Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 7:47 p.m. No.13350508   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0513 >>0524 >>1239

Tortured by Iran, trolled at home: academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert hits out at vicious attacks

 

STEPHEN RICE - APRIL 2, 2021

 

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Since walking free from the hellhole of Iran’s brutal Evin Prison four months ago, Australian academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert has had to face a new trauma — a ­vicious online trolling by sacked university professor Tim Anderson, who claims that she was an ­Israeli spy and helped organise “repeated terrorist murders”.

 

Dr Anderson, a far-left “anti-­imperialist” who once flew to Syria for an audience with President Bashar al Assad, has been prominent in pushing Tehran’s unsupported claims that Dr Moore-Gilbert was a Mossad agent and has posted propaganda videos that allege her “missions” included spying on the Iranian nuclear program.

 

But now Dr Moore-Gilbert has had enough.

 

The Melbourne University lecturer in Islamic Studies has hit back, labelling Dr Anderson an “Iran puppet and con­spiracy theory zealot” fired for “peddling the propaganda” of ­regimes such as Syrian President Bashar al Assad.

 

“He is clearly just a mouthpiece for these regimes,” Dr Moore-Gilbert told The Weekend Australian. “It’s not just him; there’s quite a few useful idiots in Western countries who are happy to do a deal with these guys.

 

“I honestly don’t see any logical explanation for his fixation on me, that months after my release he’s still tweeting about me the same propagandistic stuff that was released by the regime. He’s been told he has to promote that narrative and he’s doing his job.”

 

Dr Moore-Gilbert no longer sees the posts: she has blocked Dr Anderson, and some of his more aggressive followers.

 

The 33-year-old was released from jail late last year after being held in the notorious Evin Prison for more than two years on trumped-up charges of spying.

 

Dr Anderson, a political economy lecturer, was sacked by Sydney University in 2019 after a series of misconduct findings that included posting an image that featured a Nazi swastika super­imposed on the Israeli flag and sharing a photograph of one of his PhD students wearing a badge that said “death to Israel” and “curse the Jews”.

 

Dr Anderson may be an outlier in academia, and even on the radical left, but he has more than 30,000 Twitter followers. He describes himself as director of the Centre for Counter Hegemonic Studies and says he was “sacked from the University of Sydney for offending Israeli killers”.

 

He is appealing his dismissal in the Federal Court in what’s set to become a test case on the limits of academic freedom. His appeal is backed by the National Tertiary Education Union, which argues “cancel culture” led to his axing.

 

Dr Moore-Gilbert doesn’t buy it. “I think in all universities it’s a fireable offence,” she said. “I mean, if you ­replaced comments about Jews with comments about any other minority group — Muslims, African-Australians, homosexual people — there would be a huge outcry about it.

 

“I don’t see why making anti-Semitic remarks should be any ­different. It’s a violation of the university’s policies and he’s violating his employment contract by making such remarks and therefore, as would I or any academic, should expect that they would take disciplinary action against you.

 

“We are, as academics, tasked with conducting research and teaching that is informed by data, and informed by the facts, and the kind of narratives that this guy’s promoting do not at all appear to me to be informed by any research basis or factual basis that an academic would be speaking from.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 7:48 p.m. No.13350513   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0516

>>13350508

 

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Dr Moore-Gilbert finds it difficult to reconcile Dr Anderson’s ­demands for unfettered freedom of speech for himself, with his championing of a tyrant like President Assad who imprisons and kills his political opponents.

 

“It’s completely hypocritical; I don’t think he has any credibility whatsoever, either as an academic or as an independent commentator or whatever he’s trying to set himself up as,” she said.

 

“He flew to Damascus for a photo op with Bashar Al Assad at the same time Assad was bombing his own civilian population with chemical weapons — that’s a bit of a scandalous thing for an academic to do.”

 

After Scott Morrison hosted Dr Moore-Gilbert at Kirribilli House last month, and she thanked him for his help, Dr Anderson tweeted: “Australia’s PM Scott Morrison hosts Israeli zealot Dr Kylie Moore-Gilbert. Where are the ­foreign influence laws?”

 

But in a stinging repost, Dr Moore-Gilbert flung Dr Anderson’s words back at him, tweeting: “Syrian President Bashar Assad hosts Iran puppet and conspiracy zealot Dr Tim Anderson fired by @Sydney Uni for peddling these regimes’ propaganda and other odious views. Where are the ­foreign influence laws?”

 

Dr Anderson, however, has continued his attacks.

 

“Prior to her missions in Israel (vetting Iranian defectors), Syria and Israel, Kylie Moore-Gilbert presented as pseudo neutral in the Middle East hothouse,” he wrote last week. “But scratch the surface and she is as fanatically anti-Syrian and anti-Iranian as any other Zionist.”

 

It’s a charge that Dr Moore-Gilbert vehemently rejects.

 

“On what basis is he actually making this claim? I’m neither anti-Syrian nor anti-Iranian, nor am I a Zionist,” she said. “I’m very sympathetic towards Iran. I love Iran very much. It breaks my heart I can’t return there. I am very connected to the Iranian people; I’m talking to multiple friends in Iran on a daily basis.

 

“This claim that I’m some sort of evil Zionist is just bizarre because actually, you know, anybody who knows me would know I’ve been very critical of the Israeli government and I’m not an Israeli, I’ve never been employed by Israel — I’ve never worked in Israel.”

 

After a recent interview Dr Moore-Gilbert conducted with Sky News, Dr Anderson accused the “Murdoch media” of being part of a conspiracy to “stick with the ‘innocent abroad’ story so as to keep promoting war with Iran”.

 

Suggesting Dr Moore-Gilbert had done “military and leadership training in Israel”, he said Sky had “helped cover up the contribution of Israeli agents to a wave of assassinations and terrorism against the people of Iran”. In one tweet, he said he was glad Dr Moore-Gilbert had been released but then declared “her links to Israel should not be covered up”, and he linked to an article he claimed “tells of her leadership training in one of the ­illegal colonies in the occupied West Bank of Palestine”.

 

But the linked article says nothing about “leadership” or “training”; those words are an invention by Dr Anderson.

 

The words used in the ­article to describe the summer program Dr Moore-Gilbert attended are an “exploration of classic Jewish texts and seminal Zionist thinkers, lectures from prominent Israeli intellectuals and public figures, field trips to historic sites, and inter­action with Israeli peers”.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 7:49 p.m. No.13350516   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0536

>>13350513

 

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It was at that camp that Dr Moore-Gilbert was photographed with four other women, all wearing khaki jackets — an image that became Exhibit 1 in Iran’s bid to convince the world that she had undergone military training.

 

“Has anybody actually seen what an Israeli military uniform looks like?” she asked, exasperated. “If I was a soldier in the Israeli Defence Forces I would be wearing an IDF uniform not just a random old crappy khaki jacket. And surely, if I was trained in some top secret spying facility, there wouldn’t be pictures of that on ­social media. You know, I mean that’s bonkers!”

 

One thing she would like to clear up: the camp was held in a West Bank settlement but she said she was against the settlements.

 

“I mean, actually during this program I was one of the more vocal participants challenging the hosts about the fact that it’s being held in a settlement. I was calling it out. I was in favour of a two-state solution. I was in favour of Israelis withdrawing from settlements, handing them to the Palestinians.

 

“For me it’s quite upsetting to be called a Zionist and some sort of hardcore, pro-Israel fan girl when actually I have a very moderate view of both sides.”

 

Dr Anderson told The Weekend Australian he was not trolling Dr Moore-Gilbert, but was tweeting about her “because the corporate media, including The Aust­ralian, have been making this false argument there was no evidence about her being recruited by Israel — that’s not true at all”, he said.

 

“Iran has posted a substantial video which has been posted on a number of sites, citing the evidence about her receiving military and leadership training in Israel.”

 

Asked for details of this evidence, Dr Anderson could only point to a 6½-minute video aired on Iranian television.

 

“The Iranians said they had evidence she was involved in vetting Iranian dissidents who came to ­Israel to check if they were OK. So they refer to a number of things which presumably they have evidence about her links with Israel.”

 

Told that Dr Moore-Gilbert emphatically denies being a Zionist, Dr Anderson replied: “Well she speaks like one.”

 

Dr Moore-Gilbert is absorbed in the task of writing a book about her experiences in Iran, but even now, back at home in Melbourne, she doesn’t feel entirely safe.

 

“My address is known to the Iranian regime … so presumably it’s known to whatever operatives they have in Australia,” she said.

 

“But I don’t want to live my life in fear. I don’t think that I’m necessarily in danger at the ­moment — it wouldn’t be good for them to do anything to me here in Australia.”

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/higher-education/tortured-by-iran-trolled-at-home-academic-kylie-mooregilbert-hits-out-at-vicious-attacks/news-story/62e649bc6c1135e1f99e27514ec29eaa

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWw2PWQ58mo

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yv6ikkI6WJg

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 7:50 p.m. No.13350524   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0536 >>1239

>>13350508

How the Murdoch War Megaphone pulls the wool over our eyes

 

Dr Tim Anderson - 3 APR 2021

 

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In some ways I should be flattered by repeated front page smears from the Murdoch media. After all, this appalling media monopoly has backed Australian involvement in every one of the seven Middle East wars over the past two decades, while I have opposed all of them.

 

But why such an effort? Why is it important to a huge company to repeatedly smear one person? What’s wrong with their usual tactic of just ignoring little people?

 

Of course, the war media asserts, Kylie was held in a “hellhole” for no reason at all, because ‘Iran is the problem’, not the US war machine.

 

The Australian Government made an extraordinary effort to free Kylie from an Iranian prison, organising a prisoner exchange with a third country. Now that government and much of the corporate media is making an extraordinary effort to portray her as an ‘innocent abroad’, falsely asserting that Iran presented ‘no evidence’ against her.

 

So the latest Murdoch smear is that I supposedly made ‘vicious attacks’ on Kylie. Back in 2014 they said I had stirred ‘fresh controversy’ by visiting Syria. In 2017 they called me a ‘Sarin Gasbag’, for criticising the repeated fake stories about Syria using poison gas. And in 2018 they claimed I had praised the North Korean leader, when in fact I had written nothing at all about him.

 

I visit countries under attack by the big powers as part of my research work, in part because I believe that war and threats of war dehumanise entire populations, and undermine our understandings of other cultures.

 

And yes I do compare the Israeli massacres in Gaza with the racial massacres of the Nazis, because the gravity of their crimes against Palestinians is far too often understated.

 

Well this work seems to undermine the drive for war; so the Murdoch media periodically unloads a torrent of abuse on me, in attempts to intimidate anyone else from visiting or sympathising with peoples under attack.

 

Putting aside the petty distortions and lies that abound in these Murdoch attacks, I would like to focus on some common threads in this propaganda.

 

First the Murdoch scribes use classical propaganda devices with deceptive simplicity, repetitively asserting the same lines, without the need for much rational argument.

 

The old proverb “Oh! that mine enemy would write a book!” meant that one’s enemies’ words could be used against them. No such nicety is required by the Murdoch stable. I have not seen either of my research books on the Middle East wars (The Dirty War on Syria 2016; and Axis of Resistance 2019) quoted by them. They seem to not care about such trivia.

 

Second, they seem unable to imagine that someone may act on principle – in this case defend targeted countries from aggression – unless they are a paid agent or a fanatic. So the latest from Stephen Rice showcases a string of abuse from Kylie, saying I was an

 

“Iran puppet and conspiracy theory zealot … [who] flew to Damascus for a photo op with Bashar Al Assad at the same time Assad was bombing his own civilian population with chemical weapons … He is clearly just a mouthpiece for these regimes … [nevertheless] for me it’s quite upsetting to be called a Zionist.”

 

Recent exchanges have led Kylie to drop her previous pseudo-neutral stance, of a disinterested observer, to speak of the “odious regimes” of Iran and Syria and to repeat the fake and ludicrous war propaganda clichés (“Assad … bombing his own civilian population”) against Syria. And not a word against the Apartheid regime in Palestine.

 

Her line of reasoning, and that of the Murdoch stable which uses her, suggests that people could not oppose Australia being subject to foreign invasions, terrorism and economic siege unless they were fanatical mouthpieces for Australia’s hereditary monarchy and Scott Morrison. Just childish.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 7:53 p.m. No.13350536   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13350516

>>13350524

 

2/2

 

That brings me to the question of Kylie as an Israeli spy, which to my mind might not be such a big issue had it not been denied so vehemently by the Murdoch media and Canberra.

 

What basis was there for her conviction? ‘nothing’, says the Murdoch stable.

 

In fact there is such information. First of all, Iran’s media published a short documentary which summarised the case; a version with an English translation of the narration is published here. That video says Kylie was recruited to the Mossad by her then Israeli boyfriend Ruslan Hodorov. Only after her release from prison did western media acknowledge that she had married an Israeli. But there is more.

 

Iran says she at first travelled to Syria, then began to work on Israel’s Iranian nuclear program file, which involved finding out ways in which Iran bypassed US sanctions. After military and leadership training she was appointed as an inspector, vetting Iranian defectors who visited Israel. Then she carried out her two visits to Iran, on the second of which she was captured. This is Iran’s summary of their case.

 

It has corroboration in Israeli sources. Murdoch journalist Stephen Rice was either too lazy or too dishonest to look at the links I sent him, the day before his article, as he mentioned just one Israeli article: “but the linked article says nothing about “leadership” or “training”; those words are an invention by Dr Anderson.”

 

In fact I had referred Stephen to several articles, as you can see in the two DMs reproduced below. The Plus61j article, combined with information on Tikvah fellowships and the Ein Prat academy (where Kylie spent one month in 2011), show that she was indeed engaged in Israeli “leadership training”.

 

The Ein Prat Israeli leadership academy, attended by Kylie Moore-Gilbert as a Tikvah fellow, is set in Alon ‘settlement’, one of many illegal colonies in the occupied Palestinian West Bank. It sits right in the middle of the occupied West Bank, between Jerusalem and Jericho. Travel to this academy must be under armed escort and entry to the colony is by an ‘Israeli only’ road. The Plus61j article simply says that Kylie “explored her Jewish identity in an Israeli program on the West Bank in 2011”.

 

However the Tikvah Fund, which provided her with a scholarship, says it is “committed to supporting the intellectual, religious, and political leaders of the Jewish people and the Jewish State”, while Ein Prat calls itself an “Academy for Leadership” which “has acted as an incubator for civilian leadership in Israeli society since 2001. We believe that young people, secular and religious, have the power to build a better Israel.”

 

Since the Israeli colony has engaged in literally hundreds of attacks on “Iran backed” groups in the region and has assassinated several of Iran’s nuclear scientists, it is not hard to imagine why Tehran does not look kindly on Israeli agents.

 

Nevertheless, apparently confident that his Murdoch megaphone was loud enough to ignore any such any checking, Stephen Rice pretended Kylie’s Israeli “leadership training” simply did not exist. He misled his readers.

 

This wilful ignorance and distortion of facts allows the Murdoch stable to keep representing the US backed regional wars (in Palestine, Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen) as humanitarian exercises.

 

For example, the Murdoch media backs US Secretary of State Blinken’s absurd claims that his country is the greatest humanitarian donor to the Syrian people, while ignoring facts that I point out in my books: that this same USA is bombing Syria, backing anti-Syria terrorists, imposing a genocidal siege and occupying Syria’s land while it steals Syria’s fuel and food.

 

This is how the Murdoch War Megaphone tries to pull the wool over our eyes.

 

https://counter-hegemonic-studies.site/murdoch-megaphone-1/

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 8:19 p.m. No.13350655   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0667 >>0671 >>1272

Pope Francis holds mass with cardinal he cast out of the Vatican - Cardinal Angelo Becciu

 

TESS LIVINGSTONE - APRIL 2, 2021

 

In a surprise move, Pope Francis celebrated Holy Thursday mass privately with Cardinal Angelo Becciu, whom he abruptly fired last September amid financial scandals. They said the mass, one of the most important of the year, commemorating the Last Supper and Christ’s instituting the Eucharist, in the chapel of Cardinal Becciu’s private apartment.

 

A Vatican source would not comment on the Pope’s “private engagements”, but said “a fatherly gesture like this, on a day like Holy Thursday, does not seem strange”.

 

Francis normally celebrates Holy Thursday mass in public. But this year he delegated the task to the dean of the college of cardinals, Giovanni Battista Re, who offered the mass in St Peter’s ­Basilica with restricted attendance due to COVID-19.

 

At the time of his sacking last year, Cardinal Becciu said the Pope “told me that he no longer has trust in me because a report came from the magistrates that I allegedly committed acts of ­embezzlement’’. He denied any wrongdoing. Four months ago, he sued an Italian magazine for €10m, claiming reports of corruption investigations had ruined his reputation and eliminated his chances of becoming pope.

 

In October 2019, Vatican police raided the offices of the Secretariat of State, where Cardinal Becciu had formerly been second in charge. There, he was an ardent opponent of the financial reforms initiated by Cardinal ­George Pell when he was the Vatican’s prefect for the economy. Cardinal Becciu banned internal and external audit processes, Police reportedly raided the Secretariat of State because they were investigating a dubious ­investment of several hundred thousand euros by the Vatican in real estate in London’s up-market Chelsea. The deal reportedly cost the Vatican millions of euros in payments to middlemen.

 

The Pope’s gesture of reconciliation towards Cardinal Becciu was made amid seething tensions in the highest levels of the church over the banning of private masses at the 45 side altars and chapels of St Peter’s Basilica. Outspoken Hong Kong cardinal Joseph Zen this week became the fifth cardinal to speak out against the move.

 

“If it were not for the restrictions imposed by the coronavirus, I would take the first flight to come to Rome and get on my knees in front of the door of Santa Marta (the papal residence) until the Holy Father has this edict withdrawn,” he said on his website. Cardinal Zen, 89, is a vocal critic of the Vatican’s secret pact with the Chinese Communist Party. Before the pact was renewed last October he travelled to the Vatican to meet Francis to discuss it. But he left after four days, without being granted an audience.

 

Cardinal Zen said the private masses he has said in the Basilica during visits to Rome over many years were “the masses that, in my life, I celebrated with more fervour and emotion, sometimes with tears praying for our living martyrs in China.

 

“It was the thing that strengthened my faith most every time I came to Rome: At exactly seven o’clock I would enter the sacristy, a young priest would come forward and would help me to dress in the vestments, and then they take me to an altar in the Basilica proper or in the grottoes, that would make no difference to me, we were in St Peter’s Basilica!’’

 

In a passing reference to the same controversy in his Easter feature in Inquirer today, Cardinal Pell wrote: “Individual masses have been banned on the side altars at St Peter’s Basilica; stopped, probably for the first time since Charles V’s German Protestant troops sacked Rome in 1527.’’

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/pope-francis-holds-mass-with-cardinal-he-cast-out-of-the-vatican/news-story/d830f2b685981c1f0728e51db023d0e4

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 8:21 p.m. No.13350667   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0671 >>1272

>>13350655

Add another national broadcaster to reflect other views, says George Pell

 

TESS LIVINGSTONE - APRIL 3, 2021

 

Australia should consider a ­second national broadcaster to present an alternative outlook to the ABC, Cardinal George Pell believes.

 

Writing in The Weekend Australian from Rome, Cardinal Pell said: “Very sensibly Italy has at least a couple of government-sponsored television stations to reflect the different points of view, which is an option that should be considered by any national conservative government in Australia, where the ABC is dominated by a Gramscian hegemony, hostile to social conservatives, most Christians and often to Western civilisation. The Italian media is divided and disputatious but not monochrome.”

 

Asked if his view was shaped by the ABC’s coverage of the child abuse charges against him that eventually were overturned 7-nil by the High Court and the ABC’s coverage of a rape allegation against Christian Porter, the cardinal said his was a broad observation but those matters were part of it. “Everybody has a right to due process,’’ he said. “I think they were so convinced that their position was correct that they cut corners on due process and it is always dangerous.”

 

Asked whether he regretted not following the same path as Mr Porter, who is suing ABC journalist Louise Milligan and the corporation for defamation, Cardinal Pell said: “I don’t regret it too deeply.” Would he still consider doing so? “No comment.”

 

He said a free press was more important to democracy than ever in the era of “wokeness’’ and “cancel culture’’. He would not support privatisation of the ABC but greater diversity in national broadcasting was essential. “But beyond one or two (government-funded) outlets, most of the media should be part of an open market.”

 

Cardinal Pell said he doubted whether the old BBC ideal of impartiality was possible any longer given the green-left outlook of most humanities courses taught in Australian universities.

 

Writing from his apartment beside the Eternal City’s Leonine walls, constructed by Pope Leo IV in 850 after Rome had been ravaged by Saracens, Cardinal Pell said Catholic Rome, battling COVID-19, was “ill at ease, as the Vatican’s financial troubles begin to bite, with the cardinals’ salaries being clipped by 10 per cent and other staff by 8 per cent”.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/media/add-another-national-broadcaster-to-reflect-other-views-says-george-pell/news-story/92a9031e17d059b4e4918e1212d52f74

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 8:23 p.m. No.13350671   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0677 >>1272

>>13350655

>>13350667

Reflection and belief in the quiet Eternal City

 

CARDINAL GEORGE PELL - APRIL 3, 2021

 

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Easter comes at the correct time of year in the northern hemisphere as spring produces new life. The cherry blossom is out in our piazza and on the streets of Rome, and small green shoots are beginning to appear on the branches of the large western plane trees that run alongside the Leonine walls first constructed by Pope Leo IV in 850 after Rome had been ravaged by the Muslim Saracens. The wall was heightened in 1277-80 by Pope Nicholas III and a walkway constructed linking the Vatican to the fortress Castel Sant’Angelo, which had started out as a colossal mausoleum for the great Emperor Hadrian and his family in AD128.

 

The elevated walkway has been used by at least three popes as an escape route; by the notorious Borgia pope Alexander VI in 1494 when the French were advancing on Rome, then in 1527 by Clement VII while fleeing the Germans, and by Pius IX in 1870 when the French troops left the Papal States.

 

The Eternal City is a ghost town as tourists and pilgrims have vanished. It is a perfect setting for obligatory Lenten penances. A third wave of infections has swept the country so that more than 3.5 million Italians have been infected and 110,000 have died, much worse than in Australia. The school closures are keenly felt and two weeks before Easter there were protests in 23 cities against the lockouts.

 

Nearly everyone in the Vatican has been vaccinated but the rollout in Italy is slow, as it is across the continent, while Britain’s program is steaming ahead. It is fascinating to see the obstacles created and the prejudices against the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, which is cheap and easily stored.

 

Italy has a new national government, the 66th since World War II, to meet the crisis and the Premier and many ministers are not elected members of parliament. The national debt is enormous, but for the immediate future of the EU Italy is too big to fail, with a larger economy than both Spain and Greece. Sensibly, Italy has at least a couple of government-sponsored television stations to reflect the different points of view, which is an option that should be considered by any national conservative government in Australia, where the ABC is dominated by a Gramscian hegemony hostile to social con­servatives, most Christians and often to Western civilisation. The Italian media is divided and disputatious but not monochrome.

 

In these COVID times Catholic Rome is also ill at ease, as the Vatican’s financial troubles begin to bite, with the cardinals’ salaries being clipped by 10 per cent and other staff by 8 per cent. Individual masses have been banned on the side altars at St Peter’s Basilica; stopped, probably for the first time since Charles V’s German Protestant troops sacked Rome in 1527.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 8:24 p.m. No.13350677   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0693 >>1272

>>13350671

 

2/3

 

On a happier note on a sad theme, the increased number of homeless living around the Vatican, sometimes in the colonnades, are well looked after, fed, able to take a shower, and supported by the Pope’s almoner, young Polish Cardinal Konrad Krajewski, with a hands-on approach and a heart of gold. He himself was able to restore the electricity supply of one of his friends when it was interrupted. Many of the younger cardinals have more colourful backgrounds than the old hands.

 

Most of the poor and all of the taxi drivers in Rome have a viewpoint on religion and the Vatican, while everyone knows when Lent is ending, Holy Week is approaching and has a rudimentary grasp of Christian claims. The Easter bunny doesn’t get much of a run in Rome; thanks be to God.

 

In Australia, everyone enjoys the Easter break, as they enjoy the Queen’s Birthday holiday, but many haven’t much of a notion about the Christian origins of the celebration, even of Good Friday.

 

This is partly because the Christian teachings about Easter are quite uncompromising; an explicit claim to supernatural happenings, to the triumph of good over evil through the redemptive suffering and death of the Son of God, despite the reality of so much continuing suffering in the world. Christians claim that in his dying Christ went through to the highest heavens, absolving the faults of many. He looked evil in the eye and defeated it through his own defeat. A large claim.

 

Christians believe in redemptive suffering, that our personal sufferings can be turned to a good purpose through Christ. This belief can be a wonderful consolation in bad times. I like to recount the anecdote about Karl Marx who, when he had a bad attack of boils, lamented that he did not have a God to whom he could offer his sufferings. At least he knew what he was missing.

 

Christians claim not only that God continues to work through history, but redemption was achieved through actual events in Jerusalem when Pontius Pilate was the Roman governor and Herod was tetrarch. Christ died on Calvary. Few dispute this. Is he truly risen from the dead? There were no bones in the tomb after the resurrection, only a miraculous liberation, more marvellous even than the Jewish escape from Egypt under Moses. Such might be mistaken claims but they are not a bloodless myth, not an attractive apparition from the dreamtime, but an assertion that the cross has triumphed through the execution of an uneducated preacher, a non-Roman who was crucified like a slave in a difficult outlier province of the empire.

 

Naturally my words are spoken with a disciple’s tongue and an increasing percentage of Australians, often people of goodwill, cannot accept that they are true; or do not even know what is claimed. Some aren’t interested, others would like to believe but they cannot. I am blessed, or lucky, to have been brought up to believe that this account of God’s love at work is true and I have explicitly chosen to continue to believe. I suspect most Christians at some stage are tempted to wobble, to wonder about the truth, perhaps even to doubt, although the great 19th-century English thinker St John Henry Newman explained that difficulties do not necessarily lead to doubts. But too many are lapsing into disinterest or unbelief. Unfortunately, the sad little story of two clergy, sliding towards agnosticism and discussing theology, does not belong entirely in the realms of fantasy.

 

“Did you hear,” said the first speaker, “that Jesus’ bones have been found?” “What,” replied his friend, “are you saying that Jesus really existed?” I think we can safely assume that neither of these fictional figures would believe that eternal consequences might follow from the morality or immorality of our actions. Unlike the pagan gods of Greek and Rome, the Judaeo-Christian God is interested in how we live.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 8:27 p.m. No.13350693   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1272

>>13350677

 

3/3

 

Easter is harder to swallow than Christmas, as it is harder to believe that God’s Son suffered and died, than it is to believe that a messenger of God came to live among us to provide moral support. The big difficulty for the Christian case comes from the scriptural evidence because Jesus cannot be portrayed as a good bloke, not even as a good commonsense fellow. His claims are too bizarre.

 

As CS Lewis rightly concluded from the evidence, Jesus was either a liar, or a lunatic, or the Son of God; or the evidence is completely untrustworthy. From whatever starting point we come to Easter, the author of the beatitudes, of the parables was a religious genius. It is almost beyond dispute that he came to a bad end, was condemned unjustly. Why would his mythmakers burden such an attractive figure with claims that after three days in the grave he rose from the dead; and in that three-day interval, “descended into hell” to liberate the souls of the just who had died earlier? From most points of view the story does not add up.

 

But the story is coherent for believers and Easter will be celebrated with faith and reverence in all the Christian denominations. Many Catholic churches will have a congregation two or three times bigger than the usual Sunday community.

 

Most Italians are Catholic or ex-Catholics, with a significant dose of hostility as unbelief is spreading, especially in large cities. But the culture cannot escape its Catholic history. The Pope is the most important person in Italy and, although Pope Francis will celebrate with his cardinals in an almost empty St Peter’s, the church is everywhere with its parishes, monasteries, nuns and friars in their medieval robes.

 

Italian society with a higher percentage of believers does Easter better than we do in Australia. Italy has no Stawell Gift, no Easter horseracing carnivals, although the soccer has AFL levels of popular support. A cynic once claimed to me that more Italians, especially perhaps in the south, believed that Jesus suffered and died than believe in the resurrection. But in the villages after the Good Friday ceremonies, the procession of the dead Jesus will wind through the streets with Jesus and his mother going to different places to await the resurrection.

 

In my first Easter as a priest in 1967 in the mountains of Abruzzo, I was performing my ablutions on Easter Sunday morning when a series of loud explosions rocked the village. Were the Vietcong mounting an attack? It was only the locals exploding powerful fireworks to celebrate Jesus’ comeback, his return from the dead.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/reflection-and-belief-in-the-quiet-eternal-city/news-story/4df26208170c5d1d9acaaa69a0eb9c69

 

https://qanon.pub/?q=Pell

 

https://qanon.pub/?q=cardinal-george-pell

 

https://qanon.pub/?q=pecking

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 8:47 p.m. No.13350803   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0809 >>1294

Seven blood clot deaths in the UK after AstraZeneca vaccine

 

Queensland’s chief health officer has warned people to “seek urgent advice” if they have symptoms of a rare vaccine side effect, after seven died in the UK.

 

Natalie Brown - APRIL 3, 2021

 

1/2

 

Seven people in the UK have died from unusual blood clots after receiving the AstraZeneca COVID-19 jab, as Australian health officials vow they’re taking the “potential risk very seriously”.

 

The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency confirmed to the BBC that out of the 18 million people vaccinated across the UK up to March 24, 30 had presented with the blood clots. Out of those, data showed 22 cases of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST), a type of blood clot in the brain.

 

It remains unclear whether the condition is a side effect of the vaccine or just a coincidence, with investigations underway to determine if the AstraZeneca vaccine is causing the rare syndrome.

 

News of the deaths come after the first case of the condition was identified in Australia, in a 44-year-old Melbourne man who received the jab on March 22. Yesterday, he presented to the Victorian capital’s Box Hill Hospital with a fever and abdominal pain, and was found to have abdominal clots with a very low platelet count.

 

Both the Australian Health Protection Principal Committee and TGA vaccine safety investigation group will hold emergency meetings on Saturday to look into the case and consider responses.

 

This morning, Queensland’s chief health officer, Jeannette Young, insisted the vaccine is perfectly safe for the vast majority of people, but warned people to be aware of the symptoms of rare but serious side effects like blood clots.

 

“It is very, very unlikely, but if you do (become unwell four to 20 days after receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine), then you should seek urgent advice. That’s important,” Dr Young advised, adding that at this point in time, “people shouldn’t be concerned”.

 

“We know that all vaccines have some very, very rare side effects that can be serious, and we know if we are giving the same vaccine to large numbers of people across the whole world, we would expect to see those rare side effects because we’re giving the vaccine to millions and millions and eventually billions of people.

 

“People just need to be aware of any symptoms and just come forward if they do have them.”

 

Yesterday, acting chief medical officer Michael Kidd urged Aussies to stay calm.

 

“Investigators have not at this time confirmed a casual link with the COVID-19 AstraZeneca vaccine but investigations are ongoing,” Professor Kidd told reporters.

 

The “very rare disorder” has “previously not been known to be associated with the vaccine, however it has been noted as a complication of people who have contracted COVID-19”, Professor Kidd said.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 8:49 p.m. No.13350809   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13350803

 

2/2

 

Before reassuring Australians that health officials are taking the “potential risk” of the clotting disorder “very seriously”, Prof Kidd also reinforced the importance of people getting vaccinated against coronavirus.

 

“We continue in Australia to be at risk of another serious outbreak of COVID-19 at a time when most of our population has no immunity from either past infection or from vaccination,” he said.

 

“We do have low risk of transmission of COVID-19 in Australia at this time but we are being open about possible risks and acknowledge the uncertainty that this will cause. We are taking this potential risk very seriously.

 

“At this time, the risk of serious disease and death from COVID-19, if we experience another severe outbreak, especially among older Australians and those with severe health conditions, is far greater than the very small potential risk of a very rare clotting disorder associated with the vaccine.”

 

While health officials in the UK and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) repeated a similar sentiment, overnight the Netherlands joined a growing number of countries in halting its use of the AstraZeneca vaccine.

 

“We must err on the side of caution, which is why it is wise to press the pause button now as a precaution,” Health Minister Hugo de Jone said.

 

The Netherlands follows Canada and France, where the vaccine has been suspended to people aged under 55, and Germany, where use of the vaccine has been restricted to those aged over 60, among others – prompting the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI) to also reassess its position.

 

ATAGI found no link between the vaccine and blood clots but, in a new warning, told patients who received of the COVID-19 vaccines (Pfizer or AstraZeneca) to be aware of common side effects which include fever, sore muscles, tiredness and headaches usually 24 hours after the dose.

 

“The reports from overseas of rare clotting disorders have occurred later than this. Before day four and day 20, after vaccination, and have generally caused severe symptoms requiring hospitalisation,” the warning reads.

 

“People should be particularly alert to severe persistent headaches occurring 4-20 days after vaccination and which are different to the usual pattern of headaches that people may experience at other times and which do not settle with paracetamol or other over the counter painkillers.”

 

In a statement, ATAGI said there would be no change to the clinical guidance on the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine, following findings by the EMA that the condition may be associated with clots linked to thromocytopenia, a rare but serious condition involving low levels of blood platelets.

 

“ATAGI considers the benefits of vaccination in protecting people in Australia from COVID-19 outweigh the rare potential risk of these rare blood clotting events, and supports the continued rollout of the AstraZeneca vaccine in Australia,” they said.

 

https://www.news.com.au/world/coronavirus/health/seven-blood-clot-deaths-in-the-uk-after-astrazeneca-vaccine/news-story/c9f9547573a55ca8a8050fcb1e9a883f

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 9:46 p.m. No.13351013   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1022 >>1275

‘We must cut China ties I helped build’, says former SA trade minister Tom Kenyon

 

DAVID PENBERTHY - APRIL 2, 2021

 

A former state trade minister who backed a controversial Chinese consulate in Adelaide now says Australia must “disengage economically” from China as Beijing becomes hard line.

 

Tom Kenyon, who served for two years as trade minister in the Weatherill Labor government, said Beijing’s trade war and ­increased militarism meant there was little point trying to pretend the relationship between the two nations would continue to be of value. He told The Weekend Australian that President Xi Jinping was more akin to Mao Zedong than the pragmatic and economically focused Chinese leadership of the 2010s when he was trade minister and South Australia was keen to boost its ties with Beijing.

 

Mr Kenyon said that during his time in the ministry SA pulled back on its trade presence in countries such as Malaysia and the UAE and moved its focus aggressively towards China, leading several trade delegations to China and boosting the sister province relationship between SA and Shandong.

 

At that same time the SA Labor government gave Beijing approval to acquire a 5600sq m suburban block in Joslin for a rumoured $5m, where its new consular complex was launched this week by SA Liberal Premier Steven Marshall amid angry protests led by SA’s large Uighur community.

 

Mr Kenyon said it was now time for Australia to pull back, saying it was increasingly obvious that China did not share our values and that Australia now had to make a choice.

 

“Up until this point, Australia has been able to have a strong trading relationship with China and a strong political friendship with the US,” Mr Kenyon said.

 

“Unfortunately, we no longer have this luxury. Australia needs to begin disengaging economically from China or, at the very least, limiting our exposure to the Chinese economy.”

 

Mr Kenyon said the relationship between Australia and China had “fundamentally changed” since he was trade minister.

 

“When I took the role we were in the final days of Hu Jintao’s presidency and Australia, along with the rest of the world, had been engaging with China expecting China to become more open and more collegiate.

 

“That all changed within a few months when current and now-permanent President Xi Jinping took over, as well as continuing his role heading the Chinese Communist Party.

 

“Since that time, the CCP has become more aggressive, more hostile and more likely to interfere in events in foreign countries. President Xi seems to be a genuine communist more in the mould of Mao Ze Dong than Jiang Zemin. This does not augur well for us.”

 

Mr Kenyon said he regretted that so much goodwill and hard work on trade and cultural ties ­between Australian and China was now being undone by Beijing’s aggressive stance.

 

“It’s important to remember here that the Chinese people are not the problem,” Mr Kenyon said.

 

“The CCP is the problem ­because it is an organisation that is hostile and alien to Western freedoms and values.”

 

Mr Kenyon’s comments were echoed by another SA Labor government minister, former ­attorney-general Mick Atkinson, who was in government when the consulate was given approval to expand.

 

Mr Atkinson told The Weekend Australian that China’s ­increased disregard for human rights in Hong Kong meant Australian politicians needed to ­reconsider their preparedness to deal with Beijing.

 

“The horror of Chinese Communist Party rule in Xinjiang, Tibet and Hong Kong is something the Premier will have weighed in his decision to attend the opening of the new Chinese consulate in Adelaide,” Mr Atkinson said.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/we-must-cut-china-ties-i-helped-build-says-tom-kenyon/news-story/41233663dac6b9d600056898c43a8bbb

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 9:48 p.m. No.13351022   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1027 >>9853 >>4624 >>1275

>>13351013

New Zealand’s failure to call out China throws spotlight on nation’s relationship with Beijing

 

There are concerns from New Zealand Five Eyes’ allies that it may be the weak link in dealing with China as the Ardern Government, again, failed to call out Beijing.

 

Benedict Brook - APRIL 3, 2021

 

1/2

 

Last week, 13 nations across the globe raised their concerns about China’s apparent meddling in the World Health Organisation’s investigation into the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

The members of the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, which include Australia, Canada, the UK and US, all signed the joint declaration.

 

Well almost all. One Five Eyes nation, New Zealand, declined to put its name to the communique.

 

It’s led to a lingering concern that the government of Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is weaker when it comes to standing up to Beijing. It’s even been dubbed the “soft underbelly” of the Five Eyes.

 

Wellington may have seen the diplomatic and trade tussles between China and Australia and has decided it doesn’t want to end up in the same position. But as New Zealand has found out, even mild criticism can enrage China.

 

NZ fails to join Five Eyes’ China statements

 

“New Zealand has been criticised for its perceived reluctance to join with other states and speak up on matters of concern with China,” University of Canterbury China specialist Professor Anne-Marie Brady wrote in magazine The Diplomat last year.

 

“It is practising deliberate ambiguity in its China policy, and so far, it seems to be getting away with it.”

 

But New Zealand’s attempts to find a win-win way to deal with Beijing has led its political will to be questioned by its allies.

 

In January last year, British newspaper the Financial Times stated that New Zealand was “on the edge of viability as a member” of the Five Eyes and had a “supine” attitude to China.

 

A piece of evidence backing up that view occurred this week when even WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called out China for its reticence to provide the WHO COVID-19 investigation with the raw data scientists had demanded.

 

That New Zealand did not back up the WHO, the Five Eyes, or the likes of Japan, South Korea and Israel in calling out China was striking.

 

The Ardern Government said its reluctance to join the chorus of disapproval was because it hadn’t fully read the report. That’s despite everyone else, including tiny Estonia, having had sufficient time to swot up on its contents.

 

“Our technical experts are currently analysing the report,” a spokeswoman for New Zealand Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta told The Australian.

 

“As this is a scientific report, we want to make sure we understand the science before making any comment.”

 

The prevarication has happened before. In January, New Zealand failed to sign another official statement from the other Five Eyes condemning the arrests of pro-democratic politicians in Hong Kong.

 

Also in January, Kiwi trade minister Damien Cook said Australia should follow New Zealand and “show respect” to China and be “cautious with wording”.

 

That advice led former diplomat and current Liberal MP Dave Sharma to say he “expected a little more from trans-Tasman solidarity”.

 

“It betrays a lack of acquaintance with basic facts that I would not expect from a close friend and partner like New Zealand,” he told the SMH.

 

Many eyebrows have been raised about New Zealand’s handling of its relationship with China.

 

Unlike Australia, it has signed up to an aspect of Beijing’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative. According to the Financial Times, Chinese Communist Party-linked businesspeople are big donors to New Zealand’s main political parties.

 

A recent New Zealand MP admitted to teaching Chinese spies English to monitor other country’s communications prior to emigrating. But he has denied passing information about his adopted country back to Beijing, reported the website Stuff.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 2, 2021, 9:49 p.m. No.13351027   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9853

>>13351022

 

2/2

 

NZ dubbed Five Eyes’ ‘soft underbelly’

 

“Tiny New Zealand may seem like a strange target for Communist party infiltration, but the country is attractive to Beijing as the soft underbelly of the Five Eyes,” wrote Jamil Anderlini in an opinion piece for the Financial Times last year.

 

The term “soft underbelly” haunts Ms Ardern. In 2018, the Canadian Government used it in an official document to describe how China views New Zealand as a weak point in security intelligence. It added that Beijing’s relationship with Wellington was a model for future China-Australia relations.

 

New Zealand exports $18 billion of products to China, double that which goes to Australia.

 

“Presumably out of fear Beijing would respond with economic sanctions, Ms Ardern has gone out of her way to avoid even mentioning the topic of Chinese political interference,” added Anderlini.

 

She need only look across the Tasman to see the trade pain China has caused Australia after Canberra called for the WHO investigation, banned Chinese tech giant Huawei from sensitive infrastructure and continued to criticise Beijing’s human rights record.

 

In contrast, earlier this year, a free-trade deal between China and New Zealand was upgraded.

 

CCP mouthpiece the Global Times lauded Wellington, saying “it doesn’t take sides” between the US and China and “has maintained its own judgment in major China-related agendas”.

 

China’s constant call is for western nations to not take sides, which also has the handy side effect of weakening any push back that might come its way.

 

Search for a ‘safe way’ to deal with China

 

Prof Brady said New Zealand was searching for a “safe way” to deal with China. But said the country was actually more aggressive in pushing back against Beijing than it had been in the past.

 

She has dubbed it New Zealand’s “quiet shift” from the “blind eye” it had previously adopted.

 

“New Zealand is … seeking to find a safe way to deal with China’s increased political interference activities and aggressive foreign policy,” she said.

 

“The New Zealand government has strenuously avoided confronting China directly. Instead the government has carefully managed a case-by-case recalibration of the New Zealand-China relationship, all the while claiming any changes were ‘country agnostic’.”

 

In a piece in The Guardian, Prof Brady said New Zealand could learn from Australia’s China “missteps”.

 

The danger for New Zealand, however, is there may be no safe way to manage China and its dainty glass jaw. Any criticism of Beijing is met with hostility.

 

In December, Ms Ardern backed – in a somewhat muted fashion – Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s frustration of a tweet from a Beijing apparatchik that depicted a digger slitting the throat of an Afghani child.

 

The Global Times duly aimed its barbs Wellington’s way. A warning shot, perhaps.

 

“Kiwis bleat like Aussie sheep but don’t condemn Afghan killings,” said the newspaper, which claimed Ms Arden’s comments were something she “has to say” to maintain trans-Tasman relations.

 

NZ not silent on China, but perhaps more muted

 

New Zealand has certainly not been silent on China. It has expressed dismay at the smashing of Hong Kong’s already limited democracy. It has also banned Huawei from sensitive infrastructure. Last week, the foreign ministers of Australia and NZ said they had “grave concerns” about the treatment of the Uighurs.

 

Ms Ardern said New Zealand law prevented sanctions being levied against China. That get-out meant China did not levy sanctions in return, which occurred for the US, UK and Canada. Nonetheless, Beijing still took a swipe admonishing it for interfering in the nation’s “internal affairs”.

 

It’s a difficult balancing act for Ms Ardern and the New Zealand government.

 

Its aim may be to not poke the dragon. But when its allies are routinely smarting from Beijing’s wrath, there may be pressure for Wellington to give up its “quiet shift” and more stridently support Australia and other world democracies in pushing back against China.

 

https://www.news.com.au/finance/work/leaders/new-zealands-failure-to-call-out-china-throws-spotlight-on-nations-relationship-with-beijing/news-story/38340b8efbbefb7e4ade864bd9a91fa8

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:19 a.m. No.13351607   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1611 >>1613 >>1275 >>1294

Covid ‘just China’s first virus threat’, warns Mike Pompeo

 

GREG SHERIDAN - APRIL 2, 2021

 

1/2

 

The world faces new pandemic outbreaks at least as deadly as COVID-19 because of the ­continued biological weapons ­research being undertaken in Chinese laboratories, Donald Trump’s secretary of state Mike Pompeo has declared.

 

“The Chinese Communist Party continues to engage in this sort of biological research,” Mr Pompeo told The Weekend ­Australian in a wide-ranging ­interview.

 

“The risk of this sort of thing happening again from a Chinese facility is real and significant.

 

“We can see in the millions of lives lost and the billions of dollars of wealth that’s been destroyed, the world must make sure that this does not happen again.”

 

Mr Pompeo believes that COVID-19 originated in a Wuhan laboratory, but that it was not released intentionally by Chinese authorities.

 

“I am highly confident the virus began in Wuhan, China,” he said. “I am reasonably confident it came from the (Wuhan Institute of Virology) laboratory. I am less certain of that and the CCP has diligently tried to make sure we never know. But the weight of evidence suggests it likely came from that laboratory.”

 

Mr Pompeo is unimpressed by the joint World Health Organisation/China investigation into the origins of the virus and said Beijing stood condemned for its cover-up.

 

“We still don’t know who patient zero was,” he said. “We still haven’t seen the original strain. We still haven’t interviewed the doctors that were working in the laboratory.

 

“The central moment that the Chinese knew they had a virulent virus that was human-to-human transmissible, their choice was to lock down Wuhan and to lock down the world from understanding the risk that was presented to it. That cover-up alone, regardless of where the virus actually began, is something the CCP must be held to account for.”

 

Before he became secretary of state in 2017, Mr Pompeo was CIA director; before that he was a member of the congressional ­intelligence committee. He endorsed recent remarks by US Indo-Pacific commander Philip Davidson that Beijing could launch military action against Taiwan in the next few years.

 

“In my time in service I saw the Chinese actions and the intelligence we had about their intentions,” Mr Pompeo said.

 

“The reunification of Taiwan is something they are intent upon. The means that they will use are likely to be coercive at the front end and military at the back end, only when necessary.”

 

Mr Pompeo believes the best way to avoid conflict and safeguard regional democracies is for the US and its allies to make clear to Beijing that military action against Taiwan would come at an enormous cost.

 

Mr Pompeo sees the Quadrilateral Dialogue, involving the US, Australia, Japan and India, as critical in resisting Chinese ­domination. “These are four great friends,” he said. “They are real democracies, with all the noise and hubbub that comes with that, but they are real democracies working every day to make their countries great.”

 

Mr Pompeo said the chief method of coercion Beijing ­employed was economic power, citing recent trade actions against Australia as an example. But the Quad nations between them were powerful enough to resist such ­coercion, he said.

 

“We four represent a very ­significant piece of the economic activity between free and open ­societies. We should do our best to get rid of tariffs on each other, make sure we have as open and free arrangements between our countries as we can, and demand that other countries participate on the basis of those same rules.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:20 a.m. No.13351611   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13351607

 

2/2

 

However, Mr Pompeo believes the US and its allies, including Australia, are not acting with sufficient vigour in the hi-tech competition with Beijing.

 

“We are not doing enough, not nearly enough,” he said.

 

Hi-tech fields such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, quantum computing, blockchain and a few others would be the “commanding heights of the next generation” whereas in the past they were resources such as oil. “We must make sure the technology of the future is democratic technology and not totalitarian technology,” he said.

 

He gave a cautious pass mark to the Joe Biden administration in its early handling of China and Asia policy. “I’m hopeful,” he said. “There is a bipartisan consensus in the US on the threat from China. I’m rooting for the current administration to have the backs of our friends like Australia, India and our friends in Southeast Asia as they are confronted by all the things we know the Chinese are likely to do.”

 

Mr Pompeo strongly contests the idea that Beijing is a status quo power with limited objectives.

 

“The Chinese Communist Party deeply believes their ­Marxist/Leninist ideology is the right ideology for the world, and they attempt to impose that ideology everywhere. Their intentions are to undermine democracy.”

 

He is more critical of the Biden administration in its weakening of US policy towards Iran, and cites the recent China-Iran economic agreement as a dangerous development.

 

“The Chinese need oil and the Iranians need money and weapons systems,” he said.

 

Because of the Biden administration’s weakening of US sanctions on Iran, Mr Pompeo said Tehran now faced almost no limitations on the weapons systems it could acquire.

 

“You will see increased trafficking in arms systems,” he said.

 

“The Iranians have the ­capacity to build some of these on their own. But Chinese cyber capabilities, Chinese missile ­technology, all the things the ­Chinese have been working on these last 25 years are now likely to find their way to an ayatollah who will use them to destabilise the Middle East. It’s a really negative outcome to see China and Iran working so closely together.”

 

Mr Pompeo would not accept that his former boss’s language and undisciplined tweets were a significant problem.

 

He argued that the Trump ­administration deserved to be judged by what it did, rather than whether it lived up to diplomatic niceties.

 

Rumours are strong that Mr Pompeo plans to run for the presidency in 2024.

 

He said: “It’s a long ways off. I’m always up for a good fight. But I have a mission before that.

 

“The Republicans do not control any of the Houses of Congress. We’ve got to get them back. I want to help that happen.”

 

That response will convince both his admirers and his critics that Mr Pompeo plans to have a crack at the Oval Office.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/covid-just-chinas-first-virus-threat-warns-mike-pompeo/news-story/c3f84010077b4bf081a2d84b1e54d9f7

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:21 a.m. No.13351613   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1616 >>1275

>>13351607

Pompeo rallies allies against China threat

 

GREG SHERIDAN - APRIL 2, 2021

 

1/3

 

Mike Pompeo was the surviving resident adult in the national ­security administration of former president Donald Trump. He was, successively, a pro-Trump congressman, CIA director for a year, then secretary of state for two. Uniquely in that turbulent, unstable administration, he not only survived, but left each position with his reputation enhanced and solid achievements under his belt.

 

Pompeo was certainly controversial, and by previous diplomatic standards strikingly direct. But his accomplishments are undeniable. He achieved a string of peace agreements between Israel and its Arab neighbours, which would have been unthinkable under Barack Obama. And he established a completely dominant new US ­position on China, which the ­administration of Joe Biden has honoured by not changing in any significant way.

 

More than that, in the neurotic performance drama of Trump’s erratic statements and mercurial emotions, there was a ballast — a substance and reliability — to Pompeo that every US ally valued.

 

Now he looks to be running, if as yet unofficially, for president in 2024. Although an ebullient and engaging personality, he sees a pretty dark world with one enormous problem at the centre of everything — the Communist Party of China.

 

In a wide-ranging and lengthy interview over Zoom, I asked Pompeo what he thought Beijing’s strategic ambitions really were. His reply was less than cheerful.

 

“Two things we can point to in making predictions about their ­actions. First is what they say. Their central idea is to undermine democracy everywhere. The Chinese Communist Party deeply ­believes their Marxist/Leninist ideology is the right ideology for the world, and they attempt to ­impose that ideology everywhere.

 

“Second, observe their actions. They chastise their counterparts. Any time someone dares ask what’s happening in western China (Xinjiang), in Tibet, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Mongolia, they say stay out of our business, that’s our internal affairs.”

 

Pompeo argues the best way to avoid conflict and keep democracies safe is for the US and its allies and friends to make it clear to ­Beijing that breaching its inter­national obligations carries a cost.

 

“When the CCP says we’re going to allow the people of Hong Kong to be semi-autonomous for 50 years and then violates it, the world has to take note, the world has to respond to it, the world cannot say ‘Oh darn it, that’s just the Chinese doing what they do’.

 

“When the CCP puts a million people in internment camps, the world can’t just say ‘Oh, you know, it’s an internal matter’.”

 

Pompeo agrees with the US ­Pacific Commander Admiral Philip Davidson that there is a serious chance Beijing could launch military action against Taiwan: “In my time in service I saw both the Chinese actions and the intelligence we had about their intentions. The reunification of Taiwan is something that they are intent upon. The means that they will use are likely to be coercive at the front end and military at the back end, only when required.

 

“But you can see them already ratchet up the pressure. They challenge every time the US lives up to simply what we promised to do, to provide weapons to the people of Taiwan so they can defend themselves. We have a responsibility to live up to our commitments.

 

“When we hear the words of the most senior Pacific commander for the US, we know that the world has a responsibility to make it clear to the CCP that such an undertaking against Taiwan is simply unacceptable.”

 

Sensibly, Pompeo would not commit, even out of office, to backing a specific US military response if Taiwan is attacked (despite my strenuous efforts to get him to do so), but the thrust of his sentiment is clear: “Look at the actions we (the Trump administration) took for four years — the clarity with which we spoke about these issues, the preparedness we demonstrated to engage Taiwan, the efforts we made to get Taiwan into the World Health Organisation, the work we’ve done with Taiwan on the commercial side.

 

“We have a broader responsibility that is wrapped up in this to make it clear to the CCP that their continued abrogation of their international responsibilities has real costs.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:22 a.m. No.13351616   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1624

>>13351613

 

2/3

 

Pompeo argues that Beijing’s actions right now — not its speculated future actions — put the world at risk.

 

He believes the COVID-19 virus came from a Chinese laboratory, but even if it didn’t the danger of such an event in the future is real. The world faces the prospect of new pandemic outbreaks as bad or worse as the COVID-19 pandemic we are still grappling with, he claims, because of continued Chinese biological weapons work.

 

“This is an ongoing challenge because the CCP continues to engage in this sort of biological research. The risk for something like this happening again from a Chinese facility is real and significant,” he says. “We can see in the millions of lives lost, and the billions of dollars of wealth destroyed, that the world must make sure that China never does this again.”

 

This is a tough-minded assessment. But Pompeo’s view of all this is a little more nuanced and qualified than he is sometimes given credit for. Let him explain:

 

“I am highly confident that the virus began in Wuhan, China. I am reasonably confident it began in the (Wuhan Institute of Virology) laboratory. I’m less certain of that and there are still more facts that are unknown and the CCP has ­diligently tried to make sure that we never know. But the weight of evidence suggests that it likely came from that laboratory. There is enormous evidence for that.”

 

Before considering the rest of the Pompeo argument, it’s important to gauge precisely what he has said. He thinks the virus came from the lab, but he’s not sure. The Australian agencies that assessed this question came to what seems to be the opposite conclusion. They think the virus did not come from a lab but from the animal kingdom to human beings. But they, too, readily admit that they are not sure.

 

Thus Pompeo on one hand, and our agencies on the other, ­accept the same range of possibilities, accept that they cannot know for sure, but weight the different factors a bit differently. Neither position is unreasonable.

 

I ask Pompeo, could the Chinese possibly have released the virus deliberately? “I’ve seen no evidence that they intentionally set it loose,” he says. “None”.

 

There is now a big and public literature on these questions. Many nations which do biological warfare research, and that’s a lot of nations, engage in what is called “change of function” research. In this, they manipulate viruses within the laboratory to make them more transmissible or more deadly. They justify this on defensive grounds. Doing this research allows them to develop potential ­vaccines and other defences in case they are ever attacked with such biological weapons. But the very act of this research creates enormous dangers.

 

The laboratories create deadly viruses that nature had not previously created. You only need the cleaning or protective protocols to break down once and there is a ­potential deadly spread.

 

Pompeo is much clearer that Beijing stands condemned over the cover-up regarding the virus. Like most commentators, he is deeply unimpressed with the recent World Health Organisation report that cleared Beijing of all culpability.

 

Pompeo says: “We still don’t know who Patient Zero was. We still haven’t interviewed the doctors who were working in the laboratory. The central moment the Chinese knew they had a virulent virus that was human-to-human transmissible, their choice was to lock down Wuhan and lock down the world from understanding the risk that was presented to it.

 

“The Chinese know what happened They have data that could answer all these questions. As you and I sit here today, they are choosing not to divulge it to us. I think that’s incredibly telling.”

 

Pompeo is deeply committed to the US-Australia alliance and ­believes that the Quadrilateral Dialogue involving the US, Australia, Japan and India is a key to dealing with the challenge posed by Beijing’s strategic ambitions.

 

“These are four great friends. We are great friends because we have a shared interest in what ­humanity could look like in 10 years, in 100 years.

 

“We are real ­democracies, with all the noise and hubbub that comes with that — real democracies working every day to make their countries great.

 

“I view these four countries as essential in pushing back against the CCP. The primary tool used by the Communist Party of China is economic power. It has 1.4 billion people. They have spread their power around the world, using predatory means via the Belt and Road Initiative.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:24 a.m. No.13351624   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13351616

 

3/3

 

“These four (Quad) countries represent a very significant piece of economic activity among open and free societies. They have enormous potential to influence who can trade and how they can trade. We can demand fairness, openness, free trade. We should do our best to get rid of tariffs on each other.”

 

Pompeo at no point will criticise Trump, but free trade does ­figure in his rhetoric much more than it did in Trump’s. Pompeo gives a cautious pass mark to the Biden administration for its early performance on China and Asia: “I’m hopeful, in that there is a ­bipartisan consensus in the US on the threat from China. Democrats understand this as well as Republicans. I’m rooting for the (Biden) administration to have the backs of our friends like Australia, India, our friends in Southeast Asia, when they are confronted by all the things we know the Chinese are likely to do. I hope the administration will not contain, but ­convince, the CCP that their ­aggressive, malign activity will simply not be successful.”

 

One area he is clear the US and its allies are operating well below par is in the competition in key ­hi-tech fields such as artificial in­telligence, blockchain, quantum computing, hypersonic weapons. The Chinese are intensely focused on this technology competition. These new technologies, Pompeo says, will be the commanding heights of the next generation, whereas previously the commanding heights were provided by resources like oil: “We have to make sure the technology of the future is democratic technology, not totalitarian technology.”

 

If Pompeo gives Biden a cautious pass on China, he is far more critical on the loosening of US ­policy towards Iran and what he sees as the potentially extremely dangerous economic deal Iran and Beijing have just concluded.

 

“The Chinese need oil and the Iranians need money and weapons systems,” Pompeo observes.

 

“We (the Trump administration) were able to successfully deny Iran the ability to ship crude oil in significant amounts to China. Now we’ve got Iran freed from any prohibition on arms sales.”

 

Under the international agreement, which Trump repudiated, there was a temporary ban on ­Iranian arms sales, but it has now expired. The Biden administration has abolished the unilateral mechanisms which Trump and Pompeo used to keep Iran away from the international arms trade. Now, it’s much more open slather.

 

“You will see increased trafficking in weapons systems,” Pompeo tells me.

 

“The Iranians have the ­capacity to build some of these on their own, but Chinese cyber capability, Chinese missile technology — all the things the Chinese have been working on these past 25 years — are likely to now find their way to an ayatollah who will use them to destabilise the Middle East.”

 

Pompeo is unhappy with North Korea’s recent ballistic missile tests. He notes that they were relatively short-range systems, but they are clear breaches of UN ­Security Council resolutions. However, he makes a point which to me has always seemed obvious. It is impossible to reform North Korea meaningfully unless Beijing itself decides that it wants North Korea to change.

 

I try to draw Pompeo into some kind of comparison between his own targeted remarks and the sometimes wild and scattergun things Trump said as president. But he certainly won’t criticise Trump. He makes the reasonable point that the Trump administration should be judged on what it did, rather than whether it lived up to diplomatic niceties.

 

“I’m from Kansas and my diplomatic skills are about two out of 10,” Pompeo says.

 

“The president was the same. We say what we think.”

 

Actually Pompeo is being too modest there. His remarks, while you might have disagreed with them occasionally, were always judged, making a case. Even his best friend couldn’t say that with a straight face about Trump.

 

But Pompeo achieved what he did by running his own race while never being disloyal to Trump.

 

So, is he now planning to run for president?

 

He laughs, then says: “I’m always up for a good fight. But I have a mission before that. Republicans don’t control any of the houses of Congress. We need to get them back and I want to help with that.”

 

Pompeo is a man with a lot ­invested in the future.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/pompeo-rallies-allies-against-china-threat/news-story/2dd6bba82346b7263a3d1bcec140ed57

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:39 a.m. No.13351663   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1664 >>1301

Exclusive: Ghislaine Maxwell’s brother says 'self-destructive' Prince Andrew will not be a witness

 

Ian Maxwell says that Duke of York is 'hostage to fortune' and that his sister has become a hate figure as she awaits sex trafficking trial

 

Robert Mendick - 2 April 2021

 

1/3

 

Ian Maxwell is adamant his sister, Ghislaine Maxwell, will not be calling the Duke of York as a witness for the defence when she stands trial this summer. Following Prince Andrew’s last public interrogation – on BBC television by the journalist Emily Maitlis – he considers it wouldn’t be a good idea for the Queen’s son to spring to Ms Maxwell’s defence. “It was the most remarkable piece of self destruction,” says Mr Maxwell. “I think he would be – as he proved in that interview – I think he's a pretty serious hostage to fortune. I don't think that's going to happen.”

 

Mr Maxwell, 64, is giving a wide-ranging interview in defence of Ms Maxwell. He believes his younger sister (now aged 59) has become a hate figure, in part because she is a woman accused of sex crimes. He says she is being treated far worse ahead of her trial than famous (now infamous) men, such as Harvey Weinstein and Bill Cosby, who were both subsequently convicted of sex offences.

 

He has written a letter to Joe Biden’s Attorney General, pleading for the US to give Ms Maxwell a fair trial. In the letter, he draws a comparison between his sister’s plight and that of Field Marshal Lord Bramall, the former head of the Army and D-Day veteran, who was falsely accused of being a paedophile by a fantasist subsequently jailed for 18 years.

 

Ms Maxwell, he believes, risks becoming a victim of a terrible miscarriage of justice, a “patsy” in his words for the sex crimes committed by her one-time boyfriend, the billionaire financier, who hanged himself in the summer of 2019 while awaiting trial for child sex abuse.

 

“It is completely Kafka-esque,” said Mr Maxwell of his younger sister’s predicament. She is languishing in a Brooklyn jail on charges relating to allegations that took place – in some cases – 27 years ago and made by four women, now presumably middle-aged, whose identities the courts will not reveal. This, says Mr Maxwell, is the American justice system. And he holds it in pretty low regard. Ms Maxwell is in a tiny cell, watched over 24 hours a day, woken up and checked on every 15 minutes to ensure she hasn’t killed herself, as her former boyfriend did. Mr Maxwell likens the “truly horrific” conditions of her captivity to “torture” and questions how she can mount a defence in such “circumstances”. There are two million pages of discovery documents for her to plough through.

 

“My sister has been banged up for 280 days. It really is grotesque,” he says. It’s a word he uses a lot in relation to his sister’s current situation. So too “Kafka-esque”. When – or if – she is acquitted, he says, she plans to campaign for the other half a million people who spend month after month on pre-trial detention in the US.

 

In the latest twist in the Maxwell saga, the British socialite was informed this week she faces two further charges of sex trafficking of a minor after a new woman came forward claiming she procured her for Epstein. In total, she faces eight charges over allegations made by four women over a 10-year period. Mr Maxwell insists there isn’t a shred of corroborative evidence to back up historic allegations and that the new charges, perversely, suggest the US prosecutor’s case is a weak and desperate one. He points to testimony given by a police officer in a civil case against Ms Maxwell who under oath said her name had never come up in a previous criminal investigation into Epstein dating back to a conviction 2008. “It’s not in her nature to do any of these things,” says Mr Maxwell.

 

Ms Maxwell, says her brother, is now in a quandary. If she delays her trial – due to start in July – in order to prepare her defence against the new allegations, then she will spend more time in jail. A fourth attempt to secure her bail is being prepared.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:40 a.m. No.13351664   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1667

>>13351663

 

2/3

 

In his letter to Merrick Garland, the new US Attorney general, Mr Maxwell writes: “I live in Britain and am completely confounded by the American legal system.” He complains of the repeated decisions to block bail but adds: “What is most puzzling is the court’s refusal to identify the now four anonymous complainants who only stepped forward after Epstein’s death, 25 years after the offences were alleged to have been committed. As you may be aware, Ghislaine is adamant that she has committed no crime. Given the anonymity of the accusers she is unable to prepare her defence, simply because she doesn't know who they are and of what she is accused.”

 

He then draws parallels with Operation Midland, the police investigation in the UK in which a man named as “Nick” and later revealed to be Carl Beech, accused a series of VIPs of being involved in a murderous paedophile gang.

 

“One of them was the former Head of the Armed Forces, Field Marshall Lord Bramall and in particularly tragic circumstances his wife, who had been made aware of the allegations, sadly died before he was cleared,” writes Mr Maxwell. “Lord Bramall himself died a couple of years later. After all of this suffering it was determined that the accuser had fabricated the entire story and he was subsequently tried and sentenced to 18 years imprisonment for his lies.”

 

Mr Maxwell had known and befriended Bramall – they worked together at a military publishing company owned by the Maxwells – and is adamant his sister too is being falsely accused.

 

“This D-Day vet must have been churning inside with anger,” says Mr Maxwell in an interview conducted over zoom from his London home. “The reason that I raised it [Operation Midland] is simply that here we have a situation where we have now four anonymous accusers. Their allegations have never been put to the test, no-cross examination, no evidence furnished, no names provided. It's completely Kafka-esque. You don't know who's accusing you; you don't know what you're accused of specifically; you don't know when it's alleged to have happened other than it did happen.”

 

He criticises prosecutors and the FBI for staging what he calls a “dog and pony” show to announce she had been captured, in the hours after Ms Maxwell’s arrest last July at a remote home she had bought in New Hampshire. What followed was, he says, “an outrageous perp walk of a press conference, designed to be prejudicial and it’s been highly successful. If you look at the headlines Ghislaine is a ‘monster’ or a ‘madame’ or whatever else she has been described as and it’s grotesque and really offensive.”

 

Mr Maxwell doesn’t buy conspiracy theories that his sister is somehow being put in a squeeze to give up bigger names. Epstein, aged 66 when he was found dead in his New York jail cell, was friends with not just Prince Andrew but also Bill Clinton and Donald Trump. All of them deny vehemently any suggestion of wrongdoing or knowledge of Epstein’s behaviour. An infamous black book of his influential contacts has been widely circulated on the internet.

 

“The reality is that as far as my sister is concerned this is completely peripheral,” says Mr Maxwell although he wonders if their associations have created more publicity and fanfare.

 

He doesn’t recognise the sister he knows, her depiction as a sexual predator and procurer of girls and young women. “We grew up together in England seeing a lot of each other and she has the right values. You couldn't be a child of Bob Maxwell and be some kind of floating socialite, doing nothing. It just was not possible to be in our family and be like that.”

 

Their father, the publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell, fell overboard and died off his yacht the Lady Ghislaine in November 1991, leaving behind a business empire in tatters and which fell apart soon after. People have tried to draw a connection between father and daughter, suggesting they both had “bad genes” but that is unfair, says Mr Maxwell.

 

Mr Maxwell says his sister’s subsequent work promoting environmental concerns over the oceans has been utterly “disparaged” in the wake of her association with Epstein.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 1:41 a.m. No.13351667   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13351664

 

3/3

 

Her next project will be to help 500,000 pretrial detainees should she ever be set free. “She wants to use her name; she wants to use her case; she wants to use her resources, her intelligence, her network to get a powerful light shone on this absolutely unacceptable side of American, so-called justice. It’s wrong,” says Mr Maxwell. “If she is exonerated, which she fully expects to be, she's not going to just walk away and forget about this. She's going to put her shoulder to the grindstone trying to do something positive to get that situation changed.”

 

After attending the University of Oxford, Ms Maxwell moved to the US while her brother remained in the UK and they saw less and less of each other. But Mr Maxwell is now riding to his sister’s defence. The last time he heard his sister’s voice was nine months ago, listening to her give monosyllabic answers at an early court hearing that was viewable online. She has lost weight – and hair – while in jail and communicates through her lawyers.

 

Mr Maxwell insists his sister’s relationship with Epstein was not a normal boyfriend-girlfriend relationship and that they maintained separate homes. “I don't think you could characterise this as a kind of conventional lovey-dovey living together relationship,” he says. “I think the most important thing that you could possibly report is that they never lived together, ever. He had his place. She had her place. It's hugely important for a man who was as compartmentalised as Jeffrey Epstein clearly was.”

 

Epstein, he believes, kept his sordid sex life and criminality secret from Ms Maxwell. It is an argument that her lawyers will need to win to persuade a jury of her innocence.

 

Dozens of women have filed lawsuits against the Epstein estate, valued at close to $600 million on his death. To date, four women are involved in the criminal prosecution of Ms Maxwell. It is unclear if others will give supporting evidence. The new charges, announced last week, had the effect of “lobbing a grenade into the proceedings”.

 

Mr Maxwell says: “Ghislaine is facing charges effectively created by the US government solely to satisfy the media, to appease accusers, and their trial lawyers, bolstering a weak case in an effort to justify huge settlements for crimes committed by Jeffrey Epstein, and by Jeffrey Epstein alone. They're trying to revive Epstein by relitigating crimes, with a proxy defendant Ghislaine. That just ain't right.”

 

The latest charges relating to sex trafficking between 2001 and 2004 are intriguing, not least because that is a timeframe when Prince Andrew, Ms Maxwell’s long-time friend, was becoming close to Epstein. The pair met in about 1999. Prince Andrew gave an interview to the BBC current affairs programme Newsnight in November 2019, three months after Epstein died, in which he denied any wrongdoing but failed to express sympathy for Epstein’s victims and argued, for example, that the account of one victim Virginia Roberts Giuffre was false because he did not sweat and had, anyway, been at Pizza Express.

 

The claims opened Prince Andrew up to ridicule but Mr Maxwell doesn’t believe that interview had any bearing on the subsequent pursuit of Ghislaine. The die was cast when Epstein died in custody and, says Mr Maxwell, authorities – the then Attorney general William Barr was “livid” – needed somebody in the dock.

 

“I don't actually agree that this particularly reignited [the case],” says Mr Maxwell. “I think it was, it was bubbling away there after Epstein died… it [the interview] did sort of shine a light back on it, but it was the most remarkable piece of self-destruction.”

 

Prince Andrew and Ms Maxwell, long-time friends since her Oxford days, last saw each other in June 2019 when she was visiting London at the start of a charity car rally. In almost two years since then their lives have been turned upside down over their association with Epstein. The Duke of York is banished from public duty, free to roam the Queen’s Windsor estate. Ghislaine Maxwell is confined, meanwhile, to her 9ft by 7ft jail cell. A trial, should it take place in July, will decide once and for all if she deserves anyone’s sympathy.

 

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/04/02/exclusive-ghislaine-maxwells-brother-says-self-destructive-prince/

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 2:50 a.m. No.13351778   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1781 >>1790 >>6364 >>1295

Civilian expert tracks the child abusers

 

DAVID MURRAY - APRIL 3, 2021

 

Australian police are using civilian sleuths with expertise in open source intelligence techniques to help solve the world’s toughest online child sexual abuse cases.

 

Since September last year, carefully selected images from a dozen cases have been sent overseas by Queensland’s Task Force Argos to a volunteer online investigator with remarkable skills in finding locations from small clues in photographs.

 

Working with a team of other international volunteer investigators, the engineer has directly tracked down locations or generated significant leads in 10 of the cases, leading to authorities rescuing children.

 

He first discovered his proficiency in online investigations through Europol’s Trace an ­Object crowdsourcing campaign, in which the public is asked to identify objects and places from unsolved child abuse cases.

 

The Australian Federal Police-led Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation (ACCCE) in March launched its own version of the campaign, ­initially releasing images of nine objects.

 

Investigators say they are overwhelmed by the sheer volume of new images being generated every day and public assistance is key to fighting back against child exploitation.

 

“In many cases, we know the sex offender communities are ­demanding more content from some of these people,” says ­Detective Superintendent Jon Rouse, manager of covert online investigations, victim ID and training at the ACCCE.

 

“So, you know it’s going to keep happening, and police are working against the clock with what we have, to try to find the ­location and get an investigative team somewhere in the world or Australia onto it.

 

“There’s people out there that once they realise what we are up against, and with the very, very, very thin blue line that we have to put against it, they want to help.”

 

ACCCE victim identification analyst Laura Smith has been driving the Australian Trace campaign since returning from a three-year stint with Interpol’s Crimes Against Children Unit in France.

 

“The crime type as a whole can be a really hard and uncomfortable topic to talk about for people in general, but it’s so important because the effects of abuse on children last a lifetime,” she said.

 

The hope is that in some cases the victim would come forward and recognise that the object used to belong to them, and that they know that they’ve been abused and photographed.

 

Superintendent Rouse said ­investigators had been unable to identify hundreds of abused and at-risk Australian children on photographs and videos retrieved from the surface web, dark web and other sources, so had to think laterally to try to solve them.

 

“Crime scenes are something police deal with all the time,” Superintendent Rouse said.

 

“Our problem is we don’t know where the crime scene is, we don’t know who the victim is and we don’t know who the ­offender is. And all that we’ve got is that image or video.”

 

Since its launch, Trace an ­Object Australia’s website has had about 37,500 page visits and received 425 reports from the public that are being assessed, an AFP spokesman said on Friday.

 

Victim identification analyst Adele Desirs from Argos has been selecting images for the civilian investigator.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/civilian-expert-tracks-the-child-abusers/news-story/a9a4ec119ba3c16c85000fd37c06f8b1

 

https://accce.gov.au/report/trace

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 2:51 a.m. No.13351781   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1786 >>1790 >>6364 >>1295

>>13351778

Citizen sleuths to the rescue in child abuse cases

 

If you’ve got an eye for piecing together clues, Trace an Object needs you.

 

DAVID MURRAY - April 2, 2021

 

1/3

 

The picture shows a young girl standing on a deck, paint peeling off the railings behind her, with a partial view of a lake in the background. Carefully edited to conceal the girl’s identity, it was almost all that Carlos Gonzales had to go on, and the clock was ticking. According to police, this non-explicit image was of a girl who was being abused by a man who appeared to be her father.

 

Gonzales is an engineer, not a cop, who just happens to have discovered he has a freakish talent for identifying locations from tiny clues in photographs.

 

His skills first came to the fore after Europol, the EU’s police force, launched its groundbreaking Trace an Object campaign.

 

As part of the campaign, which has been running for almost four years and recently has been replicated in Australia, investigators publicly release images of objects and places from unsolved child abuse cases to try to find victims.

 

Gonzales tried his hand in tracking down the Europol images and had some stunning success, publishing his results on investigative journalism website Bellingcat.

 

It earned him the attention and respect of some of the leading child-victim identification experts in international law enforcement, who were soon approaching him for assistance.

 

Since September last year, Australian police — at the forefront of the global fight against child exploitation — have been sending pictures from the world’s most intractable cases to Gonzales, tapping into his skills in forensic online investigations, popularly known as open source intelligence.

 

One of the images shared with him was of the girl by the lake, along with some images of blurred background objects from other pictures in the same series.

 

She could have been anywhere in the world, but one object, a partially obscured water bottle, allowed Gonzales to narrow the search.

 

“I tracked it to one specific region in Mexico, found a lake in the city where I thought the image was from, and bang! Found it,” Gonzales tells Inquirer this week. “Three days it took us to narrow down the place and time­frame.”

 

Co-operative effort

 

Adele Desirs pulls up the girl’s redacted image on her over-size computer screen at the Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation.

 

“Once he had the location, we managed to identify the girl and the father. So we forwarded all of that to the country (Mexico),” she says. Desirs is a French police captain recruited to work as a victim identification analyst in the Queensland Police Service’s renowned anti-online child exploitation squad, Taskforce Argos, four years ago.

 

In a remarkable example of federal and state co-operation, Desirs now sits side-by-side with Australian Federal Police analysts at the new federally funded ACCCE facility in Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley. By dismantling cross-agency silos, the centre is raising the capacity of investigators in the pursuit of a single goal — protecting children.

 

Inquirer was allowed on to the investigation floor as the victim ID analysts arrived for work from 6am, followed by covert investigators.

 

“I first heard about Carlos from what he did in Trace an Object Europol because I read his articles on Bellingcat,” says Desirs.

 

“I was just very, very impressed, from an old series that was not even really reviewed any more, how much he could find. I learned a lot from what he did.”

 

Believing that Gonzales might be able to find other children, Desirs initially sent him images from five unsolved cases. To the amazement of Desirs and her colleagues, he found all five locations, working on each for just five days with a team of other volunteer online investigators.

 

Gonzales is extremely generous with his time and will “work on one picture for hours and hours and hours”, she says. Police, on the other hand, must “work every day, as much as we can, on thousands and thousands and thousands of pictures and cases”.

 

On the anonymous dark web, where Desirs is focused, vast new sets of photographs and videos are shared among global networks of offenders each day.

 

As they appear online they are filtered through law enforcement databases to automatically identify those already discovered, while Desirs and her colleagues scramble to find the new images of children at immediate risk of harm.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 2:52 a.m. No.13351786   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1787

>>13351781

 

2/3

 

Experienced victim identification analysts can instantly recognise children and locations from sets they have seen years earlier, preventing them from wasting precious time on chasing down old leads.

 

“At some points it’s very sad but what we do is triage,” Desirs says.

 

“It’s really like in the war when doctors have to choose who they prioritise — we only go to the ones we can save, and save fast, because there’s so many.

 

“I cannot spend thousands of hours on one image, it’s impossible. I can’t allow myself to do that because there’s just too many others to look at. If I’m spending 50 hours on a case, how many others am I missing?”

 

The pace is frenetic and losing just a day or two of monitoring can leave Desirs and her colleagues inundated.

 

It’s why she’s at her desk early until late each workday, her computer screen permanently clogged with dozens of open tabs.

 

“You really have to keep up. It’s very important. If you’re not here to look at it at the moment that it’s published, it can be gone forever,” she says.

 

That's where external resources such as members of the public can make all the difference.

 

“If they can help speed up that process, that’s where we are all winners,” Desirs says.

 

‘I like to help’

 

The name Carlos Gonzales is a pseudonym. His real identity is known to law enforcement, but for now, with a young family to consider, he keeps it private because of the nature of his volunteer work.

 

“I like to help, I like to contribute, but I am not keen to be famous,” he says via Zoom audio, from an undisclosed overseas location.

 

Gonzales discovered his aptitude for online investigations after watching a television news report on Trace an Object Europol that explained the agency had a database of 40 million images of abused children it was trying to identify.

 

“They were asking members of the public for help to identify these objects, and they were portraying a guy in Finland who was an architect and he managed to identify an image in China,” Gonzales says.

 

“I thought, well, if that guy’s an architect and I’m an engineer, why can’t I give it a go?”

 

He started copying Bellingcat investigative techniques and tracked down his first image. His obvious ability led to an invitation to collaborate with Bellingcat, then with US-based charity the National Child Protection Task Force.

 

NCPTF members include cyber security experts, intelligence analysts, retired investigators and other civilian cyber sleuths who volunteer to help law enforcement agencies tackle child exploitation, human trafficking and missing person cases.

 

“The main constraint (for law enforcement) is time,” Gonzales says. “The amount of cases is overwhelming, the resources are little and the time is short, so that’s where we actually kick in.”

 

Some of Gonzales’s earlier work on Trace an Object Europol images is detailed on Bellingcat, revealing painstaking and methodical analysis and cross-referencing of the smallest details in images.

 

In one case, a solitary chimney stack was first narrowed down to five Russian-speaking cities via a single tree, before other clues led to a perfect match with a factory in northern Moscow.

 

In another, his investigations into a low-resolution photograph of a desolate landscape, showing just weeds and some rural buildings in the background, led to a Ukrainian child modelling studio.

 

Desirs, from Argos, has now sent him 12 cases. Incredibly, Australian investigators reveal, he discovered one location in Asia through a single decorative tile in a swimming pool.

 

Police ask that methodology be kept to a minimum because abusers are constantly watching what they are doing and adjusting their behaviour to avoid arrest.

 

Gonzales estimates he spends about 100 hours on each case and says the support, input and instincts of fellow investigators from the NCPTF have been essential. He is never exposed to any explicit material.

 

“From 12 cases … we have managed to identify or at least produce valuable leads in 10 of them. We have managed to identify cases in Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, France, Chile, Croatia, China and Mexico.

 

“In some cases we have seen how law enforcement has been able to rescue children and bring offenders to justice as a product of our findings.

 

“At that moment, I knew that I wanted to work on these sorts of investigations and I wanted to keep helping in the way that I’m doing.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 2:53 a.m. No.13351787   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13351786

 

3/3

 

Raising awareness

 

Three weeks ago, the ACCCE launched its own Trace an Object campaign, the first outside Europe, initially sharing nine objects. Australian investigators hope it will attract an army of online sleuths such as Gonzales, but they stress that people don’t need to be experts to contribute.

 

The real success will come if people in the wider community simply take a regular look at the images as they are progressively published on a dedicated AFP website, accce.gov.au/report/trace, to see if they recognise them.

 

AFP victim identification analyst Laura Smith, who sits beside Desirs in the ACCCE, selected the first set of images. She says six are “without question” from Australia and three are from Asia.

 

“I wanted to include a higher percentage of Australian images, particularly with this first round, because we have direct control over what happens with that information,” she says.

 

“If it leads to identification or an area, we can as the law enforcement body go out and directly execute a search warrant or interview people.”

 

She says it’s already generating valuable leads from around the world. On her computer, she pulls up a photo someone has sent in of Disney bedsheets on a Japanese woman’s blog.

 

It matches one of the new campaign’s nine images — a relatively new case in which the child is most likely still being abused.

 

“We’re able to see the full pattern of the sheets and recognise the brand,” Smith says. “Along with a lot of other indicators that we had from the series, we’ve been able to go, OK, well, this is a Japanese series. We’ll this week be referring this case over to Japan.”

 

There are strict rules about what can be published, Smith says.

 

“It needs to go through a very stringent victim ID process to make sure that we’ve exhausted all options,” she says.

 

“If we’re putting something on here, we generally don’t have any other avenues of investigative inquiry with it.”

 

Detective Inspector Jon Rouse, ACCCE manager for covert online investigations, victim ID and training, says it’s intended that the campaign will run permanently.

 

Gonzales describes the civilian investigators trying to find the objects as being akin to “X-Men” characters.

 

“So many people are doing things out there which are incredible. Every one of them has like a superpower,” he says.

 

“For example, some of us are good with satellite imagery, some of us are good with the dark web, some are good in Facebook or analysing social networks and gathering information.

 

“I’m in the geolocation and visual investigation unit so I think I’m good at analysing images.

 

“Rather than speed, I am like a bit of a sniper. I’m taking my time, but I will get there and I will find it.”

 

He encourages everyone to look at the images being shared by police, regardless of technical or investigative skills.

 

“The more people are aware of the campaign, the better,” Gonzales says.

 

“We all have object memory. The other day I recognised one that was from my country, and it took me just two minutes.”

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/trace-an-object-citizen-sleuths-to-the-rescue-in-child-abuse-cases/news-story/29c3cc8cef1c4e123fbe5405f011495e

 

https://accce.gov.au/report/trace

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 2:55 a.m. No.13351790   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1792 >>6364 >>6272 >>1295

>>13351778

>>13351781

Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation

 

Stop child abuse - Trace An Object

 

The smallest clue can often help solve a case.

 

1/2

 

We need your help in the fight against online child sexual exploitation.

 

The below objects have been taken from the background of child sexual abuse images. We are convinced that more eyes will provide more leads and ultimately help to save these children.

 

''TRIGGER WARNING: The following content contains images that may be distressing to some people.''

 

Can you help us recognise these objects?

 

We specifically want to trace their origin (location/country).

 

If you recognise any of these objects, click on the item and provide the ACCCE with the information you have. This can be done anonymously. Once we know where the object is, we will inform the relevant law enforcement agencies to further investigate this lead and hopefully speed up the identification of both the offender and the victim.

 

(continued)

 

https://accce.gov.au/report/trace

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 2:56 a.m. No.13351792   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6272 >>1295

>>13351790

 

2/2

 

Out of respect for the victims, we urge you not to share any personal information (recognisable pictures, names, etc.) on social media or anywhere online. Your useful tips can be shared with us in a secure way via this website form. Thank you for your support.

 

https://accce.gov.au/report/trace

 

https://qanon.pub/#1735

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 7:41 p.m. No.13355662   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6362 >>1275

>>13341990

Peter Dutton defends against Chinese Global Times censure

 

Sky News Australia

 

4 Apr 2021

 

Newly appointed Defence Minister Peter Dutton has responded to criticism from China's Global Times accusing him of looking to "stir up trouble" with the United States in the South China Sea.

 

Sky News Political Editor Andrew Clennell says “the Global Times out of China had an article criticising your appointment describing you as a hawk and saying it was likely you would look to work with the US to stir up South China Sea issues”.

 

Mr Dutton said “they’re half right” as he fully intended to work closely with the United States because they were Australia’s most important ally.

 

However, he added Australia would not work with America in an “antagonistic way” but rather only so as to secure national sovereignty.

 

“We don’t support militarisation of ports".

 

“We don’t support any foreign country trying to exert influence here via cyber or other means.

 

“We don’t want to see conflict in our region.”

 

Mr Dutton said he would continue to work with allies in the region and five eyes partners across the world.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHYM4MLGKtI

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 3, 2021, 10:50 p.m. No.13356362   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1239

>>13355662

Dutton warns contractors on submarine, frigate deliveries

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 4, 2021

 

New Defence Minister Peter Dutton has warned the big prime contractors delivering the nation’s new submarines and frigates that he expects the platforms to be delivered on time and on budget, and won’t allow “slippage” on Australian industry content.

 

Mr Dutton has revealed he has requested full briefings on all of Defence’s major programs, including the $90bn Attack-class subs and the $45bn Hunter-class frigates, “to make sure that everything is on track and on budget”.

 

He said program costs and time frames would blow out “from time to time”, given the huge cost of the Defence mega-platforms.

 

But he said he was determined to ensure Australia, and particularly Australian industry, received value for money from the investments.

 

“I want to make sure there is a very clear message to the primes here,” Mr Dutton told Sky News in his first major interview in his new portfolio.

 

“We are not going to tolerate slippage in relation to the Australian content.

 

“And I’ve been very clear with the secretary of the Defence department, and the (Chief of Defence) as well. that we will work to budget, and if we need additional expertise, if we need additional resources, then they will be applied to deliver these projects on time and on budget.”

 

The firm message to the defence multinationals follows criticism of his predecessor, Linda Reynolds, over her lack of public commentary on the projects.

 

Mr Dutton said the government was determined to ensure Australia’s small and medium-sized defence firms benefited from the huge investments being made.

 

“Making sure they are taken care of is an important part of the spend as well because it creates jobs, it creates industry, it has a massive multiplier effect in the Australian economy,” he said.

 

Mr Dutton also backed Australia’s special forces community, which has been rocked by the Brereton inquiry’s findings that up to 19 Australian soldiers murdered at least 39 Afghan civilians and prisoners.

 

“We have one of the most feared fighting machines in the world and we need to support them,” he said.

 

Mr Dutton said there was “a relatively small number of people who have done clearly the wrong thing”.

 

“I don’t want to overshadow the very significant, outstanding work, particularly that the SAS and others have done within the Australian Defence Force in the Middle East and conflicts going back a long period of time,” he said.

 

Mr Dutton said the government needed to do more to support veterans, and was “very open” to a royal commission into veterans’ suicide.

 

But he said the government had made it clear it wanted “a standing royal commission” so that future veterans’ suicides could also be given appropriate attention.

 

Mr Dutton said Australia would continue to work closely with the United States, together with “Quad” partners India and Japan and traditional ally the United Kingdom, to ensure regional peace.

 

“We don’t support militarisation of ports, we don’t support any foreign country trying to exert influence here by cyber other means, we don’t want to see conflict in our region,” he said.

 

He said China had “obviously” had a long-term ambition to take over Taiwan, but Australia would work with its international partners, and with the Chinese Communist Party, to prevent conflict from occurring.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/defence/dutton-warns-contractors-on-submarine-frigate-deliveries/news-story/580e01582ec568e8325eee3a6d30a055

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 9:33 p.m. No.13362728   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1239

Australians Christa Avery and Matthew O'Kane freed from house arrest in Myanmar

 

Tasha Wibawa - 5 April 2021

 

An Australian couple has been freed from house arrest in Myanmar and allowed to leave the country without charge.

 

Business consultants Christa Avery and her husband Matthew O'Kane were refused permission to leave Myanmar last month when they were about to board a flight home.

 

The country has been in turmoil since a February military coup ousted elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, with violence between anti-coup protesters and armed forces rising in recent weeks.

 

"I am, of course, incredibly relieved to have been released and to be on my way home with my husband, Matt," Ms Avery said in a statement.

 

"Even though I knew that I had done nothing wrong, it was very stressful being held under house arrest for two weeks."

 

Janelle Saffin, a friend of the couple and the state MP for Lismore, told the ABC that their release was "great news".

 

"The fact that they were detained … this just shouldn't happen at all," Ms Saffin said.

 

"We now can't wait until we hear the same news about our colleague and friend, Sean Turnell."

 

In a statement to the ABC, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) "welcomed" their release.

 

DFAT also confirmed it provided the couple with consular assistance prior to their release, while it also assisted their departure from Yangon on April 4.

 

The couples' current location remains unclear.

 

DFAT said it was unable to release further detail due to privacy obligations.

 

Couple calls on Myanmar to release other Australian

 

Another Australian, Sean Turnell, an economic adviser to Ms Suu Kyi, was detained shortly after the army seized power and remained in prison.

 

"I hope that even if Sean cannot be released very soon, he can, at least, be moved to house arrest for his physical, mental and emotional wellbeing," Ms Avery said.

 

Australian economist Tim Harcourt, a friend of the couple and of Mr Turnell, told the ABC he spoke to Mr O'Kane during the early days of detention but had not heard from either since.

 

"They're two independent business people doing work in agriculture in Myanmar," Mr Harcourt said.

 

"They do know Sean [Turnell] because he's a celebrity over there, but they're not directly connected.

 

"They just happen to be Australians."

 

Mr Harcourt said he was "very relieved" that the couple had now left home detention.

 

"Their release allows the Australian government to focus its efforts on the release of Professor Turnell from Myanmar," he said.

 

"Professor Turnell's wife Ha Vu is in good spirits and well supported by friends and family and the economics faculty at Macquarie University."

 

Authorities have said Mr Turnell is under investigation, but no charge has been announced against him.

 

A lawyer for Ms Suu Kyi said last week that he understood Mr Turnell faced charges under the Official Secrets Act, but no charges had been confirmed.

 

Thousands remain in detention post-coup

 

Crowds have continued to come onto Myanmar's streets day and night despite an internet blackout, and threats of arbitrary detention and death.

 

The Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), an activist group monitoring casualties and arrests, said the toll of dead had risen to 557, as of late Saturday.

 

In the capital, Naypyitaw, two men were killed when police fired on protesters on motorbikes, the Irrawaddy news site reported.

 

One man was killed earlier in the northern town of Bhamo, the Myanmar Now news outlet said.

 

A social media user later posted pictures of what appeared to be a women medic lying wounded and unattended on a street after curfew in the second city Mandalay following a protest there.

 

A huge crowd, including many women in straw hats, streamed through the central town of Taze chanting slogans, pictures from DVB TV News showed. Crowds were also out in other towns.

 

The AAPP said 2,658 people were in detention, including four women and a man who spoke to a visiting CNN news crew in interviews on the streets of Yangon last week.

 

A spokesman for CNN said the network was aware of reports of detentions following the team's visit and was pressing the authorities for information.

 

Local police and a spokesperson for the junta did not answer telephone calls seeking comment.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-04-05/australians-christa-avery-matthew-o-kane-arrest-free-myanmar/100048568

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 9:40 p.m. No.13362769   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2790 >>2840 >>2235 >>1275

China winning Pacific vaccine diplomacy war

 

BEN PACKHAM - APRIL 4, 2021

 

1/2

 

Australia is in a race against time to secure millions of COVID jabs for the Pacific in the next four weeks or risk a Chinese vaccine diplomacy victory that would push regional partners closer to Beijing.

 

Papua New Guinea has accepted 200,000 Chinese Sinopharm jabs in recent days, and Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare says Chinese vaccines are the next step in his country’s COVID response.

 

Fiji says it will also accept Chinese jabs when they are approved by the World Health Organisation, which is expected to occur by the end of the month.

 

Australia has donated 8500 AstraZeneca jabs to PNG to vaccinate frontline health workers amid a worsening COVID crisis, but has been unable to secure a promised one million shots for the country from Europe.

 

Burnet Institute director Brendan Crabb said PNG, which he believes now has more than one million COVID cases, needed to source vaccines wherever it could.

 

He said once the Chinese vaccines received WHO approval, “I see no reason why they shouldn’t be used in PNG as well”.

 

“It’s an ‘all hands on deck’ situation,” Professor Crabb said.

 

Supplying the shots is only half the battle. Transporting them across the country and “getting them into people’s arms” was also an urgent priority, he said.

 

PNG accepted the one-shot Chinese vaccines ahead of WHO approval on the basis that they would be used to vaccinate Chinese citizens in the country.

 

However, there are far fewer than 200,000 Chinese in PNG, leaving thousands of Sinopharm shots potentially available for Papua New Guineans.

 

Lowy Institute Pacific program director Jonathan Pryne said Australia was in “a race to get the Pacific access to Western vaccines … It will be a significant blow to Australia, just as we are stepping up our effort in the Pacific, for China to take the lead in a vaccine rollout, and in turn economic recovery, in the Pacific

 

“Should the WHO approve the (Chinese) vaccines, Pacific nat­ions would be absolutely within their rights to take whatever is offered and readily available. Australia would have no moral authority to stop them,” Mr Pryke said.

 

“Ideally, we would want ­Pacific nations to have Western vaccines but if the only option is a Chinese WHO-endorsed vaccine, then we should be helping with the rollout.”

 

The US could reportedly assist in getting Australia’s one million paid-for AstraZeneca doses to PNG from Europe, where EU authorities have so far blocked them from being exported.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 9:43 p.m. No.13362790   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13362769

 

2/2

 

Amid heightened tensions between Western allies and China, Defence Minister Peter Dutton said Australia would continue to work closely with the US to maintain regional stability. “We don’t do it in an antagonistic way, we do it in a way to protect our sovereignty and our national interests,” he said. “We don’t support militarisation of ports, we don’t support any foreign country trying to exert influence here by cyber or other means, we don’t want to see conflict in our region.”

 

PNG Health Minister Jelta Wong told a Lowy Institute podcast that his country was grateful for the assistance it was receiving from all of its international partners. “We’re getting help from everywhere, and it’s good help,” Mr Wong said, adding that the vaccine rollout would be “a real challenge”, given high levels of misinformation circulating on Facebook. “When Facebook hit PNG, everybody became an expert. (It was like) everyone had a PhD. They could be sitting under a coconut tree and get a PhD,” Mr Wong said.

 

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said Australia was providing “a comprehensive package of support to help PNG respond to its COVID crisis”.

 

“Australia has committed $144.7m to ensure PNG has access to full coverage of safe and effective vaccines, and the systems in place for a broad national rollout,” a DFAT spokeswoman said.

 

“We are working with PNG, the WHO and ­UNICEF to help prepare for the fast and safe large-scale rollout of vaccines. This includes working on supporting planning, logistics, training and public information.”

 

Australia has also pledged $80m to the UN-backed Covax initiative to help vaccinate 20 per cent of the population of Southeast Asia and the Pacific. The scheme will provide 588,000 vaccines for PNG by June.

 

Labor Pacific spokesman Pat Conroy said Australia needed to urgently deliver on its commitment to the region or risk ceding influence to China. “It is vital Australia remains the partner of choice for Pacific island nations,” he said. “If Australia does not step up and provide adequate and timely assistance, this will create a vacuum that will be filled by ­nations such as China.”

 

The Chinese Foreign Ministry announced in February it had provided or planned to provide vaccine assistance to 53 countries and export to 27 countries.

 

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken recently denounced China’s vaccine diplomacy, saying it came with “strings attached … We shouldn’t tie the distribution or access to vaccines to politics or to geopolitics.”

 

The WHO hopes to issue recommendations on China’s Sinovac and Sinopharm vaccines by the end of April.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/china-winning-pacific-vaccine-diplomacy-war/news-story/dc44360538370bf40cf216a7d3ffa1db

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 9:52 p.m. No.13362840   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2854 >>2235 >>1275

>>13362769

Solomon Islands Premier Daniel Suidani said no to China’s bribe

 

STEVE JACKSON - APRIL 5, 2021

 

1/2

 

It may seem an unlikely reaction from the leader of an impoverished province in the middle of the South Pacific but Daniel Suidani insists he is filled with an overwhelming sense of patriotism whenever he sees the words “Made in Taiwan” on products floating around his ­island home.

 

For the past year and a half, the first-term Premier of the Solomon Islands’ most populous province, Malaita, has been in open ­rebellion against his national government’s decision to sever its longstanding diplomatic ties with Taiwan, adopt a “one-China” foreign policy and cash in on Beijing’s political and economic ambitions in the region.

 

He refuses to accept any aid from the People’s Republic of China and — much to the chagrin of his country’s central government — continues to recognise the sovereignty of his “old friend” ­Taiwan and turn to it for help with medical supplies throughout the coronavirus pandemic.

 

The 51-year-old is now calling on Australia to up its ­involvement in his developing ­nation, saying he fears some of his political contemporaries in the Solomons Islands have already been compromised by China and his country’s democratic processes risk being corrupted by political interference from the communist regime.

 

“What we have seen with the PRC’s involvement in other countries in the region is that everything looks quite good at the start but at the end of the day, the countries eventually find it difficult to handle the problems that come with dealing with China,” he says.

 

“As far as Malaita goes, we don’t want any help from the PRC as we don’t want to have any constraints put on our independence.

 

“We don’t have the legal safeguards in place to protect us from the involvement of these people and they are not welcome here.”

 

The former primary school teacher says he had barely finished celebrating his first electoral victory in June 2019 when he was ­approach­ed by agents acting on Beijing’s behalf and pressured to accept a SI$1m (AUD$165,000) bribe in exchange for switching Malaita’s diplomatic ­allegiances from Taiwan to China.

 

“I received the offer by phone and they told me where they were and said they wanted to meet with me to discuss it,” he says. “I knew I needed to take a strong stance against such an offer and I drove to where they were staying so I could tell them that I do not accept.

 

“When I arrived, I made up my mind that it is not right for me to even go up and see them. I called and said I was not for sale and they should keep their money.”

 

Mr Suidani says what troubles him most is that the illicit overture came from agents who had already infiltrated his national government. While he refused their offer, he suspects the same cannot be said for all his fellow premiers and national MPs.

 

Within two months of him being offered the bribe, the island nation announced it had ended its 36-year relationship with Taiwan and would no longer recognise it as an independent nation.

 

“I cannot comment on whether (China) has given money to other (politicians) but you have to think that if they came to me (with a bribe), then it is certainly possible they made approaches to other people too,” he says.

 

“In some cases, I suggest (the decision to switch allegiances) was made because the PRC had been involved in funding election campaigns and helping MPs retain seats, and now they had to fulfil on commitments they had made.

 

“It’s all very, very cloudy and it’s difficult to come to terms with what that means for the Solomon Islands if our very democracy has been interfered with.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 9:54 p.m. No.13362854   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13362840

 

2/2

 

Mr Suidani’s defiant anti-China stance has reignited the deep-seated ethnic and cultural tensions within the Solomon Islands that gave way to a prolonged period of civil unrest between 1998 and 2003, while his critics in the country’s national cabinet have accused him of exploiting the issue to fuel simmering separatist sentiment within Malaita.

 

The claims have done little to temper his resolve: at the height of the pandemic last June, he issued a provocative public statement praising Taiwan for its support, adding that Malaita was in “a unique and a privileged situation to have been assisted by a country that has stood against the might of the Wuhan virus”.

 

Mr Suidani’s comments were immediately denounced by outraged officials in China’s embassy in the Solomon Islands capital, Honiara, and further condemned by the Solomon Islands Foreign Minister, Jeremiah Manele, who admonished him for referring to Taiwan “as a state rather than a province of the People’s Republic of China”.

 

The government was so furious it seized a shipment of medical supplies arriving in Malaita from Taiwan three days later, with ­Attorney-General John Muria Jr saying the cargo represented an “act of defiance of a government decision” and could be considered a breach of the Sedition Act.

 

The growing friction caused by Mr Suidani’s stand-off with the Solomon Islands’ central government is being closely monitored by bureaucrats in Canberra.

 

After 14 years on the ground heading up the Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands, Australian soldiers wrapped up their peacekeeping role in the Pacific nation in June 2017, but Lowy Institute Pacific program director Jonathan Pryke says there are concerns China’s involvement could undo much of the progress made throughout the operation.

 

“One key driver of the breakdown of law and order which led to the RAMSI intervention was the inter-island rivalries, largely driven by frustrations around uneven distribution of benefits,” he says. “While RAMSI helped put the country back together, those tensions are still very present and simmer just under the surface in Solomon Islands — and it is very worrying that the swap from Taiwan to China is now playing into these domestic tensions.

 

“It would have been easier for Australia if the Solomon Islands maintained its alliance with Taiwan because we are so anxious about the kind of investments China is making and what they’re going to use that influence for.

 

“At the same time, we recognise Solomon Islands is a sovereign nation and can make their own decisions.”

 

For now, neither side is willing to cede ground. For months, Mr Suidani has talked of the possibility of calling a province-wide vote on whether Malaita should secede from the Solomon Islands, a move that has been laughed off as ridiculous and illegal by his political opponents.

 

Whatever happens, the Premier says one thing is certain: as long as he is in power, China’s interests will remain in exile on his island.

 

“This is our place and we will never share it with people who don’t share our values and principles of democracy and independence,” he says. “As long as the Malaita people still exist, we will continue to fight against China and anyone who threatens to take that independence away from us.”

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/solomon-islands-premier-daniel-suidani-said-no-to-chinas-milliondollar-bribe/news-story/215022fd3edfd2982af7ec0925137685

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 10:56 p.m. No.13363189   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3201 >>3220 >>3244 >>3326 >>1307

Group mocks QAnon, Easter by placing over 3K eggs containing Kool-Aid packets around DC

 

WJLA STAFF - April 5th 2021

 

1/2

 

WASHINGTON (WJLA) — A local group is mocking QAnon and Easter by placing thousands of Easter eggs containing Kool-Aid packets hidden around multiple neighborhoods in D.C. on Sunday.

 

A group called INDECLINE placed over 3,000 eggs that are hidden throughout the city. INDECLINE distributed Colorful banners advertising the fake QAnon Easter Egg hunts around the District late Saturday night.

 

7News reporter Nick Minock spoke with a member of INDECLINE who says Sunday they are poking fun at Easter and QAnon. The man reportedly linked the conspiracy group to the Easter holiday.

 

INDECLINE in a release says the Kool-Aid packets are labeled to reflect the "controversial conspiracy groups ideologies and buzzwords" associated with QAnon.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 10:58 p.m. No.13363201   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13363189

 

2/2

 

INDECLINE is an American activist collective founded in 2001. It is comprised of graffiti writers, filmmakers, photographers, and full-time rebels and activists. Indecline focuses on social, ecological, and economical injustices carried out by American and international governments, corporations, and law enforcement agencies. INDECLINE is not an anarchist group, according to its website.

 

The Easter eggs are located at parks and surrounding neighborhoods including but not limited to the following locations:

 

• Garfield Park

 

• Stanton Park

 

• Lovejoy Park

 

• Meridian Hill Park

 

• Rose Park

 

• Logan Circle

 

• Kalorama Park

 

• Farragut Square

 

https://wset.com/news/local/group-places-easter-eggs-containing-kool-aid-packets-around-dc

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 11 p.m. No.13363220   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1307

>>13363189

Indecline :: Do You Know Where Your Thoughts Come From?

 

INDECLINE is an Activist Art Collective founded in 2001. It is comprised of graffiti writers, filmmakers, photographers and full-time rebels and activists. INDECLINE focuses on social, ecological and economical injustices carried out by American and International governments, corporations and law enforcement agencies.

 

https://thisisindecline.com/

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9eQT6ZPZLLg

 

 

Indecline

 

Indecline, stylized as INDECLINE, is an American art collective.

 

Members have said that the collective was formed in 2001 and is decentralized, with "dozens" of members in affiliated groups in several US states and a few foreign countries, and have characterized it as "[an] underground movement [of] activists, musicians, graffiti writers, [and] photographers".

 

Projects

 

''Bumfights''

 

In 2002 Ryen McPherson, Daniel Tanner, and others operating as Indecline Films produced the first video in the Bumfights series, Bumfights: A Cause for Concern. They subsequently took down the Indecline Films website, and have said they sold the rights to the series to two investors.

 

…..

 

''Rape Mural''

 

In October 2015, in response to Donald Trump's calling illegal immigrants "rapists", the group spray-painted a mural depicting Trump with the slogan "¡Rape Trump!" on an old border wall on US territory approximately a mile from the Tijuana airport.

 

…..

 

''Donald Trump Statues''

 

On August 18, 2016, using industrial epoxy, the group glued life-sized nude statues of Trump to the sidewalk in five cities: Cleveland, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, and Seattle.

 

…..

 

''Freedom Kick''

 

In September 2020, the group began a project alongside Spanish artist Eugenio Merino called Freedom Kick, where they order silicone replicas of the head of famous world leaders and distribute them around the world to be used as soccer balls. The games are recorded and uploaded to their Instagram account. Some of the world leaders included Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Jair Bolsonaro. After releasing Bolsonaro's video, members of the group received death threats.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indecline

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 11:04 p.m. No.13363244   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1307

>>13363189

Freedom Kick : Mexico

 

INDECLINE

 

15 Sept 2020

 

INDECLINE x Eugenio Merino

 

According to Trump’s doctor his health is “astonishing,” which means he should be in decent enough to shape to enjoy a little football, as long as everybody stands for the flag, of course. There is irony in the fact that America’s cartoon dictator finally gets to visit his wall and see what those in Mexico think of it from such an intensely close perspective. It makes for a decent ball stop, although doubtful it slows migration near as much as his belligerent, white supremacy. If America is so much greater during his tenure, how come people don’t seem as enthusiastic about coming over? Based on the athleticism displayed here, it certainly isn’t the wall.

 

Football, with its emphasis on teamwork and collective sacrifice, has always crossed borders with ease, but so have different kinds of ideology. Nationalism is a plague too, and at its outset, it was just as hard to predict its effect on our culture and politics. It spread quietly on the Internet, which means no one was watching to ensure fair play. And now, America is learning the hard way how fragile democracy can be.

 

Freedom Kick is an appeal to the American sense of justice as a match between two opposing teams. The rules are meant to protect us from cheaters. We believe it is time to reset the game, before we have to spend another four years watching a cheeseburger-scarfing, bloviating mess hobble up and down the pitch spreading hate. The game should be beautiful, if nothing else.

 

After all, football is a game of love. Let’s hold our heads of state accountable. Or else they will hold us accountable for our apathy.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6u2-hTTBpw

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 4, 2021, 11:19 p.m. No.13363326   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1307

>>13363189

This Is The End

 

INDECLINE

 

8 Nov 2020

 

We’d like to take a moment, not just to celebrate the fall of the Orange Emperor, but to acknowledge the importance of sustained resistance, which has, once again, unequivocally proven to be one of the many driving forces in effectively changing the course of history and will be an essential ingredient as we move forward beyond this divisive election.

 

We are all capable of enforcing creative checks and balances. It’s a lot more difficult and time consuming than simply casting a vote, but you get to have a blast doing it. Politics is a never ending, large scale game of Tug of War and it’s worth remembering that the 60 million plus citizens who voted for Trump will gladly stay committed to pulling their end of the rope until we collapse, so just because Trump is out of office, doesn’t mean we’re done. If anything, it means we need to fight harder than ever while we have the momentum.

 

Do we think Biden is the answer to our problems? Absolutely not. In fact, we’re all but certain he will do exactly what Obama did when he took over and keep the most vital and vile parts of the machine well greased and functioning in the best interest of the ruling class. Biden won’t do much for the environment and we know he’s not defunding the police. He’ll keep us complicit in Israel’s constant human rights violations and most likely continue to enforce unjust laws at our borders.

 

A lot of people told us we focused on Trump too much. They said it was “trendy”, low hanging fruit. But the thing these people fail to realize, is that in order to make the biggest impact, sometimes you have to attack the biggest person in the room. But if we choose to act as if Trump, or any President for that matter, is the sole threat to civilization, we will never gain the upper hand. We have to stretch our canvases far and wide and paint in broad strokes in order to create equity, understanding and balance.

 

20 years of direct action has taught us a lot. It’s taught us that time flies when you’re breaking the rules, creating art, inspiring conversation and debate and doing it all with your loved ones. It’s taught us that 20 years can just serve as the warm up.

 

Sometimes men in power find themselves in a position to set a historical precedent for the ruling class. But the creative class will always be just around the corner, bags filled with paint, bolt cutters and burner phones, ready and willing to kill that precedent.

 

Here’s to the next chapter. See you out there.

 

With Love & Solidarity,

INDECLINE

 

MUSIC: ANTI FLAG

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3yUletZfCoo

 

>Why were[are] violent [masked] terror orgs such as Antifa immediately created/funded and allowed to operate within [D] controlled cities [safe-zones]?

 

https://qanon.pub/?q=antifa

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 5, 2021, 11:14 p.m. No.13369823   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1239

Malcolm Turnbull dumped from new NSW Government climate job

 

MAX MADDISON - APRIL 6, 2021

 

NSW Energy Minister Matt Kean has backflipped on his decision to appoint Malcolm Turnbull as his climate energy tsar, dropping the former prime minister just days after his appointment.

 

The appointment of Mr Turnbull as chair of the Net Zero Emissions and Clean Economy Board had enraged some Coalition MPs who pointed to his constant criticism of the federal government since he was deposed in 2018.

 

One Liberal MP speaking on the condition of anonymity, told The Australian: “This is just another stunning example of Matt’s appalling judgment”.

 

Several other Liberal MPs privately said the role was inappropriate considering he was simultaneously running Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest’s green steel investment fund.

 

In a statement released on Monday, Mr Kean succumbed to the pressure, saying the “focus should not be on personality”.

 

“No person’s role on the Board should distract from achieving results for the NSW people or from the Government’s work in delivering jobs and opportunities for the people of NSW,” Mr Kean said.

 

“For this reason, I have decided not to proceed with his appointment as chair.”

 

Mr Turnbull blamed the decision to dump him on “thuggery” from the “the right-wing media ecosystem”.

 

“The right-wing media — they cracked the whip as bullies do, and got their way,” Mr Turnbull told Nine Newspapers. “In actions like these, you have to ask, ‘who’s in charge?’”.

 

He also denied being against jobs in the Hunter but rather supported transitioning coal miners into new industries as the sector declined.

 

The NSW Chief Scientist and Engineer Hugh Durrant-Whyte will head the board until a replacement is found, Mr Kean said.

 

Mr Kean had faced ongoing criticism from sections of his own party and the media, with several questioning whether a letter sent by Mr Turnbull objecting to the expansion of an Upper Hunter coal mine was evidence he had a conflict of interest.

 

The Daily Telegraph on Tuesday reported Mr Turnbull had last month written to object to the expansion of the Mount Pleasant mine in Upper Hunter, where the Coalition is facing a by-election fight with One Nation and Labor and where support for coal is a key issue.

 

In the letter, which Mr Turnbull cosigned with his wife Lucy, the former Wentworth MP cited worsening air quality, saying the existence of other mines in the area had done “considerable damage” to the local environment, which included his family’s nearby 2700 acre grazing property.

 

Coalition sources were concerned Mr Turnbull’s appointment could prove detrimental to The Nationals chances of retaining the Upper Hunter seat at the upcoming by-election.

 

Deputy leader John Barilaro labelled the decision to drop Mr Turnbull as a “great result for common sense”, saying he had personally given the benefit of the doubt to Mr Turnbull but “he pulled my pants down within 48 hours”.

 

“We are not proceeding with the appointment of Malcolm Turnbull as chair. I give credit to Matt Kean. He accepts even if you want to go down this position of Net Zero board and that target you don’t need an individual who clouds or makes controversial – you need someone who brings people together and not divide and unfortunately Malcolm has done the opposite,” Mr Barilaro told Ray Hadley on 2GB.

 

NSW opposition leader Jodi McKay said the decision to appoint Mr Turnbull was a “monumental failure of judgment”:

 

“How on earth did it even come to this? John Barilaro backed Turnbull’s appointment in cabinet. This should never have been a political appointment and was always going to be divisive. A monumental failure of judgment by John Barilaro.’’

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/malcolm-turnbull-dumped-from-new-nsw-government-climate-job/news-story/5245b7932b02f34e2e492e0e13015b7b

 

https://twitter.com/kloussikian/status/1379218097941348355

 

https://twitter.com/JodiMcKayMP/status/1379223147518386176

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 5, 2021, 11:21 p.m. No.13369853   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1275

>>13351022

>>13351027

Australia pressures New Zealand to toe the line of Washington

 

Yu Lei - Apr 05, 2021

 

The Australian media outlet News.com.au reported on Saturday that, "There are concerns from New Zealand Five Eyes' allies that it may be the weak link in dealing with China as the Ardern Government, again, failed to call out Beijing."

 

This is not the sole article delivering grievances regarding New Zealand's China policy. There seems to be many of them that harangue Wellington when it does not join in chorus with Washington, London, Ottawa and Canberra to browbeat and belittle China. The conservative US news website Washington Examiner published an article on January 11 entitled, "Appeasing China, New Zealand abandons the Five Eyes."

 

Indeed, Wellington's policy toward Beijing does differ from its allies in the Five Eyes, especially Washington and Canberra. The following reasons lead to it. For one, New Zealand's economy is comparatively small in the global marketplace, and heavily depends on international trade, especially the Chinese market. At the end of 2019, China was New Zealand's largest goods market, largest source of international students, and second largest source of tourists. It was also a significant foreign investor.

 

Most exports from New Zealand resemble those from the US and Australia. In this context, Wellington has attached great importance to maintain close and friendly relations with markets it has opened, such as China. The two countries on January 26 signed a deal upgrading their existing free trade pact, which gives exports from New Zealand greater access to China.

 

For another reason, in comparison to the US and Australia, where the white mainly determines their foreign policy, the Maori today have occupied a considerable position in politics. Therefore, Wellington's policy focuses more on domestic affairs and tends to be more pragmatic.

 

The US persuaded 13 other countries to released a joint statement on March 30 expressing so-called "shared concerns regarding the recent WHO-convened study in China." Except for New Zealand, four other members of the Five Eyes were among the group. In regard to this event, the News.com.au article remarked that the administration of Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has been "dubbed the 'soft underbelly' of the Five Eyes."

 

Such narrative reflects the mindset of some Australian elite politicians. They have seen their country as a hegemonic force in South Pacific, second only to the US. This makes them believe New Zealand should also follow Australia's lead. However, it is wishful thinking. Wellington has long remained independent with its national interests, and has been reluctant to obey orders from Washington and Canberra.

 

For example, in 1984 New Zealand passed legislation that made the entire country a nuclear-free zone, which effectively barred US warships from docking in their ports. As a consequence, the US froze New Zealand out of the Australia-New Zealand-US military alliance, and downgraded their diplomatic status from a close ally to a friend.

 

Even under US pressure, New Zealand is still a nuclear-free zone.

 

Four other allies of the Five Eyes are anticipated to pile pressure on New Zealand hoping to put more pressure on China. Yet judging from historical experience, Wellington will not easily yield to pressure.

 

As a matter of fact, the Five Eyes is an alliance for interests only. It does not do so for the pursuit of the share values of democracy and freedom, which is a disguise. Just as late UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill said, "We have no lasting friends, no lasting enemies, only lasting interests." This can be illustrated by the fact that the US in 1812 declared war against Britain and Canada.

 

In the post-Brexit era, the UK may temporarily maintain close ties with the US. As a neighbor of the US, Canada appears to be not bold enough to deviate from Washington's stronghold. For many years, Australia has relied on the US to pursue its regional hegemony in South Pacific.

 

Against this backdrop, China is supposed to do its own thing well. And Beijing will patiently counter their potential moves.

 

The author is chief research fellow at the research center for Pacific island countries of Liaocheng University in East China's Shandong Province. opinion@globaltimes.com.cn

 

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202104/1220252.shtml

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 5, 2021, 11:33 p.m. No.13369902   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9905 >>1275

Explainer: China’s ‘wolf warrior’ diplomats howl at Xinjiang critics

 

AFP / theaustralian.com.au - APRIL 6, 2021

 

1/2

 

China’s “wolf warrior” diplomats are back after a brief lull, firing insults over Twitter, smearing critics and suggesting conspiracies.

 

The hyperactivity of the envoys follows renewed global pressure over Beijing’s treatment of the Muslim Uighur minority in China’s Xinjiang region.

 

Here are five things to know as the wolf warriors once more bare their teeth:

 

When did it start?

 

The term “wolf warrior diplomacy” became common parlance in 2019, when Chinese envoys — most prominently spokesman Zhao Lijian — adopted a vociferous defence of the Communist-led country on social media platforms such as Twitter, which is blocked in China.

 

The nickname derives from a film about a Rambo-like Chinese special forces soldier.

 

China insists it was forced into the change of tone, which came amid the fulminations of Donald Trump’s White House.

 

But officials like Zhao, who made headlines in 2019 over controversial tweets as an envoy to Pakistan, took to his fresh combat role as foreign ministry spokesman with particular aplomb a year later.

 

He has promoted conspiracy theories including that the US military might have brought COVID-19 to China, and then railed against Canberra in tweets alleging “the murder of Afghan civilians & prisoners by Australian soldiers”.

 

That post came with an illustration of a soldier holding a bloody knife to a child’s throat. It was denounced by Australia’s prime minister, but set the tone for feuds that still dominate relations.

 

Trump’s rhetoric over the “China virus” saw Beijing’s envoys up the ante as the pandemic roiled the world.

 

Experts say the switch into attack mode partly reflects the new assertive China of President Xi Jinping.

 

Why did the wolves return?

 

As Joe Biden settled into the US presidency in January, China’s diplomats floated hopes of a reset in relations.

 

But the ceasefire collapsed at a US-China meeting in Alaska in mid-March, where the Chinese Communist Party’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi threatened action over “US interference”.

 

“Yang’s tough talk in Anchorage seems to have encouraged senior Chinese diplomats to indulge in inflammatory remarks,” said Mathieu Duchatel, director of the Asia Programme at Paris-based think-tank Institut Montaigne.

 

China’s consul-general in Rio de Janeiro Li Yang has since referred to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as “boy” while calling Canada a “running dog of the US”.

 

And in late March as the European Union, Britain, Canada and the United States imposed sanctions over Xinjiang, foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying went as far as to suggest the CIA helped cook up rhetoric on the northwestern region to destabilise China.

 

In response to backlash against brands like H&M and Nike who raised concerns over the textile supply chain in Xinjiang, Hua showed a photo she said showed Black slaves in US cotton fields.

 

Referencing the transatlantic slave trade that same week, she argued others were in no position to criticise China.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 5, 2021, 11:34 p.m. No.13369905   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13369902

 

2/2

 

Attack mode

 

China’s envoys say Beijing has been forced to retaliate as rivals — particularly in the West — gang up to curtail its rise.

 

But officials’ attitudes have markedly shifted under Xi from late leader Deng Xiaoping’s philosophy to “hide your strength, bide your time”.

 

When France recently summoned the Chinese ambassador over “unacceptable” behaviour, the embassy said he would not immediately comply and instead come to “make representations” over sanctions and Taiwan issues.

 

Observers suggest there are bigger geopolitical calculations at play with a benefit in slinging mud at the once untouchable bigwigs of the global political order.

 

“The uncertainty of the international environment also gives Beijing a particular strategic development space to challenge the existing international order,” said Zhao Alexandre Huang, an academic at the Universite Gustave Eiffel in France.

 

What’s next?

 

Signalling strength and threatening costs for non-compliance may lead to friction with some states but could cow others, said Chong Ja Ian of the National University of Singapore.

 

Nations dependent on Chinese trade “are more susceptible to submission”, he said, adding that those with experience handling Chinese pressure may find it easier to ride out Beijing’s ire.

 

But if it wants to signal costs in opposing China, Beijing may edge towards demonstrating “capacity and determination to escalate at each moment of confrontation”, Duchatel said.

 

While the wolf warriors have overturned many diplomatic assumptions, the surge into social media has not all been to Beijing’s benefit.

 

In September 2020, a Twitter account belonging to Liu Xiaoming, China’s longstanding firebrand ambassador to Britain, “liked” a pornographic foot fetish video on Twitter. He played off the incident as a hack.

 

Liu retired a few months later.

 

China’s embassy in Ireland drew mirth last week when it cited a fable to push back against the wolf warrior label: “Aesop described how the Wolf accused the Lamb of committing offences…BTW, China is not a lamb.” The tweet appears to have since been deleted.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/explainer-chinas-wolf-warrior-diplomats-howl-at-xinjiang-critics/news-story/38c9395b906f3bba2c605b75628409b9

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 12:03 a.m. No.13369989   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1239

Andy Meddick slams AustraliaOne party after supporters of the far-right party gathered in Torquay

 

A local politician has slammed a “disgusting” and “hateful” political group that was seen promoting itself on Torquay’s busy foreshore over the Easter weekend.

 

RUSTY WOODGER - April 5, 2021

 

A LOCAL politician has slammed a “disgusting” and “hateful” political group that was seen promoting itself on Torquay’s busy foreshore over the Easter weekend.

 

A small group of people aligned to AustraliaOne, a fringe far-right party, converged on The Esplanade at Torquay on Good Friday.

 

As families flocked to the nearby beach, supporters erected a large sign displaying the party’s logo, along with messages including one that proclaimed: “It’s time to take back our country.”

 

The party, which claims it is not a far-right group, holds controversial views on a range of topics.

 

It opposes immigration, lists China and Islam among “The Five Threats” to Australia, and wants to reinstate the death penalty for crimes of treason.

 

Its founder has also appeared at rallies alongside members of True Blue Crew, an extremist group that has been linked to far-right terrorism.

 

Andy Meddick, a state politician who lives in Torquay, said he was “shocked” to learn of the party’s views after being alerted to Friday’s gathering.

 

The Animal Justice Party MP labelled the group “racist, homophobic and transphobic”, stating their presence in his hometown was further evidence of the “rise of the far right”.

 

“These hateful people, and their hateful ideology, do not represent the attitudes of Australia,” he wrote in a Facebook post that has since gone viral.

 

“They have no place here or anywhere.

 

“It is all our responsibility, all of us, to rid our society of these disgusting groups.”

 

It is understood the party’s presence in Torquay was to attract signatures for a petition calling for the lifting of all suppression orders involving convicted paedophiles.

 

Its signage, however, promoted other issues such as “military power” and “political freedom”.

 

Passers-by were encouraged to visit the party’s website where it outlines contentious policies, including opposition to same-sex marriage and what it describes as “weird gender ideologies”.

 

It also proposes a ban on accepting Muslims as migrants or refugees.

 

Mr Meddick told the Geelong Advertiser it was troubling that some of those targeted by the party’s views may have witnessed the group’s presence in Torquay.

 

“Anybody in any of those groups would rightly be quite concerned and it wouldn’t surprise me to find they were quite fearful,” he said.

 

“There has been a rise in far-right extremism … We should be concerned.”

 

AustraliaOne was founded by Riccardo Bosi, a former NSW Senate candidate for the Australian Conservatives.

 

A promotional video on the party’s website shows Mr Bosi speaking at a True Blue Crew rally in 2018.

 

True Blue Crew has achieved notoriety in recent years, with a former member of the far-right group, Phillip Galea, serving a 12-year jail term after being found guilty of terrorism offences.

 

Mr Bosi was approached for comment but did not respond before deadline.

 

https://www.geelongadvertiser.com.au/news/geelong/andy-meddick-slams-australiaone-party-after-supporters-of-the-farright-party-gathered-in-torquay/news-story/adeb88d8f5251a439dd9c06d903b09d8

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 1:17 a.m. No.13370228   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1295

Cops lay 45 charges against 15 alleged sex criminals busted preying on Territory children online

 

Police have charged 15 people with a total of 45 offences following a months long operation targeting sex criminals preying on Territory children via online chat forums.

 

JASON WALLS - April 6, 2021

 

POLICE have charged 15 people with a total of 45 offences following a months long operation targeting sex criminals preying on Territory children via online chat platforms.

 

During Operation May, police executed 19 search warrants between January and March throughout the NT and Queensland, as well as successfully extraditing a 52-year-old man from Western Australia.

 

In a sting conducted as a part of the bust, officers posed as a 12-year-old girl who engaged with a 28-year-old man online before arranging to meet up.

 

The investigators tracked the man while using an undercover operative as a decoy and arrested him when he showed up at the arranged location.

 

He and the other men, aged between 21 and 52 were charged with offences including using the internet to procure a child, using a carriage service to transmit child abuse images and indecent dealing with a child under 10.

 

The offences were allegedly committed against four girls in the NT aged between 5 and 8.

 

NT Police Acting Commander Lauren Hill said the joint operation with Queensland Police and the Australian Federal Police was the first time such a large scale raid focusing on the NT had been undertaken.

 

“Police had identified an investigation in the Tennant Creek area and a result of examination of devices held by that person allowed us to conduct some intelligence and assessment and from that assessment we rolled with the operation,” she said.

 

Cmdr Hill warned parents that any of the online platforms children had access to could be harbouring “predators on the other side”.

 

“We would encourage parents to know what they’re children are doing in relation to online,” she said.

 

“Who they’re engaging with online, where their chat conversations are, what gaming platforms they’re accessing and potentially using any security enhancements that are available on their own devices.”

 

AFP Detective Superintendent Paula Hudson said the operation was another example of Australian law enforcement’s dedication to working hand-in-hand to protect children and ensure predators were detected and prosecuted.

 

“This is also a warning to any adult who wants to prey on children online,” she said.

 

“You may not be talking to a vulnerable child, you could be talking to a police officer.”

 

Detective Sergeant Paul Lawson said the alleged offences and the potential for further offending by the perpetrators was “horrific”.

 

Stopping the abhorrent intentions of people like them, drives officers within the joint operation every day to rid our society of this type of offending,” he said.

 

https://www.ntnews.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts/cops-lay-45-charges-against-15-alleged-sex-criminals-busted-preying-on-territory-children-online/news-story/eadaa9c679d62e79ab36321f2727b5cf

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 2:20 a.m. No.13370328   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1307

Shayan Sardarizadeh Tweets

 

Based on the finale of #QIntotheStorm Q drops are over for good. Both Jim and Ron told @CullenHoback Q would end after the election, and that's exactly what happened.

 

We already had proof of the end given there haven't been any drops since 8 December, but we can now be certain.

 

https://twitter.com/Shayan86/status/1379097929072443400

 

 

This, of course, doesn't mean the end of QAnon by any means.

 

There are nearly 4,953 Q drops. Followers will forever refer to those drops and link them to current events at any given time regardless of context.

 

That's what they've been doing since December anyway.

 

https://twitter.com/Shayan86/status/1379099213661937665

 

 

Q Post #3466

 

Jul 22 2019 19:51:16 (EST)

 

These people are stupid.

Enjoy the show!

Q

 

https://qanon.pub/#3466

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 10:37 p.m. No.13376039   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6043 >>1307

Q: Into the Storm set to provide answers on dangerous QAnon cult

 

JACK THE INSIDER (Peter Hoysted) - APRIL 7, 2021

 

1/2

 

On August 7, 2020 President Donald Trump spoke to American people. “We’re going to win,” he said. “And we’re going to win big. Q just watch. We have the cards – they don’t.”

 

The ‘Q’ was almost certainly a mispronunciation, but millions of QAnon observers latched on to it. Trump was their man. Trump was their saviour. Anons believed President Trump had set himself to war against the Deep State and with their help, he would triumph.

 

Q: Into the Storm is an HBO six-part documentary currently screening in Australia on Foxtel. It is the first serious attempt to get to the bottom of the QAnon cult and determine the real identity of the deep state “insider” known as Q.

 

Three years in the making, Director Cullen Hoback and executive producer Adam McKay traversed the globe investigating the movement fuelled by conspiracy theories and revealed how the Q drops war gamed the internet, hijacked politics, and manipulated people’s thinking.

 

The documentary is also a study on freedom of speech. QAnon itself is an exercise in speech without consequence, of deliberate use of dangerous misinformation designed to inspire violence.

 

The great cult of the 20th Century, Scientology, was based on the charismatic manner and style of its founder, L. Ron Hubbard, his books and his cultist toys like the e-meter. It drew people in due to a mistrust of psychology and peddled easy answers to complex personal and societal problems through old technology and communication methods.

 

QAnon is a 21st Century phenomenon. It could only have happened in this time, driven by social media and imageboard websites like 4 Chan and 8 Chan/kun.

 

The preconditions of its success are grounded in a profound sense of disconnection from the political process and a deep mistrust of mainstream media.

 

Ironically, the darkest claims of QAnon fall in the historical, founded on the bizarre belief that the world is run by Satan-worshipping paedophiles who eat babies. The baby eaters are Democrat politicians, Hollywood liberals, even Pope Francis I.

 

The slaughter and cannibalism of infants is an age old propaganda ploy, used widely to inspire anti-Semitic pogroms for centuries.

 

Interestingly, the GOP congressman from Florida, Matt Gaetz, who is facing allegations of sex trafficking and possibly trafficking of a minor for the purposes of prostitution, has found support from QAnon cultists who have posted recently on Telegram declaring Gaetz has been set up.

 

Unlike most cults before it, QAnon is political rather than religious or spiritual in nature.

 

QAnon is more than a conspiracy theory. It’s the mother of all conspiracy theories. At one level, it’s an online game that encourages adherents to play their own role in a revolution which will solve the evils of the world.

 

We don’t yet know who Q is, but his messages called Q drops are largely based on repetition, a useful tactic in psy-ops. There have been more than 5000 Q drops, almost all cryptic in meaning while emphasising a key set of phrases – “Do your own research”, “Trust the Plan”, “Where We Go One, We Go All,” and predicting Apocalyptic scenarios like “The Storm” and “The Great Awakening”.

 

Q drops are then analysed by influencers and turned into memes where they filter through the social media before ending up on grandma’s Facebook page.

 

In 2018, the cult of QAnon came to the belief that sealed indictments had led to the arrest of 55,000 people, including Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Tom Hanks, Bill Gates. In 2020, the Australian branch of QAnon were shrieking that Victorian Premier, Dan Andrews had been arrested and was cooling his heels in Guantanamo Bay and had been replaced by a body double.

 

None of this happened, of course, but it didn’t diminish the fervour.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 10:38 p.m. No.13376043   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13376039

 

2/2

 

Why is it dangerous? QAnon is a cult and cults practice exclusion – members of the cult are separated from their friends and families. QAnons are ‘redpilled’ – a term first used in the film, the Matrix where the Keanu Reeves character, Neo, takes a red pill in order to find a hidden reality.

 

Like all cults, it separates followers from their money who splurge on donations and merchandise to Q-influencers.

 

QAnon’s most dangerous element is that it encourages its adherents to take matters into their own hands. In its early days and in its earliest expression, a Washington DC family restaurant, Comet Pizza, became the scene of a siege when one Anon entered the restaurant with an AR-15 seeking to rescue abducted children kept in the basement. There were no abducted children. There was no basement.

 

A swat team circled the building, arresting the gunman, Edgar Maddison Welch, a 29-year-old resident of Salisbury, North Carolina. No one was injured although patrons fled the building terrified. Welch, who has just completed a four year jail sentence, offered no apologies, claiming only that his shocking assault was a case of “bad intel”.

 

The storming of the Capitol building on January 6 was not exclusively a QAnon event, but it had been promised by Q and Q-influencers for years. It wasn’t just the Q Shaman, Jake Angeli, who turned up. Thousands of Anons pushed their way into the Capitol Building, clashed with police and threatened the very heart of American democracy.

 

Intriguingly, Q Posts have stopped. There hasn’t been one since December 20, 2020, a typically cryptic message but this one attempted to put an end to the dangerous nonsense.

 

It hasn’t worked. Anons are now off the leash, free to make all sorts of torturous predictions. There was a flurry of activity online when the Ever Given became blocked in the Suez Canal. Part of the container ship’s registration included the initials “HRC” – Hillary Rodham Clinton. The ship is operated by Taiwanese transport company, Evergreen Marine. Evergreen was Hillary Clinton’s secret service ascribed codename.

 

Anons started chirping that abducted children are being transported around the world by container ship. QAnon has now become a danger to shipping.

 

Who was Q? You’ll have to watch the documentary to find out but the name of Ron Watkins, the administrator of the message board 8kun, the conspiratorial movement’s online home, looms large.

 

But there are so many questions still to be answered. Was this a political psy-op designed to create a hard base of Trump voters or was it a crazy game that spun out of control and led millions of people around the world to fall under its spell? And who should pay the price for entrapping millions of people into a violent fantasy, giving them a sense of connection and enhanced identity by propelling them into battle, the foot soldiers in a contrived fight against evil?

 

Peter Hoysted is Jack the Insider: a highly placed, dedicated servant of the nation with close ties to leading figures in politics, business and the union movement.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/life/q-into-the-storm-set-to-provide-answers-on-dangerous-qanon-cult/news-story/3e505fc9d6608d12f4029429ac923a44

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 10:58 p.m. No.13376098   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6103 >>6111 >>2781 >>1275

China denies abuse of Uyghurs in bizarre press conference

 

Australian journalists have been invited to a surreal press conference by the Chinese embassy, where they have been fed the nation’s propaganda.

 

Finn McHugh - APRIL 7, 2021

 

The Chinese government has held an extraordinary press conference in Canberra, trotting out members of a Muslim ethnic minority to deny they had been persecuted by the communist nation.

 

The Chinese embassy in Canberra invited Australian journalists to the meeting on Wednesday to defend Beijing’s human rights record in Xinjiang Province, where human rights groups believe more than a million Muslim Uyghurs have been sent to internment camps.

 

But in a surreal press conference, Chinese ambassador Cheng Jingye insisted Uyghurs were not subjected to oppression in Xinjiang.

 

China’s ambassador to Australia, Cheng Jingye, said the point of the press conference was to combat “disinformation” about Xinjiang and the Uyghurs.

 

“Over some time, there has been quite some distorted coverage about Xinjiang in certain Western media,” Mr Cheng said.

 

“Those reports are basically based on disinformation or misinformation.

 

“Today’s press conference is to help you Australian journalists to have a better understanding of the actual situation in Xinjiang.”

 

Journalists were shown a six-minute propaganda video – entitled “Xinjiang is a Wonderful Land” – depicting the region as one of “economic development, social stability, livelihood improvement and religious harmony”.

 

The video suggested the Communist Party of China had “transformed” Xinjiang “into a land of life, a land of thriving vitality”.

 

China has long insisted the camps are designed to quell a growing separatist movement in the region, driven by the Uyghur population.

 

Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women’s Association president Ramila Chanisheff said the number of people to have passed through the camps could range between 5 and 8 million, with more than 380 sites across Xinjiang.

 

She said the press conference was a sign of “desperation” from Beijing, which was “very much afraid” of the growing international scrutiny about the province.

 

“I think what we can see is that they’re desperate, they’re trying every way to cover up the reality of the actual statistics and the pure evidence that’s coming out of Xinjiang,” she told Sky News.

 

“The world is realising what’s happening out there, they’re seeing it for what it is. I think China is very much afraid at the moment.”

 

Ms Chanisheff said China’s economic and international influence meant it would likely become more vocal as it defended its record in Xinjiang.

 

Canada’s parliament in February declared a genocide was under way in the region, while UK foreign secretary Dominic Raab accused China of a “highly disturbing program of oppression” last month.

 

“This is one of the worst human rights crises of our time and I believe the evidence is clear, as it is sobering,” he said.

 

Despite deteriorating relations between Canberra and Beijing over the past year, Australia has so far resisted following suit.

 

Foreign Minister Marise Payne last month indicated Australia would not declare a genocide in Xinjiang.

 

“We have a slightly different approach to that turn of phrase, and I don’t mean this in a pedantic or semantic way,” she said.

 

But Ms Payne called on China to allow the UN high commissioner for human rights to have access to the region.

 

https://www.news.com.au/national/politics/china-denies-abuse-of-uyghurs-in-bizarre-press-conference/news-story/7efadf8abb39157b810e4acc3cdab7f4

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 10:59 p.m. No.13376103   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6111 >>2781 >>1275

>>13376098

Chinese embassy release propaganda film riddled with misinformation on Uyghur genocide

 

Sky News Australia

 

7 Apr 2021

 

The Chinese Embassy in Canberra has aired a bizarre nine-minute propaganda film riddled with misinformation in an attempt to downplay the acts of genocide being committed against the Uyghur population in Xinjiang.

 

The video was littered with propaganda declaring Xinjiang as a “wonderful land” and spoke about free-education camps in the region.

 

The ambassador slammed so-called “distorted coverage” of the situation in Xinjiang where up to a million Uyghurs are being kept in ‘re-education camps’.

 

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has come out against the treatment of the Muslim minority group declaring Beijing is committing “genocide and crimes against humanity”

 

The Australian Strategic Policy Instituted has claimed there are more than 380 ‘re-education’ camps in the region which is up more than 40 per cent from previous estimates.

 

In early 2021 the BBC did an expose on the horrific treatment of the Uyghur population, highlighting the treatment of females in the camps which included forced sterilisation.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjpLjsEAUes

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 6, 2021, 11 p.m. No.13376111   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2781 >>1275

>>13376098

>>13376103

China delivers propaganda speech blaming Uyghur treatment on ‘terrorism’

 

Sky News Australia

 

7 Apr 2021

 

A senior Chinese government official from Xinjiang has delivered a disturbing speech which defended the horrors being committed against the Uyghur population.

 

In the bizarre press conference at the Chinese Embassy in Canberra, Xinjiang Vice-Governor Erkin Tuniyaz said the forced labor and re-education camps were merely a means to combat “terrorism” and “religious extremism”.

 

“We have made utmost efforts to eradicate the soil and conditions for breeding terrorism and religious extremism and protect the people’s basic rights from being harmed by terrorism and religious extremism,” he said.

 

More than a million Uyghur muslims are believed to be trapped in re-education camps in China, which survivors have told the BBC subjected women to sexual assault and violence.

 

During the press conference, the Chinese Government also played several strange propaganda videos which attempted to spruik Xinjiang as a popular tourism destination and a place for religious freedoms.

 

“In Xinjiang, the principle of the freedom of religious beliefs enshrined in the national constitution has been implemented in entirety,” the video stated.

 

“Normal religious activities of believers and their religious needs are guaranteed by law,” it said.

 

China has faced sustained international criticism in relation to its treatment of the Uyghur populations.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-it6kwnffLo

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 7, 2021, 1:11 a.m. No.13376526   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1295

HIV-positive paedophile Jadd William Brooker to be charged with 100 more offences involving six child and teenage victims

 

The HIV-positive paedophile who vowed to infect children will be charged with 100 more crimes, while another alleged offender is now co-operating with police.

 

Sean Fewster - April 7, 2021

 

Investigators are poised to charge HIV-positive paedophile Jadd William Brooker with 100 more offences – including the depraved abuse of six children and teens in Australia.

 

The Advertiser can reveal the new allegations, which include “contact offending” against children, will be laid before Brooker’s next court appearance in June.

 

Some of those alleged offences are regarded as “category five” crimes, meaning they involve acts such as coerced bondage, sadism, torture or bestiality.

 

The Advertiser can also reveal another man facing charges arising from the Brooker case is now co-operating with AFP and SA Police investigators.

 

The 37-year-old senior Correctional Services Department officer last week told a court he wanted his identity suppressed – and his lawyer, Stacey Carter, said the situation “may change”.

 

“I can confirm my client has co-operated fully with SA Police,” she said.

 

“I am permitted to confirm he has provided police with the identity of the alleged victims … this may change the suppression order application.”

 

Brooker, 38, of Glenelg East, has already pleaded guilty to seven child abuse and exploitation charges – earning a potential 40 per cent sentencing discount.

 

Prosecutors have previously alleged he expressed his intention to infect adults and children with HIV, then acted on it while filming himself.

 

They said he had a teenage victim – who has been tested for the virus – in an eastern states city, and can be connected to 40 other paedophiles worldwide.

 

A month after Brooker’s arrest, in September last year, police had analysed just 30 per cent of the 4.5 million files on his electronic devices.

 

They allegedly discovered 10,000 images of child exploitation, 7000 of which were new and “not pre-existing” on the internet.

 

That prompted further investigations resulting in the arrests of the senior correctional services officer and of former Labor Party staffer Ben Waters last week.

 

Court documents released on Wednesday allege the senior correctional services officer’s offending occurred at Port Lincoln, the northern suburbs and the Eyre Peninsula in 2020 and 2021.

 

It is alleged that, between June 2020 and January 2021, he both produced and disseminated exploitation material featuring children under the age of 14 years.

 

It is further alleged that, between June 2020 and March 2021, he indecently filmed an adult without their consent.

 

The man allegedly produced further exploitation material between November 2020 and January 2021, and was caught in possession of such material on March 30 this year.

 

Last week, the man’s counsel sought an identity suppression and, when that failed, said they would appeal to the Supreme Court.

 

That appeal has meant the man’s unmasking will be postponed until his legal challenge has been heard on Tuesday.

 

On Wednesday, Brooker faced court on the charges filed against him so far.

 

Those include the seven counts to which he has confessed, and 36 further charges involving the alleged production, possession and dissemination of child abuse material.

 

Tim Clarke, for Brooker, asked for the existence of those 36 charges, and any pending charges, to be suppressed from publication.

 

“I’ve spoken to the prosecution and we’re seeking to negotiate these matters … those negotiations are ongoing, and there has been correspondence,” he said.

 

“We’ve been identifying the counts that are likely to resolve by way of plea … we expect these matters are likely to resolve.”

 

He argued the suppression was needed to ensure the integrity of ongoing investigations – a claim rejected by both prosecutors and The Advertiser.

 

The state’s chief magistrate, Judge Mary-Louise Hribal, declined to impose a suppression order and remanded Brooker in custody until June, when he will enter his pleas.

 

https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-sa/hivpositive-paedophile-jadd-william-brooker-to-be-charged-with-100-more-offences-involving-six-child-and-teenage-victims/news-story/49f349e4e7cd6c00634edfd6c7618b2b

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 7, 2021, 1:40 a.m. No.13376573   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5620 >>1301

Ghislaine Maxwell ordered to clean dirty and smelly prison cell

 

Ghislaine Maxwell’s life behind bars is arduous but the Bureau of Prisons says that she’s the one making it harder.

 

Marta Dhanis - 7 April 2021

 

Ghislaine Maxwell’s life behind bars is arduous but the Bureau of Prisons says that she’s the one making it harder. It turns out the British socialite is keeping her cell "very dirty" and smelly but had complained about those conditions a couple of months ago.

 

In a letter to a judge, the government details Maxwell’s latest conditions of confinement at the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC), in Brooklyn. "MDC staff directed the defendant to clean her cell because it had become very dirty. Among other things, MDC staff noted that the defendant frequently did not flush her toilet after using it, which caused the cell to smell," prosecutors said.

 

Moreover, her cell became "increasingly dirty" as she didn’t clean it "in some time."

 

For one thing the accused madam of Jeffrey Epstein can be thankful for: she has now been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

 

The MDC medical staff considered that the defendant is "physically healthy" despite her lawyers’ suggestions that she may not be able to stand trial due to her deteriorating health. The staff indicated that the defendant’s weight has fluctuated between the 130s and the 140s, what they consider an adequate weight for her 5’7" height. The MDC also refuted the idea that the defendant has experienced any noticeable hair loss.

 

Maxwell’s sleep deprivation suggestions were also turned down.

 

Prosecutors said that, at night, the MDC staff are required to confirm every 15 minutes that the defendant is not in distress. In order to do so, they point a flashlight to the concrete ceiling of the defendant’s cell to illuminate the cell sufficiently to make sure that the defendant is breathing. This shouldn’t disturb her much, they argued, since the defendant has been seen wearing an eye mask when she sleeps.

 

The MDC also observed that Maxwell is a privileged inmate who gets more time "than any other inmate" to review documents and evidence in her case to prepare for trial. "Specifically, the defendant is permitted to review her discovery thirteen hours per day, seven days per week."

 

For that purpose and while in a day room separate from her cell, she has access to both a desktop and a laptop computer, and a phone through which she can communicate with her attorneys.

 

Despite the MDC having resumed in-person visitation in mid-February, her attorneys have so far declined to meet with the defendant in person.

 

The DOJ has recently filed more charges against Maxwell, and she is expected to be arraigned on the superseding indictment on April 23. Her trial is currently scheduled for July 12.

 

https://www.foxnews.com/us/ghislaine-maxwell-ordered-clean-dirty-and-smelly-prison-cell

 

https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/17318376/united-states-v-maxwell/?filed_after=&filed_before=&entry_gte=&entry_lte=&order_by=desc

 

https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.539612/gov.uscourts.nysd.539612.196.0_2.pdf

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 7, 2021, 1:55 a.m. No.13376601   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1275

Contact books of Australian diplomats hacked in major ‘phishing’ scam

 

Anthony Galloway - April 7, 2021

 

Senior Australian diplomats, including ambassador to the United States Arthur Sinodinos, have been caught up in a sophisticated identity theft scam in which cyber attackers impersonated them on encrypted messaging services WhatsApp and Telegram in a bid to get sensitive information from their contacts.

 

The Australian Federal Police is investigating the security lapses after a number of heads of mission reported experiencing suspicious activity on their phones.

 

The cyber scare appears to mirror the attacks on senior cabinet ministers, including Finance Minister Simon Birmingham and Health Minister Greg Hunt, whereby the attackers are impersonating the individuals on WhatsApp or Telegram by using their names and personal phone numbers and gaining access to their contact book. There is also a third federal MP who has been hit by the scam who has not been identified.

 

The “phishing” attacks have unsettled some senior members of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade to the extent that they are now operating on the basis their phones have been compromised. This climate of fear has been exacerbated by a number of other unrelated cyber attacks against diplomats, as well as sophisticated hacks on the computer networks of Parliament House and Nine News (publisher of this masthead).

 

Mr Sinodinos confirmed a Telegram account was created in his name and said the matter had now been addressed by the AFP.

 

The AFP’s investigations, which included having MPs hand over their phones, so far show none of the devices have been physically hacked into, despite their contact books being stolen. But cabinet ministers did have their phones replaced out of caution.

 

Under the scam, senior politicians and diplomats are being sent messages asking them to validate new WhatsApp and Telegram accounts. Once they click on the link or download the app, the hacker then has access to their contact book and the ability to impersonate them on the new account. The cyber attackers are then sending unsolicited messages to the person’s contacts asking for contact details of people in Hong Kong.

 

The person impersonating Senator Birmingham’s phone began sending messages to a number of his contacts on Telegram, with one of the recipients asked: “Do you have a contact in Hong Kong. An Aussie preferably.”

 

After one of the recipients handed over contact details for two pro-democracy activists not knowing they were speaking to an imposter, the cyber hacker responded: “Let me know if you have reached out to the both of them.”

 

The AFP has yet to establish whether a criminal syndicate or a foreign country is behind the scam, but security agencies believe it is more likely to be a criminal group. While the focus on Hong Kong activists has sparked concern among some members of the government that China is behind the cyber attacks, the attackers appeared to be wanting money.

 

Some people contacted were asked to transfer money to a Hong Kong bank account with the account name “Yat Ting Ho Laundry Co”. The account was with Standard Chartered Hong Kong.

 

A spokeswoman for the AFP said it was aware of the matter and was investigating.

 

“There is no compromise of the affected users’ devices,” the AFP spokeswoman said.

 

The AFP has organised briefings for MPs to educate them on how to look out for phishing scams.

 

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/contact-books-of-australian-diplomats-hacked-in-major-phishing-scam-20210406-p57gte.html?utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1617741524

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 7, 2021, 2:02 a.m. No.13376613   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1275

Secret recordings to be used in case against alleged Chinese spy

 

Hundreds of thousands of messages and secret recordings will form part of the court case against an alleged Chinese spy.

 

Genevieve Alison - April 6, 2021

 

Hundreds of thousands of messages between an alleged Chinese spy and an “associate of interest” are being combed through by federal investigators ahead of a court case – the first of its kind in Australia.

 

Sixty witness statements and almost 10 hours of audio captured on secret listening devices will form part of the court case against Di Sanh Duong, a former Liberal party candidate and the first Australian charged with a foreign interference offence in November.

 

The Surrey Hills man, known also as “Sunny” Duong, was charged with the single offence of preparing an act of foreign interference following a year-long probe by domestic spy agency, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, and the Australian Federal Police.

 

The investigation was dubbed Operation Fruithof.

 

In a brief hearing before the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday, prosecutor Christopher Tran requested a ten-day extension to finalise their case.

 

Seven mobile phones, two laptops, two tablets and one computer were among the devices seized during a raid on Mr Duong’s home in October 2020.

 

An affidavit released to the Herald Sun revealed the “enormity” of the material currently being analysed by investigators – the vast majority of which is in a foreign language.

 

The AFP has recruited three translators who have been working around the clock for the past 12 weeks so translate 90 per cent of the material into English.

 

According to the affidavit, the large brief of evidence includes 502 pages of statements from 60 witnesses, 9 hours and 28 minutes of covert recordings and more than 2000 forensic files seized from laptops and other devices as a result of the investigation.

 

Investigators said that on just one iPhone, 105,351 images, 1449 videos, and 916 conversations on WeChat containing 234,940 messages were found.

 

Defence lawyer Charles Morgan did not oppose the extension and Magistrate Marita Altman approved the application.

 

Mr Duong did not attend the brief hearing and remains on bail.

 

In December, the Sunday Herald Sun revealed Mr Duong is barred from contacting any embassy and consulate staff, must surrender his passport and cannot possess any mobile phones while he awaits his next court date.

 

Mr Duong, who has lived in Melbourne for decades, is the first person to be charged under foreign interference laws which went through the federal parliament in 2018.

 

If convicted, Mr Duong could face up to 10 years behind bars.

 

https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/secret-recordings-to-be-used-in-case-against-alleged-chinese-spy/news-story/64f893752958b9874bb68d540ad09874

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 7, 2021, 2:09 a.m. No.13376630   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9653 >>0344 >>1275

Labor staffer allegedly involved in foreign interference plot claims evidence was illegally obtained

 

Elizabeth Byrne - 7 April 2021

 

Australia's foreign interference laws will be tested in the High Court in Canberra today, when former Labor adviser John Zhang challenges the validity of warrants used to seize his passport, phones and computers.

 

Mr Zhang has not been charged with anything.

 

But Australian Federal Police (AFP) seized material from him during an investigation into an alleged Chinese plot to infiltrate the New South Wales Parliament through the office of Labor backbencher Shaoquett Moselmane.

 

Mr Zhang used to be an adviser to Mr Moselmane.

 

The AFP said it is investigating whether Mr Zhang and his accomplices used a chat group on the Chinese social media platform WeChat to encourage Mr Moselmane to support Chinese government interests, while concealing or failing to disclose to him they were collaborating with the Chinese state.

 

Mr Zhang has categorically denied the claim.

 

Submissions from his lawyers say the warrants were invalid on several fronts.

 

"In respect of the stated offence under [the law] the warrants did not identify the target with precision," the submission reads.

 

Mr Zhang's lawyers submitted that the foreign principal is identified only by implication as the Chinese government, the ministry of state security and the United Front Work Department.

 

Mr Zhang will also argue the laws interfere with the implied constitutional right to freedom of political communication.

 

But the government submissions say, even if that is the case, the laws are still valid.

 

"The purpose of the provisions — protecting Australia's sovereignty by reducing the risk of foreign interference in Australia's political or governmental processes — is not only legitimate, but serves to preserve and enhance the system of representative and responsible government," the government's submission reads.

 

"The provisions are reasonably appropriate and adapted to that significant purpose."

 

Zhang seeks return or destruction of seized items

 

Another key battleground will be over what happens to the items and materials seized under the warrants.

 

Mr Zhang wants them returned or destroyed.

 

The phones, passport, hard drives and other personal items were collected by police during three searches, including at the NSW Parliament.

 

Government lawyers will argue that even if the warrants weren't valid, police should get to keep the material, citing the recent judgement in the case of former News Corp journalist Annika Smethurst, where police were allowed to keep the material they gathered, even though the warrants were overturned.

 

In that case, the judges said:

 

"… It has long been accepted that the courts will refuse to exercise their discretion to grant equitable relief when to do so would prevent the disclosure of criminality which [would] be in the public interest to reveal."

 

Mr Zhang's case escalated tensions between Australia and China, with three Chinese journalists who were part of the WeChat group known as FD (Fair Dinkum) leaving in June last year shortly after being questioned by ASIO.

 

Another two scholars had their visas cancelled.

 

The diplomatic crisis also saw the ABC's Bill Birtles and the Australian Financial Review's Michael Smith evacuated from China.

 

The High Court hearing is expected to run for a day.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-04-07/act-foreign-interference-laws-challenged-john-zhang-moselmane/100051188

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 7, 2021, 2:14 a.m. No.13376644   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1261

Five AFP officers examine Higgins rape allegations

 

Daniel McCulloch - Apr 7, 2021

 

A team of five Australian Federal Police officers has been assembled to investigate rape allegations raised by Brittany Higgins.

 

But deputy commissioner Neil Gaughan will not say whether the alleged perpetrator has been interviewed.

 

“Natural justice has to be held here in relation to this particular issue,” he told ABC radio on Wednesday.

 

“Of course, this person that has allegedly undertaken any crime is not obliged to be actually subjected to an interview, they have the right to remain silent.

 

“It’s up to them, it’s a matter for them, that’s the way our democracy is and the way our laws have been crafted.”

 

Ms Higgins alleges she was raped by a male colleague inside a ministerial office in Parliament House after a night out in 2019.

 

The former Liberal staffer initially decided not to pursue a police complaint, fearing her job could be affected.

 

But Ms Higgins re-engaged with the AFP about the alleged rape in February.

 

Four investigators assigned to her case are being overseen by an AFP detective-inspector.

 

“We will follow the evidence to where it takes us,” Mr Gaughan said.

 

“We’ve got to get this right, clearly, and we will be methodical.

 

“We will work through the evidence, we will work with the DPP and when we are ready and when they are ready, we will make some further public announcements about it.”

 

Mr Gaughan would not say how long the investigation might take.

 

“How long is a piece of string,” he said.

 

“I don’t want to put a timeline on it – I think that’s really dangerous – I don’t want to put pressure on investigators.

 

“My job is to provide them with time and space to do their job and that is my intention.”

 

Mr Gaughan said he would not provide “blow-by-blow” details on progress of the case but any major milestones would be accompanied by public media releases.

 

“We’ll just have to see where that takes us in the coming weeks.”

 

https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/crime-news/2021/04/07/brittany-higgins-rape-afp/

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 12:26 a.m. No.13382781   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2789 >>2795 >>1275

>>13376098

>>13376103

>>13376111

Uyghur community leaders in Australia appalled and outraged the government allowed a Chinese Communist Party propaganda parade

 

Bang Xiao - 7 April 2021

 

1/2

 

Uyghur community leaders say Australia should be ashamed for allowing a Chinese government propaganda presentation to take place, and have called for the alleged atrocities against the minority group to be labelled a genocide.

 

Their comments come after the Chinese embassy in Canberra held a press conference where journalists were played five propaganda videos about conditions in Xinjiang in China's far west.

 

It has been estimated that more than 1 million Uyghurs, Kazakhs and other Muslim ethnic minorities have been detained in what the Communist Party (CCP) calls vocational education centres.

 

The United Nations calls the facilities "re-education camps".

 

The press conference was joined by government officials in Urumqi, Xinjiang.

 

The videos, titled Xinjiang Is A Wonderful Land, presented the Chinese government's interpretation of the human rights concerns in the region, including forced sterilisation, concentration camps and forced labour.

 

In the videos, one woman featured said she has put in an intrauterine device (IUD) voluntarily while another emphasised she has been more satisfied with her life after receiving "training" from one of the re-education camps.

 

The fact that the Chinese government allows Uyghur parents in Xinjiang to have more than one child per family was also used in an attempt to demonstrate there was no genocide in the region.

 

Six speakers from Uyghur background also shared their "real stories" that echoed the Party's narrative after the screening. Most of them were women, too.

 

Chinese ambassador Cheng Jingye stated that the press conference aimed at "helping Australian journalists to understand the real situation in Xinjiang".

 

He criticised the Western media's allegations as being based on fake news and misinformation.

 

Xinjiang Vice-Governor Erkin Tuniyaz also spoke.

 

Both the Governor and the videos hit very familiar themes, saying the government maintains "ethnic harmony" in Xinjiang while cracking down on terrorism.

 

In Mr Tuniyaz's 20-minute speech, he stressed the "prosperity" and "harmony" of the region.

 

He said media and Western politicians were lying about the alleged treatment of Uyghurs and other minorities.

 

Members of the Uyghur community in Australia tell a different story.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 12:28 a.m. No.13382789   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2795

>>13382781

 

2/2

 

'It's just preposterous propaganda'

 

Mamutjan Abdurrahim, an Adelaide Uyghur man and an Australian permanent resident, said he had been separated from his wife Muherrem Ablet, his daughter Muhlise and son Hikmet for more than five years.

 

Mr Abdurrahim told the ABC his wife was once taken into a re-education camp after she returned to Xinjiang from Malaysia, where the family had lived for about three years, with their two children.

 

He said he didn't believe the video Chinese officials played at the press conference in Canberra on Wednesday afternoon.

 

"Their passports were confiscated," Mr Abdurrahim said.

 

"The CGTN (China Global Television Network) had just made a counterclaim to that and falsely accusing me as a family abandoner.

 

"Because in that propaganda case, they also said that my wife was arrested in 2019 for provoking ethnic hatred, which is one of the common charges that are levelled against Uyghurs who were wrongfully detained after being detained in the concentration camps for years."

 

Mr Abdurrahim said he was trying his best to advocate for his wife and was waiting for her release.

 

But he said the press conference had left him enraged.

 

"It's just preposterous. It makes me furious and makes me even shiver as to I cannot find any words … to describe those outrageous claims. It is outrageous to say that people are happy," he said.

 

"How can people going through such massive persecution be happy?

 

"It is just preposterous propaganda."

 

Australia asked to stop allowing CCP to spread propaganda

 

Nurmuhammad Majid, the president of East Turkistan Australian Association, described China's campaign as a "propaganda mission" for both domestic and international audiences.

 

"They are advocating for the legitimacy of the crackdown policy in Xinjiang region," Mr Majid told the ABC.

 

"But they are ignoring the factual grounds of how Uyghur nations are actually living in the worst conditions and worst circumstances we have seen since 2017.

 

"The entire region has become a dystopian state."

 

Mr Majid said the Chinese government had been showcasing videos on different platforms to "deceive international communities".

 

"Today's briefing in Canberra by the Chinese authorities is actually another means of deception," he said, adding that over 20 of his family members were detained and sent to re-education camps in Xinjiang.

 

"And I call on the Australian government and the public to be shamed for allowing the Chinese government to have such a big platform in a democratic country to spread its political agenda.

 

"Australia has moral, ethical [and] legal obligations to call such atrocities committed by the Chinese government a form of genocide."

 

No contact with family for three years

 

Reyhangul Abliz, a Melbourne-based Uyghur woman, said she has several relatives who have been missing, detained or imprisoned.

 

"I am here to testify that my parents and other family relatives have been caught by the Chinese communist regime," Ms Abliz told the ABC.

 

"Some of them are detained in camp since 2017, and have not been released."

 

She said her father, 71, and mother, 68, were both successful business people who were victims of China's re-education camps.

 

"They are typical victims of the Chinese concentration camp," she said.

 

Ms Abliz said her parents were not criminals and neither of them needed any training.

 

"It's been more than three years now. I totally lost my contact with my parents and my other siblings," she said.

 

"Every single minute I am suffering this situation about my parents.

 

"I am begging the Australian government to help all my people, my parents, and try to help them through the worst situation.

 

"Recognise the genocide."

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-04-07/uyghur-leaders-call-china-atrocities-genocide-xinjiang/100053014

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 1:28 a.m. No.13382988   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2993 >>6142 >>1295

Defrocked US priest revered in East Timor accused of abuse

 

AP / nzherald.co.nz - 8 Apr, 2021

 

1/3

 

WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT

 

It was the same every night. A list of names was posted on the Rev Richard Daschbach's bedroom door. The child at the top of the roster knew it was her turn to share the lower bunk with the elderly priest and another elementary school-aged girl.

 

Daschbach was idolised in the remote enclave of East Timor where he lived, largely for his role in helping save lives during the tiny nation's bloody struggle for independence. So, the girls never spoke about the abuse they suffered. They said they were afraid they would be banished from the shelter the 84-year-old from Pennsylvania established decades previously for abused women, orphans, and other destitute children.

 

The horrors of what they said happened behind closed doors over a period of years is now being played out in court - the first clergy sex case in a country that is more solidly Catholic than any other place aside from the Vatican. The trial was postponed last month due to a coronavirus lockdown, but is expected to resume in May.

 

At least 15 females have come forward, according to JU,S Jurídico Social, a group of human rights lawyers representing them. The Associated Press has spoken to a third of the accusers, each recalling their experiences in vivid detail. They are not being identified because of fears of retribution.

 

They told AP Daschbach would sit on a chair every night in the middle of a room holding a little girl, surrounded by a ring of children and staff members praying and singing hymns before bed.

 

"The way that you determine who sits on his lap is by the list that he'd have on his door," one accuser said. "And that meant that you were the little girl that was going to go with him."

 

Later in his room, they said Daschbach would strip down to white boxer shorts and a T-shirt and then undress the girls, giving them deodorant to put on before fondling them and quietly guiding their hands to touch him. Then, they said, there would often be oral sex. One accuser also alleged she was raped.

 

He would sometimes ask the children with him on the lower bunk to switch places with one or two others sleeping on the mattress above, they said, adding abuse also occasionally occurred during afternoon naps.

 

Daschbach faces up to 20 years in prison if found guilty. He and his lawyer declined to be interviewed by the AP.

 

The church defrocked Daschbach in 2018, saying he had confessed to sexually abusing children. But he maintains strong political ties and is still treated like a rock star by many, especially at the Topu Honis shelter, which means "Guide to Life."

 

Former President Xanana Gusmao attended the trial's opening in February. A month earlier, the independence hero visited Daschbach on his birthday, hand-feeding cake to the former priest and lifting a glass of wine to his lips, as cameras flashed.

 

Daschbach's lawyers have not made their legal strategy public, and court proceedings are closed. But documents seen by AP indicate that they will argue he is the victim of a conspiracy.

 

In January, however, the former priest appeared to be preparing his supporters for the worst. He told local reporters that his message to the children who remain in the orphanage is this: "Be patient. We won't meet again because I will be detained for life, but I will still remember you and you have to be happy there."

 

The son of a Pittsburgh steelworker, Daschbach began his religious studies as a teenager. In 1964, he was ordained by Divine Word Missionaries in Chicago, the Catholic church's largest missionary congregation, with around 6000 priests and brothers serving in more than 80 countries.

 

When he arrived in Southeast Asia a few years later, the nation now known as East Timor was under Portuguese control. That colonial rule would last until 1975 when the country was almost immediately invaded by neighbouring Indonesia. A bloody, 24-year independence struggle followed, leaving as many as 200,000 people dead — a quarter of the population — through fighting, famine, and starvation.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 1:30 a.m. No.13382993   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2997 >>1295

>>13382988

 

2/3

 

Daschbach started the shelter in 1992 and earned his reputation during the conflict. He often told visitors about defending the women and children living in Topu Honis and surrounding areas, sheltering them in a cave, and leading a ragtag group armed with spears to stave off attackers.

 

Stories about the charismatic priest who joined in traditional dances with bells on his ankles, spoke local languages fluently, and gave mass where he blended Catholicism with the area's customs and animist beliefs, spread far beyond East Timor.

 

Foreign donors, tourists, and aid workers who made the three-hour hike up the steep, narrow jungle path to Kutet village were met by the grandfatherly priest who was often surrounded by laughing kids playing hopscotch in matching uniforms. In many photographs of Topu Honis taken by visitors and posted online, young girls are seen by Daschbach's side, on his lap, or with his arm pulling their tiny shoulders against him.

 

Some visitors stayed on the mountain for weeks or even months, so impressed by what they saw that they sent tens of thousands of dollars to support the shelter or pay for college scholarships.

 

Jan McColl, who helped fund Topu Honis, said she was devastated after she and another longtime Australian donor, Tony Hamilton, flew to East Timor and asked Daschbach point-blank whether he was a peadophile.

 

"He said, 'Yes. That's who I am. And always have been,'" said McColl, adding he responded calmly while continuing to eat his lunch. "So, we just got up and left the table. We were just absolutely distraught."

 

Hamilton said the exchange was jarring and surreal, and he has struggled to make sense of it while continuing to support some of the children. He and McColl have given affidavits.

 

"I think in some crazy way, he recognises that what he has done is a crime," he said. "But he reconciles it somehow with the good that he's done."

 

The global clergy sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church for more than two decades, has led to billions of dollars in settlements and the establishment of new programmes aimed at preventing further abuse. But experts have seen a growing number of victims coming forward in developing nations like Haiti, Kenya, and Bangladesh, where priests and missionaries deployed by religious orders often operate with little or no oversight. Even if they're caught, they rarely face consequences. For some, the idea of ever jailing a priest, no matter the crime, seems blasphemous.

 

Many supporters in East Timor insist the accusations against Daschbach are lies and part of a bigger plot to take over the shelter and other property, including a beachside boarding school. After the trial's opening, dozens of mostly women and children waited outside the courtroom, wailing as the ex-priest waved goodbye to them from a vehicle.

 

"Law enforcers must see which one is better: Omitting one person or eliminating the future of many?" said local resident Antonio Molo, one of the doubters, who worries that hundreds of children may lose a chance at a better life if Daschbach is gone.

 

Though the Vatican acted swiftly to investigate and remove the priest when accusations were levelled three years ago, the local archdiocese was more accommodating.

 

It agreed to lodge him under informal house arrest at a church residence in the town of Maliana. But Daschbach still moved around with relative ease, including taking an overnight ferry to Oecusse enclave where he returned to the children's home, infuriating accusers and their families. Despite being stripped of his priestly duties, local media reported he continued to perform mass while there.

 

Monsignor Marco Sprizzi, Vatican ambassador to East Timor, stressed that Daschbach should not be allowed to be among children, but said there's little the church can do now.

 

"Once he's defrocked … he's no more a priest. He is no part of the clergy," he said. "And, of course, that house for children was not - since the beginning - was not belonging to his religious congregation. He did it by himself, and it was in his own name."

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 1:32 a.m. No.13382997   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1295

>>13382993

 

3/3

 

Zach Hiner, executive director of the US-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, said the church had a moral responsibility to do more and should have recalled Daschbach to the US before laicising him.

 

"We fear for the vulnerable children that he may still have access to," he said.

 

But Daschbach still has strong support within factions of the church, locally.

 

Late last year, the Archbishop of Dili sacked the president of the church's "Justice and Peace Commission" and publicly apologised following the publication of a report naming the victims and implying prosecutors, police, and NGOs investigating the allegations had sexually abused the accusers, themselves, by carrying out forensic exams. The report also alleged human trafficking, referring to seven accusers who had been moved to a safe house.

 

Former donors and the accusers were outraged, saying the report put the lives of those who came forward in danger. Threats of violence have been made against anyone who speaks out against Daschbach.

 

The ex-priest faces 14 counts of child sexual abuse, one count of child pornography and one count of domestic violence. He also is wanted in the US for three counts of wire fraud linked to one of his California-based donors, which accused him in a court case of violating an agreement to protect those under his care. An Interpol Red Notice has been issued internationally for his arrest.

 

The accusers who spoke to AP described systematic abuse and inappropriate behaviour, including Daschbach regularly overseeing the girls' showers. They said all of the children removed their clothes and stood together around a large concrete water basin outside, with the nude priest going from girl to girl shampooing their hair and splashing water on their private parts. They said he also took photos of them naked as they played in the rain, and that some girls were told he didn't want them to wear underwear.

 

His accusers said they were filled with hope when they arrived at the shelter. For the first time, they, along with many others, had clean clothes, time to play, and an emphasis on school. Most importantly, they had food. The meals were basic but steady.

 

The adoration and respect for the white American missionary was so commanding, the accusers said they did whatever he wanted without question.

 

One recalled first arriving at the shelter still distraught after her father had died and said the priest raped her that same night. She said he continued to do so frequently the entire time she was there.

 

She said he would lock the door and pull the curtains, telling her they had to be careful and that no one could know. She said he typically chose young children, but for those like her who were nearing puberty, Daschbach exercised caution.

 

"He would pull out and say, 'I have to stop, otherwise you'll be pregnant,'" she said.

 

Now, accusers say they struggle to process how someone who appeared so kind and selfless could ask them to do things that felt so wrong.

 

"When I was getting abused, I was like, 'Is this sort of like the payment?'" one accuser said. "That's what I was computing in my head … 'this must be the price that I have to pay to be a part of this.' You know, like those shiny little dresses that these girls are wearing to church. That's not free. This is the price tag."

 

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/child-sex-abuse-case-defrocked-us-priest-revered-in-east-timor-accused-of-abuse/25KHMBPKKHHP63GVTX7NAWA3TE/

 

https://www.1800respect.org.au

 

https://www.lifeline.org.au

 

https://ntv.org.au

 

https://kidshelpline.com.au

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 2:19 a.m. No.13383087   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3098 >>8224 >>1275

China researchers face abuse, sanctions as Beijing looks to silence critics

 

Lily Kuo and Gerry Shih - April 7, 2021

 

1/2

 

The Internet has become an unbearable place for Vicky Xiuzhong Xu, a 26-year-old analyst based in Australia. Over the past week, she was shocked to see her name trending on Chinese social media, with millions of views and thousands of negative comments.

 

The flood of attacks posted and re-posted by state-media outlets and nationalist bloggers followed similar themes. Xu, part of a team documenting abuses of Uyghurs in China’s Xinjiang region last year, was a traitor, a pawn controlled by the West, or a “female demon.” Queries for her name turn up thousands of results, including videos claiming to reveal details of her dating life, calling her “promiscuous” and “drug infested.”

 

On Weibo, people have called for her family to be tracked down and ordered to apologize for raising such a daughter. Others said Xu should never be allowed back into China, issuing not-so-veiled threats. “Meet a traitor, kill a traitor,” one user wrote. Her family asked her to change her name for her own safety.

 

The torrent of abuse targeting Xu, one year after she co-wrote an Australian Strategic Policy Institute report on Uyghur labor in supply chains, is the most extreme example of a growing Chinese campaign to defend its Xinjiang policies and to silence overseas researchers through sanctions and intimidation.

 

In recent weeks, China has imposed sanctions on scholars and think tanks while state propaganda organs fanned nationalist anger at companies such as H&M and Nike for not using cotton from Xinjiang. Researchers like Xu, who said people close to her in China have been detained and interrogated because of her work, face increasingly personal attacks.

 

“As someone who analyzes propaganda activities for a job I can see it’s clearly a coordinated attack,” she said. “At this point, the Chinese government has made it abundantly clear that if you want to keep talking about Xinjiang, the Chinese state would not treat you nicely.”

 

In March, Beijing announced travel bans and asset freezes on more than 20 scholars and officials, and their families, as well as think tanks in the European Union and Britain, in response to sanctions from the United States, the E.U., Britain and Canada on Chinese officials linked to abuses in Xinjiang. China also barred its citizens and organizations from dealing with the blacklisted entities and individuals.

 

Scholars focusing on China, who have already seen more restrictions on academic exchanges between China and Western countries, say the latest measures will damage fragile ties and mutual understanding over the long term. More than 1,150 scholars have signed a statement urging Beijing to revoke the sanctions, which they say amount to “academic repression.”

 

“There is no legal or moral basis for the persecution of scholars, merely because they expose and criticize a powerful government’s human rights abuses,” it said.

 

Silencing voices

 

Foreign scholars say the personal attacks against researchers and sanctions on institutions go beyond the scope of recent Western measures against China, which only target government officials, and represent a shift in Beijing’s focus to U.S. allies in Europe.

 

Among the institutions now banned by China is the Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS) in Berlin, whose researchers publish analysis about Chinese politics, foreign and economic policy and the China-Europe relationship.

 

“MERICS is probably the one think tank in Europe doing the most pathbreaking work on sensitive issues like Xinjiang and Made in China 2025,” said Bonnie Glaser, incoming director of the German Marshall Fund’s Asia Program, referring to the Chinese state-directed manufacturing plan criticized by foreign governments as unfair.

 

“The Chinese thought by shutting down these small numbers of voices and their access to China, that they would limit the bad news and negative analysis coming out of Europe. They don’t have that option in the United States,” she said, noting Europe has far fewer institutions researching China.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 2:25 a.m. No.13383098   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8224 >>1275

>>13383087

 

2/2

 

European scholars said Beijing’s measures were more likely to encourage China skeptics in government and academia who see China as a rival and cautioned against an investment deal now in jeopardy because of the sanctions.

 

Björn Jerdén, director of the Swedish National China Center, who has been targeted by the new sanctions, said Beijing’s retaliation was “much stronger than expected.” “The Chinese are trying to break what they see as an anti-China alliance but I think the only effect will be that Europe is more eager to coordinate with the U.S.,” Jerdén said.

 

'Not getting solid information'

 

Sympathetic Western and Chinese scholars say academic institutions are a crucial venue for both sides to talk, glean insights — and avoid catastrophe — amid mounting tensions. But China’s hard-liners, driven by growing paranoia of foreign infiltration and desire to punish critical voices abroad, are cutting off a useful source of information.

 

Attacking researchers and blocking channels of information “would be incredibly damaging” for China, said Scott Kennedy, a specialist in China’s economic policies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

 

In mid-2018, China dispatched scholars and diplomats to think tanks in Washington to get a better read on President Donald Trump, whom they struggled to understand. Kennedy said he warned visiting Chinese officials and scholars skeptical of Trump’s tariff threats to take him more seriously. Trump eventually announced tariffs, kick-starting a trade war that rocked Chinese manufacturers.

 

Since China detained the Canadian researcher Michael Kovrig in 2018, more foreign researchers have worried about traveling to China to conduct fieldwork — and whether they too might be detained, Kennedy said.

 

Some Chinese researchers also worry about academic decoupling between China and the West. Last month, Jia Qingguo, a member of a foreign policy advisory body, wrote in a proposal that the Chinese government should lift “unnecessary” restrictions on Chinese academics that limit meetings with foreigners to twice a year and prohibit one-on-one meetings.

 

“If any Chinese entering the U.S. is a suspected secret agent and anybody from the West suspected as a possible spy, that’s not good,” Jia said in an interview. “We need to allow people to exchange views and opinions, and we need to know the other country, how people of the other country are thinking, so that we can be better informed and develop more realistic policies.”

 

For researchers who have spent their careers focused on China, losing access has been devastating.

 

Jo Smith Finley, who researches Uyghur identity at Newcastle University in Britain, said the sanctions mean she cannot stay in touch with contacts in China, where she has been traveling for more than three decades.

 

“My friends in Beijing are some of my oldest and dearest soul mates,” she said, describing adrenaline-filled days after the suppression of pro-democracy protests in Beijing in 1989.

 

“The thought of no longer being able to sit in Beijing cafes and restaurants with them and set the world to rights is just unthinkable, surreal,” she said.

 

The online onslaught against Xu, named in countless headlines as the unexpected “black hand” behind the West’s anti-China campaign, has continued with tacit if not outright support from Chinese state media. “Even as a Chinese person, she insists on going against China; the doxing of Xu Xiuzhong and trashing of her reputation are in no way undeserved,” said an editorial in the state-run China Daily.

 

Xu, who has tried to stay away from the Internet recently, said she will not stop her work on detention camps in China and forced labor targeting Uyghurs. “For me, it’s always been about writing what’s really happening — discovering and revealing the truth. And there is such a thing as truth.”

 

And she will not be changing her name, she said. “It’s too late for that.”

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/china-online-threats-academics-xinjiang/2021/04/07/2ff73360-968f-11eb-8f0a-3384cf4fb399_story.html

 

https://www.vickyxu.com/

 

https://twitter.com/xu_xiuzhong

 

https://www.aspi.org.au/report/uyghurs-sale

 

https://s3-ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/ad-aspi/2021-03/Uyghurs%20for%20sale%2016%20March%202021.pdf

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 2:36 a.m. No.13383114   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1295

Ipswich man charged with possessing child abuse material

 

A 35-year-old Ipswich man is due to appear in court today (8 April 2021) charged with child exploitation offences following an Australian Federal Police (AFP) child protection investigation.

 

Officers from the Brisbane Joint Anti Child Exploitation Team (JACET) executed a search warrant at an address in Gailes, Ipswich on 28 January 2021 after receiving a report from the National Centre for Missing and Exploited Children in the United States.

 

The report indicated a person, believed to be in Queensland, was uploading child abuse material using a Google account.

 

During the search of the Gailes home officers located two laptops, an iPad and five USBs, allegedly containing child abuse material. Three mobile phones and two external hard drives were also located and seized for forensic analysis.

 

The man was later charged with three counts of possessing child abuse material obtained or accessed using a carriage service and five counts of possessing child exploitation material, as well as unrelated state offences.

 

The maximum penalty for these Commonwealth child abuse material offences is 15 years imprisonment.

 

He is due to appear in Brisbane Magistrates Court today.

 

AFP Detective Superintendent Child Protection Operations Paula Hudson, said the AFP’s international partnerships were vital to stopping those spreading child abuse material online.

 

“It takes a network to break a network and this arrest is an example of our strong relationships with international law enforcement,” Detective Superintendent Hudson said.

 

“Our message to offenders accessing, transmitting and exchanging child abuse material is that the AFP will not stop investigating those responsible for spreading this abhorrent material and bringing them before the court.”

 

Members of the public who have any information about this network or people involved in child abuse and exploitation are urged to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

 

https://crimestoppers.com.au

 

You can also make a report online by alerting the Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation via the Report Abuse button.

 

https://www.accce.gov.au/report

 

Note to Media:

 

Use of term 'CHILD ABUSE' MATERIAL NOT 'CHILD PORNOGRAPHY'

 

The correct legal term is Child Abuse Material – the move to this wording was among amendments to Commonwealth legislation in 2019 to more accurately reflect the gravity of the crimes and the harm inflicted on victims. Use of the phrase "child pornography" is inaccurate and benefits child sex abusers because it:

 

• indicates legitimacy and compliance on the part of the victim and therefore legality on the part of the abuser; and

 

• conjures images of children posing in 'provocative' positions, rather than suffering horrific abuse.

 

Every photograph or video captures an actual situation where a child has been abused.

 

Editor's Note: Images of this investigation are available via Hightail - https://spaces.hightail.com/space/Ker98mFsVT

 

https://www.afp.gov.au/news-media/media-releases/ipswich-man-charged-possessing-child-abuse-material

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 8, 2021, 11:42 a.m. No.13385620   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1301

>>13376573

Fight over Ghislaine Maxwell's jail conditions heats up

 

The rancorous fight over jail conditions for Ghislaine Maxwell are reaching new lows

 

LARRY NEUMEISTER - 9 April 2021

 

NEW YORK – The rancorous fight over jail conditions for Ghislaine Maxwell is reaching new lows, with prosecutors blaming the British socialite and Jeffrey Epstein’s ex-girlfriend for creating a stink by failing to flush her toilet and her lawyer saying her health is declining in a facility so mucky that even her salad has mold in it.

 

The latest exchange in letters to a Manhattan federal court judge came this week as the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals scheduled oral arguments for late April on Maxwell's appeal of her thrice-rejected application to be freed on bail before her July 12 sex trafficking trial.

 

Maxwell has been at a Brooklyn federal jail since her July arrest on charges she recruited three teenage girls for Epstein to sexually abuse in the 1990s. Charges were recently expanded to allege the sex trafficking of girls for Epstein to abuse in the early 2000s. Maxwell has pleaded not guilty.

 

Attorney Bobbi Sternheim wrote in a letter late Wednesday that an effort by prosecutors “to publicly embarrass and humiliate Ms. Maxwell in the hostile court of public opinion further erodes the likelihood that her case will be tried by a fair and impartial jury."

 

She says Maxwell has been mistreated, including over 1,400 physical searches and flashlight checks to ensure she's breathing every 15 minutes while she sleeps, as jail officials overreact to Epstein's August 2019 self-inflicted death in a Manhattan jail as he awaited trial on sex charges.

 

The letter came a day after prosecutors got specific about Maxwell's jail conditions as they refuted claims Sternheim made in February that her 59-year-old client was “withering to a shell of her former self — losing weight, losing hair, and losing her ability to concentrate.”

 

Sternheim had also alleged that Maxwell was physically abused when she was shoved into her cell by a guard prior to a pat-down search and then was retaliated against for reporting it when she was ordered to clean, sanitize and scrub the walls of a shower.

 

In their letter, prosecutors said an investigation of the pat-down search complaint proved Maxwell's complaint unfounded.

 

They wrote that Maxwell was directed to clean her cell, not in retaliation, but because it had become “very dirty." They noted that Maxwell “frequently did not flush her toilet after using it, which caused the cell to smell.”

 

Prosecutors said jail staff reported Maxwell, fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, to be physically healthy.

 

They said the jail's medical staff monitor the 5-foot-7 Maxwell daily and weigh her weekly, finding her weight fluctuates between the 130s and the 140s, normal for her height. They said staff has not observed any noticeable hair loss.

 

In Wednesday's letter, Sternheim criticized the government, calling it “debatable whether the public has a ‘right to know’ about Ms. Maxwell’s conditions of confinement.” She said prosecutors violated her client's privacy rights by releasing medical information related to weight and vaccination status.

 

“She is weighed while clothed on scales that are erratic and not set to zero,” Sternheim said. “Her eyesight is failing, and her hair is thinning. The guards are far from qualified to assess Ms. Maxwell’s physical condition.”

 

As for Maxwell's toilet, Sternheim said her client avoids using it in a cell closely observed by video and guards but flushes it frequently, as directed by guards, to help alleviate a stench from overflowing toilets in the cellblock above.

 

“Blaming Ms. Maxwell for the filth of her severely restricted environment is utterly misplaced. To suggest she willingly lives in squalor is absurd,” the lawyer said.

 

Sternheim said the building where Maxwell is held is permeated with mold and vermin, and even a salad she was given earlier this week had mold in it.

 

“Cockroaches and rodents are plentiful and glue tracks have been placed in Ms. Maxwell’s day area to help remediate the problem,” she said.

 

https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/lawyers-raise-stink-british-socialites-jail-care-76951589

 

https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/17318376/united-states-v-maxwell/?filed_after=&filed_before=&entry_gte=&entry_lte=&order_by=desc

 

https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.539612/gov.uscourts.nysd.539612.197.0_1.pdf

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 1:46 a.m. No.13389479   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9482 >>9486 >>3449 >>3451 >>1261

Malka Leifer: Former principal of ultra-orthodox Jewish school to face alleged victims

 

CAROLINE SCHELLE - APRIL 9, 2021

 

Three sisters who accused former principal Malka Leifer of sexually abusing them want to face their alleged abuser in person, a court has been told.

 

The 54-year-old former principal of the ultra-Orthodox Jewish Adass Israel School appeared on Friday morning for a brief administrative hearing in the Melbourne Magistrates Court.

 

Ms Leifer is facing 74 charges of sexually abusing sisters – Dassi Erlich, Elly Sapper and Nicole Meyer – during the period she was principal at the school between 2004 and 2008.

 

The sisters previously sought a court order so they could be named in proceedings.

 

Prosecutor Holly Baxter said the sisters wanted to give evidence against their alleged abuser in person and not at a remote facility during a committal hearing.

 

The hearing will determine the strength of the case against Ms Leifer and whether it proceeds to trial.

 

The remote option would remain available to the sisters but it was unlikely to be used, Ms Baxter said.

 

The former principal’s lawyer Tony Hargreaves told the court he wanted her to appear in person because it was “impossible” to get directions from her if they appeared remotely.

 

He told magistrate Johanna Metcalf he wanted to quiz several witnesses at the hearing, but do so with “as much care as possible”.

 

“We may wish to ask the witnesses in relation to what was happening at home with the complainants,” Mr Hargreaves told the court.

 

He said the cross-examination would be “limited”.

 

Dressed in a blue jumper and a white head covering, she appeared in court via videolink and spoke only to confirm she could see and hear the court.

 

Up to 10 witnesses, including a doctor and people in Israel, will also be called to give evidence at the hearing, the court was told.

 

Family members of the former educator appeared via video link.

 

Of the charges Ms Leifer faces 11 counts of rape and three charges of sexually penetrating a child, according to court documents.

 

She also faces 47 counts of indecent assault and 13 of committing an indecent act with a child

 

The alleged abuse took place across the Melbourne suburbs of Elsternwick, Elwood and Frankston as well as regional towns of Rawson, Emerald and Blampied.

 

Ms Leifer left Australia for Israel in 2008, and Victoria Police submitted their request for her to be extradited in 2014.

 

The former principal fought her extradition back to Australia for six years through the Israeli court system. Her last appeal was rejected in December last year after more than 70 hearings.

 

She will face another mention at the end of July before the five-day committal hearing in September.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/breaking-news/malka-leifer-former-principal-of-ultraorthodox-jewish-school-back-in-court-on-child-sex-charges/news-story/19f515156d340d62963b239641be568f

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 1:48 a.m. No.13389482   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1261

>>13389479

Leifer accusers set to attend court in person to give evidence

 

Adam Cooper - April 9, 2021

 

Three sisters who allege they were sexually abused by Malka Leifer are set to give evidence in person in court later this year rather than appear via video links.

 

As Ms Leifer faced Melbourne Magistrates Court for the second time since her extradition from Israel in January, the court heard it was the preference of sisters Elly Sapper, Dassi Erlich and Nicole Meyer to be questioned in person in the hearing that determines whether the former principal stands trial.

 

But the cross-examination of the three women could feature questions “about what was happening at home with the complainants” at the time of the alleged abuse, defence lawyer Tony Hargreaves told the court.

 

Mr Hargreaves said Ms Leifer’s barrister, Ian Hill, QC, might pursue that line of questioning but if he did so, he would “ensure it is done properly”.

 

The three sisters will be among 10 witnesses called in the five-day committal hearing set to start on September 13. That hearing will determine whether Ms Leifer stands trial in a higher court.

 

The former principal of the Adass Israel School in Elsternwick is accused of sexually abusing the sisters, when they were students at the school, between 2004 and 2008.

 

Ms Leifer faces 74 charges comprising 11 counts of rape, 47 of indecent assault, three of sexual penetration of a child and 13 of committing an indecent act with a child. Charge sheets allege the abuse happened in Elsternwick, Elwood, Frankston and Emerald and the regional towns of Blampied and Rawson.

 

The 54-year-old has long maintained she is innocent of the allegations against her.

 

Ms Leifer appeared in Friday’s administrative hearing via a video link from prison, but sat with her head down, looking away from the camera, and said nothing other than to confirm she could hear. She wore a blue top and a white headscarf as a guard sat behind her in a small room.

 

Prosecutor Holly Baxter and Mr Hargreaves told magistrate Johanna Metcalf it was both sides’ preference that lawyers attend the committal hearing in person rather than conduct it online, to ensure the hearing ran efficiently.

 

The coronavirus pandemic has meant most court cases are conducted online, as the courts try to ensure safe social distancing in their buildings.

 

Ms Metcalf agreed the committal hearing would run more efficiently if lawyers were in court in person.

 

Some witnesses based in Israel will appear via video links.

 

Complainants in sexual assault cases in Victoria often give evidence via a video link from a remote location so they can avoid the distress of attending court in person.

 

While remote facilities have been booked for Ms Sapper, Ms Erlich and Ms Meyer, the prosecutor said it was the women’s preference to attend court in person to give their evidence.

 

Asked by the magistrate if none of the complainants would appear remotely, Ms Baxter replied: “That’s likely to be the case.”

 

Ms Sapper, Ms Erlich and Ms Meyer were last year granted a court order which allows them to publicly identify themselves and speak about their case.

 

It was not known whether the sisters were among the 30 people watching Friday’s hearing online.

 

Ms Leifer could also attend the September hearing in person or watch on a video link from prison. She has not applied for bail.

 

Mr Hargreaves said it could be “impossible” to gain effective instructions from his client if she watched the substantial hearing on a video link from prison. He said he would discuss the issue with her before the case returns to court on July 30 for a further administrative hearing.

 

Ms Leifer fled to Israel in 2008 when allegations against her first emerged and was charged by Victorian police in 2012. Extradition proceedings began in 2014 and ended in January when she was flown to Melbourne.

 

If you or anyone you know needs support, you can contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service on 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732).

 

https://www.1800respect.org.au

 

https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/leifer-accusers-set-to-attend-court-in-person-to-give-evidence-20210409-p57hs3.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 1:49 a.m. No.13389486   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1261

>>13389479

Malka Leifer's lawyers say they may probe home life of accusers in child sex offences court case

 

Danny Tran - 9 April 2021

 

Lawyers for Malka Leifer, the former ultra-orthodox school principal accused of dozens of child sex offences, have said the "home life" of her alleged victims may be probed, as they seek to test the evidence against her.

 

Ms Leifer today fronted the Melbourne Magistrates' Court facing 74 charges of child sex abuse, including multiple counts of rape, indecent assault and sexual penetration of a child.

 

The allegations have been levelled against the 54-year-old by three sisters — Dassi Erlich, Nicole Meyer and Elly Sapper — who attended the Adass Israel School in Elsternwick while Ms Leifer was headmistress.

 

Ms Leifer has long maintained her innocence.

 

Today the Melbourne Magistrates' Court heard that 10 witnesses will be called to test the evidence against Ms Leifer.

 

The administrative hearing was only Ms Leifer's second appearance since she was extradited from Israel earlier this year.

 

She appeared by videolink from the Dame Phyllis Frost Centre, which is Victoria's maximum-security women's prison, wearing a blue jumper, a white shirt and a white head covering.

 

Ms Leifer was supported by her brother, who watched proceedings from Israel, where it was early in the morning.

 

She spoke sparingly, only acknowledging that she could hear the proceedings.

 

Her lawyer, Tony Hargreaves, told the court that any cross-examination would be done with "as much care as possible".

 

"Clearly the relationship that the three complainants had with their parents, in particular their mother, it would seem is the genesis for the relationship between the accused and the complainants," Mr Hargreaves told the court.

 

"We may wish to ask the witnesses about … what was happening at home with the complainants," he said.

 

"…It will be limited and it may be that counsel chooses not to pursue that avenue."

 

Ms Leifer will face a five-day hearing in September.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-04-09/malka-leifer-faces-melbourne-court-over-sex-assault-charges/100057734

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 1:56 a.m. No.13389499   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1275

Free speech debate misses point if Australia continues vilifying China

 

Li Qingqing - Apr 08, 2021

 

Is it racism to criticize China, or freedom of speech? Rising racial discrimination against Asians has sparked a debate on the issue in Australia. However, whether people have the freedom to criticize China or not is not a problem. The issue is, in Australia, there are smears and rumors against China, and Canberra has been an active part of them.

 

A recent case is Australian artist Luke Cornish's recent exhibit in Canberra. According to the South China Morning Post, some of Cornish's works, including showing late chairman Mao Zedong dressed as Batman, have triggered backlash from some Chinese students. Cornish later admitted that the Batman piece, which indicates conspiracy theories about the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic, could be perceived as discriminating and he apologized. Yet, he questioned the removal of two other exhibits related to Uygurs in Xinjiang and China's social credit system.

 

Some Australian analysts said that similar acts of withdrawing works critical of China's policies forget "the importance of freedom of speech" and are meant to "appease Beijing."

 

But can freedom of speech be used as a shield to spreading rumors? Any defamation should be condemned and held accountable. This is common sense. Even though perception on China has worsened in Australian society due to bilateral tensions, leading to more criticism against China, there is still a clear boundary between information and disinformation.

 

A disinformation campaign launched by some Western media and elites, including conspiracy theory that COVID-19 originated in China and China's governance in Xinjiang is "genocide," are groundless rumors. The World Health Organization-China investigation has suggested broader probe on virus origins in more countries after their probe in China, yet Australia joined the US and 13 other countries to question the WHO report. And their claim of "genocide" in Xinjiang is also nonsense since local people have lived a peaceful and prosperous life, thanks to Xinjiang's governance.

 

Australia is condoning the instigation of hatred and hostility against Chinese people by letting these rumors spread unchecked. Like in the US, racism is also deeply rooted in Australia and can be traced to the White Australia Policy in the 20th century.

 

Some people argue that criticizing the Chinese government is not the same as attacking Chinese people or Asians. But just look at the actual consequences: During the COVID-19 pandemic, the term "Chinese virus" has made many Chinese students in Australia suffer from verbal or physical abuse. They were even attacked for simply wearing masks.

 

Canberra has to admit that the discrimination and violence experienced by Chinese people in Australia is real. Some Western elites try to use so-called freedom of speech to justify their badmouthing China, while at the same time, they claim that none of this is aimed at Chinese people and they are against racism. This seems very hypocritical and ridiculous.

 

Some in Australia regard anti-China as political correctness, and the disguise of freedom of speech does not justify this. When the Australian government is taking the lead in ignoring, condoning or even inciting hatred against Chinese and other Asians, those empty anti-racism slogans and demonstrations will only prove the hypocrisy of Australian politics.

 

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202104/1220595.shtml

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 2:51 a.m. No.13389623   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9625 >>4892 >>1275

Sanctions fail: exporters defy Chinese trade bans

 

BEN PACKHAM and ROSIE LEWIS - APRIL 8, 2021

 

1/2

 

Australian exporters are defying Chinese trade bans, limiting the damage of Beijing’s punitive ­economic campaign by finding new markets for ­almost all affected products.

 

Economic analysis reveals that although $20bn a year has been slashed from Australian exports to China, the nation’s barley, coal, copper, cotton, sugar and timber producers have either partially or completely offset this by diverting shipments to new buyers in other countries.

 

Lowy Institute chief economist Roland Rajah said only the ­nation’s wine traders had struggled to make up for the loss of their premium Chinese market.

 

Mr Rajah said that, with the exception of wine, the net loss to Australian exporters as a result of the bans — imposed over ­Australia’s call for an inquiry to the origins of COVID-19 — amounted to less than $1bn. But when all of Australia’s exports were taken into account, soaring iron ore ­prices had “completely swamped” the effect of the Chinese trade bans.

 

Chinese ambassador Cheng Jingye defended the trade bans on Wednesday and blamed Australia for “the difficulty we now have in the bilateral relationship”.

 

The Chinese embassy set out Beijing’s grievances with Australia late last year in a list that included the Morrison government’s call for a COVID-19 inquiry, the ban on Huawei participating in the 5G network and its foreign interference laws.

 

Trade Minister Dan Tehan ­unveiled a new strategy on Wednesday to help “Team Australia win in Asia’’, saying the Indo-­Pacific presented a much more complex strategic environment than in past decades.

 

Mr Tehan said it would take a collective effort by government and the private sector to ensure Australia could capitalise on ­opportunities in the region in the next five to 10 years.

 

The Asia Society and Business Council of Australia’s Asia ­taskforce also recommended ­exports should make up 35 per cent of GDP by 2030, up from 29 per cent today.

 

It also warned that navigating the China relationship would ­require “strategic patience, avoiding over-reaction and emotion, maintaining long-established personal networks, and continuing to be prepared to co-operate on ­issues that benefit both countries”.

 

The council said diversification should not exclude China but be in addition to pursing the Chinese market. It identified Indonesia and Japan as countries Australian businesses could target for export opportunities in healthcare and financial services. South Korea and Vietnam also presented significant opportunities”, as industry sought to diversify beyond China.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 2:52 a.m. No.13389625   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13389623

 

2/2

 

Mr Tehan, whose Chinese counterpart, Wang Wentao, still refuses to speak to him, called on Australia’s business community to “step up to the plate” and engage with China where the government was unable to.

 

“We can’t sit on our hands and just sort of think ‘oh well that’s not very good’,” Mr Tehan told business leaders in Canberra.

 

“What we need to do is we have to find other ways to keep ­engaging and to keep sending that message that we do want a good relationship, we want a friendly relationship with China.”

 

In his report to be published by the Lowy Interpreter on Thursday, Mr Rajah said the impact of the Chinese sanctions had been “quite limited”.

 

“Exports to China have ­predictably collapsed in the areas hit by sanctions, but most of this lost trade seems to have found other markets,” Mr Rajah said.

 

While ships carrying Australian coal had been unable to ­unload their cargo in China, ­causing a $6bn slump in the trade, Australian exports of the commodity were already down by about $7.5bn a year lower before the ban was imposed.

 

Mr Rajah said that, by January 2021, Australian coal exports to the rest of the world were running $9.5bn higher in annualised terms than before the ban.

 

“Whatever impact China’s ban on Australian coal might be having, it doesn’t seem to be enough to shift the overall picture a great deal once trade diversion is taken into account,” he said.

 

Mr Rajah found other Australian exports hit by the ban “show even clearer signs of substantial trade diversion”.

 

Sales of Australian barley, copper, seafood and timber to other markets rose sharply after the late-2020 trade sanctions. Australia’s wine exporters had “suffered terribly”, and beef ­exports were also down due largely to supply side issues, he said.

 

“On the other hand, a bumper barley crop has helped partially offset weakness in these other areas,” Mr Rajah said.

 

“Overall, Australia’s sanctioned exports to China other than coal held steady through most of 2020 at the equivalent of a little over $9bn a year, before falling to about half that level as sanctions escalated in late 2020.

 

“Meanwhile, exports in these same categories to the rest of the world rose by about $4.2bn in annualised terms — offsetting most of the loss.”

 

Mr Tehan said he had not received any response from Mr Wang, China’s Commerce Minister, after attempting to engage with him in January when he was handed the trade portfolio in a ministerial reshuffle.

 

“(But) we have previously had very good relations and there’s no reason why we can’t have them in the future,” he said.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/sanctions-fail-exporters-defy-chinese-trade-bans/news-story/7f94d7c4937af7682e4ecd275093ae5e

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 3:03 a.m. No.13389653   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0344 >>1275

>>13376630

‘Bundles of cash’: AFP considers referring former Labor staffer to prosecutors over money laundering

 

Carrie Fellner - April 9, 2021

 

The Australian Federal Police has told the High Court it is actively considering referring a former NSW Labor staffer to prosecutors over suspected money laundering offences after bundles of $60,000 in cash were seized from his premises last year.

 

Police have underlined the “serious” and “ongoing” nature of their investigations before the High Court this week, as they fight to uphold search warrants executed against ALP staffer John Zhang last year.

 

Mr Zhang is under investigation over an alleged foreign interference plot to advance the interests of the Chinese government while he was working as a staffer to NSW Labor backbencher Shaoquett Moselmane.

 

Some of the conduct allegedly took place in a private social media chat group.

 

Last June the AFP swarmed on Mr Zhang’s home and sunglasses business in an unprecedented raid, seizing two Huawei mobile phones, three computers and $60,000 in cash.

 

Mr Zhang provided pass codes for the Huawai phones but advised the AFP that he was unable recall his WeChat password and unable to find his WhatsApp password.

 

A “vast number” of WeChat messages have been identified as being held on the phones by authorities.

 

Mr Zhang has launched a legal bid to have the search warrants quashed by the High Court and the material seized destroyed or returned to him.

 

The matter went to a two-day hearing before the full bench of the High Court this week.

 

Mr Zhang has argued the warrants were invalid because they “lacked clarity” and did not precisely identify the target of the alleged plot or the foreign actor involved.

 

His lawyer, Bret Walker, SC, told the court the “uncertainty and ambiguity bespeak defectiveness in the warrant”.

 

“For the warrant the present concern is the availability of discernible boundaries so as to make this piece of paper an appropriate open sesame of that which would otherwise not be within State power to compel,” Mr Walker said.

 

Mr Zhang is also arguing Australia’s new foreign interference laws are constitutionally invalid because they infringe on freedom of political communication.

 

“Keeping your private political discussions secret is entirely proper for a free population, not all of whom wish to be involved in the public hurly-burly of political debate,” Mr Walker said.

 

The AFP has rejected suggestions the warrants were imprecise, arguing the target of the plot was “plainly” Mr Moselmane and if it was necessary to state the foreign actor this was “amply satisfied” as being the government of the People’s Republic of China.

 

“These warrants comfortably satisfied the requirement to indicate the area of the search,” Commonwealth Solicitor-General Dr Stephen Donaghue QC told the court.

 

Perry Herzfeld, SC, appearing for the AFP, noted that $60,000 in cash had been seized during raids on Mr Zhang’s home and business.

 

“So the offences at issue are serious ones,” he said.

 

“The investigation is ongoing and the AFP is continuing to give consideration to whether a brief of evidence should be referred to the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions”.

 

He noted there was a five-week delay in Mr Zhang launching legal action following raids.

 

Such a delay had not occurred in a similar case where journalist Annika Smethurst took action in the High Court after a raid on her home by the AFP, which ultimately resulted in the search warrants being declared invalid.

 

“[Use] has been made of the material by the AFP since the execution of the warrants, both before and after the commencement of the proceeding,” Mr Herzfeld said.

 

“Unlike Smethurst, the copied data has not been quarantined pending the outcome of the proceeding.”

 

The plaintiff’s conduct had given rise to an “impossible” situation where AFP officers may have to “put out of their minds information which then came to their notice” or “ignore leads or inquiry and investigation” if the search warrants were found to be invalid, Mr Herzfeld said.

 

The AFP also argued that foreign interference poses a serious threat to Australia’s political and governmental processes and the effect of the new laws on freedom on political communication was “slight” at most.

 

Mr Moselmane was temporarily stood aside from parliament in the wake of the AFP raids but has maintained his innocence and the suspension was lifted in October.

 

Mr Moselmane said his legal counsel had been advised he was “not a suspect” in the investigation.

 

The High Court has reserved its decision.

 

https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/bundles-of-cash-afp-considers-referring-former-labor-staffer-to-prosecutors-over-money-laundering-20210409-p57hwa.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 5:36 a.m. No.13390184   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0206 >>1239

Prime Minister Scott Morrison Tweet

 

Statement on His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh.

 

https://twitter.com/ScottMorrisonMP/status/1380482042152939525

 

 

MEDIA STATEMENT

 

09 Apr 2021

 

For nearly 80 years, Prince Philip served his Crown, his country and the Commonwealth.

 

His Royal Highness The Duke of Edinburgh was, in the words of Her Majesty, her ‘strength and stay’.

 

He embodied a generation that we will never see again.

 

Beginning as a naval cadet in 1939, he served in war and in peace. When Her Majesty ascended the throne, The Duke ended his military service and became her constant support.

 

Prince Philip was no stranger to Australia, having visited our country on more than 20 occasions.

 

Through his service to the Commonwealth he presided as patron or president of nearly 50 organisations in Australia. Given his own service, Prince Philip also had a strong connection with the Australian Defence Force.

 

For 65 years, The Duke of Edinburgh’s Award scheme has encouraged over 775,000 young Australians to explore their leadership potential. Forty thousand young Australians are currently participating in the program.

 

Australians send our love and deepest condolences to Her Majesty and all the Royal family. The Commonwealth family joins together in sorrow and thanksgiving for the loss and life of Prince Philip. God bless from all here in Australia.

 

Further details about Australia’s remembrance of Prince Philip will be announced over coming days. Flags will be lowered in honour of His Royal Highness.

 

https://www.pm.gov.au/media/his-royal-highness-duke-edinburgh

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 5:40 a.m. No.13390206   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1239

>>13390184

Q Post #100

 

Nov 5 2017 18:41:11 (EST)

 

Who is the Queen of England?

How long in power?

With power comes corruption.

What happened to Diana?

What did she find out?

Why was she running?

Who did she entrust to help her flee?

What was the cover?

Why is this relevant?

Why now?

Old.

Connection.

News.

Bad actor.

London Mayor.

Background?

Affiliation?

Connection to Queen?

British MI6 agents dead.

When?

How?

What was reported?

What really happened?

Why is this relevant?

Wealth.

Corruption.

Secret society.

Evil.

Germany.

Merkel.

Migrants.

Why are migrants important?

Assets.

What are assets?

Define assets?

Why are migrants so important?

What are assets?

Why are migrants so important?

What are assets?

Why are migrants so important?

Operations.

Satan.

Who follows?

What political leaders worship Satan?

What does an upside down cross represent?

Who wears openly?

Why?

Who is she connected to?

Why is this relevant?

Spirit cooking.

What does Spirit Cooking represent?

Cult.

What is a cult?

Who is worshipped?

Why is this relevant?

Snow White

Godfather III

Speed.

Q

 

https://qanon.pub/#100

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 10:52 p.m. No.13395856   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5860 >>1093 >>1301

>>13389533

@GMaxFacts

 

Follow us at our new handle

 

https://twitter.com/GMaxFacts

 

 

Follow us on our new handle @realghislaine

 

https://twitter.com/GMaxFacts/status/1380522027879137282

 

 

@RealGhislaine

 

Developed & maintained by Ghislaine Maxwell’s brothers & sisters. We will continue to fight on behalf of our beloved sister. Follow us for the truth & updates.

 

https://twitter.com/realghislaine

 

 

Facts must always prevail over fiction. Period. Follow along and get to know the REAL Ghislaine. #FollowFriday #RealGhislaine

 

https://twitter.com/RealGhislaine/status/1380615247363403776

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 10:54 p.m. No.13395860   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5863 >>5882 >>1093 >>2819 >>1301

>>13395856

'My sister is no monster.' Ghislaine Maxwell's family launches website protesting her innocence and detailing her jail cell conditions as she prepares to appeal her thrice-rejected bail application

 

KAREN RUIZ - 10 April 2021

 

1/2

 

The family of Ghislaine Maxwell has launched a website in support of the British socialite, insisting she's 'no monster' and protesting her innocence, as she awaits trial on charges she procured underage girls for billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

 

The site, realghislaine.com, went live on Friday, weeks before Maxwell is scheduled to appeal her thrice-rejected application to be freed on bail.

 

Her family invited people to 'get to know the real Ghislaine' on the website, where they shared biographical details, information about her upcoming trial, jail conditions, as well as the books she is reading behind bars.

 

'This website has been developed and is maintained by brothers, sisters, family & friends of Ghislaine Maxwell, the people who have known the real Ghislaine all her life, not the fictional one-dimensional character created by the media,' it states.

 

'We believe wholeheartedly in our beloved sister's innocence and encourage visitors to this site to sign up for updates from the family on her case by providing your e-mail address below in the strictest of confidence.'

 

The launch of the webpage is a notable shift in tone by the famously tight-lipped family, who appear to be trying to salvage Maxwell's reputation ahead of her trial in July.

 

Maxwell, 59, has been detained at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn since her arrest last July and has been denied bail multiple times.

 

She has pleaded not guilty to sex trafficking underage girls in the 1990s and early 2000s for Epstein, her one-time boyfriend.

 

In a video statement included on the site's home page, her brother Ian claimed she has been wrongfully detained in solitary confinement and said she is now preparing to appeal her denied application for bail.

 

'I and my brothers and sisters love her very much. We believe in her innocence and that she'll be exonerated in the end, which is why it's so hard for us to see her held in an American prison in solitary confinement without bail for over 260 days and counting,' he says.

 

'My sister is no monster. Ghislaine is a stepmother. A wife. A friend to many. A sister to me. No one deserves to be tortured when they're presumed innocent.'

 

Ian said his sister is awaiting trial 'based on allegations that date back 25 years by accusers whose names not even her own lawyers know.'

 

He also claimed she has been unable to properly prepare for her defense because she is locked in a tiny cell for '12 hours a day.'

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 10:55 p.m. No.13395863   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13395860

 

2/2

 

The website attempts to paint Maxwell in a positive light, describing her as 'kind and compassionate' and includes a biographical section with details of her family, work and accomplishments over the years.

 

It makes no mention of her husband, Scott Borgerson.

 

'Today, [Ghislaine] remains close to her family and friends. Like all detainees in these times of COVID, she is unable to receive their visits, but she is buoyed by their love and the knowledge of their support on the outside which is conveyed to her by their letters.

 

'Ghislaine is extremely grateful for the hundreds of beautiful and supportive letters from strangers some of whom write her on a daily basis.'

 

The family claims more than a dozen letters of support 'affirming her honesty and integrity' have been submitted to the court in a bid for Maxwell's release.

 

An FAQ section also provides details of her 'restrictive' jail conditions, which include multiple physical searches a day that involve guards looking inside in her mouth and pointing a flashlight into her cell 'every 15 minutes during the night, making sleep impossible for her.'

 

'There is no flat surface in her cell for her to work on the legal documentation for the long hours she is left to languish in there,' the website states.

 

'The drinking water is full of contaminants and the food is inedible. Food has been fed to her on plastic trays that have melted when exposed to microwaved heating, making the food inedible and unsafe.'

 

It also reveals Maxwell has been keeping busy behind bars by reading books including 'The Oregon Trail' by Rinker Buck, 'Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine,' by Gail Honeyman, 'The Black Swan', by Nicholas Taleb, among others.

 

Maxwell is the youngest of seven surviving siblings including Anne, 73, Kevin, 62, twins Isabel and Christine, 70, Philip, 71, and Ian, 64.

 

Prior to its launch, the family had promoted the website on a new Twitter account with the handle @RealGhislaine.

 

'We believe in Ghislaine's innocence and that she will be exonerated in the end. Get to know the real Ghislaine and get more facts, and information by visiting our website, live today!' they said in a tweet.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9454901/Ghislaine-Maxwells-family-launches-website-detailing-jail-cell-conditions.html

 

https://twitter.com/RealGhislaine/status/1380507034898948097

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 11:02 p.m. No.13395882   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1093 >>2819 >>1301

>>13395860

REALGHISLAINE.COM

 

This website has been developed and is maintained by brothers, sisters, family & friends of Ghislaine Maxwell, the people who have known the real Ghislaine all her life, not the fictional one-dimensional character created by the media.

 

As Daniel Moynihan, New York’s former Senator, famously said: “You are entitled to your opinion but not to your own facts”. This site is dedicated to presenting factual information about Ghislaine, her present situation and the case.

 

Available on Realghislaine.com is exclusive content, news, commentary and useful resources. It is planned for other material to be added and readers can form a more balanced viewpoint.

 

Ghislaine's current status is that of a pre-trial detainee. As such, she is innocent and has the right to be presumed innocent, a constitutional right which is fundamental to preserve the fairness of the American system of justice.

 

We believe wholeheartedly in our beloved sister’s innocence and encourage visitors to this site to sign up for updates from the family on her case by providing your e-mail address below in the strictest of confidence.

 

Media enquiries can be directed to this email: Justice@realghislaine.com.

 

You can find “public legal documents from the case” on Court Listener.

 

https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/17318376/united-states-v-maxwell/?filed_after=&filed_before=&entry_gte=&entry_lte=&order_by=desc

 

https://www.realghislaine.com

 

 

https://archive.4plebs.org/pol/thread/179647411/#179647703

 

https://qanon.pub/#1712

 

https://qanon.pub/#1713

 

>The face is never the author.

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 9, 2021, 11:46 p.m. No.13395990   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8063 >>1261

Vigils planned to support Julian Assange

 

Alan Jones - APRIL 9 2021

 

Vigils are to be held this weekend to mark the second anniversary of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange being detained in prison after being dragged out of the Ecuadorian embassy in London.

 

Supporters demanding his release will join events on Sunday outside the embassy, at Westminster Magistrates' Court, and at Belmarsh prison in London where he is being held.

 

Assange lived inside the embassy for several years before being forcibly removed and arrested by police on April 11 2019.

 

A bid by the United States to extradite him was rejected at Westminster Magistrates' Court earlier this year but he has remained in prison until the outcome of an appeal.

 

WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson told the PA news agency that Assange's continued imprisonment was an "outrage and a travesty of justice".

 

"April 11 marks two years since one of the world's most important journalists was silenced when Metropolitan Police officers stormed into the Ecuadorian embassy and subsequently arrested and imprisoned Julian Assange on the United States' behalf.

 

"It has now been two years of incarceration, isolation and psychological torture, all for exposing war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, the same journalism for which Julian has been applauded all over the world for and nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

 

"It's long past time for this injustice to end and we continue to appeal to the United States and the Department of Justice to drop the appeal and all the charges against Julian.

 

"In January, a judge in London ruled that Julian should not be extradited and so we are today calling for him to be released from Belmarsh prison and be a free man to be able to spend his time with his young family."

 

Hrafnsson added that dozens of human rights and media organisations are supporting the case for Assange to be freed, saying: "This gross injustice must come to an end."

 

It was recently revealed that Pope Francis sent a personal message to Assange, whose partner Stella Moris said: "After a hard night, Julian woke up this morning to a kind, personal message from Pope Francis @pontifex delivered to his cell door by the prison priest."

 

https://www.bendigoadvertiser.com.au/story/7203387/vigils-planned-to-support-julian-assange/

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 12:25 a.m. No.13396098   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6102 >>1295

Gerald Ridsdale: Victorian man abused as schoolboy by paedophile priest given $1.5m settlement

 

The settlement, on eve of trial, is one of the largest payouts Victoria has seen for institutional sexual abuse

 

AAP / theguardian.com - 10 Apr 2021

 

A Victorian man abused as a schoolboy by Catholic pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale and two teachers has been given a $1.5m settlement on the eve of the matter going to trial.

 

It was the early 1970s when the man, who cannot be named, joined Ridsdale’s list of almost 70 child victims.

 

At the time Ridsdale was a priest of the Diocese of Ballarat in regional Victoria and lived at the presbytery next to St Alipius Boys’ School, where he also served as the school’s chaplain.

 

The then schoolboy was also victimised by others at St Alipius – Christian Brothers teacher Gerald Leo Fitzgerald and Stephen Farrell, who taught him in year 3 and year 5.

 

Now, five decades after all that abuse, the schoolboy has finally resolved his claim against the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat and the Christian Brothers.

 

The $1.5m settlement, plus legal costs, is one of the largest payouts Victoria has seen for institutional sexual abuse.

 

The victim’s lawyer, Dr Viv Waller, is sure it would not have eventuated without the looming threat of court action that was due to start next week.

 

“Catholic defendants have to be dragged to the door of the court before they offer appropriate amounts of compensation, and this matter was resolved in the shadow of a trial due to start in the next few days,” she said.

 

The victim has decided not to give media interviews other than a brief comment to Nine newspapers’ the Age: “I feel vindicated and listened to. The church has taken responsibility for what they did to me. It can’t erase the memory but I can move on.”

 

In 2015, the victim gave evidence to the royal commission into institutional child sexual abuse, under the pseudonym BAQ.

 

He told of being abused by Ridsdale at the presbytery, of being assaulted by Farrell during a school fishing trip, and of his terror as he waited each day for the other teacher, Fitzgerald, to decide which boy he would abuse at the back of the classroom.

 

As an adult, he coped by becoming a workaholic, while other survivors turned to drugs and alcohol. He told himself that he wasn’t badly affected. But, after addressing the royal commission, he was unable to work.

 

Waller, whose firm has resolved dozens of institutional sexual abuse cases, encouraged abuse survivors to re-examine their matters in light of recent legal reforms.

 

She says that in some cases survivors who may have received small payouts, in some cases as little as $15,000, through negotiated settlements with religious institutions might be able to achieve more just sums.

 

Diocese of Ballarat vicar-general Father Kevin Maloney also encouraged more victims to come forward.

 

A Christian Brothers spokesman said the order has been meeting its obligations to victims of abuse for more than 30 years, with payments running into the tens of millions of dollars annually.

 

Ridsdale is serving a 36-year jail sentence for abusing close to 70 victims. Fitzgerald died in 1987 while under investigation. Farrell was given an 18-month jail term in 2018.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/apr/10/gerald-ridsdale-victorian-man-abused-as-schoolboy-by-paedophile-priest-given-15m-settlement

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 12:26 a.m. No.13396102   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6108 >>1295

>>13396098

‘I can move on’: $1.5 million payout to St Alipius sex abuse survivor

 

Henrietta Cook and Chris Vedelago - April 10, 2021

 

1/2

 

A Victorian man who was sexually abused by Australia’s most prolific paedophile priest has reached a $1.5 million settlement with the Catholic Church, one of the largest payouts of its kind.

 

The now 58-year-old was abused by paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale as well as Christian Brothers teachers Gerald Leo Fitzgerald and Stephen Farrell while a student at St Alipius Boys’ School in Ballarat in the 1970s.

 

On Friday he reached a $1.5 million settlement, plus costs, with the Christian Brothers and Catholic diocese of Ballarat. He is among hundreds of survivors who have sought compensation in the wake of landmark legislation that allows victims to sue the church.

 

While the victim went on to have a successful career as the executive of a multinational company, he has always struggled to trust men and has no male friends.

 

His life unravelled in 2015 after he gave evidence to the royal commission under the pseudonym BAQ.

 

“It made me face what I couldn’t face,” he said. “There was lots of pain but I never regretted the process.”

 

After recounting his traumatic childhood experience, BAQ nearly lost his marriage and quit a job that he loved. He hasn’t worked since.

 

“I reached the point where I thought, ‘I can’t do this anymore’ and after taking some leave I resigned.”

 

He said the settlement was an important step in the healing process.

 

“I feel vindicated and listened to. The church has taken responsibility for what they did to me,” he said. “It can’t erase the memory but I can move on.“

 

The abuse started when BAQ was around eight years old.

 

During the daily reading sessions in grade 3, students were asked to face the front of the classroom while Fitzgerald sat at the back of the classroom and chose a boy to sit on his knee.

 

BAQ said he was chosen up to 20 times that year and the teacher kissed, cuddled and fondled his genitals.

 

”It was terrifying waiting each day to see who he would choose,” BAQ told the royal commission.

 

On an overnight school fishing trip in grade 5, Farrell unzipped BAQ’s sleeping bag and masturbated him.

 

BAQ recalled visiting Ridsdale at the presbytery, who asked the boy to remove his trousers and bend over. He was then abused.

 

Ridsdale is serving a 36-year prison sentence for abusing 69 victims, while Fitzgerald died in 1987 as he was being investigated. Farrell was sentenced to 18 months’ jail in 2018.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 12:28 a.m. No.13396108   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13396102

 

2/2

 

The survivor’s lawyer, Dr Viv Waller, said the payout was one of the state’s highest for an institutional sex abuse matter.

 

“It represents a significant shift in the amount of compensation that we have been able to obtain for sexual abuse survivors in institutional abuse matters,” she said, pointing out that victims had previously received “manifestly inadequate” payments as low as $15,000.

 

It follows the introduction of new laws in 2018 that revoked the Ellis defence, which once prevented victims from suing the church, as well as the abolition of time limits that restricted child abuse victims from seeking civil damages.

 

The Christian Brothers have spent more than $300 million on settlements to sexual abuse victims from 2013-2019, with the local wing of the religious brotherhood depending on huge injections of cash from its regional headquarters to meet its obligations.

 

The Australian order is also expecting to spend another $177 million as victims continue to launch lawsuits or seek compensation under the National Redress Scheme.

 

The Christian Brothers maintains it has the financial resources to meet its potential obligations, according to the organisation’s 2019 financial records.

 

Dr Waller has worked on 45 claims relating to St Alipius Boys’ School and said many victims in the Ballarat diocese were now seeking top-up payments after receiving “insulting” payouts in the past.

 

“It is possible in some circumstances for survivors to make an application to have their previous deed overturned, and to to seek additional compensation,” she said.

 

Diocese of Ballarat vicar-general Father Kevin Maloney encouraged more victims to come forward.

 

“The whole affair has been horrible,” he said. “A lot of people have been hurt because of what happened at St Alipius.”

 

A Christian Brothers spokesman said the order been meeting its obligations to those who experienced abuse for more than three decades.

 

“Payments run into the tens of millions of dollars annually and this represents the practical effect of the Congregation’s ongoing commitment to address the harm suffered as a result of child sexual abuse,” he said.

 

For help in a crisis call 000. If you or anyone you know needs support, contact the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service on 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732), Lifeline on 131 114, or Beyond Blue on 1300 224 636.

 

https://www.1800respect.org.au

 

https://www.lifeline.org.au

 

https://www.beyondblue.org.au

 

https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/i-can-move-on-1-5-million-payout-to-st-alipius-sex-abuse-survivor-20210409-p57hr0.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 12:36 a.m. No.13396142   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1295

>>13382988

American ex-priest accused of abuse in East Timor

 

Associated Press

 

8 Apr 2021

 

A former American priest who saved lives during East Timor’s struggle for independence is on trial in the tiny Asian country, accused of sexually abusing underage girls who lived at the shelter he founded.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMAI-iOw50I

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 1:23 a.m. No.13396274   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6279 >>1301

Feds call Ghislaine Maxwell’s claims about new charges ‘conspiracy theories’

 

Ben Feuerherd - April 9, 2021

 

1/2

 

Ghislaine Maxwell is relying on “conspiracy theories” when she claims that the timing of the new federal indictment against her shows the weakness in the prosecutors’ case, the feds said in court docs filed Friday.

 

Manhattan federal prosecutors, in a letter to Judge Alison Nathan, blasted Maxwell’s claim that the new sex-trafficking charges brought against her last month were “obvious tactical gamesmanship.”

 

Maxwell’s lawyers had argued that prosecutors could have brought the additional charges at any point — and the fact they waited until just three months before they’re expected to go to trial shows the apparent “weakness” of their case.

 

Federal prosecutors retorted, “It would make no sense for the Government to spend weeks preparing a more than 200-page response to [previous defense] motions if the Government could have instead just obtained a new indictment” — while blasting the allegations as “conspiracy theories.”

 

Prosecutors had unsealed a superseding indictment against the accused madam alleging she sex-trafficked a 14-year-old girl for Jeffrey Epstein to abuse in the early 2000s.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 1:25 a.m. No.13396279   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13396274

 

2/2

 

The feds allege that Maxwell groomed the teen — identified as “Minor Victim-4” in court papers — to engage in sex acts with Epstein, who killed himself in a lower Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges himself.

 

According to the indictment against Maxwell, the fallen British socialite “sought to normalize inappropriate and abusive conduct by, among other things, discussing sexual topics in front of Minor Victim-4 and being present when Minor Victim- 4 was nude in the massage room of the Palm Beach Residence.”

 

Maxwell is now facing 80 years behind bars if convicted on the counts against her. She maintains her innocence and has sought three times to be released on bail pending her trial. She has been denied each time.

 

https://nypost.com/2021/04/09/ghislaine-maxwells-claims-about-new-charges-are-conspiracy-theories-feds/

 

https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/17318376/united-states-v-maxwell/?filed_after=&filed_before=&entry_gte=&entry_lte=&order_by=desc

 

https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.539612/gov.uscourts.nysd.539612.199.0_4.pdf

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 1:51 a.m. No.13396364   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1295

>>13351778

>>13351781

>>13351790

Australian Federal Police save three-year-old girl 15,000km away from sexual abuse, American man arrested

 

A tip-off from Australian Federal Police to their US counterparts has been credited with saving a three-year-old girl from further alleged sexual abuse in the United States.

 

Elise Williams - April 10, 2021

 

A three-year-old girl has been saved from further potential harm by an alleged child abuser after Australian Federal Police tipped off their American counterparts who rescued the child.

 

It was the efforts of officers from the AFP-led Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation that identified and tracked down an American man accused of creating child exploitation material with his alleged three-year-old victim.

 

Specially trained to identify and disrupt behaviours that exploit or endanger children, the work of the Australian investigators directly led to saving the youngster, who police claim was being used to create child exploitation material.

 

The man has now been identified as 32-year-old David Allen Kiper, who was arrested at his Kentucky home late last month.

 

Kiper was raided and charged after the ACCCE alerted America’s Homeland Security Investigations he was allegedly creating and uploading images, sexually explicit in nature, of the girl in March of this year.

 

Despite being over 15,000 km away from the endangered girl, it was the advice of the Australian agency that meant she could be rescued from further harm, as Homeland Security and local police took immediate action to save her and arrest her alleged offender after the ACCCE tip-off.

 

AFP Commander of the Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation and Child Protection

 

Operations Hilda Sirec said the AFP’s expertise meant no matter where in the world children were located, specialist teams stood ready to protect them.

 

“Our investigators at the ACCCE are dedicated to protecting children in Australia from abuse and work with law enforcement across the world to do the same,” Commander Sirec said.

 

She gave a strong warning to offenders, as she pledged the AFP would stop at nothing to bring them to justice.

 

“Our message to offenders accessing or exchanging child abuse material is that we will not stop investigating anyone responsible for spreading this abhorrent material and bringing them before the court.”

 

Homeland Security Investigations attache to Australia Adam Parks said the teamwork of the two country’s agencies meant horrendous crimes would continue to be investigated.

 

“Despite the distance between the US and Australia, our dedicated men and women are joined together in a solemn duty to protect the vulnerable. As demonstrated in this investigation, we will pursue justice wherever it leads and no matter the hour when confronted by these horrendous crimes,” Mr Parks said.

 

Kiper was charged with 25 child abuse related offences – including five counts of using a minor in a sexual performance.

 

If found guilty, Kiper could spend up to 20 years behind bars.

 

Members of the public who have any information about this network or people involved in child abuse and exploitation are urged to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

 

https://crimestoppers.com.au

 

https://www.couriermail.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-qld/afp-save-threeyearold-girl-15000km-away-from-sexual-abuse-american-man-arrested/news-story/83b175e3be88f2beb1df574e8882acf2

 

https://accce.gov.au/report/trace

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 9:07 p.m. No.13401177   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1179 >>1275

Former Turnbull security adviser auditing universities’ foreign interference risks

 

Nick Bonyhady - April 11, 2021

 

1/2

 

Some of Australia’s top universities have called in a Chinese Communist Party expert to detect foreign interference risks, including auditing academics from at least one institution to see if they have secret secondary jobs.

 

The universities of Sydney, New South Wales, Monash and Queensland have all engaged former journalist and government adviser John Garnaut through consultancy firm McGrathNicol in a move designed to reassure the federal government they are taking the issue seriously.

 

Mr Garnaut’s appointment follows the introduction of the Foreign Influence Transparency Register, which requires people acting for overseas governments to declare their activities, and the refusal of several academic funding grants by the Education Minister last year on security grounds.

 

There have been growing fears in the West, including Australia, that the Chinese government is using academic talent programs to acquire intellectual property that can be put to military use.

 

That created a climate stifling legitimate international collaboration with scant security implications, some academics said.

 

The chair of Federal Parliament’s Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security, Liberal senator James Paterson, welcomed Mr Garnaut’s work as a signal universities were taking the problem seriously.

 

“I will be watching with interest to see how successful they are in implementing John’s advice,” he said.

 

Mr Garnaut declined to comment on this story but provided a remark he made to a closed-door hearing of Senator Paterson’s committee where he said most Australian universities had rapidly started building resilience to foreign interference.

 

“They are doing so through different pathways, at different paces and from different starting points,” said Mr Garnaut, who also does work for technology companies, infrastructure firms and state and federal departments.

 

“This testimony would be very different if we were delivering it three years ago, or even six months ago. While there is a long way to go, the shift in approach has been far reaching.”

 

His collaborator at McGrathNicol, Matt Fehon, said the firm’s work recognised the importance of international research collaborations while managing risk and helping universities to assess conflicts of interest.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 10, 2021, 9:07 p.m. No.13401179   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13401177

 

2/2

 

A spokesman for the University of Sydney said its international engagement was vital to supporting educational, research and commercial partnerships with other universities, including in China.

 

But he added the university was awake to increasingly sophisticated security threats. “We take these risks seriously and work carefully and diligently to identify and manage relevant risks in a constantly changing legal and operating environment,” the spokesman said.

 

A Monash spokeswoman said the university had contracted a specialist counter foreign interference team from McGrathNicol, including Mr Garnaut, since the release of new government guidelines in 2019.

 

While Monash still valued and worked with international partners, the spokeswoman said parts of Australia’s security regime for universities made it more difficult for potential overseas partners.

 

“The process to enter into formal partnership agreements with global prospects is now very complex and raises additional risk from any institutional partner’s perspective, as the legislation gives unfettered discretion to the minister to cancel agreements at any time,” she said.

 

Sophie Loy-Wilson, a senior lecturer specialising in Australian-Chinese history, said concerns about foreign interference had led to an opaque regime of controls that made academics like her afraid to collaborate with Chinese counterparts.

 

“I’m angry that something that I’ve dedicated my life to, which is trying to understand the relationships between Australians and Chinese people, is now being thwarted,” Dr Loy-Wilson said.

 

Another University of Sydney lecturer, David Brophy, whose research is primarily on China’s autonomous Xinjiang region, which is home to the repressed Uighur minority, said some rhetoric about the threat of technology transfers was overblown.

 

“It’s in the context of talking about scientific exchange,” Dr Brophy said. “It’s not some set of secret instructions to ethnically Chinese people in Australia.”

 

A University of Queensland spokeswoman said it had completed a three year set of works to update its policies and increase disclosure requirements, which required staff to complete registers disclosing other paid employment, work on sensitive technology or anything else required by the influence register.

 

“As part of this program, UQ commissioned an external audit by John Garnaut at McGrathNicol to assist the University in ensuring secondary paid employment has been adequately disclosed,” the spokeswoman said.

 

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/former-turnbull-security-adviser-auditing-academics-links-to-china-20210408-p57hoj.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 11, 2021, 11:53 p.m. No.13407722   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7731 >>7783 >>7814 >>7824 >>8195 >>0361 >>2740 >>4966 >>9771 >>5040 >>1263

Buried evidence and threats: How Ben Roberts-Smith tried to cover up his alleged crimes

 

Australia’s most decorated soldier sought to hide shameful images and evidence of war crimes. Now they have been unearthed.

 

Nick McKenzie, Chris Masters and Joel Tozer - APRIL 11, 2021'

 

1/4

 

It’s September 2012 inside a coalition military base in Tarin Kowt in southern Afghanistan and an Australian soldier wearing the white gown and pointed hood of the Ku Klux Klan poses for the camera.

 

His face obscured by the hood, the soldier holds up a noose like those used by the white supremacist group to lynch African-Americans. In another picture, the man stands with a burning cross, staring at the camera as his colleagues cheer around him.

 

The images, taken at a fancy-dress party in an unauthorised military bar called the Fat Ladies Arms, capture soldiers from the elite Perth-based Special Air Services Regiment a decade into Australia’s longest war. They were fighting an insurgency and trying to win hearts and minds in a Muslim country whose inhabitants had already made multiple complaints that some of their number – including that certain friends of the soldier dressed in KKK gear had executed their fathers, brothers and husbands.

 

A series of images from parties at the makeshift bar hint at one of those suspected killings.

 

They show soldiers drinking beer from the prosthetic leg of a Taliban fighter killed by an Australian soldier in 2009. Most of the soldiers would have known little about the history of the leg, which they called “Das Boot”. But at least one man knew it represented something more sinister, because he had allegedly murdered its former owner outside the laws of combat on Easter Sunday, 2009.

 

That soldier was allegedly Corporal Ben Roberts-Smith, Australia’s most decorated Afghan war veteran and, until recently, a man lauded by politicians as the embodiment of Australia’s ideal fighter. Roberts-Smith is pictured, smiling and pumping his fist, in the background as the soldier in the KKK outfit – one of his mates – burns the cross. He is also happily pictured with people drinking from the leg – despite comments to the Federal Court from his lawyer, Bruce McClintock, in 2019 that his client “thought it was disgusting to souvenir a body part”.

 

The images published here, and hundreds more, were in the possession of Roberts-Smith. Among them is one that shows what former defence force chief Chris Barrie has told The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes is credible evidence of the war crime of desecrating a corpse.

 

They are clear illustrations of what, when he came to investigate Australian military war crimes in Afghanistan, military Inspector-General Paul Brereton described as a culture in which “ethical leadership was compromised by [the] toleration, acceptance and participation in a widespread disregard for behavioural norms”. Justice Brereton singled out alcohol consumption at the Fat Ladies Arms as one part of that failure of discipline.

 

One of the photographs shows a senior commissioned Special Air Services Regiment commanding officer simulating a sex act with a high-ranking soldier using an object taken from a model camel.

 

The images were stored on a series of USB drives that also contained classified documents and videos. But despite Brereton’s order at the start of his probe in 2016 that soldiers hand over all images and files, Roberts-Smith did not do so, according to sources with knowledge of the cache but who have asked to remain anonymous.

 

Instead, the sources say, Roberts-Smith dug a hole in the backyard of his house in the Sunshine Coast hinterland and buried the USB drives inside a pink plastic children’s lunchbox to hide them from both police and military investigations.

 

Once the Victoria Cross recipient had filled in the hole, he placed a rock on top to mark the spot.

 

According to multiple sources familiar with the matter, federal police who are conducting war crimes investigations into the war hero, have since obtained the contents of the USBs.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 11, 2021, 11:55 p.m. No.13407731   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7740

>>13407722

 

2/4

 

Brereton’s landmark investigation report into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan last year posed the greatest challenge to the Australian military in decades after he found serious allegations of up to 39 murders committed by special forces. Roberts-Smith has repeatedly denied committing war crimes or any other wrongdoing and is suing The Age and Herald for defamation. He has insisted he has cooperated fully with the Brereton Inquiry and the federal police.

 

But further evidence obtained by The Age, the Herald and 60 Minutes shows the former soldier – who is now an executive at Seven West Media’s Queensland operations – intimidated witnesses in an attempt to stop them giving evidence in inquiries.

 

Meanwhile leaked recordings of the decorated soldier speaking frankly to a number of associates suggest he is confident that he can see off those seeking to hold him accountable. As long as his employer and benefactor, Seven chairman Kerry Stokes, keeps funding his cause, he says, he will not only win, he will “f-cking destroy” his enemies.

 

A trophy of war

 

On September 20, 2012, Ben Roberts-Smith’s patrol choppered towards the village of Tizak in Southern Afghanistan. A battle was looming at a scrubby, stony stretch of land that the 203-centimetre soldier knew well.

 

It was at Tizak in 2010, two years earlier, that Roberts-Smith had earned his VC by displaying an “extreme devotion to duty” paired with “a total disregard for his own safety” as he “stormed the enemy position”, according to the official citation.

 

Two years later, Afghans would also die in Tizak. But unlike the famed battle of 2010, this fight would not involve stories of heroism. Instead, SAS members who spoke on the condition of confidentiality say the Brereton Inquiry questioned soldiers about whether some of the Afghan people left dead by Roberts-Smith’s small patrol team had been illegally executed while unarmed.

 

The Brereton Inquiry’s findings about this Tizak mission were released in November 2020 but were heavily redacted. Multiple sources, including SAS soldiers, said several deaths during this operation had been the subject of investigation. Some of the same sources said the inquiry never obtained one photo from that day. It was lying under dirt and a rock in Roberts-Smith’s backyard.

 

The image shows an Afghan man killed by the patrol team led by Roberts-Smith. The man is lying on his back on a woven mat. He has a trimmed dark black beard and looks to be in his 30s. His left arm appears badly injured, a bullet wound appears on his head and his face is smeared with fresh blood. No weapon is pictured.

 

On each of his eyes is a souvenir military coin. One bears the winged dagger emblem of the SAS, the second shows a picture of bushranger Ned Kelly posing with two six-shooters – the emblem of Roberts-Smith’s SAS 2 squadron. The coins were intended to be given to Afghan military allies after joint operations.

 

Former Chief of the Defence Force and Vietnam veteran, Chris Barrie, says the placement of the coins on a deceased man’s eyes amounts to “barbaric trophy hunting”. The practice may also be illegal under international law – the Geneva Conventions prohibit the disrespecting of corpses on the battlefield. Barrie said the image trampled over basic military standards.

 

Though it is not known who is responsible for the death of this Afghan man, or who placed the coins on his eyes, the picture invites questions for potential investigators from the Brereton Inquiry or the federal police. The boots of two different SAS soldiers can be seen in the shot. These are people who might hold critical information.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 11, 2021, 11:56 p.m. No.13407740   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7746

>>13407731

 

3/4

 

Intimidating witnesses

 

In June 2018, two years after the Brereton Inquiry was launched and as it was beginning to call in witnesses to testify about Ben Roberts-Smith, an SAS soldier who served with the Victoria Cross winner received a threat in the mail. It warned the soldier that if he did not recant war crimes allegations he would be targeted and would “go down”.

 

The soldier reported to the federal police the attempt to intimidate him into silence. Police seized the letter and tested it for DNA. The then chief of the defence force, Air Chief Marshal Mark Binskin, publicly criticised whoever was behind the missive.

 

“I think it is disgusting that a disaffected person thought they could threaten a witness and look to influence the inquiry,” Binskin said on June 15.

 

Former NSW Supreme Court judge Anthony Whealy said the offence of intimidating a witness, if proven in a court, could carry a jail term of up to five years. He described the sending of the letter as “the sort of thing we’d see in The Godfather or mafia-type movies”.

 

“If it does happen, then it’s demonstrative of the worst kind of affront to the judicial system. Intimidating witnesses is a horrifying thing to happen in our community.”

 

The police forensics team could not identify the letter’s sender and the AFP investigation quickly stalled. But multiple sources, each with knowledge of different aspects of the threatening letter, now say Roberts-Smith organised it. He had bought the paper and stamps, printed the letter at a Seven Network office in regional Queensland and then arranged for a former contractor to send it from a postbox in Tweed Heads in northern NSW.

 

There is no suggestion Stokes or any other person at Seven West Media knew anything about Roberts-Smith’s alleged efforts to intimidate witnesses or conceal evidence.

 

Warnings of a massacre

 

Months earlier, as another SAS soldier prepared to deliver adverse information about Ben Roberts-Smith to the inquiry, three anonymous emails were sent: one to the federal police, one to independent politician Nick Xenophon and the third to the The Australian newspaper’s editor and the paper’s former WA-based reporter Andrew Burrell.

 

The emails variously claimed the soldier was at grave risk of committing a violent act in public, including gunning down civilians in Perth. One of the emails referenced the Las Vegas massacre that was carried out by a lone gunman in October 2017 and claimed 60 lives. Spurred into action, authorities arrived at the witness’s family home in Perth with a search warrant and raided the SAS soldier’s family home.

 

Senior barrister Greg Barns SC, who has spoken to the SAS soldier’s lawyers in Perth and analysed the anonymous emails, described the raid as a “terribly traumatic event” for a family otherwise “living an ordinary Australian life”.

 

Police found nothing to suggest the soldier was planning a mass shooting, but The Australian seized on allegations in the email and produced a front-page story that alleged the raided soldier had “smuggled automatic weapons from Perth to Afghanistan”. Barns says the emails were designed to force police to act.

 

“One would assume that the reference [to the Las Vegas massacre] was there to indicate that this person would go out and shoot up a huge number of people … You can’t think in our society of a more chilling and serious allegation,” Barns said. It put the soldier, “in a position where they’re inevitably going to be subjected to a raid from police”.

 

The Age, the Herald and 60 Minutes has confirmed the emails were sent by a former contractor to Ben Roberts-Smith. A number of sources, who cannot be named because they have requested anonymity and in some cases fear retribution, say the contractor was acting on Roberts-Smith’s instructions.

 

Barns says concocting a false police complaint may amount to a criminal offence if proven in court. And he says the ostensibly anonymous emails appear to have an ultimate aim: to silence the SAS witness before the Brereton Inquiry.

 

“The point is to make sure that that whistleblower is of no further impact.”

 

The SAS witness, who retained his job in the regiment, later complained to authorities that the raid was designed to intimidate him into silence before the Brereton Inquiry.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 11, 2021, 11:58 p.m. No.13407746   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13407740

 

4/4

 

‘My sole f-cking mission’

 

Ben Roberts-Smith has long been at the centre of a storm. By June 2018, the federal police had launched two separate taskforces into allegations he was involved in the executions of Afghan prisoners in 2009 and 2012, and the Brereton Inquiry was also focused on his alleged role in multiple executions of unarmed Afghans, including prisoners. The media had begun exposing his alleged misdeeds and he has since launched defamation action against The Age, the Herald and 60 Minutes. The trial in that case is due to start soon.

 

But covert recordings of the war hero talking to various associates and now published for the first time, give a rare insight into his confidence. The Roberts-Smith heard on the recordings is bullish.

 

“All kinds of people have chimed in for their own benefits. They seemed to have smelled blood in the water and thought, ‘Oh, Roberts-Smith is going down, we’ll f-cking chime in’. I’m talking politicians and all kinds of people,” he says of those accusing him of wrongdoing.

 

But, with the backing of his employer, Seven West Media chairman and billionaire Kerry Stokes, he is full of confidence. He would, he said, go “all the way”.

 

“There’s no f-cking way I’d be able to keep paying … until Kerry got into it. That’s why now they’re shitting themselves because he’s prepared to run his bank down to do it,” Roberts-Smith says in one conversation.

 

“But, Seven’s been good … Other businesses would have just gone, ‘Mate, it’s not tenable’ … I offered to resign at the start and they said, ‘Nah’. But it’s good it’s played out the way it has behind closed doors because they now understand.”

 

Secure in his confidence that he would retain Stokes’ support and his high-paid career as Seven West Media’s Queensland manager, Roberts-Smith is recorded gloating about those, including politicians, journalists and other former soldiers, that he will bring down.

 

“I’m going to do everything I can to f-cking destroy them mate … That’s my sole f-cking mission in life.”

 

The police, though, have never downed tools. In around April 2020, the AFP sent two briefs of evidence to Commonwealth prosecutors. The briefs outline the police case that Roberts-Smith is implicated in the execution of Afghan prisoners, including one who was kicked off a small cliff in 2012.

 

A number of sources have also confirmed that it was some time in 2020 that federal agents covertly obtained the contents of the USBs that Roberts-Smith had buried in his backyard.

 

Police detectives have also gathered evidence that has allowed them to trace back to Roberts-Smith the threatening letter and the emails that prompted a police raid on a Brereton Inquiry witness.

 

Now this alleged conduct is out in the open, Roberts-Smith may be counting more than ever on support from one of Australia’s most powerful media moguls. In the recordings of the former soldier speaking to his associates, Roberts-Smith describes how he is “indebted to Kerry”.

 

“I probably won’t leave the fold now,” he says of Stokes’ business empire.

 

“Bottom line, I’d be f-cked without him … we’ve certainly had those conversations already.”

 

''Open Arms — Veterans and Families Counselling provides support for current and ex-serving ADF personnel and their families. Free and confidential help is available 24/7. Phone 1800 011 046 (international: +61 1800 011 046 or +61 8 8241 4546) or visit www.OpenArms.gov.au''

 

https://www.openarms.gov.au

 

https://www.smh.com.au/national/buried-evidence-and-threats-how-ben-roberts-smith-tried-to-cover-up-his-alleged-crimes-20210408-p57hlr.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 12:07 a.m. No.13407783   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1263

>>13407722

War hero Ben Roberts-Smith hits back at bombshell report

 

RHIANNON DOWN - APRIL 12, 2021

 

Ben Roberts-Smith has accused Nine Entertainment of attempting to intimidate him “into not proceeding” with a defamation suit against the company and its star investigative reporter Nick McKenzie.

 

Nine’s 60 Minutes program on Sunday reported Mr Roberts-Smith, one of the country’s most decorated veterans, buried in his backyard evidence of depraved conduct by Special Air Services Regiment soldiers instead of handing it over to war crimes investigators.

 

The images — first published by The Sydney Morning Herald – show one soldier at the Fat Ladies Arms, a makeshift on-base bar, dressed in a Ku Klux Klan outfit and others drinking alcohol from a prosthetic leg taken from a Taliban fighter killed by an Australian soldier in 2009.

 

Other images show senior SAS officers pretending to engage in sex acts with subordinates.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith said the allegations were “not supported by any evidence filed by Mr McKenzie and Nine in what has been an extensive pre-trial process”.

 

“Mr McKenzie has chosen not to give evidence in support of the allegations he has made against Mr Roberts-Smith repeatedly over the past three years,” he said in a statement.

 

“The allegations aired this evening are baseless.

 

“These allegations are not supported by any evidence filed by Mr McKenzie and Nine in what has been an extensive pre-trial process.

 

“These allegations were not put to Mr Roberts-Smith prior to being broadcast on 60 Minutes and published in the Nine newspapers.

 

“Mr Roberts-Smith denies that he has engaged in any unlawful conduct and he will not be intimidated by Mr McKenzie or Nine into not continuing with the Federal Court proceedings against them.”

 

The images, 60 Minutes reported, were stored on USB drives buried in a garden.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith is engaged in a high-profile defamation action against Nine Entertainment after the company — then Fairfax Media — published a series of ­stories alleging the Victoria Cross recipient murdered an unarmed Afghan civilian by kicking him off a cliff.

 

Nine has argued that the allegations are substantially true.

 

Australian Special Forces soldiers are now accused of murdering 39 Afghan civilians and prisoners and of “blooding” new recruits by forcing them to shoot unarmed detainees.

 

That was the conclusion of a four-year investigation by NSW Supreme Court judge Paul Brereton that found “credible information” that up to 25 soldiers were involved in — and covered up — alleged war crimes.

 

In recordings published by 60 Minutes on Sunday, Mr Roberts-Smith appears to praise Seven West Media chairman Kerry Stokes for financing him and his fight to “destroy” his enemies.

 

“There’s no f..king way I’d be able to keep paying what I’m paying for until Kerry got into it,” Mr Roberts-Smith is heard saying in one recording. “That’s why now they’re shitting themselves because they realise he’s prepared to run his bank down to do it.

 

“I probably won’t leave the fold now … I think I’m indebted a little bit now to Kerry. Bottom line, I’d be fed without him … we’ve certainly had those conversations already.”

 

Mr Roberts-Smith was hired by Mr Stokes to run his company’s operation in Queensland.

 

The Australian Federal Police has told Mr Roberts-Smith it has “eyewitness accounts” implicating him in alleged war crimes in Afghanistan, Nine’s lawyers have told the Federal Court.

 

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/war-hero-buried-proof-of-lewd-conduct/news-story/2e862921224ae510477998d73bbf3cb4

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 12:13 a.m. No.13407814   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7819 >>1263

>>13407722

‘I’m going to do everything I can to f-cking destroy them’: Secret Ben Roberts-Smith audio revealed

 

Nick McKenzie, Joel Tozer and Chris Masters - April 11, 2021

 

1/2

 

Accused war criminal Ben Roberts-Smith has been caught on secretly recorded audio lauding his media mogul boss, Kerry Stokes, for financing his fight to “destroy” those in politics, the media and the SAS who have accused him of war crimes.

 

In the recordings, which were lawfully made, Mr Roberts-Smith, a senior executive of the Stokes-chaired Seven West Media, reveals his disdain for the business he helps run, his dislike of his fellow Seven executives and his incredulity that he is still running the company’s Queensland operations despite being at the centre of a war crimes scandal.

 

“It’s bizarre. Other businesses would have just gone, ‘Mate, it’s not tenable’. I offered to resign at the start [of the war crimes scandal] and they said, ‘Nah’,” Mr Roberts-Smith says to an associate in one conversation.

 

The recordings capture multiple conversations between Mr Roberts-Smith and three other people. The conversations occurred at the time the inquiry of the military Inspector-General, Paul Brereton, was uncovering evidence from SAS whistleblowers that Mr Roberts-Smith was implicated in multiple unlawful executions while serving as an SAS soldier in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012. That evidence prompted the Australian Federal Police to launch two ongoing taskforces in June 2018 targeting Mr Roberts-Smith.

 

The tapes cast fresh light on the extraordinary relationship Mr Stokes has maintained with Mr Roberts-Smith, while revealing the embattled war hero’s view that the billionaire is happy to run sections of his media empire at a loss in return for political power. Mr Roberts-Smith says the media is such “a powerful tool” that its owners say, “I’ll take that [financial] loss if it means I have political influence … Politicians are scared of guys that own media networks.”

 

Encrypted communications

 

Mr Roberts-Smith describes how the influence of Mr Stokes, who is also the chairman of the Australian War Memorial, has forced those who supported scrutiny of the accused war criminal to back down.

 

“They seemed to have smelled blood in the water and thought, ‘Oh, Roberts-Smith is going down, we’ll f-cking chime in.’ I’m talking politicians and all kinds of people,” he says.

 

But after it became known Mr Stokes supported him, these same critics “are like, ‘Oh, thanks Kerry, glad you can help Ben out’. What the f-ck is that? You wanted me to go down, you piece of shit.”

 

Mr Roberts-Smith also reveals how he talks to Mr Stokes on “encrypted” phone applications and “intelligence agencies cannot recover it”.

 

“So if I am talking to KMS for example – Kerry – we only talk on Telegram and then delete the messages after … People use them so it can’t be intercepted,” he says.

 

There is no suggestion that Mr Stokes uses the applications to avoid interception by Australian authorities, but multiple sources told The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald that Mr Roberts-Smith has used such applications to avoid interception by the ongoing AFP inquiries.

 

‘I’m indebted to Kerry’

 

In the recordings, Mr Roberts-Smith makes multiple references to Mr Stokes’ support of his fight to contest war crimes allegations and those airing them.

 

“There’s no f-ckng way I’d be able to keep paying what I’m paying for until Kerry got into it. That’s why now they’re shitting themselves because they realise he’s prepared to run his bank down to do it,” Mr Roberts-Smith is recorded saying.

 

”I probably won’t leave the fold now … I think I’m indebted a little bit now to Kerry. Bottom line, I’d be f-cked without him … we’ve certainly had those conversations already.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 12:14 a.m. No.13407819   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13407814

 

2/2

 

Mr Stokes’ financial support allowed Mr Roberts-Smith to form an expensive legal and public relations team in 2018 to combat the allegations investigated by the military Inspector-General and detailed in media reporting in The Age and Herald. Mr Roberts-Smith is running a defamation case against the mastheads.

 

He said of Mr Stokes’ camp: “They are privy to everything that’s gone on in the courts, they know what is going on … Put it this way, mate, Stokes isn’t an idiot. He’s not going to back someone …who’s a loser.”

 

Mr Roberts-Smith is scathing on the recordings about those he considers his enemies: “Now it is personal. Now I’m going to do everything I can to f-cking destroy them mate. Like everyone – and I’ll keep going – all those journalists. And that’s my sole f-cking mission in life.”

 

Dysfunctional and inept

 

Mr Roberts-Smith was hired to help run Seven West Media’s Queensland operations in 2014, after he discharged from the army having earned a Victoria Cross, Medal of Gallantry and Commendation for Distinguished Service as a special forces soldier in Afghanistan. But on the recordings, Mr Roberts-Smith describes Seven West Media as a dysfunctional business led by inept fellow executives.

 

“As a business person, or inside the business, you just sit there going, ‘What the f-ck?‘,” he tells one associate. “[Kerry Stokes’ son and Seven executive] Ryan Stokes put me on the strategy committee because no one knows how to f-cking plan in Sydney, which is actually true … These are the people that are running this business, they don’t know how to plan … There are some really good people that I’ve worked with. Just not many of them above me.”

 

He says on the tapes that his influence in the business is far too limited.

 

“If I was actually in charge … like they f-cking pay me to do, then I would be able to actually do a job. But I’m not in charge,” he complains. “I’ll be frank with you … I don’t really like this industry, to be honest. I’m not, I don’t see myself staying in this job.”

 

Mr Roberts-Smith describes his fellow Seven employees as “smiling assassins” and says the TV network’s Queensland staff “have f-cking … worn me down, and down and down to now I’m like, ‘you know what? F-ck ’em’.”

 

He is particularly dismissive of human resources issues in the business.

 

“I hate this shit where people go, ‘Oh, you know, this person is a bully, this person is this, that person’s that and there’s sexual harassment’, and you throw these things out there.

 

“I go, ‘OK, that’s fine, but if we are going to do that then I want to know, dates, times, places. I want stat decs on the f-cking lot. I don’t want your f-cking opinion, I don’t want people’s bullshit rumours. If you say that to me again, make sure you come with the f-cking proof. Otherwise, it impacts on you’.”

 

Of Channel Seven’s high-profile hiring, sports presenter Mel McLaughlin, Mr Roberts-Smith says: “You know the worst thing? I just don’t think she’s that good looking.”

 

https://www.smh.com.au/national/i-m-going-to-do-everything-i-can-to-f-ing-destroy-them-secret-ben-roberts-smith-audio-revealed-20210409-p57hv9.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 12:15 a.m. No.13407824   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7832 >>1263

>>13407722

Seven stands by senior executive Ben Roberts-Smith over new evidence he attempted to cover up alleged crimes

 

Anthony Galloway - April 12, 2021

 

1/2

 

The Seven Network is standing by its senior executive Ben Roberts-Smith, saying the former soldier denies new allegations that he attempted to cover up police and military investigations into alleged war crimes.

 

Mr Roberts-Smith has been caught on secretly recorded audio lauding his media mogul boss, Kerry Stokes, for financing his fight to “destroy” those in politics, the media and the SAS who have accused him of war crimes.

 

A joint investigation by The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes has also revealed allegations that the accused war criminal dug a hole in the backyard of his house and buried USB drives inside a pink plastic children’s lunchbox, hiding them from both police and military investigations. The USB drives contained images of soldiers misbehaving at a makeshift bar in Afghanistan, as well as classified documents and videos.

 

In separate secret recordings, which were lawfully made, Mr Roberts-Smith revealed his disdain for the business he helps run, his dislike of his fellow Seven executives and his incredulity that he is still running the company’s Queensland operations despite being at the centre of a war crimes scandal.

 

Mr Stokes, who is also chairman of the Australian War Memorial, has provided significant financial support to the former special forces soldier to form an expensive legal and public relations team to combat the allegations investigated by the military Inspector-General and detailed in media reporting in The Age and Herald. Mr Roberts-Smith is running a defamation case against the mastheads.

 

In a statement, the Seven Network said it noted the denials of the Victoria Cross recipient.

 

“Insofar as most of the material aired is old, Seven notes that it is before the Federal Court and the court process should be respected,” the company said.

 

“Insofar as new allegations are made they do not appear to be supported by evidence. In the circumstances Seven does not need to reconsider its position concerning Mr Roberts Smith and him continuing in his position.”

 

The company said Mr Roberts-Smith held “grave concerns” as to whether the broadcast was an “attempt to intimidate him into not proceeding with his case” against the newspapers and reporter Nick McKenzie.

 

“The allegations aired this evening are baseless. These allegations are not supported by any evidence filed by Mr McKenzie and Nine in what has been an extensive pre-trial process,” the company said.

 

“Mr Roberts-Smith denies that he has engaged in any unlawful conduct and he will not be intimidated by Mr McKenzie or Nine into not continuing with the Federal Court proceedings against them.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 12:17 a.m. No.13407832   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13407824

 

2/2

 

Labor’s spokesman for veterans affairs Shayne Neumann described the images as “disgraceful” and “confronting”, but said he couldn’t comment on the allegations against Mr Roberts-Smith.

 

“There’s an Office of Special Investigator looking at it and the Australian Federal Police are also looking at those issues, so it’s not appropriate for me to give a running commentary in relation to those issues,” he said.

 

“But I will say that what I saw last night would disgust most Australians. They’re disgraceful, the photos were confronting. That shouldn’t have happened. People should behave better in the ADF and the Australian public expects people to not behave that way.”

 

The Australian Federal Police would not say whether it was investigating Mr Roberts-Smith for burying the USB drives, with a spokesperson saying: “The AFP declines to comment.”

 

Defence Minister Peter Dutton and the Department of Defence have been contacted for comment.

 

In the secret recordings, Mr Roberts-Smith described how the influence of Mr Stokes had forced those who supported scrutiny of the accused war criminal to back down.

 

“They seemed to have smelled blood in the water and thought, ‘Oh, Roberts-Smith is going down, we’ll f-cking chime in.’ I’m talking politicians and all kinds of people,” he said.

 

But after it became known Mr Stokes supported him, these same critics “are like, ‘Oh, thanks Kerry, glad you can help Ben out’. What the f-ck is that? You wanted me to go down, you piece of shit.”

 

The images which were previously in the possession of Mr Roberts-Smith included photographs showing a senior commissioned SAS commanding officer simulating a sex act with a high-ranking soldier using an object taken from a model camel.

 

Another image is one that shows what former defence force chief Chris Barrie told The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and 60 Minutes was credible evidence of the war crime of desecrating a corpse.

 

According to multiple sources familiar with the matter, federal police who are conducting war crimes investigations into the war hero have since obtained the contents of the USBs.

 

If you are a current or former ADF member, or a relative, and need counselling or support, contact the Defence All-Hours Support Line on 1800 628 036 or Open Arms on 1800 011 046.

 

https://www1.defence.gov.au/adf-members-families/health-well-being/services-support-fighting-fit/need-help-now/all-hours-support-line

 

https://www.openarms.gov.au

 

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/seven-stands-by-senior-executive-ben-roberts-smith-over-new-evidence-he-attempted-to-cover-up-alleged-crimes-20210412-p57id8.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 12:57 a.m. No.13408002   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8018 >>5137 >>1239 >>1279

Mike Pompeo Tweets

 

“Put on the full armor of God, so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes.” Ephesians 6:11

 

#SundayScripture

 

https://twitter.com/mikepompeo/status/1381307564000960517

 

 

As a proponent of freedom, enjoying some Taiwanese dried pineapple. Checkmate.

 

https://twitter.com/mikepompeo/status/1381392669704871942

 

>https://qanon.pub/?q=armor%20of%20God

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 1 a.m. No.13408018   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8025 >>1279

>>13408002

Pineapple war shows Taiwan won’t be bullied by Beijing

 

Like Australian wine, Taiwanese pineapples have been targeted by Beijing. If democracies are to stand up to Chinese coercion, they will have to join forces.

 

Lindsay Gorman - Mar 19, 2021

 

1/2

 

This month, China banned imports of Taiwanese pineapples, the latest in a string of punitive trade measures against democracies that illustrate how China has weaponised its growing economic clout.

 

As the island’s largest trading partner, China buys more than 90 per cent of Taiwanese pineapple farmers’ exports. But the island is taking Beijing’s boycott in its stride, underlining the potential for what is quickly emerging as one of the Biden administration’s sharpest foreign-policy tools: bringing democratic allies together on China.

 

US President Joe Biden took the first step in that direction last week. In a joint statement, the leaders of the four democracies in the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue – Australia, India, Japan and the United States – announced their support for an Indo-Pacific region “anchored by democratic values, and unconstrained by coercion.”

 

To that end, the Biden administration also appears to be taking a strongly pro-Taiwan stance, with the US State Department saying in a statement in January that Washington’s commitment to Taipei is “rock-solid.”

 

In response to China’s trade ban, the Taiwanese government has launched a chirpy public campaign for the “freedom pineapple” that’s gone viral. From Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen on down, prominent Taiwanese are urging citizens to stand up to China by eating more of the fruit. “After Australian wine, unfair Chinese trade practices are now targeting #Taiwanese pineapples,” Tsai wrote. “But that won’t stop us… Support our farmers & enjoy delicious Taiwanese fruit!”

 

Global netizens quickly joined in support of Taiwanese growers, posting photos of pineapple cakes and pineapple shrimp balls.

 

In Taiwan, creative restaurateurs came up with new pineapple dishes, adding pineapple to staples like beef noodle soup. Taiwan’s envoy to the United States shared a picture of herself taking a giant bite out of a whole pineapple at a local Taiwanese farm.

 

Solidarity for “freedom pineapples” flooded in from all corners of the world, including Britain, Denmark, India, and the United States.

 

Of course, most of the support from abroad has been moral and not economic, since it will take more than just a few days for Taiwanese producers to redirect their exports.

 

Most pineapples in the United States, for example, are sourced from Hawaii and Puerto Rico. But the swift and very public backlash against Beijing suggests there is a growing sense of solidarity among the world’s democracies with victims of China’s economic bullying.

 

Beijing’s economic tactics aren’t new. China has a history of threatening the private industries of countries whose governments it wants to coerce.

 

Last November, China slapped tariffs on Australian wine over a list of 14 grievances. Chief among them were press coverage spotlighting China’s human rights abuses and Australia’s call for an independent investigation into the origins of the COVID-19 virus.

 

The Norwegian salmon industry has also gotten the cold shoulder since 2010, when the Nobel Committee in Oslo awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to Chinese human rights activist Liu Xiaobo.

 

By 2015, even the tiny Faroe Islands – a territory of Denmark – sold more salmon to China than all of Norway did. Relations only began to thaw after the Norwegian government signed a joint statement with China in 2016 recognising the latter’s concerns over the Nobel Peace Prize and pledging not to support actions that undermine “China’s core interests and major concerns”.

 

China’s bullying is also not limited to import restrictions. In Europe and North America, China has used economic coercion as a tool for interference 60 times since 2000, according to the Authoritarian Interference Tracker, a data set recently compiled by the Alliance for Securing Democracy.

 

They include threatening the German auto industry over the Chinese company Huawei’s access to constructing Germany’s 5G telecommunications network, issuing a travel warning to damage Canada’s tourism sector following the arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver, and cancelling broadcasts of US National Basketball Association games in response to a pro-Hong Kong tweet by Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 1:02 a.m. No.13408025   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13408018

 

2/2

 

Coercion of business

 

The Chinese party-state does not hesitate to coerce private companies when it disapproves of their messages. These economic tactics are one component of a broader information strategy to bend the truth to the Chinese Communist Party’s wishes.

 

Unfortunately, the major democracies are more focused on their readiness to counter military aggression from autocrats and have neglected developing a common approach to economic browbeating.

 

A network of defence alliances underpins the liberal order. As important as that is, democracies now also have to find ways to support each other against economic attacks.

 

So what is to be done? Earlier this month, the Biden administration released a new trade agenda saying that it would use “all available tools” to fight China’s unfair trade practices. Which tools will be used, under what circumstances, and in which ways all remain open questions.

 

One option that former Danish diplomat Jonas Parello-Plesner has proposed is to reach into the Cold War toolkit and enact an economic version of NATO’s Article 5: An attack on one democracy’s economy is an attack on all. Democratic allies would hit back against China with retaliatory tariffs whenever an industry from one country is threatened.

 

While Parello-Plesner’s logic is sound, the idea may be too complex to implement in practice. In the best case, it would require co-ordination of precise economic tripwires and retaliatory measures on a masterful scale.

 

In the worst case, it could easily snowball into a global tariff war. Limiting the bloc of democratic countries involved in responding to particular threats, such as by region or industry relevance, could simplify the calculus – but leave the others exposed to China picking them off, one by one.

 

Beijing’s hammer

 

Another option, much easier to implement and likely just as effective, would be to soften the blow to one nation by spreading out the cost among all. When Beijing’s hammer comes down in the form of import bans or tariffs, democracies could agree to increase purchases of affected goods. Where supply chains don’t already exist and are too hard to establish, countries could jump in with aid. In removing the pain, they remove the leverage.

 

Swift public information campaigns like #FreedomPineapple will be the key to success. And democracies already seem to be learning from each other: a December 2020 campaign led by the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China in support of Australia’s “freedom wine” garnered similar attention.

 

If their governments speak plainly about China, worldwide consumers may jump at the opportunity to support the targeted farmers, fishers, or vintners.

 

Given the high premium the Chinese Communist Party places on information control, visibly losing the public opinion war would show the party that its economic aggression has backfired.

 

As analysts debate whether the world is headed into a new cold war with China, one distinction is plain: unlike the Soviet Union, China is deeply integrated in the global economy.

 

https://www.afr.com/policy/foreign-affairs/pineapple-war-shows-taiwan-won-t-be-bullied-by-beijing-20210317-p57bhc

 

https://twitter.com/iingwen/status/1365253680606289921

 

https://twitter.com/iingwen/status/1366676589186936835

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 1:16 a.m. No.13408063   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8146 >>1261

>>13395990

Julian Assange supporters hold vigils

 

AAP / thewest.com.au - 12 April 2021

 

Small vigils have been held in cities across the world to mark the second anniversary of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange being detained in prison after he was dragged from the Ecuadorian embassy in London.

 

Supporters demanding his release joined events on Sunday in countries including Australia, the UK, Belgium, Germany and the United States.

 

Protests were held in London outside the Ecuadorian embassy, at Westminster Magistrates' Court, and at Belmarsh prison where he is being held.

 

Messages saying "Bring Assange Home" and "Journalism Is Not A Crime" were also projected onto buildings in the capital.

 

A small gathering of supporters held up similar banners in Sydney Harbour, calling for the Australian to be released.

 

Assange has been held in Belmarsh high security jail since he was carried out of the Ecuadorian embassy on April 11 2019 by police before being arrested for breaching his bail conditions.

 

He had entered the embassy in 2012 after exhausting all legal avenues to avoid extradition to Sweden to face sex offence allegations, which he has always denied and were eventually dropped.

 

A bid by the United States to extradite him was rejected at a London court earlier this year but Assange has remained in prison until the outcome of an appeal.

 

He was denied bail under strict conditions for fear he could abscond and deny prosecutors the chance to appeal.

 

The 49-year-old is wanted to face an 18-count indictment, alleging a plot to hack computers and a conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defence information.

 

WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said Assange's continued imprisonment was an "outrage and a travesty of justice".

 

"It has now been two years of incarceration, isolation and psychological torture, all for exposing war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, the same journalism for which Julian has been applauded all over the world for and nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize," he said.

 

"It's long past time for this injustice to end and we continue to appeal to the United States and the Department of Justice to drop the appeal and all the charges against Julian.

 

"In January, a judge in London ruled that Julian should not be extradited and so we are today calling for him to be released from Belmarsh prison and be a free man to be able to spend his time with his young family."

 

It was recently revealed that Pope Francis sent a personal message to Assange, whose partner Stella Moris said: "After a hard night, Julian woke up this morning to a kind, personal message from Pope Francis @pontifex delivered to his cell door by the prison priest."

 

https://thewest.com.au/news/crime/julian-assange-supporters-hold-vigils-c-2569908

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 1:28 a.m. No.13408100   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8103 >>1239

‘Utterly unaccountable’: Turnbull labels News Corp the most powerful political actor in Australia

 

Lisa Visentin - April 12, 2021

 

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Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull says Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp poses a real threat to Australian democracy, claiming it has surpassed the Coalition or Labor as the most powerful political force in the country.

 

Mr Turnbull, who has blamed News Corp as a key player in his removal as prime minister in 2018, was unsparing in his criticism of the Murdoch empire in his evidence to a Senate inquiry into media diversity on Monday.

 

Giving evidence by video link, Mr Turnbull said the Murdoch media business had evolved into a powerful political force that, unlike political parties, was unaccountable to the Australian public.

 

“This is the fundamental problem that we’re facing: the most powerful political actor in Australia is not the Liberal Party or the National Party or the Labor Party. It is News Corp. And it’s utterly unaccountable,” Mr Turnbull said. “It’s controlled by an American family and their interests are no longer, if they ever were, coextensive with our own.”

 

News Corp has been contacted for comment.

 

Mr Turnbull, a Liberal, has joined former Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd as a strident critic of News Corp and has backed his push for a royal commission into the influence of the Murdoch empire on the Australian media and political landscape. The media diversity inquiry, which is examining issues of media concentration in Australia, was established by the Senate after more than 500,000 people signed a petition by Mr Rudd voicing those concerns.

 

In his evidence to the inquiry in February, Mr Rudd said News Corp used systematic character assassinations to cultivate a culture of fear among politicians and engaged in campaign journalism against issues such as action on climate change.

 

At the same public hearing, News Corp Australia executive chairman Michael Miller dismissed Mr Rudd and Mr Turnbull’s criticisms as “a convenient diversion from their own failings” during his evidence. News Corp executive Campbell Reid gave evidence the company was “professional, accountable media” that operated in the Australian landscape “with an extraordinary degree of both government, and indeed regulatory, oversight and legal oversight if we get things wrong”.

 

“Our editing process – for all professional media – is high stakes because we can be charged with contempt of court, our journalists can be threatened with jail, we can be taken to the Press Council, and we can be held up to scrutiny by other organisations, which is completely different to the misinformation industry that is perpetuated by and is a driver of, frankly, profit online,” Mr Campbell told the inquiry in February.

 

Mr Turnbull echoed many of Mr Rudd’s concerns, saying he had experienced “bullying and standover tactics” from News Corp when he served in the Parliament.

 

He said the political might of the Murdoch empire represented “an absolute threat to our democracy” – a threat he said America had already witnessed on January 6 when rioters stormed the US Capitol building. Mr Turnbull said the Murdoch-controlled Fox News had amplified the civil unrest that led to rioting by promoting the lie that US President Joe Biden had stolen the election from Donald Trump.

 

“If you don’t think that isn’t a threat to American democracy and undermining the strength and capability of our most important ally. Then, you know, you are kidding yourself,” Mr Turnbull said.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 1:28 a.m. No.13408103   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13408100

 

2/2

 

He also claimed that News Corp’s “problematic” influence was evident in its lobbying for the news media bargaining code laws, which forces Google and Facebook to compensate media companies for using their content on their platforms.

 

“The power that you represent – your Parliament, our Parliament – has been used to shake down two big tech platforms, Google and Facebook, to give money to media companies, the leading protagonist of which was News Corp, and we don’t know what they were paid,” Mr Turnbull said.

 

Nine Entertainment Co, owner of this masthead, also heavily lobbied the government to pass the media code. The laws were supported by other major media outlets, including the ABC and Guardian Australia.

 

Facebook Australia policy director Mia Garlick said the company had struck content deals with at least six publishers – Seven, News Corp, Schwartz Media, Private Media, Solstice Media and Sky News – but declined to disclose the size of deals, citing commercial in confidence. Nine has also signed a letter of intent with the tech giant for use of its news articles. Ms Garlick said the company would launch its news platform, Facebook News, by the end of 2021.

 

News Corp is the country’s biggest newspaper owner, with titles including national broadsheet The Australian and Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph, Melbourne’s Herald Sun, Brisbane’s The Courier Mail and Adelaide’s The Advertiser. News Corp also owns Australia’s second-biggest news website news.com.au and 24-hour channel Sky News Australia.

 

Nine is also a dominant player in Australian media and owns The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and The Australian Financial Review newspapers and a range of radio stations and television assets. The ABC is the third major player through television, radio and the nation’s most-visited news website.

 

Executives from regional media companies Prime Media Group, WIN Corp and Imparja gave evidence on Monday that their struggling business model had forced job cuts and newsroom closures. The companies are lobbying the Morrison government to change media laws preventing the industry from consolidating.

 

“The reality is that if any one of us wasn’t here, diversity is dead in regional Australia,” Prime Media chief executive Ian Audsley said. “That needs to be fixed and the only way it can be fixed is to enable us to rearrange ourselves in a more economically sustainable way.“

 

Andrew Jaspan, co-founder of news website The Conversation and former editor of The Age, said Australia was witnessing a “spiralling concentration” in its media market, which posed an “unprecedented and real threat” to democracy. He listed the merger of Nine and Fairfax Media in 2018, and News Corp and Nine’s decision to walk away from newswire service AAP as key events that had reinforced the dominance of those two players.

 

“What is the real issue we face here with media concentration? It entrenches excessive political and ideological power in the hands of the few, giving them the ability to set the public agenda [and] determine political decision making [and] public and media policy,” Mr Jaspan said.

 

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/utterly-unaccountable-turnbull-labels-news-corp-the-most-powerful-political-actor-in-australia-20210412-p57idq.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 1:48 a.m. No.13408146   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8149 >>1261

>>13408063

Britain is damaging its reputation by keeping Julian Assange in jail, says partner

 

Stella Moris says continued detention of WikiLeaks founder is compromising UK’s global standing

 

Patrick Wintour - 11 Apr 2021

 

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Britain would be on stronger ground campaigning against authoritarian regimes if it pressed the Biden administration to drop its call to extradite Julian Assange on espionage charges, Stella Moris, Assange’s partner, has told the Guardian.

 

Moris – who has two children with Assange – is trying to broaden the campaign of support for him by pointing to the global damage caused to the UK’s reputation by keeping him in jail for so long.

 

In an interview coinciding with the second anniversary of his detention in the high-security Belmarsh prison in south-east London, she says: “The treatment of Julian is compromising the UK constantly all round the world. It’s giving authoritarian governments points to score all round the world both privately and in international fora like the UN. You cannot start a new values competition with China with Julian Assange in Belmarsh for publishing war crimes. It just does not work. You don’t get to take the moral high ground with this as your starting point.

 

“Jake Sullivan, the US national security adviser, said the difference between China and the US is that China puts its critics in prison. I am not sure the British government is aware of how much international criticisms it is facing over this issue, or the damage it is doing to its soft power reputation. It’s a tool to whack the UK again and again. It is the perfect response for authoritarian leaders when they are criticised by the UK, or pressed to release political prisoners: ‘What about Julian Assange?’”

 

She said the UK Foreign Office was running a major global press freedom campaign, and yet at the same time keeping Assange in jail. “Every major human rights group – Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and Reporters without Borders – are on the same page about this issue.“

 

Moris portrays Britain as caught by a highly political case launched by the Trump administration as part of its war on journalism – a war that never had much support in the US.

 

So far, the new Biden administration, to the disappointment of Moris, has said it will appeal against the UK court’s decision, made in February, to refuse extradition on the grounds Assange’s mental health meant there was a real risk he would commit suicide in US prisons. The court rejected most of the free press arguments lodged by Assange’s lawyers to reject extradition. It also refused Assange bail.

 

But Moris is hopeful that the new US attorney general, Merrick Garland – who has a strong record on first amendment issues – will look at the Assange case afresh. Moris claims that “it’s seen in the US as a Trump administration prosecution driven by Mike Pompeo. They said they wanted a head on a pike.”

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 1:49 a.m. No.13408149   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13408146

 

2/2

 

The Obama administration, no fans of Assange, chose not to prosecute him, saying it could find nothing that did not amount to newsgathering and if it did charge him it would have to charge other organisations that had published the same material, such as New York Times and the Guardian.

 

Moris claims the pressure is real on the Biden team from civil liberties groups. New supporters pop up all the time. Kylie Moore-Gilbert, herself released from an Iranian jail and according to Moris a cousin of Assange’s, has joined the ranks calling for his release.

 

She says the court was right to be concerned for his wellbeing in a US prison given his mental health history, including the professional medical diagnosis of Asperger syndrome, presented in his case as an obsessiveness and an inability to understand how others might be thinking.

 

Moris says: “The prison system in the US is atrocious. On any given day there are an estimated 80,000 people in solitary confinement. He is a suicide risk, which means they would keep him under constant watch. He is a high-profile national security prisoner so they would keep him away from others.”

 

If the US does press an appeal to secure his extradition, it is likely Assange’s lawyers could go into a cross-appeal on some of the press freedom issues raised but rejected. The consequences for journalism are wide, Moris argues, including for British journalists who report on sensitive information about foreign powers.

 

But the danger for the Assange team is that he is left in limbo, neither released or extradited, as the case drags on. The case has been going on for so long Boris Johnson probably feels little domestic political pressure over the issue – it is not an issue that seems to animate the Labour party under the leadership of a former director of public prosecutions – and if something does happen once every three months to spark media interest, the Home Office can push out a line that has been on file for years.

 

She said she speaks to Assange by phone most days. “We sometimes have to talk about the case but he likes to hear about normal life and the kind of escape that gives him. Prison especially under Covid is all encompassing. You have no power to do anything. There is no agency, no autonomy. It is your entire world, so it is important to get his mind out of there. It is such a fucked up situation. Winning your case does not seem to matter.

 

“Sometimes I have to hide how much of an emotional struggle it is, I have good days and I have bad days, but I feel the trajectory has to be that he is going to be released, and that has to happen soon. But yet he is still in there.”

 

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2021/apr/11/britain-risks-damaging-reputation-by-keeping-julian-assange-in-jail-says-partner-stella-moris

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 2:15 a.m. No.13408195   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1263

>>13407722

Ben Roberts-Smith under fresh investigation over burner phones and sealed envelopes

 

Nick McKenzie, Chris Masters and Joel Tozer - April 12, 2021

 

The Australian Federal Police is launching fresh investigations into former special forces soldier Ben Roberts-Smith and has already seized evidence implicating the war hero in an alleged conspiracy to silence witnesses.

 

The new evidence includes letters Mr Roberts-Smith allegedly placed in sealed envelopes and planned to send anonymously to SAS soldiers he feared would testify against him at a war crimes inquiry.

 

The AFP has also uncovered the existence of at least five “burner” phones that the Victoria Cross recipient arranged to be purchased in 2018, according to records sighted by The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald. Authorities have identified multiple Optus and Telstra SIM cards purchased for use in burner phones belonging to Mr Roberts-Smith in 2018 and 2019.

 

Burner phones are disposable mobile phones subscribed in the name of a third party to obscure the true identity of the user from police phone taps and are typically used by people concerned they might be bugged by authorities. After use they are usually destroyed.

 

Lawyers for Mr Roberts-Smith were contacted on Monday for comment but did not respond.

 

A joint investigation by The Age, the Herald and 60 Minutes revealed allegations that Mr Roberts-Smith, an accused war criminal, dug a hole in the backyard of his Queensland house and buried USB drives inside a pink plastic children’s lunchbox, hiding them from both police and military investigations. The USB drives contained images of bad behaviour by soldiers at a makeshift bar in Afghanistan, as well as classified documents and videos.

 

The AFP has seized the contents of the USBs and is investigating the Victoria Cross recipient’s handling of the sensitive files.

 

The two sealed envelopes recently seized by detectives are in addition to a threatening letter previously seized by police and which was posted anonymously in June 2018 to an SAS witness to the military Inspector-General’s war crimes inquiry. That letter warned the witness to stay quiet.

 

Police are investigating if Mr Roberts-Smith sent that anonymous letter and later sought to destroy the two other envelopes he also had planned to send. Multiple sources speaking on condition of anonymity said a third party, who was allegedly told by Mr Roberts-Smith to destroy the envelopes, kept them instead.

 

Police seized the envelopes last month, and earlier this month a police forensics team at the AFP Brisbane office was assigned to examine them. The AFP declined to comment, but multiple sources said inquiries were being “prioritised” by the federal agency.

 

The new investigation probing Mr Roberts-Smith for allegedly intimidating witnesses and concealing evidence is in addition to two AFP taskforces investigating Mr Roberts-Smith for allegedly executing and brutalising unarmed Afghan prisoners in 2009 and 2012.

 

The new revelations of sealed envelopes and burner phones come as Mr Roberts-Smith’s employer, the Seven Network, is standing by him in his role as senior executive. Mr Roberts-Smith and Seven released a statement saying the former soldier denies new allegations that he attempted to thwart police and military investigations by burying USBs.

 

Seven is also backing the ex-soldier after he was caught on secretly recorded audio lauding his media mogul boss, Kerry Stokes, for financing his fight to “destroy” those in politics, the media and the SAS who have accused him of war crimes.

 

In separate secret recordings, which were lawfully made, Mr Roberts-Smith revealed his disdain for the business he helps run, his dislike of his fellow Seven executives and his incredulity that he is still running the company’s Queensland operations despite being at the centre of a war crimes scandal.

 

Mr Stokes, who is also chairman of the Australian War Memorial, has provided significant financial support to the former special forces soldier to form an expensive legal and public relations team to combat the allegations investigated by the military Inspector-General and detailed in media reporting in The Age and Herald. Mr Roberts-Smith is running a defamation case against the mastheads.

 

In its statement, the Seven Network said it noted the denial by the Victoria Cross recipient of the allegations unearthed by 60 Minutes and this masthead.

 

“Insofar as most of the material aired is old, Seven notes that it is before the Federal Court and the court process should be respected,” the company said. “Insofar as new allegations are made they do not appear to be supported by evidence.”

 

https://www.theage.com.au/national/ben-roberts-smith-under-fresh-investigation-over-burner-phones-and-sealed-envelopes-20210412-p57if9.html

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 2:29 a.m. No.13408224   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8227 >>1279

>>13383087

>>13383098

'Bewitched' Vicky Xu who fabricates Xinjiang story stokes anti-China sentiment in Australia

 

GT staff reporters - Apr 11, 2021

 

1/2

 

Vicky Xu Xiuzhong, who is widely regarded by Chinese netizens as one of the manipulators behind this wave of Western crackdowns over issues related to Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, not only irritates the Chinese public but also puts the Chinese community in Australia in peril.

 

Xu is known as the author of Uyghurs for Sale, a so-called research report published by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI). The report, released in March 2020, claimed there was forced labor in Xinjiang and at least 82 global brands were among the supply chains of Xinjiang-related factories. This was prior to the latest wave of Western attacks on China over non-existent forced labor concerns in the cotton-producing region.

 

Xu is performing a stunt for her groundless story smearing China and Xinjiang-related issues. Interviews by the Global Times showed that groundless reports by this Chinese who now lives in Australia are stoking the already strong anti-China sentiment in Australia and reducing the voices of the Chinese community in the country.

 

Xu is quite familiar among the Chinese community in Australia as a person who is frequently in the Western media spreading false information on China and issues relating to Xinjiang, but Chinese individuals in Australia chose to keep silent in the face of rising anti-Chinese racism in the country, the Global Times learned.

 

Some Chinese associations in Australia reached by the Global Times referred to the unfriendly atmosphere against Chinese in the country and declined to talk to the media as a result.

 

Anti-Chinese forces are now so strong in Australia that pro-Beijing Chinese and Australians have to keep silent for their personal safety, and even the centrists cannot speak their minds, the Global Times learned from some living in Australia.

 

"We were all silent for fear of being ostracized. Making public comments supporting Chinese would be labeled as anti-Australia," an Australian citizen who preferred to be called George told the Global Times.

 

"Most ordinary Australian people will naturally believe in those made-up stories fabricated by Xu and her like, because most of them have never been to China and they will not know what these people like Xu are talking about. Anti-China activists use such information gaps to say whatever they want in media reports and no one can challenge them," George said.

 

(continued)

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 2:30 a.m. No.13408227   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13408224

 

2/2

 

Xu has never lived in Xinjiang but she decked herself out as an "expert" specializing in issues relating to Xinjiang, even making appearances on US and Australian TV to peddle her anti-China policies and cater to the tastes of "anti-China fans".

 

Xu was hired by the ASPI as an analyst specializing in Chinese nationalism and Xinjiang issues. Her profile on the ASPI website said that Xu studied political science at the University of Melbourne before she worked for the New York Times and Australian Broadcasting Corp.

 

ASPI hired her is because she is Chinese. The anti-China organization needs such an identity to pin labels on nationalism. A white face would not convince the public as easily as a yellow one, George told the Global Times.

 

Xu drew conclusions on forced labor in Xinjiang simply citing security booths and fences at the Jiashi Vocational School and the Haoyuanpeng Clothing Manufacturing's factory in Shule, Xinjiang. She even wrongly cited satellite data and claimed that a nursing home, a school and a residential compound were detention centers.

 

One of Xu's schoolmates at the University of Melbourne, a Chinese student studying global media and communication surnamed Zhu, told the Global Times that Xu is a person who pursues personal interests by selling out her own country. This morally low person who frequently spreads false news and defies facts doesn't have any professional ethics as a journalist.

 

"What on Earth distorts her? People with a strong hatred of the country like her are uncommon," Zhu said.

 

"It seems like Xu would do anything against her country just to obtain permanent residence (PR) in Australia. I was shocked. None of my acquaintances who are most eager for PR would do such things," a student surnamed Zhao from the University of Melbourne said.

 

"I believe she was bewitched by the anti-China forces in the West, and her worship of the West makes her go further on the pathway against her motherland. Anyone who really knows about China and had visited Xinjiang would not write a research report like Uyghurs for Sale." The labor transfer story she wrote was a muddled one with many wrong references, many other Chinese in Australia told the Global Times.

 

Despite the facts that Xu's research on Xinjiang was based on lies, the Washington Post depicted Xu as a real "researcher" and a victim of online criticism.

 

Chen Hong, a professor and director of the Australian Studies Center at East China Normal University, commented that it takes years of education and strenuous scholarly training to be a true academic. To call someone who has been producing fabrications and falsehoods a researcher and scholar is actually a blasphemy of the word "academic."

 

In fact academics in China are never subject to domestic restrictions on their research and studies. The only sanction, bans and mistreatment imposed on them are from Western countries which wrongfully accuse them of posing risks to their national security, said Chen.

 

"Nowadays people around the world have full freedom of expression in the cyberspace. It is quite normal for some netizens in China to express their indignation at someone whom they perceive as damaging China's national interest. Such spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings has nothing to do with academic repression," Chen said.

 

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202104/1220777.shtml

Anonymous ID: 90de52 April 12, 2021, 11:53 a.m. No.13410361   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1263

>>13407722

Shocking evidence of potential war crime exposed in major investigation

 

60 Minutes Australia

 

12 Apr 2021

 

It’s not pleasant busting a long-held myth about a much-admired and highly-decorated veteran of the Afghanistan war. But Australia really needs to know the truth about VC recipient, Ben Roberts-Smith. For the last three years he’s been under police investigation, accused of war crimes. The former soldier emphatically denies any wrongdoing, repeatedly saying he has nothing to hide about his time in Afghanistan. 60 MINUTES, the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age newspaper reveal startling new information that will shock the nation. It’s about Roberts-Smith’s efforts to conceal evidence and threaten SAS witnesses who dared to stand up to him.

 

And a warning: This joint investigation by 60 MINUTES, the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age newspaper, contains confronting material.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u76c7Eqxz28