Solomon Islands

Australia: University staff strike for “day of action”

By our reporters, September 17, 2009

Members of the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) at 16 universities stopped work yesterday to fight increased workloads, a blow-out in class sizes, casualisation and other attacks on jobs and c...

Australian court hears Julian Moti’s challenge to “politically motivated” prosecution

By Patrick O’Connor, September 17, 2009

The Queensland Supreme Court yesterday commenced hearings on an application made by former Solomon Islands’ attorney general Julian Moti for a permanent stay of proceedings in his prosecution by Aus...

Australia: UN envoy denounced after he describes Northern Territory “intervention” as racist

By Richard Phillips, September 16, 2009

All factions of the political elite came together last month to denounce the UN’s Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Rights after he criticised the federal Labor government’s policies towards Aborig...

Paltry GDP growth promoted as proof of Australian “recovery”

By Alex Messenger, September 15, 2009

Quarterly growth of 0.6 percent might mean that Australia has dodged a so-called ‘technical recession’, but a closer study of the figures reveals that Labor’s massive stimulus package is far fro...

Gillard’s “Teach for Australia”: a corporate-backed assault on teaching

By Katrina Morrison and Laura Tiernan, September 14, 2009

Teach for Australia will parachute unqualified teachers into disadvantaged government schools. Part of the Rudd government’s “education revolution”, the initiative is modelled on Teach for Ameri...

Education deans oppose Teach for Australia

“Teachers need a depth of theoretical understanding”

By Laura Tiernan, September 14, 2009

Since the Rudd government’s Teach for Australia program was first publicly mooted at the start of 2008, it has been condemned by education deans at universities in Sydney and Melbourne.

Hundreds die in disease outbreaks in Papua New Guinea

By Frank Gaglioti, September 12, 2009

Outbreaks of dysentery, influenza and cholera have hit remote communities in the northern Morobe Province of Papua New Guinea in recent weeks. According to local authorities, more than 400 people have...

Australia: Bail denial in terrorism case sets dangerous new precedent

By Mike Head, September 11, 2009

Three men accused of a terrorist conspiracy have been denied bail, with a magistrate saying they were politically opposed to the existing legal and political system.

Australia: Ambulance union sells out MICA paramedics campaign

By Terry Cook, September 10, 2009

The federal and state Labor governments, acting in concert with the Ambulance Employees Association (AEA), mounted a major operation this week to suppress a campaign by around 300 paramedics in defenc...

Australian car parts maker goes into administration

By Terry Cook, September 8, 2009

The jobs of hundreds of workers at car parts manufacturer ACL are in jeopardy after it went into voluntary administration despite a government bailout.

Australia: New details about “SIEV 36” refugee deaths expose official lies

By Richard Phillips, September 8, 2009

Detailed information about the explosion on a fishing vessel carrying Afghan refugees off the north-west coast of Australia last April underscores the seamless transition that has taken place from the...

Australian government downplays huge oil slick

By Frank Gaglioti, September 7, 2009

A major oil and gas rupture from the West Atlas mobile offshore drilling rig off the northwestern coast of Australia is threatening to become a major environmental disaster. The leakage is unlikely to...