Human Rights Law Centre

Hundreds of people gathered outside Victorian Parliament House to oppose Victorian Labor鈥檚 introduction of the toughest bail laws in the country. Jacob Andrewartha and Kalindi Salvo Sampson 谤别辫辞谤迟.听

Josephine Langbien, a lawyer with the Human Rights Law Centre, told a forum organised by the Refugee Action Collective that Labor鈥檚 anti-immigrant laws are the 鈥渉arshest鈥 in decades. Chris Slee reports.

The Jewish Council of Australia has reiterated its call on politicians to stop exploiting antisemitism, after the Australian Federal Police confirmed that an聽abandoned caravan found with explosives聽was part of a 鈥渇abricated terrorism plot鈥. Kerry Smith reports.

Across the world, governments are targeting climate change protesters, while聽allowing fossil fuel companies to continue to pollute. In Australia, such arrests are above the international average. Binoy Kampmark reports.

The Human Rights Law Centre鈥檚 latest report on anti-protest laws should concern all those trying to win more democracy from a system geared to limit it. Josh Adams reports.

David Mejia-Canales from the Human Rights Law Centre speaks to Alex Bainbridge about its new report Protest in Peril: Our Shrinking Democracy.

About 300 people rallied outside Parliament House to demand Labor repeals the controversial anti-protest law changes. Paul Petit reports.

South Australian unions, human rights, legal and community groups are campaigning against Labor鈥檚 new draconian anti-protest laws, which passed the Legislative Assembly with the Liberal鈥檚 support. Paul Petit reports.

Human Rights Law Centre managing lawyer聽Sanmati Verma听迟辞濒诲 a forum that the Fast Track process was 鈥渄esigned to see people fail鈥. Chris Slee reports.

New South Wales Greens MP Abigail Boyd听迟辞濒诲 Suzanne James聽that NSW Labor has abandoned its base, ignoring the wave of concern about climate change that obliterated the federal Coalition government.

Proposed amendments to the Criminal Code Act of 1995 will make it impossible for media organisations to accurately report on what governments do behind closed doors, writes Jacob Andrewartha.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews formally apologised on May 24 in state parliament for a past law that treated people as criminals for being gay. "It is never too late to put things right," Andrews said. "It is never too late to say sorry and mean it. "There was a time in our history when we turned thousands of young men into criminals ... this was profoundly wrong. "It is the first responsibility of a government to keep people safe. But the Government didn't keep LGBTI people safe. The Government invalidated their humanity and cast them into a nightmare.鈥