The Week That Was – September 14 to September 20

This week saw more information about Australian Defence Force personnel heading to the Middle East. 600 Australian troops will be stationed in the United Arab Emirates, and could be there for quite some time. It’s mainly air force and some tactical staff that we’re sending for this round’s “coalition of the willing”, along with the UAE, Bahrain, France, the UK and Saudi Arabia and it’s unclear when they’ll return. It will cost the country half a billion dollars and there are concerns this coalition could play into Islamic State (aka ISIS/ISIL) hands. Tony Abbott is still calling Islamic State a “death cult”, while Greens Leader Christine Milne is suggesting that we are once again blindly following the US into battle. Other concerns include the absence of an exit strategy, and the fact that the US is calling this a ‘war’ while Australia is not.

Late in the week, it was announced that raids had been carried out across Sydney and Brisbane, after a terrorist plot was uncovered in which people were to be abducted off the street and executed by a group with links to ISIS. 15 people were arrested and two were charged with terror offences, with all but one no longer in custody. The government hasn’t been entirely clear on whether or not this plot was the reason for last week’s rise in the terror threat level, but were are being told to keep calm and carry on. Tony Abbott also told people that all they needed for a terrorist attack of this kind is a knife, an iPhone and a victim – probably wasn’t the best idea to give a how-to guide. There has also been suggestion that Parliament House, along with other tourist destinations, while the US uses Australia’s raids as an example of why they have to go deal with ISIS.

There are also new terror laws being tabled to allow police more powers. These amendments to national security laws want to change the wording so that authorities can act when they “reasonably suspect” something will happen as opposed to them only acting when it is reasonably believed that something will occur. Entire nations could become no-go zones, punishable by 10 years in prison, and people suspected of going to fight can have 21-day suspensions of their passports.

The Muslim community is a bit concerned though, because in the last decade or two, whenever Muslim extremists start planning anything and get caught for it, the rest of the well-behaved, law-abiding members of the Muslim community are the ones that cop all of the abuse, racism and xenophobia from the rest of us. It also doesn’t help when people like Cory Bernardi tweet things like this:

https://twitter.com/corybernardi/status/512381674881949696

Tony Abbott finally made true on his promise about spending a week in Arnhem Land, even if he though he might have had to leave early. He was invited by clan leaders, and was planning to talk with them about issues they have, such as land rights, housing and recognition. They have said they don’t just want the PM to listen and have some photo opportunities, they want action. Unemployment is high, and clan leaders want constitutional recognition of Indigenous Australians. However, while the PM promised to lay out a timeline soon, the referendum may not take place until 2017. Also, it’s been proved that the government can be based in a remote area for a week and not fall apart.

This week also saw Scott Morrison talk about the success of Operation Sovereign Borders one year in. The government turned back 12 boats of asylum seekers, most in the vessel they were intercepted with, except for four groups of asylum seekers, who were sent back in orange lifeboats. Tanya Plibersek has criticised the government for gloating about it.

Finally this week, Julia Gillard and Bill Shorten were mentioned at the Trade Union Royal Commission, Australia is increasing aid funding for fighting Ebola and the Russians were at the G20 Finance Ministers’ Meeting.

Tweet of the Week

Now we know who was running the spoof Mia Freedman account:

https://twitter.com/mckinnon_a/status/512115740069994497

Things I’ve been Reading/Watching/Listening etc

The power of words and censoring them – ABC The Drum

Why men still run newsrooms – The Conversation

Victorian men charged with gay sex crimes will be exonerated – ABC News

The Week That Was – July 27 to August 2

Again this week, international investigators attempted to get to the MH17 crash site, and finally arrived by the end of the week. The AFP and the Dutch police are both there to secure the site, with no ADF, because it is a humanitarian mission. Julie Bishop remained in Kiev meeting with Ukrainian politicians and the Red Cross as part of the response to MH17. Both she and Angus Houston have been in Ukraine while waiting for the international investigators to get close to the crash zone and have shared the OSCE’s frustration when the missions failed. There are now new sanctions on Russia from the US and the EU. At the moment the Australian Government is not imposing sanctions (Our main focus is to “bring them home”) but the government could revoke Russia’s G20 invite if they so choose.

There’s been a suggested change to welfare again, this time suggesting the expansion of the “work-for-the-dole” plan to all those on welfare under 50. Those on welfare could do between 15-25 hours of work depending on their age and must apply for 40 jobs per month. The opposition has labelled it cruel, and businesses are not impressed, because it means that they have to trawl through thousands of applications and possibly write back to all of them so there is evidence that the applicant, should they be on welfare, did apply but was rejected.

Onto the Asylum Seekers that are now no longer floating out near Christmas Island, but were sent to Curtin Detention Centre via the Cocos Islands. The Indian High Commission stated that they would not be repatriating anyone against their will, while lawyers have argued that technically, because they’re here, Indian officials shouldn’t be talking to the refugees, Australian officials should. Scott Morrison has been saying that because the Indian refugee camps are “safe” those who have come to Australia are economic migrants, not refugees. But in the last day or so, it appears that because the asylum seekers refused to talk to the Indian officials, they have all been secretly flown to Nauru. The government blames the lawyers, saying that they instructed the refugees to say nothing, which the lawyers deny – they haven’t been able to talk to the asylum seekers at all. The lawyers are now thinking about launching a second case, while Tony Abbott is telling asylum seekers “they’ll never stay” and that “If we stop the boats, we stop the deaths”. The government has had to apologise this week to former cricketers Brett Lee and Glenn McGrath after asking them to sign bats, which were then given to the Indian officials who were going to talk with the asylum seekers.

There has also been an Inquiry into Children in Detention this week. The results are quite shocking: there are large numbers of children  with mental illness, and the government asked the people doing the survey to remove that statistic from the report. Other children have had their medication confiscated, the medical centre on Nauru frequently runs out of supplies and because there are no child protection laws or protection services in Nauru, the children are in strife.

The Government is also planning to change national security laws in an aim to deter people from travelling to the Middle East to fight with ISIS. It reverses the onus of proof – meaning that instead of the police proving that you did something wrong, you have to prove that you did nothing wrong. This essentially restricts people’s human rights, as it presumes guilt over innocence, instead of the other way around (It is a human and civil right that a person be treated as innocent until proven guilty – usually in a court of law).

The ABC has got a promise tracker going – you might be surprised by the results

Finally this week, Peter Slipper has been found guilty of dishonesty regarding Cabcharge vouchers, the CSIRO is helping with the African Ebola outbreak and Wikileaks is telling people what a suppression order won’t let them find out from mainstream media regarding an RBA corruption scandal.

Tweet of the Week

Things I’ve been Reading/Watching/Listening to etc

Julia Gillard appeared to launch Greg Combet’s new book…mentioning ABC News NSW anchor Juanita Phillips at the end:

So a Guardian Australia staffer applied for 40 jobs in nine minutes – Guardian Australia

Behind the Baden-Clay trial – ABC Backstory