The public launchof the Bondi Memorial at Marks Park to honourlives lost and survivors of LGBTI hate and violencewas a moving commemoration. Rachel Evans reports.
Issue 1348
News
Justice campaigners are renewing their calls for Don Dale Youth Detention Centre to be closed, following reports of an attempted suicide by a child detainee. Stephen W Enciso reports.
Western Sydney University (WSU) and Western Sydney University College staff and supporters took strike action for job security, casuals’ rights, fair workloads, a decent pay rise and a healthy work-life balance. Kerry Smith reports.
Public servants are demanding fair pay rises and the permanent abolition of the 2.5% wage cap. Jim McIlroy reports.
Senior Lawman and Tiwi Traditional Owner Dennis Tipakalippa is challenging the federal offshore oil and gas regulator’s decision to approve Santos’ plan to drill the Barossa gas field.Naish Gawen reports.
The Next Generation is making another attempt to build a huge incinerator in Western Sydney.Kerry Smith reports.
Activists oppose the NSWgovernment's move to declare a coal mine expansion in the Sydney water catchmentto be“state significant infrastructure”. Jim McIlroy reports on the campaign against theDendrobium coal mine expansion.
The NSW Teachers' Federation State Council hascalledon the new Labor government to oppose AUKUS and reject the 'obscene military escalation' spearheaded by its predecessor. Kerry Smith reports.
Hundreds of people demonstrated outside the Thornbury Theatreto say “no” to Hindutva hatred and to oppose fascist Tejasvi Surya from speaking at a conference. Chloe DS reports.
Climate activists from Drum Rebellion and Extinction Rebellion protested outside the Environment and Water Minister Tanya Plibersek’s office calling on the new government to stop supporting new fossil fuel projects.
Newcastlebus drivers are campaigning for a 7% pay rise over two years. Niko Leka reports.
Analysis
Asked recently how he would act on his promise tohelp Julian Assange,Anthony Albanese implied he was working to bringthe matter to a close. Binoy Kampmarkwonders if he will.
Socialist Alliance’s Far North Queensland branch took up the challenge posed bythe conservative strongholds of Warren Entschand Bob Katter in Far North Queensland and helped increase the progressive vote. Jonathan Strauss reports.
We are being told that there is a gas shortage and the coal industry is failing because it has been run down in favour of renewables. Sue Bullargues these claims arefraudulent.
TheLabor government has reignited hope that First Nations peoples will beincluded indecision-making.But the lasting impact of colonisation in how laws are appliedalsohas to be addressed, argues Isaac Nellist.
Retail worker and unionist Stephen Bates, now the federal MP for Brisbane, spoke to Alex Bainbridge about his reasons for joining the Greens and his approach to his new job.
Scientific disagreements happen all the time. But when 'scientists' denyhuman-induced global warming,elevatingthe contrarian view to convey the pretence of scientific disagreements amongexperts, it has to be called out, argues Rupen Savoulian.
Paul Silva talks to Paul Gregoire about prospects for real change for First Nations peoples under the new Labor government.
Water campaigners are optimistic that new minister Tanya Plibersek will deliver the Murray-Darling Basin Plan in full. Tracey Carpenter reports.
World
A new government database tracking pregnancies in Poland has sparked fears that medical data will be used to prosecute women who obtain abortion care. Julia Conley reports.
Former CIA director and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has been summoned to testify on the conduct of a private security firm hired to spy on Julian Assange while he was in the Ecuadorian embassy, reports Binoy Kampmark.
Anti-war sentiment continues to grow inside Russia, as the death toll rises among soldiers from some of Russia's most ethnically marginalised and poorest peoples, reports Dick Nichols.
A political earthquake struck Colombia last month, when the left-leaning HistoricPact won the first round of the presidential elections after getting 40.3% of the vote, write Vijay Prashad and Taroa Zúñiga Silva. Can the left break the cycle of violence to win the second round on June 19?
The radical left Red-Green Alliance shook up Danish politics in November, coming first in the elections for Copenhagen City Council. Line Barfod headed its ticket and is now in charge of urban renewal and development, climate, housing and traffic. She spoke with 鶹ý’s Dick Nichols.
United Nations Human Rights Commissioner Michelle Bachelet's visit to China last month was seized on by the United States to ramp up its anti-Chinese rhetoric, writes William Briggs.
Honduran President Xiomara Castro signed a decree on April 25 that repealed the law creating the country's nefarious Economic Development and Employment Zones (ZEDEs), reports Ben Radford.
A secret memo published by Stop the War UKdetailsan April 2002 meeting between Tony Blair and George W Bushconcerning military intervention to topple Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, reports Kerry Smith.
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair will receive a knighthood on June 13, but more than 1.2 million petitioners say he should be sent to The Hague as a war criminal, not honoured at Windsor Castle.
Culture
Thomas Klikauer and Meg Young review Hans A Baer's latest book, Climate Change and Capitalism in Australia — An Eco-Socialist Vision for the Future, which invites readers to imagine a world beyond capitalism.
Alex Miller reviews Lea Ypi's fascinating memoir, which paints a vivid picture of growing up in Albaniaduring Communist rule and the descent into casino capitalism and civil war.
The Sri Lankan government is hoping the Australian cricket tour will distract from the economic and political crisis engulfing the country, writes Binoy Kampmark.
Viv Miley reviews Kapital: Sparks of Revolution, a city building, resource management, simulation video game with a class antagonism basis.
Barry Healy reviews a new film about Siegfried Sassoon, who was to become one of the great anti-war poets of World War I.
A new documentary by Brazilian duo Victor Fraga and Valnei Nunes dissects the role of media in creating the conditions to dismantle democracy and pave the way for the rise of Jair Bolsonaro. Liván García-Duquesne reviews.
Barry Healy reviews a new film based on the World War II experiences of Cioma Schönhaus, who was recruited into a circle of artists using their skills to create fake documents for Jews on the run.