Paul Barry from Media Watch thinks this story should have been covered-up.
Get stuffed lost soul Paul Barry. This is our planet, not yours.
By Peter Hannam at SMH
Within the next couple of weeks, a remote part of north-western Tasmania is likely to grab headlines around the world as a major climate change marker is passed.
The aptly named Cape Grim monitoring site jointly run by CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology will witness the first baseline reading of 400 parts per million (ppm) of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, researchers predict.
"Once it's over [400 ppm], it won't go back," said Paul Fraser, dubbed by CSIRO as the Air Man of Cape Grim, and now a retired CSIRO fellow. "It could be within 10 days."
The most recent reading on May 6 was 399.9 ppm, according to readings compiled by the CSIRO team led by Paul Krummel that strip out influences from land, including cities such as Melbourne to the north. (See chart below, with the red line showing the baseline CO2.)
Political heat
The approaching global CO2 threshold comes as climate change looks like becoming one of the key issues in Australia's election campaign.
The Turnbull government has made clear it will oppose Labor's proposals for an emissions trading scheme that will again put a price on carbon pollution.
New data out on Tuesday show that emissions from the country's main electricity grid covering the eastern states have risen 5.7 per cent - or 8.7 million tonnes - in the year to April compared with the final 12 months of the carbon tax that the Abbott government scrapped in July 2014, according to energy consultants Pitt & Sherry.
The share of coal in the National Electricity Market has risen to 76.2 per cent - its highest level since September 2012 - from 72.3 per cent during the period since June 2014, the consultants' latest Cedex report said.
Mark Butler, Labor's shadow environment minister, said the Cape Grim landmark reading was "deeply concerning".
"While the Coalition fights about whether or not the science of climate change is real, pollution is rising. And it's rising on their watch," Mr Butler said.
Greens deputy leader Larissa Waters said the Cape Grim result "should act as a global wake-up call and must shock both Australian big political parties out of their blind coal-obsession which is literally cooking our planet and our Great Barrier Reef".
"Our atmosphere cannot take any new coal mines – both the old parties must stop approving them and revoke their approval of the Adani coal mine [in Queensland] at both the state and federal level," Senator Waters said.
A spokesman for Environment Minister Greg Hunt defended the government's climate policies."There is now absolutely no doubt that we will beat our 2020 target" of cutting 2000-level emissions by 5 per cent by then, the spokesman said. "We are playing our part to tackle climate change and our 2030 target [of cutting 2000-level emissions about 19 per cent] is ambitious and significant," he said. "Labor has nothing more than a plan to bring back the carbon tax and hike electricity prices."
Rising 'pretty much all of the time'
Cape Grim's readings are significant because they capture the most accurate reading of the atmospheric conditions in the southern hemisphere and have records going back 40 years.
With less land in the south, there is also a much smaller fluctuation according to the seasonal cycle than in northern hemisphere sites. That's because the north has more trees and other vegetation, which take up carbon from the atmosphere in the spring and give it back in the autumn.
So while 400 ppm has been temporarily exceeded at the other two main global stations since 2013 - in Hawaii and Alaska - they have dropped back below that level once spring has arrived because of that greater seasonal variation.
David Etheridge, a CSIRO principal research scientist, said atmospheric CO2 levels had fluctuated around 280 ppm until humans' burning of fossil fuels and clearing of forests set in process rising levels of greenhouse gases almost without pause since about 1800.
"It's been upwards pretty much all of the time," Dr Etheridge told Fairfax Media. "This is a significant change, and it's the primary greenhouse gas which is leading to the warming of the atmosphere."
The following chart, compiled by CSIRO researchers using atmosphere and ice core readings, show how CO2 levels have risen over the past 2000 years.
While the 400 figure is in itself of no particular note, compared with 399 or 401, it was a marker likely to carry important symbolism. "People react to these things when they see thresholds crossed," Dr Etheridge said.
While the fraction may seem small, it is 0.04 per cent of the atmosphere. By comparison, a similar level of alcohol would be close to the legal driving limit in Australia.
"These things act at low concentrations," he said, noting that ozone-destroying chemicals at levels of parts per trillion were enough to damage that important component of the atmosphere.
The largest slave trading nation Britain used slave traders to transport 85,000 convict slaves to lutruwita. Then they carried-out genocide of the Aboriginal people. Today every adult Tasmanian is represented by 21 parliamentarians. The state is a bankrupt, colonialist basket case. We can publish your original content under the Creative Commons Attribution license. insidetasmania at gmail dot com
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We Can Do Better Than Paywall Mainstream Media
Today the World is crippled by debt. Many countries are dictatorships. Corrupt corporations got rich destroying the Earth's climate. Many economies are now unstable. Our current role is exposing Australia's corrupt, self-serving media.
7 May 2016
The Greg Hunt Shame Files
1) Hunt thinks there is no link between coal mines and climate change.
2) Hunt adds 49 species to the threatened and endangered list - on the quiet.
The Guardian -No definite link between coal from Adani mine and climate change
The federal environment minister has argued in court that coal from Australia’s largest coalmine would have no “substantial” impact on climate change and as a result he did not need to consider whether it would affect the Great Barrier Reef.
The Australian Conservation Foundation challenged Greg Hunt’s approval of Adani’s Carmichael mine, alleging he failed to consider the impacts the burning of the coal from the mine would have on climate change and hence on the Great Barrier Reef.
Scientists have found the current mass bleaching event affecting 93% of the reef was made 175 times more likely by climate change and would become a biennial event within 20 years. After that point, the continued existence of the reef would be in doubt.
In federal court documents obtained by Guardian Australia, Hunt denied he failed to consider the impacts of coal on the reef.
In the outline of submissions filed on behalf of the minister, the Australian government solicitor explains that the minister did not think the burning of the coal “would be a substantial cause of climate change effects” and would have “no impact on matters of national environmental significance”.
The minister’s reasoning was that whether the burning of the coal would make climate change worse depended on whether it would increase the total amount of coal burned globally. But he notes there are a “raft of factors” that could affect how much coal was burned globally, including whether the coal from the mine displaced other coal and whether it was dealt with within various national emissions targets.
He concluded that there “was no requisite relationship between combustion emissions and increases in global temperature”.
Further, the minister argued that since the net impact was “difficult to identify”, there was no need to impose conditions on the mine, such as that climate impacts would be offset.
“Put simply, because any increase in net global greenhouse gas emissions was a matter of speculation, there was no need for or utility in the imposition of conditions.”
The Australian Conservation Foundation was represented by the Environment Defenders Office Queensland. The court case was heard in the federal court in Brisbane on Tuesday and Wednesday and a decision is expected within three to six months.
The Guardian- Australia quietly adds 49 species to threatened and endangered lists
Nearly 50 new species of flora and fauna have been added without fanfare to the federal government’s list of threatened species, including nine that are critically endangered.
Among the species to be added to the list under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act were the brush-tailed bettong (endangered), the three-toed snake-tooth skink (vulnerable), the swift parrot (upgraded from endangered to critically endangered), and several types of orchid and albatross.
Australian Conservation Foundation campaigner Jess Abrahams said 49 species were added on Thursday without notice from the federal environment minister, Greg Hunt, or his ministry.
“Normally they’ll put out a press release and talk about all the great work they’re doing to turn this around. This time it just slipped out.”
Hunt’s office and the threatened species commissioner, Gregory Andrews, have both been contacted for comment.
Abrahams noted that no new funding had been put towards the existing threatened species strategy in the budget on Tuesday, meaning programs to bring animals such as the Leadbeater’s possum back from the brink of extinction were unable to be delivered.
Most of the species were threatened due to habitat loss, he said – and commercial activities that contributed to this were ongoing, compounding the problem of inadequate funding.
“What hope is there? ... The logging continues, the habitat loss continues – it’s no surprise that the species ends up on the threatened species list.”
The ghost bat, a late addition with a vulnerable status, has now joined two other threatened species on the list: the large-eared horseshoe bat (endangered), and Semon’s leaf-nosed bat (also vulnerable).
All live in the Melody Rocks near Cooktown on Cape York Peninsula, which fall under a mining proposal under consideration by the Queensland state government.
The limestone karst formations and their associated cave systems are key habitats for the three species, and Abrahams said the only known breeding site in Australia for two of them.
The mining proposal is currently before the Queensland government but has yet to be referred to the federal government for assessment under the EPBC Act. Approving it would only put the bats further at risk, said Abrahams.
The greater glider, found in East Gippsland in Victoria, was also having its habitat destroyed even as it was listed as vulnerable species.
The Goongerah Environment Centre reported that 11 greater gliders were found in a citizens’ survey of 850km of the Errinundra plateau, currently being logged by VicForests, just last week.
In East Gippsland, greater gliders are protected by law when more than 10 animals are found in a 1km long survey.
VicForests suspended its operations after GECO submitted its survey data to the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning on 28 April.
5 May 2016
Nikolic Enquiry Wants Enviro Groups to Clean-up After Logging and Mining Companies
Surprised to find this in the Hobart Mercury but not surprised an enquiry first suggested by Andrew Nikolic would arrive at this conclusion. It shows the depth of Liberal ecological depravity - the same phuktards that continued coal mining and wood chipping while the Barrier Reef was dying and then tried to cover-up the fact massive coral bleaching had happened on their watch. The problem in Tasmania was a few ENGO groups like the Wilderness Society got far too close to the logging industry during the 'forest peace deal'. TWS actually traveled to Japan to promote veneers made by Asian Timber Mafia local franchisee 'Ta Ann Tasmania'.
by Helen Kempton
The authors of a report from an inquiry into donations to environmental organisations have been accused of seeking to silence dissent over mining and logging in areas of native forest.
Save the Tarkine said the authors of the majority report from the Standing Committee on the Environment’s inquiry into the Register of Environmental Organisations were seeking to silence advocates for the environment.
The group’s stance has been backed by the Environmental Defender’s Office and the Wilderness Society.
The federal parliamentary inquiry was set up by Environment Minister Greg Hunt last year on the back of Tasmanian MP Andrew Nikolic’s motion that green groups be stripped of their charitable tax status.
In its report, the parliamentary committee recommended environmental groups use at least 25 per cent of their public funds for environmental remediation work in order to qualify as a tax-deductible charity.
“The Liberal and National Party members of this committee seem to think that instead of being advocates and defenders of our natural environment, that we should instead provide janitorial services to those who damage and destroy it,” Save the Tarkine campaign co-ordinator Scott Jordan said.
“This is an attempt to subvert the focus of advocacy groups and silence dissent to native forest logging and mining industries.
“But not only would this recommendation divert time and resources from advocacy, but it would place advocacy groups at the mercy of mining companies and forestry agencies who control the leases and access to many degraded areas where rehabilitation activities might take place, while applying no controls to the tax deductibility of the political campaigning by these same corporates.”
The authors of a report from an inquiry into donations to environmental organisations have been accused of seeking to silence dissent over mining and logging in areas of native forest.
Save the Tarkine said the authors of the majority report from the Standing Committee on the Environment’s inquiry into the Register of Environmental Organisations were seeking to silence advocates for the environment.
The group’s stance has been backed by the Environmental Defender’s Office and the Wilderness Society.
The federal parliamentary inquiry was set up by Environment Minister Greg Hunt last year on the back of Tasmanian MP Andrew Nikolic’s motion that green groups be stripped of their charitable tax status.
In its report, the parliamentary committee recommended environmental groups use at least 25 per cent of their public funds for environmental remediation work in order to qualify as a tax-deductible charity.
“The Liberal and National Party members of this committee seem to think that instead of being advocates and defenders of our natural environment, that we should instead provide janitorial services to those who damage and destroy it,” Save the Tarkine campaign co-ordinator Scott Jordan said.
“This is an attempt to subvert the focus of advocacy groups and silence dissent to native forest logging and mining industries.
“But not only would this recommendation divert time and resources from advocacy, but it would place advocacy groups at the mercy of mining companies and forestry agencies who control the leases and access to many degraded areas where rehabilitation activities might take place, while applying no controls to the tax deductibility of the political campaigning by these same corporates.”
10 Apr 2016
Hodgman, Goodwin To Attend $300,000 Shanghai Lunch
Tasmanian Premier Will Hodgman and Attorney General Vanessa Goodwin will attend a $300,000 taxpayer-funded 'Gala Lunch' in Shanghai on Thursday April 14 along with PM Turnbull. Hodgman's itinerary is here and Goodwin's is here.
From Adam Gartrell Government contract documents reveal Austrade – and therefore taxpayers – will pay the five-star Grand Hyatt Hotel $284,962 to cater the lunch. That comes on top of a $265,000 bill for venue hire at the Shanghai Expo Centre, although the lunch is only one of a number of events being held there throughout the week.
And it's costing significantly more than the same event in 2014. The first AWIC gala lunch, attended by former prime minister Tony Abbott, cost about $230,000 for venue hire and catering, according to official documents.
The lunch will be attended by about 1800 people, costing approximately $160 a head.
More Aussies than Chinese WTF?
The crowd will consist of a 1000-strong Australian business delegation led by Trade Minister Steve Ciobo and about 800 Chinese businesspeople and government figures.
The menu will "showcase Australian products", an Austrade spokesman said.
Inside Tasmania's view. The picture above shows Hodgman meeting a minor official, the deputy mayor of Shanghai on a previous visit. Most if not all of Hodgman and Goodwins meetings are with minor officials. There are 7 lunches and banquets listed on Hodgman's 7 day China itinerary. While Tasmania struggles to keep the power on after draining it's hydro electricity dams and China struggles to hide the Panama Papers from revealing Communist Party corruption to 1.3 billion people. Does anyone need lawyers Hodgman and Goodwin wasting time at banquets in a totalitarian regime whose out of control population has already changed the Earth's climate?
Hodgman meets minor official |
And it's costing significantly more than the same event in 2014. The first AWIC gala lunch, attended by former prime minister Tony Abbott, cost about $230,000 for venue hire and catering, according to official documents.
The lunch will be attended by about 1800 people, costing approximately $160 a head.
More Aussies than Chinese WTF?
The crowd will consist of a 1000-strong Australian business delegation led by Trade Minister Steve Ciobo and about 800 Chinese businesspeople and government figures.
The menu will "showcase Australian products", an Austrade spokesman said.
Inside Tasmania's view. The picture above shows Hodgman meeting a minor official, the deputy mayor of Shanghai on a previous visit. Most if not all of Hodgman and Goodwins meetings are with minor officials. There are 7 lunches and banquets listed on Hodgman's 7 day China itinerary. While Tasmania struggles to keep the power on after draining it's hydro electricity dams and China struggles to hide the Panama Papers from revealing Communist Party corruption to 1.3 billion people. Does anyone need lawyers Hodgman and Goodwin wasting time at banquets in a totalitarian regime whose out of control population has already changed the Earth's climate?
5 Apr 2016
Panama Papers - Meet Jurgen Mossack and Ramon Fonseca
Blake Schmidt at Bloomberg
For decades now, Jurgen Mossack and Ramon Fonseca have been the go-to guys in Panama for international investors looking to put their money in far-flung places.
But even before the world learnt their names on Sunday – in reports that alleged their firm played a critical role in helping political leaders around the world move money offshore – the lawyers knew their lucrative partnership had begun to fray.
During a four-hour interview last week, Mossack and Fonseca sounded like two men in retreat: the go-go days of cranking out shell companies en masse for clients was over; the firm's been considering scaling back its international franchising; and Mossack was expressing frustration about how Fonseca's political ambitions were earning them unwelcome scrutiny from regulators and the media.
Just days earlier, Fonseca had stepped down as a special adviser to Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela, saying he wanted to focus his attention instead on the business.
"We are going to make ourselves the right size – smaller," Fonseca said. For the co-head of a firm that over the past few decades has helped revolutionise the way companies and wealthy individuals structure their investments across the globe – and popularised the British Virgin Islands as a hub – the statement marks a big drop in ambition.
Many of the details of Mossack Fonseca's operations were revealed in a documents leak that the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) says showed how scores of celebrities and world leaders have been shuffling billions of dollars through banks and shell companies.
Among those who the ICIJ says used the firm's services to help them stash money overseas are Argentine President Mauricio Macri, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and associates of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
For decades now, Jurgen Mossack and Ramon Fonseca have been the go-to guys in Panama for international investors looking to put their money in far-flung places.
But even before the world learnt their names on Sunday – in reports that alleged their firm played a critical role in helping political leaders around the world move money offshore – the lawyers knew their lucrative partnership had begun to fray.
Jurgen Mossack and Ramon Fonseca |
Just days earlier, Fonseca had stepped down as a special adviser to Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela, saying he wanted to focus his attention instead on the business.
"We are going to make ourselves the right size – smaller," Fonseca said. For the co-head of a firm that over the past few decades has helped revolutionise the way companies and wealthy individuals structure their investments across the globe – and popularised the British Virgin Islands as a hub – the statement marks a big drop in ambition.
Many of the details of Mossack Fonseca's operations were revealed in a documents leak that the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) says showed how scores of celebrities and world leaders have been shuffling billions of dollars through banks and shell companies.
Among those who the ICIJ says used the firm's services to help them stash money overseas are Argentine President Mauricio Macri, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and associates of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
4 Apr 2016
How Bees Become Addicted To Caffeine
from Albany Daily Star
Researchers in United Kingdom have found that certain plants actually produce caffeine to attract bees and help in pollination.
Scientists at the University of Sussex said they thought the plants produce the caffeine in their nectar to fool bees into thinking it contains more sugar than it actually does. The insects will repeatedly visit those flowers, helping the plants maximize pollination.
Francis Ratnieks, a professor of apiculture at the university, said bees communicate by moving their abdomens a certain way — or, as he calls it, “dancing.” He said the caffeine increases that dancing.
In their experiments, Ratnieks and his colleagues used two artificial flowers that contained sucrose and water, and one contained caffeine as well. “The one with caffeine attracted more bees,” he said, and “the bees who were foraging made more dances — about four times as many dances.”
Identification numbers were glued to those bees exposed to caffeine, and the bees were then sent back to the hive. Those bees’ dances then influenced the behavior of others in the hive, and many bees were directed to revisit sites where caffeinated nectar had been found, even after the feeder ran dry.
The scientists theorized that plants use caffeine to manipulate bees in a way that is good for the plant, but not so good for the bees. The caffeine, they said, tricks bees into thinking that the nectar is of a higher quality and has more sugar than it really does.
According to scientists studying the phenomenon, plants produce caffeine within their nectar in order to fool bees into thinking there is more sugar in it than it actually has and attract them more. The trick makes bees return to the same plant over and over again and help that particular plant more in the process of pollination.
Francis Ratnieks, a professor of apiculture at the University of Sussex, has explained that bees use a series of specific movement patterns in order to communicate with one another. This dance-like pattern is created by the bee through specific movements of its abdomen and it seems that caffeine enhances it.
Researchers in United Kingdom have found that certain plants actually produce caffeine to attract bees and help in pollination.
Scientists at the University of Sussex said they thought the plants produce the caffeine in their nectar to fool bees into thinking it contains more sugar than it actually does. The insects will repeatedly visit those flowers, helping the plants maximize pollination.
Francis Ratnieks, a professor of apiculture at the university, said bees communicate by moving their abdomens a certain way — or, as he calls it, “dancing.” He said the caffeine increases that dancing.
In their experiments, Ratnieks and his colleagues used two artificial flowers that contained sucrose and water, and one contained caffeine as well. “The one with caffeine attracted more bees,” he said, and “the bees who were foraging made more dances — about four times as many dances.”
Identification numbers were glued to those bees exposed to caffeine, and the bees were then sent back to the hive. Those bees’ dances then influenced the behavior of others in the hive, and many bees were directed to revisit sites where caffeinated nectar had been found, even after the feeder ran dry.
The scientists theorized that plants use caffeine to manipulate bees in a way that is good for the plant, but not so good for the bees. The caffeine, they said, tricks bees into thinking that the nectar is of a higher quality and has more sugar than it really does.
According to scientists studying the phenomenon, plants produce caffeine within their nectar in order to fool bees into thinking there is more sugar in it than it actually has and attract them more. The trick makes bees return to the same plant over and over again and help that particular plant more in the process of pollination.
Francis Ratnieks, a professor of apiculture at the University of Sussex, has explained that bees use a series of specific movement patterns in order to communicate with one another. This dance-like pattern is created by the bee through specific movements of its abdomen and it seems that caffeine enhances it.
29 Mar 2016
Sinodinos Battles On
Sean Nicholls SMH
The fundraising body that has embroiled cabinet secretary Arthur Sinodinos in a campaign finance scandal did not tell NSW authorities it received almost $1 million in donations - including from property developers - the year it gave $693,000 to the Liberal party for the 2011 state election.
The controversial Free Enterprise Foundation (FEF), whose donation to the NSW Liberals is the subject of an escalating dispute with the NSW electoral commission, told the state authority it received no donations in 2010-11.
But it had received $958,000 from companies including Westfield ($150,000), Meriton ($50,000) and Walker Group ($100,000) in the same year - a fact it had disclosed in a separate declaration to the federal Australian Electoral Commission.
Westfield, Meriton and Walker Group were unable to donate to the Liberals' state election campaign as contributions from property developers are prohibited. However, they are allowed to donate to federal election campaigns.
The revelation sheds new light on allegations the FEF was used by the NSW Liberals to funnel illegal donations to its 2011 campaign.
It suggests the foundation did not want state authorities to make the link between the donations it had received and the money it gave to the NSW Liberals for the state election.
Last week the NSW electoral commission announced it is withholding $4.4 million in public funding to the NSW Liberals until the party formally discloses who donated the $693,000 via the FEF.
In a landmark ruling, the commission found the FEF was not a charitable discretionary trust which could receive "gifts" not classified as political donations.
As a result, it said the names of companies who donated through the FEF to the NSW Liberals must be declared as political donors by the party, which it has so far refused to do.
The ruling also contained the explosive finding that senior NSW Liberal officials had deliberately used the FEF to "channel and disguise donations by major political donors some of whom were prohibited donors".
The commission said to reach the conclusion it had relied on evidence provided to the Independent Commission Against Corruption during its Operation Spicer investigation into Liberal party fundraising.
It said it relied on evidence by officials including party finance director Simon McInnes, state director Mark Neeham and "through them" evidence of the "involvement" of finance committee members including Senator Sinodinos "in the arrangements touching the Foundation".
Senator Sinodinos chaired the NSW Liberal finance committee and was party treasurer at the time, but has insisted he had no knowledge of the FEF being used to channel illegal donations.
The finding has led to calls for Senator Sinodinos to stand aside as cabinet secretary. But Senator Sinodinos has criticised the electoral commission's report as "flawed" and asked that his name be removed.
The fundraising body that has embroiled cabinet secretary Arthur Sinodinos in a campaign finance scandal did not tell NSW authorities it received almost $1 million in donations - including from property developers - the year it gave $693,000 to the Liberal party for the 2011 state election.
The controversial Free Enterprise Foundation (FEF), whose donation to the NSW Liberals is the subject of an escalating dispute with the NSW electoral commission, told the state authority it received no donations in 2010-11.
But it had received $958,000 from companies including Westfield ($150,000), Meriton ($50,000) and Walker Group ($100,000) in the same year - a fact it had disclosed in a separate declaration to the federal Australian Electoral Commission.
photo Andrew Meares |
The revelation sheds new light on allegations the FEF was used by the NSW Liberals to funnel illegal donations to its 2011 campaign.
It suggests the foundation did not want state authorities to make the link between the donations it had received and the money it gave to the NSW Liberals for the state election.
Last week the NSW electoral commission announced it is withholding $4.4 million in public funding to the NSW Liberals until the party formally discloses who donated the $693,000 via the FEF.
In a landmark ruling, the commission found the FEF was not a charitable discretionary trust which could receive "gifts" not classified as political donations.
As a result, it said the names of companies who donated through the FEF to the NSW Liberals must be declared as political donors by the party, which it has so far refused to do.
The ruling also contained the explosive finding that senior NSW Liberal officials had deliberately used the FEF to "channel and disguise donations by major political donors some of whom were prohibited donors".
The commission said to reach the conclusion it had relied on evidence provided to the Independent Commission Against Corruption during its Operation Spicer investigation into Liberal party fundraising.
It said it relied on evidence by officials including party finance director Simon McInnes, state director Mark Neeham and "through them" evidence of the "involvement" of finance committee members including Senator Sinodinos "in the arrangements touching the Foundation".
Senator Sinodinos chaired the NSW Liberal finance committee and was party treasurer at the time, but has insisted he had no knowledge of the FEF being used to channel illegal donations.
The finding has led to calls for Senator Sinodinos to stand aside as cabinet secretary. But Senator Sinodinos has criticised the electoral commission's report as "flawed" and asked that his name be removed.
19 Mar 2016
Why The Four Corners Crew Was Arrested In Sarawak
The Malaysian corruption scandal involves Australia. We educated some of them and they own hotels and a timber company here.
By Lindsay Murdoch
Bangkok: "I came here for my children's education, that's all," Santamil Selvi angrily shouted at a Kuala Lumpur press conference, under close questioning from the ABC's Linton Besser.
It was a gotcha moment for Besser and his cameraman Louie Eroglu – this is probably when the official clock started counting down on their stay in Malaysia – but it was also a dramatic reminder of the role that patronage politics and an entrenched system of payments still plays in the way the country is run.
Santamil had just revealed that she was offered 20,000 Malaysian ringgit ($A6460) to apologise to Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and his family for alleging their involvement in the sensational murder of a Mongolian socialite in Kuala Lumpur in 2006.
Santamil is the widow of a private investigator who watched over
Altantuya Shaariibuu before she was killed. It is not the first time
that money has intervened in the case surrounding this gruesome murder.
Fairfax Media revealed in February that Sirul Azhar Umar, a Malaysian police bodyguard convicted of the murder, made videos distancing Mr Najib from the crime in January 2015 – at the same time that he was attempting to blackmail his government for $17 million to keep quiet.
A shadowy middleman with links to high-level Malaysian officials sent a message back to Sirul saying "they want to discuss".
The murder of 28-year-old Ms Shaariibuu has dogged Mr Najib during his seven years in office, despite his repeated denials of any involvement, while his office has described attempts to link him to the crime as "entirely false smears motivated by political gain".
Besser and Eroglu were deported on Tuesday after trying to question Mr Najib in Sarawak over how more than $A1 billion turned up in his private bank accounts in 2013 and 2012.
The scandal has focused attention on the nexus between politics and business in the long-ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO).
The Hong Kong-based Asia Sentinel reported earlier this month that once a month each of UMNO's 191 district chiefs receives 50,000 Malaysian ringgit ($A12,040) for expenses from Mr Najib's personal accounts.
The online news site claimed the system has sustained party loyalty through several prime ministers for 35 years and points to deep, long-running corruption of Malaysia's political system.
Analysts say that despite allegations swirling around Mr Najib's financial affairs and his management of heavily indebted state investment fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), his support in UMNO appears unassailable.
Mr Najib has purged his critics in UMNO, including an attorney-general who was investigating the 1MDB scandal, and cracked down on dissent from the media and academics.
Teck Chi Wong, a former Malaysian journalist studying at the Australian National University's Crawford School of Public Policy, said Malaysia's flawed political system has kept Mr Najib in power.
"Almost all power and resources are concentrated in the hands of the prime minister," Mr Teck wrote on the New Mandala academic website.
"These strengths are then abused by politicians like Najib to consolidate their position within UMNO … this isn't helped by the fact that many UMNO members rely on government contracts to make a living," he wrote.
"Many democratic institutions, which were established and inherited from the British political system to perform checks and balances, are also in a deplorable state."
Former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad said that investigations into 1MDB in the US, Singapore, Hong Kong and Switzerland could prove a more potent threat to Mr Najib than the alliance Dr Mahathir has forged with opposition MPs in a bid to topple the leader.
In Switzerland, prosecutors investigating 1MDB said in January that they believed around $US4 billion had been stolen from Malaysian state-owned companies.
And in Paris, French prosecutors are also pursuing claims relating to Ms Shaariibuu, who was abducted outside the home of one of Mr Najib's closest friends and shot twice in the head while she begged for the life of her unborn child, before her body was blown up with military-grade explosives.
Ms Shaariibuu worked as a translator in the final stages of a deal for Malaysia to buy two French/Spanish submarines when Mr Najib was defence minister.
She wrote a letter demanding $US500,000 to keep quiet about alleged kickbacks paid to high-level Malaysian officials. Mr Najib denies any wrongdoing.
Sirul, who is being held in Sydney's Villawood detention centre, and another of Mr Najib's former bodyguards who is on death row in Kuala Lumpur, have been convicted of Ms Shaariibuu's murder and sentenced to death.
"Bodyguards follow orders. So who gave the orders?" Dr Mahathir asked during an interview last week with London's Daily Telegraph newspaper.
By Lindsay Murdoch
Eroglu (L) Besser (R) leave Sarawak |
It was a gotcha moment for Besser and his cameraman Louie Eroglu – this is probably when the official clock started counting down on their stay in Malaysia – but it was also a dramatic reminder of the role that patronage politics and an entrenched system of payments still plays in the way the country is run.
Santamil had just revealed that she was offered 20,000 Malaysian ringgit ($A6460) to apologise to Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and his family for alleging their involvement in the sensational murder of a Mongolian socialite in Kuala Lumpur in 2006.
Altantuya Shaariibuu |
Fairfax Media revealed in February that Sirul Azhar Umar, a Malaysian police bodyguard convicted of the murder, made videos distancing Mr Najib from the crime in January 2015 – at the same time that he was attempting to blackmail his government for $17 million to keep quiet.
A shadowy middleman with links to high-level Malaysian officials sent a message back to Sirul saying "they want to discuss".
The murder of 28-year-old Ms Shaariibuu has dogged Mr Najib during his seven years in office, despite his repeated denials of any involvement, while his office has described attempts to link him to the crime as "entirely false smears motivated by political gain".
Besser and Eroglu were deported on Tuesday after trying to question Mr Najib in Sarawak over how more than $A1 billion turned up in his private bank accounts in 2013 and 2012.
The scandal has focused attention on the nexus between politics and business in the long-ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO).
The Hong Kong-based Asia Sentinel reported earlier this month that once a month each of UMNO's 191 district chiefs receives 50,000 Malaysian ringgit ($A12,040) for expenses from Mr Najib's personal accounts.
The online news site claimed the system has sustained party loyalty through several prime ministers for 35 years and points to deep, long-running corruption of Malaysia's political system.
Analysts say that despite allegations swirling around Mr Najib's financial affairs and his management of heavily indebted state investment fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), his support in UMNO appears unassailable.
Mr Najib has purged his critics in UMNO, including an attorney-general who was investigating the 1MDB scandal, and cracked down on dissent from the media and academics.
Teck Chi Wong, a former Malaysian journalist studying at the Australian National University's Crawford School of Public Policy, said Malaysia's flawed political system has kept Mr Najib in power.
"Almost all power and resources are concentrated in the hands of the prime minister," Mr Teck wrote on the New Mandala academic website.
"These strengths are then abused by politicians like Najib to consolidate their position within UMNO … this isn't helped by the fact that many UMNO members rely on government contracts to make a living," he wrote.
"Many democratic institutions, which were established and inherited from the British political system to perform checks and balances, are also in a deplorable state."
Former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad said that investigations into 1MDB in the US, Singapore, Hong Kong and Switzerland could prove a more potent threat to Mr Najib than the alliance Dr Mahathir has forged with opposition MPs in a bid to topple the leader.
In Switzerland, prosecutors investigating 1MDB said in January that they believed around $US4 billion had been stolen from Malaysian state-owned companies.
UMNO cronies Najib and Taib |
And in Paris, French prosecutors are also pursuing claims relating to Ms Shaariibuu, who was abducted outside the home of one of Mr Najib's closest friends and shot twice in the head while she begged for the life of her unborn child, before her body was blown up with military-grade explosives.
Ms Shaariibuu worked as a translator in the final stages of a deal for Malaysia to buy two French/Spanish submarines when Mr Najib was defence minister.
She wrote a letter demanding $US500,000 to keep quiet about alleged kickbacks paid to high-level Malaysian officials. Mr Najib denies any wrongdoing.
Sirul, who is being held in Sydney's Villawood detention centre, and another of Mr Najib's former bodyguards who is on death row in Kuala Lumpur, have been convicted of Ms Shaariibuu's murder and sentenced to death.
"Bodyguards follow orders. So who gave the orders?" Dr Mahathir asked during an interview last week with London's Daily Telegraph newspaper.
9 Mar 2016
Dutton Spends $55 Million To Resettle 2 Refugees
By Nicole Hasham SMH
A married Iranian couple who were once refugees at Nauru have left Cambodia and returned to their homeland despite the potential dangers, in a further sign Australia's $55 million deal with the south-east Asian nation has failed.
The office of Immigration Minister Peter Dutton confirmed the development on Tuesday, but said Nauru refugees were still encouraged to move to Cambodia.
It means Australia has paid Cambodia $55 million to permanently resettle just two refugees - striking a further blow to the much-maligned deal.
A married Iranian couple who were once refugees at Nauru have left
Cambodia and returned to their homeland despite the potential dangers,
in a further sign Australia's $55 million deal with the south-east Asian
nation has failed.
The office of Immigration Minister Peter Dutton confirmed the development on Tuesday, but said Nauru refugees were still encouraged to move to Cambodia.
It means Australia has paid Cambodia $55 million to permanently resettle just two refugees - striking a further blow to the much-maligned deal.
"Not only has this government wasted $55 million of taxpayers money
on this dud deal, they have also left more than 2000 people on Manus and
Nauru in limbo for nearly three years on their watch," he said.
"The inability of this government to secure a meaningful resettlement arrangement with a credible third country is a serious failure on the part of Malcolm Turnbull."
The government argues that the asylum seekers and refugees in offshore detention are a legacy of the former Labor government, and it has stopped unauthorised boat arrivals.
The Turnbull government has been seeking third countries in which to settle refugees from Nauru, after Australia refused to accept them. Nauru has offered refugees only temporary resettlement.
A spokeswoman for Mr Dutton said refugees "can elect to return to their country of origin at any time, which is what an Iranian couple in Cambodia decided to do recently".
A married Iranian couple who were once refugees at Nauru have left Cambodia and returned to their homeland despite the potential dangers, in a further sign Australia's $55 million deal with the south-east Asian nation has failed.
The office of Immigration Minister Peter Dutton confirmed the development on Tuesday, but said Nauru refugees were still encouraged to move to Cambodia.
It means Australia has paid Cambodia $55 million to permanently resettle just two refugees - striking a further blow to the much-maligned deal.
Dutton hands $55 million to Sok Pupet Photo: GDI |
"How can Cambodia take refugees better
than Australia," asks a protestor on the streets of Phnom Penh, as Scott
Morrison firms up the government's deal to send asylum seekers to the
poor nation.
The office of Immigration Minister Peter Dutton confirmed the development on Tuesday, but said Nauru refugees were still encouraged to move to Cambodia.
It means Australia has paid Cambodia $55 million to permanently resettle just two refugees - striking a further blow to the much-maligned deal.
Australian Immigration Minister Peter
Dutton with Sok Phal, director of the Cambodian Interior Ministry's
immigration department last year.
Labor's immigration spokesman Richard Marles said the deal had
been "botched" and reflected the government's "abject failure" in
dealing with asylum seekers."The inability of this government to secure a meaningful resettlement arrangement with a credible third country is a serious failure on the part of Malcolm Turnbull."
The government argues that the asylum seekers and refugees in offshore detention are a legacy of the former Labor government, and it has stopped unauthorised boat arrivals.
The Turnbull government has been seeking third countries in which to settle refugees from Nauru, after Australia refused to accept them. Nauru has offered refugees only temporary resettlement.
A spokeswoman for Mr Dutton said refugees "can elect to return to their country of origin at any time, which is what an Iranian couple in Cambodia decided to do recently".
"The government remains committed to supporting the government of
Cambodia to implement settlement arrangements in Cambodia and encourages
refugees temporarily in Nauru to explore this settlement option," she
said.
"The government holds firm on our policy that you if arrive by boat then you can either return to your country or origin or be resettled in a third country."
As Fairfax Media reported last week, the federal government says two gay refugees reportedly bashed at Nauru, where homosexuality is illegal, should take up the Cambodian resettlement deal.
The first group of four refugees arrived in Phnom Penh in June last year at a cost to Australia of $15 million, on top of $40 million in increased aid that Australia gave Cambodia to sign the agreement.
However one of those refugees returned to Myanmar. The departure of the Iranians leaves just one from the original group remaining, plus another who arrived last November.
Critics say Cambodia is not a suitable place to resettle refugees because it is impoverished, has been accused of human rights abuses and has no refugee resettlement experience.
Mr Dutton was forced to fly to Cambodia in September last year to salvage the controversial deal, after a Cambodian official declared the nation had no plans to resettle more than the four refugees who had so far arrived.
"The government holds firm on our policy that you if arrive by boat then you can either return to your country or origin or be resettled in a third country."
As Fairfax Media reported last week, the federal government says two gay refugees reportedly bashed at Nauru, where homosexuality is illegal, should take up the Cambodian resettlement deal.
The first group of four refugees arrived in Phnom Penh in June last year at a cost to Australia of $15 million, on top of $40 million in increased aid that Australia gave Cambodia to sign the agreement.
However one of those refugees returned to Myanmar. The departure of the Iranians leaves just one from the original group remaining, plus another who arrived last November.
Critics say Cambodia is not a suitable place to resettle refugees because it is impoverished, has been accused of human rights abuses and has no refugee resettlement experience.
Mr Dutton was forced to fly to Cambodia in September last year to salvage the controversial deal, after a Cambodian official declared the nation had no plans to resettle more than the four refugees who had so far arrived.
5 Mar 2016
US Economy Summed Up In 9 Charts
from Hang The Bankers
Thanks Hang the Bankers for the type of news the mainstreamers want (need) to cover-up. These charts are easy to understand and take almost no time to read.
With total US debt now past $65 Trillion is it any wonder a clown like Donald Trump wants a piece of the misery? How can this be alleviated or even managed? Let us know if you have any ideas?
Thanks Hang the Bankers for the type of news the mainstreamers want (need) to cover-up. These charts are easy to understand and take almost no time to read.
With total US debt now past $65 Trillion is it any wonder a clown like Donald Trump wants a piece of the misery? How can this be alleviated or even managed? Let us know if you have any ideas?
29 Feb 2016
'Perverse Science' - Greg Hunt Allows Logging River Red Gums In National Park
Why is selective logging OK on the Murray River but not OK in Tasmania?
'Perverse Science' applies to the work of the Institute of Foresters Australia and the overlapping ANU Forestry School. These two organisations were created by the State Forestry Commissions early last century. They push a perverse form of economic forestry disconnected from any other academic courses.
By Peter Hannam
Federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt has given approval for "ecological thinning" trials in a new national park on the Murray River, a move green groups say marks the first time logging has been permitted in forests granted the highest level of protection.
At the end of last month, the Environment department approved with conditions selective logging over five years in 44 plots within the Murray Valley National Park in NSW.
The previous Victorian coalition government had earlier pulled out of the trials in their state's side of the Barmah-Millewa forest, the largest stands of river red gums in the country.
The NSW government has argued that the viability of high-density stands of red gums is at risk during extended droughts, citing research done towards the end of the dry spell in 2009 – just prior to the creation of the national park the following year.
Green groups, though, say several spells of extreme wet weather have since removed the need for thinning in what is also an internationally listed Ramsar wetland.
The planned felling – with much of the fell timber available for local firewood collection – is merely a sop to local communities that have largely opposed the national park's creation, they say.
"The trial would mean logging red gum trees with heavy logging machinery in around 400 hectares of the park, building roads and using herbicide in this sensitive environment," said Morgana Russell, co-ordinator for the Friends of the Earth campaign.
"This perverse 'scientific logging' trial could be used as a model to push for destructive intervention in other national parks."
Mark Speakman, NSW's Environment Minister, said the limited scientific trial would cover just 0.9 per cent of the total park area.
"The government position remains that no commercial logging is allowed in national parks," Mr Speakman said.
"By reducing competition for water and other resources, ecological thinning will potentially have positive effects on key habitat features such as hollows, understorey plant structure and diversity and canopy condition," he said, adding that one purpose of the trial was to determine if that was the case.
The NSW Office of Environment's report supporting the thinning stated that sufficient water provision remains the "key ecological driver" determining the flood-dependent forest's health after generations of livestock grazing, timber harvesting and river-flow regulation.
However, even with programs such as The Living Murray Initiative and other environmental efforts, large areas of each forest "will not receive the desired water regimes", it said.
OisÃn Sweeney, science officer for the National Parks Association, said that the approval appeared to be "pre-ordained", and was instead pandering to local National Party interests.
"If it was based on science and a genuine drive to improve the condition of the forests, the government would have reassessed the forest's condition after the floods to see whether they had recovered, Dr Sweeney said,
Local timber interests, paid handsome compensation to exit the forests, would now be able to take wood away again. "This is double-dipping in a major way."
A spokesman for Mr Hunt said the trial had been designed to discover how biodiversity can be improved by creating more space for other plants and wildlife.
"This trial will not adversely impact on the delivery of environmental water to the Barmah-Millewa forest," he said, adding that the thinning could improve the area's ecological values.
Conditions would also be imposed to minimise disruption for various species, such as avoiding thinning within 100 metres of any Superb Parrot nest during breeding season.
Friends of the Earth's Ms Russell, though, said there was no way to guarantee that cutting down trees in an internationally recognised wetland "will not disturb, degrade and destroy habitat and species' homes".
Cultural sites of the region's traditional owners, the Yorta Yorta, were also at risk, she said.
No further thinning is planned after the current five-year trial is over, Mr Speakman said.
'Perverse Science' applies to the work of the Institute of Foresters Australia and the overlapping ANU Forestry School. These two organisations were created by the State Forestry Commissions early last century. They push a perverse form of economic forestry disconnected from any other academic courses.
By Peter Hannam
photo Karl Quinn |
Federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt has given approval for "ecological thinning" trials in a new national park on the Murray River, a move green groups say marks the first time logging has been permitted in forests granted the highest level of protection.
At the end of last month, the Environment department approved with conditions selective logging over five years in 44 plots within the Murray Valley National Park in NSW.
The previous Victorian coalition government had earlier pulled out of the trials in their state's side of the Barmah-Millewa forest, the largest stands of river red gums in the country.
The NSW government has argued that the viability of high-density stands of red gums is at risk during extended droughts, citing research done towards the end of the dry spell in 2009 – just prior to the creation of the national park the following year.
Green groups, though, say several spells of extreme wet weather have since removed the need for thinning in what is also an internationally listed Ramsar wetland.
The planned felling – with much of the fell timber available for local firewood collection – is merely a sop to local communities that have largely opposed the national park's creation, they say.
"The trial would mean logging red gum trees with heavy logging machinery in around 400 hectares of the park, building roads and using herbicide in this sensitive environment," said Morgana Russell, co-ordinator for the Friends of the Earth campaign.
"This perverse 'scientific logging' trial could be used as a model to push for destructive intervention in other national parks."
Mark Speakman, NSW's Environment Minister, said the limited scientific trial would cover just 0.9 per cent of the total park area.
"The government position remains that no commercial logging is allowed in national parks," Mr Speakman said.
"By reducing competition for water and other resources, ecological thinning will potentially have positive effects on key habitat features such as hollows, understorey plant structure and diversity and canopy condition," he said, adding that one purpose of the trial was to determine if that was the case.
The NSW Office of Environment's report supporting the thinning stated that sufficient water provision remains the "key ecological driver" determining the flood-dependent forest's health after generations of livestock grazing, timber harvesting and river-flow regulation.
However, even with programs such as The Living Murray Initiative and other environmental efforts, large areas of each forest "will not receive the desired water regimes", it said.
OisÃn Sweeney, science officer for the National Parks Association, said that the approval appeared to be "pre-ordained", and was instead pandering to local National Party interests.
"If it was based on science and a genuine drive to improve the condition of the forests, the government would have reassessed the forest's condition after the floods to see whether they had recovered, Dr Sweeney said,
Local timber interests, paid handsome compensation to exit the forests, would now be able to take wood away again. "This is double-dipping in a major way."
A spokesman for Mr Hunt said the trial had been designed to discover how biodiversity can be improved by creating more space for other plants and wildlife.
"This trial will not adversely impact on the delivery of environmental water to the Barmah-Millewa forest," he said, adding that the thinning could improve the area's ecological values.
Conditions would also be imposed to minimise disruption for various species, such as avoiding thinning within 100 metres of any Superb Parrot nest during breeding season.
Friends of the Earth's Ms Russell, though, said there was no way to guarantee that cutting down trees in an internationally recognised wetland "will not disturb, degrade and destroy habitat and species' homes".
Cultural sites of the region's traditional owners, the Yorta Yorta, were also at risk, she said.
No further thinning is planned after the current five-year trial is over, Mr Speakman said.
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