman 129. Mr David Feith Monash University 130. Professor Lisa Cameron Monash University 131. Dr Alice Gaby Monash University 132. Dr Leanne Weber Monash University 133. Ms Rosmund Winter Monash University 134. Associate Professor Phil Andrews Monash University 135. Associate Professor Andrea Monash University Whittaker 136. Ms Anna Copeland Murdoch University 137. Associate Professor Anne Pedersen Murdoch University 138. Reverend Elenie Poulos National Director, UnitingJustice Australia 139. Father Peter Maher Newtown Catholic Church 140. Mr Stephen Blanks NSW Council for Civil Liberties 141. Dr Lesley Lynch NSW Council for Civil Liberties 142. Mr Henry Gorniak Our Lady of Graces Parish Social Justice Group 143. Greg Trainor Pastor Cabramatta Vineyard Church 144. Father Claude Mostowik Pax Christi Australia & Missionaries of the Sacred Heart Justice and Peace Centre 145. Father Pan Jordan OP Pax Christi Queensland 146. Reverend Dr Margaret Mayman Pitt Street Uniting Church Sydney 147. Rev Peter Botha Port Stephens Uniting Church 148. Ms Peta Anne Molloy Presentation Congregation Queensland 149. Mr Jack Smit Project SafeCom Inc. 150. Associate Professor Ignacio Correa- Queenland University of Technology Velez 151. Mr Paul McKinnon Refugee Action Collective, Brisbane 152. Peter Dreisiger Refugee Rights Watch 153. Dr Mike Starr Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne 154. Dr Garry Warne AM Royal Children’s Hospital, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute 155. Dr Susie Burke Senior Psychologist, Public Interest, Environment and Disaster Response, Australian Psychological Society 156. Sister Colleen Jackson rsc Sisters of Charity Australia 157. Sister Susan Connelly Sisters of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart 158. Sister Mary Cresp Sisters of St Joseph Centre-West Region 159. Reverend Paul Devitt Social Justice Group of St Mary & St Joseph, Orange NSW 160. Mr Denis Quinn Social Justice, Ecology and Peace Group, St Peters and Paul Parish, Kiama NSW 161. Ms Pauline Coady St Bedes Social Justice Group 162. Professor Klaus Neumann Swinburne University of Technology 163. Professor Sandra Gifford Swinburne University of Technology 164. Professor Linda Briskman Swinburne University of Technology 165. Dr Suzie Gardner Sydney Children’s Hospital Community Health Care 166. Dr Jonathan Page Sydney Insight Meditators 167. Dr Ameneh Khatami The Children’s Hospital, Westmead 168. Sister Lynne Crilley The Presentation Sisters, Wagga Wagga 169. Professor Emeritus Geoffrey Universities of Cambridge, Adelaide and Harcourt New South Wales 170. Professor Jon Jureidini University of Adelaide 171. Dr Mandy Treagus University of Adelaide 172. Professor Martha Augoustinos University of Adelaide 173. Adjunct Associate Professor Amanda University of Canberra Gordon Honorary Fellow of the Australian Psychological Society 174. Dr John Hill University of Divinity Melbourne 175. Dr Bruce Duncan University of Divinity Melbourne 176. Professor Tony Coady University of Melbourne 177. Associate Professor Charles Coppel University
Recommended publications
  • Pro Bono Voco Issue 4: November 2020
    AUSTRALIAN Pro Bono Voco PRO BONO CENTRE Natalie Wade: Disability rights advocacy Dentons: Large scale Measuring impact at the Centre wetlands conservation National Justice Project: Tackling Kingsford Legal Centre: Pro bono discrimination through strategic litigation FAL Lawyers: Pro bono support in the time of COVID at a boutique firm Pro Bono Guide to the Climate Crisis: Chloe O’Brien: COVID and ‘the new normal’ The Centre’s new resource Rosalind Croucher: Pro bono DLA Piper: Learning in the time of COVID-19 Spotlight on Our Board: Jonathon Hunyor & the Australian Human Rights Commission Growing pro bono participation by in-house Inspiring Pro Bono Action ISSUE 4 | NOV 2020 Thanks to Kingsford Legal Centre Pro Bono Voco for use of front cover photo Many of us are contemplating how we’ll fill our cups over the Chloe O’Brien, a lawyer in the pro bono team of holiday break to restore our mental, physical and emotional Simmons & Simmons in London, discusses challenges Each week the Centre distributes energy after such a challenging year. I hope this edition of Voco and opportunities presented by COVID-19 and her work a Weekly Round-Up of the top news will aid you in this quest! This edition’s focus is on celebrating as a volunteer Policy & Project Officer at the Centre while stories relating to pro bono legal the work of lawyers in Australia and abroad in advancing on furlough leave this year. Chloe was a great asset to work and access to justice through human rights and social justice to create a better, brighter, the team and we are grateful for her support, all Pro Bono in the News.
    [Show full text]
  • Submission to the Royal Commission Into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability
    Submission to the Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability Submission on laws, policies and practice affecting migrants, refugees and citizens from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds January 2021 Sydney Centre for International Law The University of Sydney Law School Building (F10) Camperdown Campus, The University of Sydney NSW 2006 [email protected] With Macquarie Law School Social Justice Clinic About the Sydney Centre for International Law The Sydney Centre for International Law (SCIL) was established in 2003 as a centre of excellence in research and teaching in international law. The centre fosters innovative, interdisciplinary scholarship across the international legal field, and also provides an avenue for the public to access international legal expertise. It operates within the University of Sydney Law School, building upon its well-recognised history of strength in this area. This submission was prepared by the following SCIL interns under the supervision and with the assistance of SCIL Director Professor Mary Crock. Parts 1 – 3; Part 10 Sarah Charak*; Wendy Chen*; Angus Chen*; Sherry Xueyi Jin; John McCrorie*; Leah Park; Rachel Sun*; Emma Louise Tirabosco;* Siobhan Walsh; Frank Gang Yang. Parts 4 - 6 Freya Appleford*; Sarah Charak; Angus Chen; Jake Jerogin*; Emma Kench*; Maxine McHugh; Miranda Hutchenson; Anton Nguyen*; Alexandra Touw; Jiann Yap; Alan Zheng*; Kevin Zou*; Part 7 Jess Mitchell*; Anisha Gunawardhana*; Part 8 Mary Crock; Olivia Morris; Part 9 Mary Crock with Macquarie University Law School Social Justice Clinic and the National Justice Project– Associate Professor Daniel Ghezelbash; Thomas Boyes, Sarah Croake, Jemy Ma; and Sara Hakim* (as a volunteer at the National Justice Project).
    [Show full text]
  • Black to the Future: Making the Case for Indigenist Health Humanities
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health Article Black to the Future: Making the Case for Indigenist Health Humanities Chelsea Watego 1,*, Lisa J. Whop 2 , David Singh 3, Bryan Mukandi 4, Alissa Macoun 5 , George Newhouse 6 , Ali Drummond 7, Amy McQuire 8, Janet Stajic 9 , Helena Kajlich 8 and Mark Brough 1 1 School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4059, Australia; [email protected] 2 National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra 2601, Australia; [email protected] 3 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4067, Australia; [email protected] 4 School of Languages and Cultures, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4067, Australia; [email protected] 5 School of Justice, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4000, Australia; [email protected] 6 Macquarie Law School, Macquarie University, Sydney 2109, Australia; [email protected] 7 School of Nursing, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4059, Australia; [email protected] 8 School of Political Science and International Studies, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4067, Australia; [email protected] (A.M.); [email protected] (H.K.) 9 Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4067, Australia; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +61-07-3138-0212 Citation: Watego, C.; Whop, L.J.; Abstract: This paper outlines the development of Indigenist Health Humanities as a new and Singh, D.; Mukandi, B.; Macoun, A.; innovative field of research building an intellectual collective capable of bridging the knowledge gap Newhouse, G.; Drummond, A.; that hinders current efforts to close the gap in Indigenous health inequality.
    [Show full text]
  • Breaking the Australian Silence
    Breaking the Australian Silence John Pilger 2009 City of Sydney Peace Prize Lecture CPACS Occasional Paper No. 09/2 Centre for Peace & Conflict Studies ISBN 978-1-74210-172-9 Breaking the Australian Silence 2009 City of Sydney Peace Prize Lecture Author: John Pilger Complete transcript of the 2009 City of Sydney Peace Prize lecture as delivered by John Pilger at the Sydney Opera House on 5 November 2009. Copyright © 2009 Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies First published 2009, by: The Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies The University of Sydney NSW 2006 Australia http://www.arts.usyd.edu.au/centres/cpacs 2009 City of Sydney Peace Prize Lecture - CPACS Occasional Paper No. 09/2 2009 City of Sydney Peace Prize Lecture Breaking the Australian Silence John Pilger Speech delivered at the Sydney Opera House, 5 November, 2009 Thank you all for coming tonight, and my thanks to the City of Sydney and especially to the Sydney Peace Foundation for awarding me the Peace Prize. It’s an honour I cherish, because it comes from where I come from. I am a seventh generation Australian. My great-great grandfather landed not far from here, on November 8th, 1821. He wore leg irons, each weighing four pounds. His name was Francis McCarty. He was an Irishman, convicted of the crime of insurrection and “uttering unlawful oaths”. In October of the same year, an 18 year old girl called Mary Palmer stood in the dock at Middlesex Gaol and was sentenced to be transported to New South Wales for the term of her natural life.
    [Show full text]
  • FABC Nov 07.Indd
    Ver # 4 Update NOV 07:Update March 07**NEW R5 .qxd 12/11/07 4:01 PM Page 1 Friends of the ABC (NSW) Inc. quarterly newsletter November-December 2007 Vol 16, No. 5 update friends of the abc NSW FABC AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN Enemies of the ABC Darce Cassidy BROADCASTING for 2007 GOES TO While there is little to distin- ROBYN WILLIAMS and the RADIO guish between various parties on the issues of ABC funding, and NATIONAL SCIENCE SHOW advertising on the ABC, there are significant differences with regard to the appointment of the ABC Board. All governments have tended Producer (1972), and included to appoint their own sympathisers and presen- Investigations, Ockham’s Razor to the ABC’s governing body, but ter of The and In Conversation which fea- the Howard government has Science tures leading science writer and taken board stacking to new Show since broadcaster Robyn Williams talk- heights. The Fraser government its launch ing one-on-one with science pro- made generally conservative in August fessionals and other leading figures. appointments, but playwright 1975, David Williamson was a notable Robyn has Robyn describes The Science exception.The Hawke/Keating given 32 Show as follows: government appointed mostly years of outstanding and distin- “The program is essentially Labor sympathisers, but an excep- guished service to both the ABC unpredictable. This is to allow tion was the former Liberal min- and the listening public of maximum flexibility to accommo- ister Ian McPhee. Australia. Working within very date new material and talent. It But for the Howard govern- limited financial resources, Robyn can range from the regular maga- ment selecting a predominatly has, over those 32 years, provided zine program to lectures, scripted conservative board was not us with a program of a consistent- series, of which several by the late enough.
    [Show full text]
  • Project Safecom News and Updates Sunday, 25 October 2015
    Project SafeCom News and Updates Sunday, 25 October 2015 Subscribe and become a member here: http://www.safecom.org.au/ref-member.htm 1. Richard Ackland: There's no decency in how Australia has treated Abyan. No matter what the truth is 2. Silenced and sidelined: We've already passed judgment on Abyan, so why bother with courts? 3. Refugee rape victim says Immigration Minister Peter Dutton is telling lies about abortion 4. Human rights lawyer urges Peter Dutton to let Somali woman have abortion in Australia 5. Somali refugee flown out of Australia denies saying she declined termination 6. Peter Dutton says advocates for Somali refugee 'Abyan' have let her down 7. Hundreds protest in Sydney in support of Somali refugee allegedly raped on Nauru 8. Australia spent estimated $130,000 on RAAF jet to fly pregnant Somali refugee to Nauru 9. Peter Dutton details medical care provided to Somali refugee in Australia 10. Peter Dutton indicates Somali refugee may yet return to Australia for abortion if she asks to 11. Abyan case: Dutton criticises media coverage of alleged rape victim as 'unhelpful', 'regrettable' 12. MEDIA RELEASE: Abyan needs help, not harrassment 13. Nauru rape case: Police 'stopped off to watch firework show' before ferrying Iranian asylum seeker to station 14. Scott Morrison voiced opposition to late-term abortion in 2014 asylum case 15. 'Extraordinary': Somali refugee flown to Australia for abortion was expected to reach quick decision: Gillian Triggs 16. Greens suggest Nauru expert Philip Moss as advocate for refugee Abyan 17. Peter Dutton says further oversight of asylum seekers unnecessary 18.
    [Show full text]
  • The Aboriginal Question: Enough Is Enough!
    1 The Aboriginal Question: Enough is Enough! Paper delivered to the 29th Conference of The Samuel Griffith Society by John Stone Perth, 27 August, 2017 2 The Aboriginal Question: Enough is Enough! I begin with a welcome to country – a welcome to our country. In doing so I take as my model that employed by Alan Anderson in commencing his paper1 at our 21st Conference in Adelaide. So let me begin by acknowledging the traditional owners of this land: King George III and his heirs and assigns. Introduction: I first list some matters that arise when discussing Aboriginal questions: • I refer throughout to Aboriginal people, not Indigenous ones. Most people here, I imagine, are indigenous (i.e., native-born) Australians, and the Orwellian arrogation of that term by the Aboriginal industry should not be condoned. • I refer throughout only to Aboriginal people, not to the job lot term Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. The latter – a Melanesian people – do not like being lumped in with their mainland counterparts, whom they rightly regard as having been Stone Age “hunter gatherer” nomads; by contrast, Melanesians developed agricultural gardens and settled land holdings to go with them. • I reject the pretentious terms “First Peoples” or “First Nations”. This United Nations-derived terminology asserts Aboriginal superiority over the rest of us, whereas a foundation stone of our nation is that we are all, and equally, Australians. I am giving this paper because, having observed Aboriginal politics for the past 50 years, it’s time to say, “It’s over”. Our once seemingly boundless goodwill towards our Aboriginal fellow Australians is becoming exhausted.
    [Show full text]
  • Senator the Honorable Scott Ryan President of the Senate Parliament
    17 July 2018 Senator the Honorable Scott Ryan Honorable Tony Smith MP President of the Senate Speaker of the House of Representatives Parliament of Australia Parliament of Australia PO Box 6100 PO Box 6022 Senate House of Representatives Parliament House Parliament House Canberra ACT 2600 Canberra ACT 2600 cc: Honorable Christian Porter MP cc: Honorable Mark Dreyfus QC, MP Attorney-General for Australia Shadow Attorney-General for Australia Commonwealth Parliamentary Offices PO Box 6022 Exchange Plaza House of Representatives 2 The Esplanade Parliament House Perth WA 6000 Canberra ACT 2600 cc: Honorable Angus Taylor MP Minister for Law Enforcement and Cyber Security PO Box 6022 House of Representatives Parliament House Canberra ACT 2600 To Whom It May Concern: The undersigned domestic and international organizations and experts write today to urge you to protect Australia’s cybersecurity. Specifically, we ask you not to pursue legislation that would undermine tools, policies, and technologies critical to protecting individual rights, safeguarding the economy, and providing security both in Australia and around the world.1 Further, we encourage you to publicly affirm your support for strong encryption. In early June, Minister for Law Enforcement and Cyber Security, Honorable Angus Taylor MP, gave a speech asserting, “there will […] need to be obligations on industry – telecommunications and technology service providers – to cooperate with agencies to get access to [encrypted] data.”2 Notably, he clarified that the Australian government would not seek to require “access to a decryption key otherwise under the sole control of a user.”3 While the apparent commitment to avoid an escrow system for encryption keys is a positive step, we note that, generally speaking, all known methods of bypassing, altering, or watering down security tools or technologies to provide law enforcement access have been shown to carry severe risk.
    [Show full text]
  • Statement of Eminent Australians on the Continuing Damage
    Statement of Eminent Australians on the continuing damage caused by the discrimination, racism and lack of justice towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, exemplified by the continuation of the Northern Territory Intervention Whi le the Australian nation deliberates on the future of its relationship with the First ations of this land, most Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples arc focussed on the continuing discrimination, racism and lack of justice, shown towards them by Federal, State and Territo') Governments in so many areas. An obvious example is the failure often years of Federal Government INTERVENTION in the Northern Territory where 73 remote Aboriginal communities (and hundreds more in homelands in hinterlands) remain subjected to discriminatory legislation that no other Australian citizen endures in its crushing totality. The signatories to this statement suppo1t the recent demands by orthem Territory Elders for an immediate repeal of the Intervention measures, some of which were strengthened and extended for ten years in 2012, by the misleadingly renamed 'Stronger Futures' legislation. We support the calls by Elders in their June 29th 2017 statement for an end to government control of community livi ng areas and the return of community control of housing, employment and local governance. We also support their insistence on an apology and their right to determine their futures and distinctive pathways. 1 First ations' voices have been increasingly ignored since the abolition of ATS IC in 2004 and the Intervention in 2007 and conditions have deteriorated. It is time that Federal and Territory politicians acknowledged the independent assessments2 that the Intervention measures continue to fai l3 and the necessity of establishing genuine self-determination and community control.
    [Show full text]
  • 07 July 29 2021 Clarion
    CLArion Issue No 2106 01 July 2021 CLA on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CivilLibertiesAus/ Email newsletter of Civil Liberties Australia (A04043) Email: Secretary(at)cla.asn.au Web: http://www.cla.asn.au/ ____________________________________________ Power battle in parliament: MPs & the people v. the Executive Slowly, quietly, there is a potential revolution under way in federal parliament. Committees of parliament are starting to take back power from the Executive. The Executive has bludgeoned its way to dominance by usurping powers to itself over many decades. Both Coalition and ALP governments have acted in the same way. But some long-serving and experienced MPs are realising the dangers to democracy caused by parliament ceding power to an appointed political body – the Executive – which is made up of mates, close factional allies and special-issue colleagues of the Prime Minister. The first two items below indicate the wrestling match over power that is occurring. At the same time, the “national cabinet” is being heavily questioned as to whether this sudden prime ministerial thought bubble a year or so ago is any way to run a federation nation competently and with good governance. Stand by for more battles over where power should lie: the quarantine facility debate is a precursor to the upcoming disputes. Parl committee wants human rights front and centre The parliamentary joint committee on human rights (the HR committee, or the PJCHR) is arguing that ALL ‘money/financial’ bills must go before parliament with an assessment of their potential impact on human rights attached. This does not currently happen. There is no human rights impact postulated for government spending.
    [Show full text]
  • Project Safecom News and Updates Monday, 12 October 2015
    Project SafeCom News and Updates Monday, 12 October 2015 Subscribe and become a member here: http://www.safecom.org.au/ref-member.htm 1. Why Malcolm Turnbull must dump the citizenship bill 2. UN drops plan to help move climate-change affected people 3. Anti-Islam campaigner Geert Wilders video replicates controversial 'No Way' campaign 4. Julian Burnside: Why can't we know what's happening on Nauru and Manus Island? 5. Pamela Curr: The shame of Australia's offshore war on women 6. The Saturday Paper: The next phase of the refugee debate 7. Crikey Editorial: Stop the secrecy 8. When will the Turnbull government act on the sexual violence epidemic on Nauru? 7. Family of Iranian woman raped on Nauru at breaking point, say refugee advocates 8. MEDIA RELEASE: Urgent assistance needed for pregnant Somali refugee 9. Refugee raped on Nauru begs Malcolm Turnbull to let her come to Australia for an abortion 10. Bill Shorten says refugee raped on Nauru should be allowed to come to Australia for an abortion 11. Shorten demands Government help alleged Nauru rape victim seeking abortion 12. Nauru: mother of alleged gang-rape victim attempts suicide 13. Thousands sign online petition demanding a rape victim on Nauru be allowed to come to Australia for an abortion 14. Royal Children's Hospital doctors refuse to return children to detention 15. Hospital doctors protest to demand release of children from detention 16. Children 'almost impossible to treat' while detained, Royal Children's Hospital doctors say 17. Liberal Russell Broadbent calls for end to 'unacceptable' detention of children 18.
    [Show full text]
  • Implementing OPCAT in Australia 2020
    Implementing OPCAT in Australia 2020 © Australian Human Rights Commission 2020. We encourage the dissemination and exchange of information presented in this publication and endorse the use of the Australian Governments Open Access and Licensing Framework (AusGOAL). Implementing OPCAT in Australia All material presented in this publication is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 2020 International Licence, with the exception of: • photographs and images • the Commission’s logo, any branding or trademarks • where otherwise indicated. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode. Australian Human Rights Commission In essence, you are free to copy, communicate and adapt the publication, as long as you attribute the Australian Human Rights Commission and abide by the other licence terms. Please give attribution to: © Australian Human Rights Commission. ISBN: 978-1-925917-23-9 Implementing OPCAT in Australia • 2020 For further information about copyright in this publication, please contact: Communications Unit Australian Human Rights Commission GPO Box 5218 SYDNEY NSW 2001 Telephone: (02) 9284 9600 TTY: 1800 620 241 Email: [email protected] Design and layout: Jody Stocovaz Cover image: iStock Internal photography: iStock The Australian Human Rights Commission is Australia’s National Human Rights Institution. It is an independent statutory organisation with responsibility for leading the promotion and protection of human rights in Australia. Further information about the Commission can be found at www.humanrights.gov.au/ about-commission. Authors: Sophie Farthing, John Howell and Edward Santow. Acknowledgements: • President Rosalind Croucher, National Children’s Rights Commissioner Megan Mitchell, Disability Discrimination Commissioner Ben Gauntlett.
    [Show full text]