What atheists cry out during sex

[h/t: j/m]

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This City is Dead

1985 documentary film by Stephen Stockwell on the destruction of South Brisbane ahead of the 1988 World Expo: “Leisure in the Age of Technology”.

Dedicated to Sir Johannes “Joh” Bjelke-Petersen, KCMG (January 13, 1911–April 23, 2005).

Rot in Hell.


This City is Pig

Posted in Film, History, State / Politics, That's Capitalism! | Tagged | 2 Comments

Street Art and/or Street Politics

We welcome the news that bullets are being fired into museums and palaces, into the works of Reubens, instead of into the houses of the poor in working class neighborhoods!

We welcome it when open struggle between capital and labor takes place where culture and art feel at home. The art and culture that gag the poor, that delight the bourgeois on Sunday and accommodate oppression on Monday.

Every expression of artistic indifference is counterrevolutionary!

Fnarr fnarr.

This Wednesday night: Opening of the On the Wall exhibit of ‘international street art’. “Our modern art gallery is dedicated to bringing some of the finest international artists to Australia, including world renowned stencil artist Blek Le Rat and Alexander Hoda, the enfant terrible of English sculpture.”

LOL.

    6pm
    Metro Gallery
    1214 High Street
    Armadale

This Friday night: Lucio, a Spanish-language documentary film which tells the dramatic story of Lucio Urtubia, a sort of anarchist Robin Hood whose militancy brought him into contact with some of the most significant events of our era. Plus Monson, riot, and other fun footage.

    7pm
    Melbourne Anarchist Resource Centre (MARC)
    62 St Georges Rd
    Northcote

Posted in Anarchism, Art, Film | 1 Comment

Niko Puhakka : Finnish neo-Nazi

Finnish MMA Niko Puhakka‘s recent victories in Poland over Danny van Bergen and Borys Mańkowski have helped to generated some (presumably) unwelcome headlines for the neo-Nazi skinhead.

Finnish neo-fascist at martial arts show in Poland
September 21, 2010

Niko Puhakka, a neo-fascist from Finland was allowed to fight at a martial arts show in Lodz, central Poland and show off his Nazi tattoos.

During bouts organized by KSW, the premiere mixed martial arts organization in Poland, Puhakka showed off his […] naked chest with the neo-Nazi organization Blood&Honour tattooed on his chest.

The fascist organization, which calls for violence against “the enemies of the race”, is illegal in Poland.

“It’s a scandal that a neo-Nazi was allowed to participate in the show,” Marcin Kornak from “Never Again” association which fights against racism, xenophobia and intolerance told Polish Radio.

“Niko Puhakka is known for his neo-fascist views and for exposing his tattoos showing Celtic crosses, a racist symbol of “white power”. Yet, nobody, not even Polsat TV, which broadcast the show, asked him to cover them up,” said Kornak, adding that until recently Puhakka was sponsored by a clothing company which produces clothes with Nazi symbols.

The company Kornak refers to is Hoelzer Reich. Controversy over HR’s neo-Nazi leanings eventually resulted in its product being banned from UFC.

It may seem slightly odd for a Polish fight promotion to tolerate the promotion of neo-Nazism by one of its fighters, but in fairness to KSW, it’s not just Polish business that consorts with fascists: in Sydney, Returned & Services League clubs routinely allow neo-Nazis, anti-Semites and other racists to enjoy camaraderie and mateship by holding conferences on their premises; we will remember them blah blah blah.

As for Puhakka, the bonehead will invade Poland again for KSW XV, where he will fight Maciej Górski. Since HR’s banning, Puhakka has changed his MySpace page to ‘Private’, so precisely which other Übermensch he’s mates with, and how he’s coping with the demise of ‘Kill Baby Kill’, is unknown, but he continues to wear both a Life Rune and B&H tattoo on his chest and therefore, it would seem, his Nazi heart on his sleeve.

See also : Toni Valtonen | Doug Sonier | Hoelzer Reich : White Christmas Catalogue! (December 9, 2009).

Mentally ill Russian cagefighter arrested in Norway after hospital break-out
RIA Novosti
September 23, 2010

A former Russian mixed martial arts fighter was detained in Norway a month after he escaped from a mental ward in St. Petersburg, Norwegian media said.

Vyacheslav Datsik, 33, was arrested when he applied for political asylum at the Police Immigration Unit in Oslo. The “bulky, muscular and redheaded Russian” also handed a loaded revolver to the officer, Aftenposten wrote.

Datsik was also involved in political activities as a member of the neo-Nazi party, Slavic Union, which was banned in Russia this march but reportedly opened its office in Norway. The party posted an online video saying Datsik arrived to the country onboard an arms-trafficking vessel.

The video also shows Datsik posing in front of an “Oslo SS” banner, with an axe and a gun in his hands.

“I am not a nationalist. I’m a racist,” Datsik was quoted as saying in the online edition of the Verdens Gang (VG) newspaper…

Posted in Anti-fascism | Tagged | 10 Comments

Long Road to Freedom or FBI ~versus~ FRSO

Activists in the US done got raided by the FBI. According to one of the groups targetted (Freedom Road Socialist Organization):

The activists involved have done nothing wrong and are refusing to be pulled into conversations with the FBI about their political views or organizing against war and occupation. The activists are involved with many groups, including: the Palestine Solidarity Group, Students for a Democratic Society, the Twin-Cities Anti-War Committee, the Colombia Action Network, the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, and the National Committee to Free Ricardo Palmera (a Colombian Political Prisoner).

Freedom Road Socialist Organization is to be confused with the Freedom Road Socialist Organization.

The raids took place just a coupla days after members of FRSO and other US leftists met (September 21) with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad while he was chillin’ in New Yawk. The war hero with the wonky leg got into heaps of trouble (!) when a few days later he told the United Nations General Assembly he reckoned Nimrod countered Hazrat Abraham, Pharaoh countered Hazrat Moses and the greedy countered Hazrat Jesus Christ and Hazrat Mohammad there were three ways of understanding 911, including:

That some segments within the U.S. government orchestrated the attack to reverse the declining American economy and its grips on the Middle East in order also to save the Zionist regime.

The majority of the American people as well as other nations and politicians agree with this view.

*nudge nudge* *wink wink*

See also : Australian Federal Police (AFP) ~versus~ Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) (August 20, 2010).

Posted in State / Politics, War on Terror | Tagged | 1 Comment

2010 Ian Stuart Donaldson memorial gig…

A road safety announcement.

Fnarr fnarr.

Nazis… shouldn’t drive (their cars)

They shouldn’t be driving day or night
They can’t think left, they can only think right
The sun reflects off their bald head
Like Ian Stuart they’re going to wind up dead

They should’ve paid attention in driver’s ed
Instead of hating foreigners, queers and reds
Keep your eyes on the highway you loser thug
Now you’re squished on the highway like a bug

Ian, Ian, King of the Pit, no friend to you or me
Aaaaaaaaaah! Watch out for that tree

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Charity is Big Business : Toby Hall and responsibilities that need to be taken seriously

Toby Hall, CEO of Mission Australia (MA), thinks it’s ‘Time for fresh thoughts on welfare reform’. Precisely what prompted Toby to call for a re-think is unclear. Presumably, it’s because we have a new government — and new governments demand new ideas, and new visions.

At the very least, they provide new business opportunities.

Toby begins his stirring call-to-alms by noting that it’s eleven years since the last major report into reforming Australia’s welfare system. The reminder is entirely apposite, for although Tony fails to mention it, it was MA’s previous CEO who gave his name to this report (produced by the HoWARd government’s Reference Group on Welfare Reform, chaired by Patrick McClure). Toby describes ‘The McClure Report’ as having provided an opportunity for a radical overhaul of a broken system, one which was — sadly — missed.

*cough*

Toby was appointed to the role of CEO at MA in July, 2006; prior to this, he was Chief Operating Officer @ World Vision Australia. Toby took over the role of CEO from Patrick McClure. Appointed to the position in 1997, in 2003, McClure boasted that “When I came to Mission Australia, the budget was relatively small at only $40 million; now it’s $160 million”. When McClure left, the annual budget had increased to $250 million. MA’s annual budget for 2008/9 was over $308 million — of which almost 90% was derived from sucking on the Government teat. (By way of contrast, total revenue for The Salvation Army for the same period was $295.3 million, of which approximately half was derived from the corporate nanny state.)

MA’s expanding budget has been made possible by the continued privatisation of government services (especially in the housing and employment sectors), of which MA — along with other Christian charities/businesses such as The Salvation Army — have been massive beneficiaries. Further, in 2009, MA — the tax-exempt business, inspired by Christian values — answered the question ‘What Would Jesus Do?’ by buying a failed national childcare centre network. Thus in December 2009, GoodStart, a consortium of businesses/charities including Mission Australia and the Brotherhood of St Laurence, bought ABC Learning. The purchase was assisted by tens of millions of dollars in corporate welfare payments.

The Government will be forking out more money, a $15 million loan, to help the GoodStart consortium fund the acquisition while NAB is also providing new funding.

This is on top of the $58 million allocated by the Government to keep the unprofitable centres – which were sold earlier this year – afloat.

The Government has set aside another $50 million to pay redundancies, and other entitlements, owed to former ABC Learning employees.

The acquisition of ABC Learning by the consortium of Australian charities/businesses was further investigated by Adele Horin in ‘Racing to the rescue’ (The Age, May 15, 2010):

It was an audacious bid aimed at forging a bold new direction in childcare. Adele Horin recounts how a group of charities pulled off the deal of the decade to buy ABC Learning.

Toby (Profile: Toby Hall, Lucinda Schmidt, The Age, October 10, 2007) last sat down to a big fat slice of the Government cake when the KRudd Government replaced the HoWARd Government’s ‘Job Network’ with ‘Job Services Australia’.

What Toby’s analysis boils down to is a call for Government to support the enactment by MA of stricter disciplinary measures upon its clients. In brief, the suspension of their welfare payments should they fail to meet the corporation’s ‘activity tests’. In prosaic terms, Toby is asking for a bigger stick with which to beat the unemployed. From MA’s perspective, this makes good business sense; it also constitutes a further re-alignment of the provision of state welfare along business lines. It’s in this context that what prompted Toby to mash his keyboard becomes clearer:

Recently Mission Australia was asked to report on our experiences of job seekers complying with their obligations to look for work while receiving income support.

These obligations are known as a job seeker’s ‘activity test’.

Our frontline staff told us that a significant number of job seekers were using multiple occurrences of illness as a reason for not looking for work but failing to provide the required medical certificates to support their claims.

And if that wasn’t enough, in a large number of cases where we brought such behaviour to Centrelink’s attention for action the matter was overturned.

In the six months between July and December 2009, Mission Australia submitted more than 20,000 reports to Centrelink – known as Participation Reports – for issues of job seekers not living up to their obligations.

According to our figures, Centrelink overturned 45 per cent of these.

Now, on some occasions, having our reports overturned is to be expected.

But 45 per cent?

¡Ay, caramba!

(MA’s ‘Submission to Independent Review the Job Seeker Compliance Framework, July 2010’, is downloadable as an RTF.)

Hall prefaces his remarks by asserting that:

There is no doubt that a fair Australia must have an adequate safety net that provides unemployed, sick, disabled and vulnerable people with the support they need.

Although he provides no reason why there should be ‘no doubt’, presumably, on some level, Toby understands that, without an income of some sort, most people find it very difficult to eat — and therefore to live. In other words, in the absence of ‘an adequate safety net’, many people may starve to death.

Some might argue — and have, in fact, quite vociferously — that if death results from unprofitability, however unfortunate this outcome might be for those who undergo it, it is in fact right and proper, and to the benefit of society as a whole. “In essence a sharp message to say ‘This is a responsibility that needs to be taken seriously’.”

Beyond this, two things.

First, while the concern of a New Zealand-born businessman for a fair Australia — a businessman who made the first of several fortunes as an accountant with Salomon Brothers in London — may be considered praiseworthy (and I’d be happy to wager a small amount on Toby receiving official recognition of this concern at some point in the not-too-distant future), it does nothing to explain the evolution of the welfare state, or the reasons behind its foundation. Secondly, Australia exists as part of a global economic system, and that system cheerfully, and daily, condemns tens of thousands of children, as well their parents, to death — as either a direct or indirect result of poverty. Which is to say, wealth. Whatever the merits of A Fair Australia, in The Real World, global capitalism ensures global misery.

    Salomon Brothers, Hall’s previous employer, was the subject of a book-length treatment, Liar’s Poker (1989), by another of its former employees, Michael Lewis. (See also his account of ‘The End’ (sic) of ‘The era that defined Wall Street’, November 11, 2008.)

As for the rest: Toby expresses concern for the enervating effects of ‘passive welfare’ (citing a “report released last week by the Australasian Faculty of Occupational and Environmental Medicine”) and, following Noel Pearson, the exemplary case of Aboriginal welfare dependency. Or:

Take the Disability Support Pension for example.

Between 1996 and 2007 the number of people receiving the Disability Support Pension (DSP) actually increased from 500,000 to more than 700,000.

Growth in the number of DSP recipients was greater than in any other pension category in the decade to 2007.

It’s estimated that 20 per cent of this total – 140,000 people – are thought to be capable of work.

We can’t let this situation go on.

A few points.

First, the population in 1996 was 17.9 million; 10 years later, it was approximately 19.6 million. According to these figures, the number of people living in luxury on the DSP increased during this period from 2.8% to 3.6% of the general population. Secondly:

The Howard government also consistently raised concern about the increasing number of Australians in receipt of the Disability Support Pension – up from around 300,000 in 1990 to around 700,000 in 2004. Some commentators attributed this increase to liberalised eligibility criteria that expanded beyond solely medical impairment to include job availability, while others argued that it primarily reflected a growth in the number of people with disabilities and limited job opportunities for older males (Parliamentary Library, 2005). Similar concerns were expressed about the sharp rise in the number of single parents receiving parenting payments over the past 20 years totalling, in 2006, approximately 450,000 out of a total population of more than 21 million.

In its 2005 Budget, the Howard government introduced tighter eligibility rules for the Disability Support Pension (DSP) in order to force thousands of recipients with a limited work capacity onto unemployment benefits. From July 2006 onwards, new applicants for DSP were granted the pension only if they were able to work less than 15 hours a week, reduced from 30 hours a week. Those who were ineligible for DSP would instead mainly go onto the Newstart Allowance and be subject to a part-time work test (if they were able to work between 16 and 30 hours a week).

In addition, new applicants for the Parenting Payment (PP) would be transferred to the Newstart Allowance when their youngest child turned six, and become subject to a part-time work test of at least 15 hours per week. Current recipients would stay on PP, but would be required to seek work. The disabled and lone parents affected by the changes faced a major cut in their weekly income given that Newstart would be paid at a lower rate than both DSP and PP (approx.AU$40–50 less per fortnight) with higher withdrawal rates and lower tax rebates, and they would lose pensioner concessions. They would also be forced to comply with mutual obligation requirements, and the government announced, ominously, that charities would be asked to pay the rent and food of single parents who had their payments suspended due to not meeting work requirements so that their children would not suffer (Karvelas, 2006a). Overall, new DSP recipients risked losing up to AU$120 a week, and new PP recipients risked losing up to AU$100 a week when their private earnings reached AU$300 a week (Harding, Ngu Vu & Percival, 2005). These changes would seem to be closely linked to the industrial relations reforms described above, and it was likely that many single parents and disabled claimants would be forced to accept any job available irrespective of the wage being offered. In other words, being employed did not necessarily guarantee a living wage any longer.

~ ‘Retrenching or renovating the Australian welfare state: the paradox of the Howard government’s neo-liberalism’, Philip Mendes, International Journal of Social Welfare, Vo.18, No.1, April 2008 (PDF).

The remainder of St. Toby’s Letter to the Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs proceeds along similar lines, and invokes standard neo-liberal rhetoric. More remarkably, perhaps, Toby also expresses pleasure at the thought that, as mechanisms for imposing work upon assumedly recalcitrant bodies become more widespread following an ALP victory, this might result in more bad ‘jobseekers’ gaining less income, and calls for a more general tightening of the screws with regards activity tests/physical jerks, (an expanded bureaucracy to engage in) and more intensive micro-management of micro-budgets (‘income quarantining’) — all as part of an increasingly generalised expansion in the financial and legal capacity of the corporate welfare sector to discipline and punish the undeserving poor.

Leaving aside the many issues which might emerge in critically analysing such an account — and the fact that it’s been produced by and on behalf of a major business in a multi-billion dollar industry which receives massive state subsidies — among the many things Toby fails to note in his epistle is the fact that ‘Work for the Dole’ schemes undermine wages and conditions (see : ‘One Fundamental Value’: Work for the Dole participants’ views about mutual obligation, Hilary Sawer, 2005, PDF); that, along with football, kicking the unemployed is a national sport (see : Dole bludgers, tax payers and the new right: constructing discourses of welfare in 1970s Australia (Verity Archer), February 12, 2010); and is a sport which has provided some small number of yuppie scum, such as Tim Noonan (& Co.), a proven pathway to employment.

There’s a lot of money to be made out of poverty.

Bonus McClure!

Australia: Howard finds the right people for his new “Fair Pay Commission”, Terry Cook, wsws.org, July 11, 2006:

Also bringing “Christian values” to the determination of pay levels is FPC part-time commissioner Patrick McClure. McClure, a graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors, has made a lucrative career for himself out of charity work. Since 1997 he has been CEO of one of the country’s largest Christian charity organisations, Mission Australia, overseeing an annual budget of $212 million.

The charity’s fortunes grew under McClure’s leadership. In particular, it gained contracts to oversee job provision services after the Howard government closed its own job assistance agencies such as the Commonwealth Employment Service (CES). Significantly, McClure is on the Howard government’s Community Business Partnership Board.

McClure has also been drafted onto government welfare reform committees to provide a “caring face” while slashing welfare and social security rights. He was appointed chairman of the government’s Independent Reference Group on Welfare Reform in 1999-2000 that laid the basis for fundamental attacks on welfare and social security provision.

McClure then served as deputy chair of Howard’s Welfare to Work Consultative Committee, whose recommendations were legislated last November and came into force this month. The measures are designed to drive more than 200,000 benefit claimants, including people on single parent benefits and disability allowances, into cheap labour and work-for-the-dole schemes over the next three years. Under the new provisions, the unemployed could lose payments for eight weeks if they refuse a minimum wage job or commit any of a series of petty offences.

While happy to create conditions of extreme hardship for others, McClure decided long ago that a life of poverty was not for him. He quit the Franciscan order after ten years to follow a more materially-rewarding path. He still insists, however, that Saint Francis of Assisi, the order’s Spartan founder, remains “one of my guiding lights”.

See also : Soul searching about welfare, Background Briefing (ABC), October 1, 2006 | What Is Living and What Is Dead in Social Democracy?, Tony Judt, The New York Review of Books, December 17, 2009.

Mission Australia First Party (August 7, 2010) | Labour exploitation? No, it’s Asians taking Aussie jobs (and strawberries) (July 24, 2010) | F___ Off I’m On Today Tonight! Or: Reverse racism. (February 16, 2010) | The Dole Army : “If it wasn’t real, it would almost be comical.” (January 3, 2010) | Auschwitz ‘Arbeit Macht Frei’ sign stolen; ALP offers ‘Fair Work Sets You Free’ replacement (December 19, 2009) | How to Make Trouble… // The Dole Army (November 6, 2009).

Posted in History, State / Politics, That's Capitalism! | Tagged , | 7 Comments

Melbourne rally in solidarity with the Villawood detainees

Also on Friday, a film night: A Jail in Colombia, “A look inside the La Modelo prison in Bogota, Colombia”, 6:30pm, LASNET Office, basement of Trades Hall (corner Victoria & Lygon Sts, Carlton). “Join LASNET for an evening of film and discussion. Entry is free, but donations to maintain the space are appreciated. BYO food or drink.”

See also : Villawood : Cui bono? (September 20, 2010).

Posted in State / Politics, That's Capitalism! | 1 Comment

NSW Police ♥ Sydney Forum

The Sydney Forum, Australia’s largest annual gathering of fascists, was held on the weekend of September 18/19. On Sunday, some d00d went to Tempe to protest. His account is below.

Note that, as well as being “the Australian headquarters for hate politics” and the offices of the Australia First Party, 725 Princes Highway, Tempe is the site of a notorious murder. In April 1991 — while Saleam was behind bars for organising a shotgun assault upon the home of ANC representative Eddie Funde — members of Dr James Saleam’s previous political party, National Action, killed one another: “Bovver, twenty-five years old and already weighing 108 kilos thanks to the three or four stubbies of beer he’d consume for breakfast each morning, was shot eight times with a sawn-off .22 rifle by Perry Whitehouse, ten years his senior but less than half his size, during a drunken, confused and basically pointless argument. When Whitehouse blew him away, Bovver was wearing a singlet bearing the message: Say No To The New Gun Control Laws.”

For very self-evident reasons, organisers of Australia’s premier white-power gathering, the so-called ‘Sydney Forum’, go to great lengths to hide information about where and when their next illustrious event will be held. In the past, the assembled cream of Australia’s fascist crop have been met with large, vocal counter-rallies by antifascist activists and community groups who insist that it is simply ludicrous that a city as diverse, multicultural and tolerant as Sydney is in any way the appropriate venue for a rally of the wannabe Blackshirts. Whilst I would vigorously agree, this isn’t really one of those stories about the clash of opposing ideologies you might expect the day after the Sydney Forum. Rather this is an account of those who, wielding the threat of arrest, enable the unchallenged spread of racist propaganda and the perpetuation of xenophobia, homophobia, fabricated history and all the other regressive, hateful vile you’d expect to find at a party full of nazis.

Whilst the zeitgeist has changed rather a lot since Oswald Mosley relied on London police to “protect” the march of his British Union of Fascists down Cable Street in 1936, the parasitic relationship between fascist groups and the police has survived pretty much intact. The strategy is different, largely because it is infuriatingly hard to club a protester you don’t want to listen to in public now that we live in the age of social media and smartphone ubiquity, but the effect is the same. I should make it abundantly clear that whilst I don’t believe that the cops sympathised particularly with the assembled dignitaries of white-supremacism, it is largely irrelevant to the outcome of their hard-line ‘no criticism’ show of force – to immunise fascist ideology from ANY criticism, providing the desired separation from empirical reality fascism needs to perpetuate itself without resorting to violent means.

When I turned up to this year’s Sydney Forum with the intention of challenging the bonehead vacuum, you could say that the police conducted themselves in a manner that any private security firm would pride itself on. I didn’t even have time to make it to the opposite side of the street where I intended on standing before I was challenged, told to stop, detained and grilled whilst the assembled boneheads leered at me from the gate of their compound. Go efficiency!

At first I was told by the officer in charge that ‘my friend’ (I was alone) had just pointed a weapon at police, that he had already had to bury a colleague that week, and he was damned if he was going to let that happen under his watch. I did not see what this other kid did, so I refuse to speculate as to what might have happened, but even though it should have been abundantly clear to anybody that I was there by myself it still took a long time for the officers to concede the point. In the meantime, struggling to understand what any of his accusations had to do in any way with me (and wondering why the keynote address of a prominent international fascist propagandist and Holocaust denier deserved tax-payer funded private security) my bag was confiscated and I was searched. I was also forced to relinquish my driver’s license, under threat of arrest, and my details were recorded.

The tension was palpable. I hoisted my best impersonation of level-headedness and attempted not to splutter indignantly as the officer in charge delivered an admirably theatrical soliloquy decrying my ‘obvious’ desire to start a violent riot that would terrify the elderly residents of the street. I also learnt that I hated freedom of speech and that I was a hypocrite for not just letting the guys ‘have a barbecue’ in peace. When the curtains finally dropped, I attempted to clarify my intent (peaceful); my motives (plug refugee rights events to other activists, attempt to finally use my degree in History by rebuffing the anti-Semitic revisionist drivel); and that my solution to obvious nonsense free-speech I vehemently disagree with is opposition from my own informed, dissenting speech.

Greeted by blank stares and the seemingly reluctant report by a constable that the search of my bag yielded little more than Refugee Action Coalition fliers, water, a book, gum & cigarettes (as well as my primary ‘weapon’, a sign reading ‘welcome refugees, not fascists’), the officer in charge lost interest and left the constable to ‘process’ me. Apparently the decision had already been made, because at this point I was issued an official move along notice and told to return to my specific suburb of origin under the threat of arrest. Out of options and with thirty seconds to get going before they charged me with disobeying police instructions, I stumbled away perplexed and fuming by the absurdity of it all.

As I walked, indignant at the notion I was the biggest threat to public security in an area full of people whose idea of a good time is getting drunk and beating the shit out of anyone they regard as untermensch, a carload of men in Blood and Honour (neo-Nazi) garb pulled up alongside (perhaps mistaking short hair for fascist sympathy), to enquire about how I was on this particular day. Twenty odd seconds into my thirty and surprisingly I didn’t feel like hanging around to analyse the events of the last few minutes with them that much. Though it was clearly an exercise in stating what could not be more obvious, I assured them they were in no absolutely no danger from my sinister bleeding-heart protestations and that I was already on my way. Gesturing towards the police cars in way of explanation I added, ‘you know which side they’re on.’

Posted in Anti-fascism | Tagged | 5 Comments

Villawood : Cui bono?

The death of a prisoner at Villawood detention centre is further Bad News for Serco Australia Pty Ltd, the joint venture and local franchise of the multi-billion dollar Serco Group (UK) and Sodexo (France). Well, presumably — who knows? One of the bestest things about the state contracting foreign corporations to run Australian prisons is the extra layer of bureaucracy that comes between the public and accurate infos regarding what’s going on inside, so precisely how much death and injury affects profitability — and how much a human life is worth — is difficult to ascertain. Presumably, the corporation responsible will be financially penalised if judged to be negligent in the execution of its duty-of-care.

Like how Connex got fined if trains ran late and stuff.

Anyway, money talks, bullshit walks, and here’s a press release from RISE.

Media release
Monday, 20 September 2010 at 17:58

There are seven detainees on the roof right now, in Villawood Detention Centre. Ramesh Fernandez CEO and Ex-detainee from RISE has spoken to these men and they have told him that they will jump off the roof if no resolution is given.

This morning, a Fijian detainee of Villawood immigration detention centre committed suicide. He threw himself off one of the detention centre buildings after being told that he was going to be deported back to his country. Immediately after the incident, one of his relatives, also a detainee in Villawood, was placed in isolation and had his mobile phone confiscated.

The detainees of Villawood are extremely distressed and agitated by this incident and are fasting today to honour the memory of someone they consider one of their own. The situation at the detention centre is tense and chaotic as media and police swarm the facility and detainees are being chased to their rooms by Serco.

There are reports that immigration officials, interpreters and mental health professionals in the building are not making much effort to help the asylum detainees who are already traumatized by their own asylum seeking experiences. An asylum seeker at the detention centre says, “I don’t know what to do now and I’m scared to leave my room”. He adds that all the detainees were approached last Thursday and asked to go back to their country by the Department of Immigration.

CEO and Ex-detainee of RISE Ramesh Fernandez says “Neither the Australian government or Department of Immigration can bring his life back now, this is [a] perfect example of Department and authorities’ insensitive and destructive actions in the handling of asylum seekers”. We are receiving these reports from asylum seekers in Villawood detention centre and if these facts can be confirmed, the administrators of Villawood detention centre and those dealing with the immigration matters of these detainees will have to be held accountable.

A refugee who has asked Australia, a signatory of the Refugee Convention, to grant him the right to live free from the fear of persecution, is now dead because Australia has refused him this right. Mr Fernandez further adds, “We didn’t come to this country to die, we are here to seek protection, not detention or being driven to take our own lives behind the wire fences”.

We ask that this issue be resolved in a humanitarian way and call upon every individual to help us send a clear message to those governing Australia that our new government should be one that governs with a conscience.

Regards,

RISE Admin Refugee Survivors and Ex-detainees
Level 3, 247 Flinders Lane, Melbourne, Victoria 3000

Dunno. Maybe an RMIT Yoof Work student could be sent to Villawood to negotiate?

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