United States: Occupy activist assaulted by police found guilty of assault
An Occupy Wall Street activist has been found guilty of second-degree assault and could face seven years in prison for elbowing a police officer, said on May 6.
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New documentary film Radical Wollongong, produced by 麻豆传媒 TV, will premiere in Wollongong May 18, followed by screenings in other cities and regional centres.
The film features activists who took part in Wollongong's radical history of strikes and community rallies, from miners鈥 struggles to Aboriginal justice and environmental protection.
Co-producer John Rainford writes about Wollongong's transition from making steel to looking after the environment.
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The fifth anniversary of the end Sri Lanka's civil war will be marked on May 18. In 2009, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who fought for nearly 30 years for an independent Tamil homeland in the north and east of the island, were defeated.
In the final days of the conflict, tens of thousands of Tamil civilians were killed in a horrific aerial, naval and land artillery bombardment carried out by the Sri Lankan armed forces.
Iranian asylum seeker and aspiring architect Reza Berati was beaten to death inside the Manus Island detention camp more than two months ago, during what former employees of the detention centre described as 鈥渋nevitable bloodshed鈥.
Now, the five witnesses who say they can identify those who allegedly kicked, punched and beat the 23-year-old until he succumbed to massive head injuries, have been receiving death threats from local security guards.
Hundreds gathered on May 6 to fill Adelaide's Tandanya National Indigenous Cultural Institute for the forum 鈥淎n Aboriginal Perspective on Inequality, the Intervention, Racism and Struggle鈥.
It was jointly organised by the South Australian Aboriginal Coalition for Social Justice, SIMPLA (Stop Income Management in Playford) and the Socialist Alliance. It explored a cross-section of the most pressing issues facing Aboriginal people in Australia, such as racism, the Northern Territory intervention, inequality, the need for struggle and youth activism.
The Coalition government plans to speed up the push to privatise remaining federal and state public assets in a massive program to help fund new infrastructure projects 鈥 mainly road developments 鈥 media sources reveal.
ABC radio's AM reported on May 8 that "an infrastructure package worth about $10 billion will be at the centre of the Abbott government's first budget.
About thirty scientists, engineers, mathematicians, PhD students and science advocates took to the steps of Sydney Town Hall on May 3 in defence of Australia鈥檚 research sector.
The 鈥淩ally for Research鈥 was organised by the Future Party to oppose the Coalition government鈥檚 plans to reduce the Australian Research Council鈥檚 funding by $133 million as well as cut up to 700 jobs from the CSIRO and 100 from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The rally also called for the government to reinstate the position of science minister.
I have recently celebrated my 69th birthday. I have three adult sons, six grand children and one great grandchild, all of whom I love dearly. Last December marked 51 years since I was married and next month will be 30 years since I finally left the marriage.
Despite the research I have done, together with almost five years of counselling, I still suffer from the impact of 20 years of domestic violence. I have been diagnosed as suffering from a form of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
鈥淭his will not be a budget for the rich or the poor; it will be a budget for the country,鈥 Prime Minister Tony Abbott said in his April 28 speech to the Sydney Institute, a privately funded 鈥減ublic affairs forum鈥.
He must think we are total fools.
Why else would a government that supposedly plans to introduce a budget that is 鈥渘ot for the rich鈥 ask Tony Shepherd, former president of the Business Council of Australia (BCA), to conduct a pre-budget 鈥渁udit鈥 of government spending?
Community anger at a proposal to cut the minimum wage from $16 to $12 an hour has fuelled large Labour Day turnouts across Queensland on May 4 and 5.
About 30,000 marchers from dozens of unions packed Brisbane streets, joining thousands of others in activities in Queensland cities and towns.
Queensland Council of Unions President John Battams said this week鈥檚 federal Commission of Audit recommendation to cut the minimum wage by 25% was a disgraceful attack on working people.
The federal Commission of Audit's proposal to cut the minimum wage would create an underclass of US-style "working poor" in this country, the Australian Council of Trade Unions says.
: "The plan to aggressively drive down the minimum wage would see its real value fall to its 1998 level of $12 an hour.鈥
About 10,000 workers walked off building sites in Brisbane on May 5 and rallied outside Parliament House. They were protesting against the Campbell Newman government鈥檚 changes to industrial legislation affecting workplace health and safety.
They also called for the return of the Labour day public holiday to May. The Monday after May 1 had previously been a public holiday celebrating workers' rights, but one of Newman鈥檚 first acts after being elected was to move the holiday to October.
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