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Religion > Christian in Australia > Re: Disturbingl...
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Re: Disturbingly, the inquiry did not hear direct evidence from a

by bejah <bejah.dervish@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 7, 2008 at 02:12 AM

On May 7, 2:50 pm, "malcom.khan" <malcom.k...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> All of a sudden , the white christians and jews see an urgent need to
> grab more Australian Aboriginal land  , so they invent an urgent need
> to move in and grab control pretending they care about kids welfare as
> they drop bombs of babies in Iraq and Afghanistan , after dropping
> dozens of nuke bombs on aboriginal parents presently living on APY
> lands
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_nuclear_tests_at_Maralinga
>
> Woomera Prohibited Area is a weapons-testing range located in central
> South Australia. The Woomera Prohibited Area currently has an area of
> 127,000 square kilometres making it the largest land-based defence and
> aerospace range in the world [1]. This makes it roughly the size of
> englandhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woomera_Prohibited_Area
>
> FORMER Supreme Court judge Ted Mullighan yesterday slapped down the
> option of federal intervention in South Australia's  Aboriginal
> homelands,
>
> maphttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anangu_Pitjantjatjara_Yankunytjatjara
>
>  Mullighan reported that child  abuse on the Anangu Pitjantjatjara
> Yankunytjatjara lands, adjoining the federal intervention zone in the
> Northern Territory
>
> but Disturbingly, the inquiry did not hear direct evidence from a
> single victim of abuse.
>
> Not one verifiable case has been identified in his huge investigation
>
> act of parliament
1981http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anangu_Pitjantjatjara_Yankunytjatjara_La...
>
> The crisis, traced by Mr Mullighan to "Third World conditions" in the
> desert communities across South Astralia's far northwest, has
> overtones of the child safety emergency that last year precipitated
> federal government intervention in the Northern Territory.
>
> But the former judge, who was winding up a three-year inquiry into
> the  abuse of children in state care in South Australia, rejected the
> need for federal intervention in the APY lands.
>
> The measures, however, should be carried out in co-operation with
> local people and not imposed, as was the case when the Howard
> government intervened in the NT last year.
>
> "My approach in these recommendations is to empower the people who are
> likely to do the most good, and that is the Aboriginal people
> themselves," Mr Mullighan said. "If you have a problem concerning
> Aboriginal people, the best way to address it is through Aboriginal
> people.
>
> "I don't know what the army could possibly do, I don't know what it
> did in the Northern Territory."
>
> Federal Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin, describing the
> report as alarming, immediately pledged $19 million in additional
> funding for the APY lands.
>
> This would pay for a new police station and housing for police and
> child protection officers.
>
> and enable the full control over all Aboriginals so as to slowly
> remove the children and kill off the Elders for the USA military bases
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woomera_Prohibited_Area
>
> Woomera Prohibited Area is a weapons-testing range located in central
> South Australia. The Woomera Prohibited Area currently has an area of
> 127,000 square kilometres making it the largest land-based defence and
> aerospace range in the world [1]. This makes it roughly the size of
>
> "We need people to come forward with hard evidence so we can lock
> these bastards up," the Premier said.
>
> Mr Mullighan found that long-standing under-reporting of child sex
> offences to police and welfare agencies meant that his estimate of a
> 14 per cent incidence rate was probably far too low.
>
> Disturbingly, the inquiry did not hear direct evidence from a single
> victim of abuse. ," Mr Mullighan reported.
>
> looks like the USA wants the land for more USA military bases as it
> builds up for  its attack S E Asia , most aussies are far to drunk
> and  busy watching football to care
>
> Woomera Prohibited Area is a weapons-testing range located in central
> South Australia. The Woomera Prohibited Area currently has an area of
> 127,000 square kilometres making it the largest land-based defence and
> aerospace range in the world [1]. This makes it roughly the size of
> england
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woomera_Prohibited_Area
>
> any excuse is OK for yanks to move in and grab land or oil , often
> disguised as some noble cause , like in East Timore or Afghanistan or
> Iraq , we all know why the white christians show some humanitarian
> concern

Why not build the USA bases next to white australians homes ??

Then let them try attacking S E Asians

US close to decision on joint bases
By Mark Baker
Asia Editor
Singapore
June 7, 2004
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The United States is close to a decision to spend tens of millions of
dollars establishing permanent joint training facilities in northern
Australia for its military forces.

Defence Minister Robert Hill yesterday said he expected an in-
principle decision next month on a plan that could see thousands of
American soldiers, marines and air force personnel training at
upgraded Australian bases.

The move would involve US forces bringing state-of-the-art computer
systems that would also vastly enhance the training capabilities of
Australia's armed services.

Senator Hill said he was optimistic that a decision to proceed with
the joint facilities would be made at next month's annual defence
ministers' talks in Washington. But he said the final choice of which
base or bases would be chosen for upgrading was likely to follow
further detailed studies by the US.

American military teams that have inspected military facilities across
Australia are believed to be favouring several bases in the Northern
Territory and far north Queensland.
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The plan is part of a global review of the deployment of US forces,
which aims to reduce the number of personnel based in set locations
and develop more mobile and flexible capabilities.

Senator Hill said the plan was being backed by the commander of US
forces in the Pacific, Admiral Thomas Fargo. "They are taking it very
seriously," he said.

He said the plan would enable Australia to expand its support for a
key ally while giving Australian forces access to advanced training
technologies and computer systems. "The starting point is the
enhancement of the capability of one or more of our training
facilities. It's an opportunity to utilise the most sophisticated
training assets that exist in the United States," he said.

The Americans are believed to be keen to use the space available at
bases in northern Australia for complex "rapid deployment" training
between air and ground forces and for amphibious operations.

Senator Hill said the joint facilities would be an extension of the
support Australia already provided in military joint exercises and in
allowing the US Navy to rotate ships crews through Australia. "It's
just another aspect of a long and deep and important
relationship . . . It's to enhance mutual capability, ensure
interoperability and to assist a critically important ally," he said.

US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who met Senator Hill at a
regional security conference in Singapore at the weekend, said the US
was streamlining the deployment of its forces around the world.

"We don't want to be in a static defence mode. We want to be in a more
agile arrangement," he said.

"Some of our forces are where they were left over from the Cold War
and where it was reasonably easy to know where a threat might come
from. Today a threat can come from any number of directions, so we
need to have the flexibility and agility to deal with that."

Australia is involved in the reciprocal exchange of military personnel
with forces in the US, Britain, Canada, New Zealand and, to a lesser
extent, several Asian and Pacific island countries.

The Pine Gap communications complex near Alice Springs is the only
military facility jointly operated by Australia and the US on
Australian soil. There are no longer any US bases in Australia.

Labor defence spokesman Chris Evans said the Opposition supported
joint training facilities with the US in Australia. However, Labor was
against US soldiers being permanently based on Australian soil.




 1 Posts in Topic:
Re: Disturbingly, the inquiry did not hear direct evidence from
bejah <bejah.dervish@[  2008-05-07 02:12:17 

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tan13V112 Sat May 17 5:55:07 CDT 2008.