Tahrir (鈥淟iberation鈥) Square in Cairo was the birthplace of hope for millions if not billions of people this year. It was here that the Egyptian people launched a mighty democratic revolution, writes Peter Boyle.
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More than 100 people filled Leichhardt鈥檚 Palace Cinema on November 24 for the Sydney premiere screening of Growing Change: A Journey Inside Venezuela鈥檚 Food Revolution.
The documentary, made by filmmaker and solidarity activist Simon Cunich, examines the global food crisis that leaves hundreds of millions of people in hunger and is rapidly depleting the soil fertility on which long-term food security depends.
Adelaide Socialist Alliance branch hosted a Solidarity Dinner and Fiesta on November 19 to celebrate 20 years of 麻豆传媒 Weekly and raise funds for the paper鈥檚 fighting fund.
The event was a great success, with about 50 people attending. Those present ranged from long time GLW supporters to young Resistance activists, members of the Latin American community and people involved in Occupy Adelaide.
Wollongong City Council, elected on September 3, has so far made several decisions that reflect community will in the area. This is a refreshing change from the years of corruption scandals that rocked the last elected council and the four-year unelected administration that followed it.
All 13 councillors, including four Liberal, four Labor, three independent and two Green, are under immense pressure to deliver outcomes for the community. Key election issues included democracy, transparency and accountability.
The (HACSU) has begun a series of rolling stoppages for better wages and conditions at mental health services across Victoria. HACSU covers mental health and allied health workers.
Stoppages and rallies have been held in Bendigo and Shepparton, and at Eastern Mental Health, St Vincents and Melbourne Health. A two-hour stopwork rally will be held at Latrobe Valley Mental Health on November 29, from noon at the Latrobe Valley Hospital in Traralgon.
A voluntary system of certifying whether goods are free from forced labour is about as far as things go in Australia when it comes to abolishing the slave trade throughout the world.
Though it is illegal to import slave made goods, there has never been a single prosecution for the crime in Australia.
believes it should not be left to the ethics of consumers to decide whether to purchase products made by slaves. Rather, they simply shouldn鈥檛 be available in Australia.
鈥淧eople are joining up to the Lock the Gate Alliance all over the country,鈥, Lock the Gate president Drew Hutton told a rally of about 100 outside Brisbane鈥檚 Sofitel Hotel on November 24.
The rally was called to protest at the annual general meeting of coal seam gas (CSG) company LNG Ltd. The company鈥檚 AGM took place inside the hotel.
Hutton said: 鈥淭he Lock the Gate Alliance is now moving to 鈥楤lock the Gate鈥. We are calling on groups all over Australia to blockade wherever CSG companies are setting up, against the wishes of the farmers and landholders.
released the statement below on November 24.
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"The Australian government should come out and support the Egyptian people in their demand that the Egyptian Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF) return the government to the people who successfully ousted the former dictator Hosni Murbarak in February this year, " Socialist Alliance national convenor Peter Boyle said today.
released the statement below on November 23.
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This week the Planning Assessment Commission granted approval to a 16th coal seam gas (CSG) borehole in the Illawarra.
Stop CSG Illawarra spokesperson Jess Moore responded: 鈥淚t is now abundantly clear who [Premier Barry] O鈥橣arrell represents. It鈥檚 not communities, and the concern we express for our water, environment and health; it鈥檚 the CSG industry.
Activists involved in organising October鈥檚 peaceful protests during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Perth had warned that passed for the event could be used to restrict the right to protest in Western Australia.
Now, a month after CHOGM finished, three Perth-based activists are fighting charges related to CHOGM.
The Mercury, Nov 22 -- There they fell during 2011, one after the other in past-their-prime domino descent.
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali from Tunis, Hosni Mubarak from Cairo, Dominique Strauss-Kahn from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Muammar Gaddafi from Tripoli, Georgios Papandreou from Athens, Silvio Berlusconi from Rome, US football guru and sex-crime cover-upper Joe Paterno from Penn State University. Media baron Rupert Murdoch, soccer supremo Sepp Blatter, Syrian tyrant Bashar al-Assad and Yemeni dictator Ali Abdullah Saleh looking decidedly shaky, too.
Trade unionists from the Transport Workers Union, the National Tertiary Education Union and the Maritime Union of Australia joined Occupy Sydney activists in a protest on November 22 outside Angel Place Recital Hall, where the union-bashing CEO of Qantas Alan Joyce was addressing a forum.
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