Hundreds protested outside Labor MP Ged Kearney’s office to demand she speaks up against Israel's genocide in Gaza and calls for a ceasefire. Jacob Andrewartha reports.
Issue 1397
News
DP World, Australia's largest port terminal operator, is refusing to negotiate with the Maritime Union of Australia's demands forÌýfair pay and conditions for wharf workers. Kerry Smith °ù±ð±è´Ç°ù³Ù²õ.Ìý
Join your nearest Invasion Day protestÌýhappening this January 26.
LGBTIQ activists and alliesÌýcelebrated a new Rainbow crossing which was finally completed last December, after a six-year campaign. Isaac Nellist reports.
National secretary of the CFMMEUÌýChristy Cain told the Friends of Palestine WA rally that the union movement needed to take a stronger stand on Palestine.
The Save the Powerhouse group is concerned that NSW Labor is going back on its promise to end the secrecy surrounding this much loved and internationally admired arts and sciences museum. Kerry Smith reports.
Ìý
The movement for Palestine in Australia is maintaining its pressure on Labor to abandon its support for Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza. Peter Boyle,ÌýRenfrey Clarke and Jacob AndrewarthaÌýreport.
Kurdish supporters of the Western Sydney Wanderers showed their solidarity with Kurdish soccer playersÌýat the team’s winning January 1 match. Peter Boyle reports.
The release of cabinet documents from 2003 under the John Howard government has failed to clarify exactly how it decided to send Australian troops to the Iraq War. Mark Robinson reports.
Maritime Union of Australia and Electrical Trades Union members who work at the Geelong Port went on strike for 24 hours over January 1–2. Tim Gooden reports.
As the pro-Palestine justice movement grows, more Victorian councils have condemned Israel’s genocide of Gaza and joined the global call for a ceasefire.ÌýGabriel Di Falco reports.
For the 12th consecutive week, Australians called for a permanent ceasefire at rallies and vigils over the traditional holiday period. People are also being urged to fly the Palestinian flag at midnight to show they oppose Israel'sÌýgenocide.
Thousands marched through the streets ofÌýGadi/Sydney on December 30Ìýdemanding an end to Israel's ongoingÌýgenocidal war on Gaza, reports Peter Boyle.
An emergency rally was held on December 29 to protest the latest escalation of the Turkish state's bombing of civilian infrastructure (including power stations, factories and even hospitals) in the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (Rojava), reports Peter Boyle.
Protesting for a permanent ceasefire, to recognise Palestine and for a just and lasting peace continue across Australia.
Â鶹´«Ã½ journalists Isaac Nellist, Chloe DS and Gabriel Di Falco go through the latest news from across the continent and around the world.Ìý
Blue Mountains Friends of PalestineÌýorganised its fifth protest on December 17. Aiasha Slee °ù±ð±è´Ç°ù³Ù²õ.Ìý
Workers at Coles and Woolworths supermarkets have ramped up their campaign for a living wage, secure jobs and safe workplaces with a Christmas #Superstrike. Isaac Nellist °ù±ð±è´Ç°ù³Ù²õ.Ìý
The National Union of Students unanimously voted to stand in solidarity with Palestine at its 2023 National Conference.ÌýSimone MaddisonÌýreports.
Protesters were not deterred by Christmas distractions, summer heat or the long overdue Australian vote at the United Nations to join weekend protests for a genuine ceasefire in Gaza.ÌýAlex BainbridgeÌýreports.
Analysis
Australia has not said much aboutÌýSouth Africa’s case againstÌýIsrael's genocide at the International Court of Justice. Alex Bainbridge writes that while Canberra generally supportsÌýthe USÌýon Israel, it is also giving itself some wriggle room.
The dismissal of ABC broadcaster Antoinette Lattouf last year is both the productÌýof a nasty campaign fromÌýthe outside as well as a weakness from management, argues BinoyÌýKampmark.
Despite their ballooning wealth, the corporate rich are using their power to demand more tax breaksÌýand protect their industrial-scale tax dodging. Peter Boyle reports.
Alarmingly — but not surprisingly — 2023 was the hottest year since 1850, but Labor is dragging its feet and depending on the private sector to handle the climate transition. Pip Hinman reports.
Tim Gooden, a former Geelong Trades Hall secretary, said the Labor government is complicit in Israel's genocide against Gaza and that unions should be doing more to stop it.
A deceitful historical narrative, at best, dismisses the systematic dispossession and genocide of First Nations peoples as being in the distant past. It isn'tÌýand it needs to be stopped, argues Peter Boyle.
Reporting Israel’s war on Gaza has become the greatest credibility challenge for journalists and the media in our time, writesÌýDavid Robie.
South Africa'sÌýcase against Israel in the International Court of Justice could be one route to end the hot war in Gaza. But, asÌýPaul Gregoire writes, politics will decide —Ìýa reason to keep mobilising.
Arabunna Elder Uncle Kevin Buzzacott passed away in Alice Springs on November 29, 2023. A fierce advocate for his people and for a nuclear-free Australia, Kevin will be sorely missed,Ìýwrites Jim Green.
The Australia Palestine Advocacy Network is urging Labor to support South Africa’s suit against Israel forÌýgenocide in Gaza in the International Court of Justice in The Hague. Stuart Rees reports.
Foreign fighter laws aim to prevent AustraliansÌýfighting alongside Hamas and Hezbollah, but Australians can and haveÌýjoinedÌýthe Israeli Defense ForcesÌýin Gaza. Paul Gregoire reports.
John Pilger should be remembered and honoured not just for his impressive body of work, but for being a braveÌý—ÌýandÌýat times near-lone — voice for truth against power, write Peter Boyle and Pip Hinman.
AI behemoth Palantir, which markets itself as 'humanitarian'Ìýis proud to provideÌýthe Israeli government with military and surveillance technology.ÌýBinoy Kampmark reports onÌýthe tech giant's mission is make the WestÌýstronger.
While the US Department of Justice battles to indict Assange for absurd espionage charges, various parts of his case have begun to unravel. Binoy Kampmark reports.
World
Â鶹´«Ã½â€™s Federico Fuentes spoke to Youngsu Won, a socialist and coordinator of the International Forum in South Korea, about the new tensions flaring on the Korean peninsula and their potential ramifications.
An Algerian court has acquitted university lecturer and scientist Kamel Aïssat on all charges related to his opposition to a lead and zinc mine on Algeria’s Mediterranean coast, following an international campaign of solidarity, reports Susan Price.
In the United States, despite the mainstream media’s backing of Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza, more young people in the US are critical of the war and taking leading roles in the movement against it, write Barry Sheppard and Malik Miah.
In the second part of his interview with Â鶹´«Ã½â€™s Federico Fuentes, Brazilian author and socialist Pedro Fuentes discusses the crisis of imperialist hegemony, the unpredictability of contemporary politics and its impacts on Latin America.
Pedro Fuentes, a leader of the Socialist Left Movement (MES), a tendency within Brazil’s Socialism and Freedom Party (PSOL) speaks to Â鶹´«Ã½â€™s Federico Fuentes about imperialism’s new phase, ecological crisis and international solidarity.
Three Indigenous land defenders were found guilty of criminal contempt in a Canadian court on January 12 for their opposition to the construction of the Coastal GasLink fracked gas pipeline on unceded Wet’suwet’en territory, reports Jeff Shantz.
When the overwhelming majority of world governments call for a cease fire, it indicates Israel and its key ally the United States are under intense pressure from below, argue Malik Miah and Barry Sheppard.
In part 2 of his interview with Â鶹´«Ã½'s Federico Fuentes, South African politial economist, author and activist Patrick Bond discusses some of the limitations in Vladimir Lenin’s views on imperialism and the need to incorporate the concept of "unequal ecological exchange" into any analysis of this defining feature of modern capitalism.
South Africa instituted proceedings against Israel before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on December 29, on the grounds of genocide against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. Mohamed Hanipa Maidin looks at South Africa's case and Israel's response.
Aotearoa/New Zealand's Fair Pay Agreements Act was repealed by the newly-elected conservative National Party government on December 20, reports Clive Tillman.
Turkey carried out a devastating string of airstrikes on North East Syria (NES) over Christmas, targeting civilian service facilities and infrastructure. The Rojava Information Center (RIC) spoke with Kurdish politician and former Syrian Democratic Council co-chair, Ilham Ahmed, about the latest attacks.
In the first of our two-part interview, South African political economist and author Patrick Bond discusses modern-day imperial power and the role BRICS countries play in maintaining United States dominance with Â鶹´«Ã½'s Federico Fuentes.
Standing Together is a Jewish-Arab social movement in Israel, organising against racism and occupation and for equality and social justice. Its national field organiser Uri Weltmann spoke to Â鶹´«Ã½â€™s Federico Fuentes about its response to Israel's war on Gaza and anti-Arab racism within Israel.
The crackdown against Palestine solidarity activists and movements in Canada has intensified, as the shadow of a 'new McCarthyism' hangs over the country's universities, reports Jeff Shantz.
Culture
Federico Fuentes reviews Uprising: The October Rebellion in Ecuador, an exceptional look at the October 2019 anti-neoliberal insurrection from the perspective of one of its central leaders.
Alex Salmon reviews Knocking the top off: A people’s history of alcohol in Australia, edited by Alex Ettling and Iain McIntyre.
Chris Slee reviews Benjamin Fong's book, Quick Fixes: Drugs in America from Prohibition to the 21st Century Binge, which examines the history of drug use and prohibition in the United States.
Andrew Chuter reviews Their Blood Got Mixed, a graphic memoir through the heart of a remarkable experiment in self-determination.
In their book, The Locked-up Country — a play on Donald Horne’s The Lucky Country — Tom Chodor and Sharar Hameiri meticulously chronicle how governments opted for seemingly unthinkable measures to control the COVID-19 pandemic. Fred Fuentes reviews.
Cricketer Usman Khawaja challenging theÌýbanning of wearing messages supporting PalestineÌýis the latest example of athletes countering the idea that 'sports and politics don't mix'. Alex Salmon °ù±ð±è´Ç°ù³Ù²õ.Ìý