John Passant

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Canberra: Left Unity Public Forum
Left Unity: A Forum with Socialist Alternative and Socialist Alliance on Left Unity 6 pm Thursday 16 May Room G 52 Haydon-Allen Building ANU Socialist Alternative and Socialist Alliance are in talks about unity, and as part of that process we will hold a joint forum here in Canberra on left unity in Australia. If you are interested in this exciting development and want to learn more or be involved, come along to this public forum and hear the discussion and debate. https://www.facebook.com/events/452603648150763/ (0)

Labor's super back down: a party rotten to the core
Me on superannuation and the death rattle of the ALP in The  Conversation. (0)

Marxism 2013 Conference
“Marxism is one of the best forums for debate in Australia” John Pilger gives a glowing review of the Marxism Conference. He will be returning to speak at Marxism 2013. Buy your tickets online today at www.marxismconference.org The talk on Saturday at 4 pm about taxing the rich looks interesting too.  Wonder who is giving that one? (0)

Marx and taxing economic rent in Australia
A very amateurish first draft by me on Marx and taxing economic rent, with too much explanation of basic ideas and then off on tangents and misunderstood ideas. http://docs.business.auckland.ac.nz/Doc/51-John-Passant.pdf

(0)

An article of mine on superannuation tax rorts in the Canberra Times
This is an article of mine in the Canberra Times on Tuesday 12 February. I argue that the benefits of the superannuation tax concessions go disproportionately and overwhelmingly to the rich and that it’s time to end the super tax rorts. (3)

Me in the media recently on tax
‘Mining Tax shortfall: the experts respond’ The Conversation 8 February 2013 ‘Current super concessions favour the wealthy – so why aren’t we supporting reform?” The Conversation 8 February 2013 (0)

Tax the rich
I am speaking at Marxism 2013 on taxing the rich. I will be talking on Sunday 31 March at 11.30. The Conference is the biggest left wing event of the year, over Easter at Melbourne University. Others speakers among the 70 or more include John Pilger, Gary Foley, Billy X Jennings, Brian Jones, Bob Carnegie, Jeff Sparrow, Antony Loewenstein, Toufic Haddad, and speakers from parties from Indonesia, The Philippines, Pakistan, New Zealand, the US and many many more….Check out the link here. (2)

The 99 Passant
I am about half through compiling the first volume of my most read (readers’ view) or most interesting (my view) articles from this blog.  Keep an eye out for Volume I of the 99 Passant when it is published later this year. I’ll keep you updated. (0)

More threats
As some of you may know I have been censoring the posts of a serial pest who makes anti-Muslim and racist comments and has in the past threatened me. He has posted again saying that the next time he is in my area – he names my street – he’ll ‘drop in to say g’day’. Clearly this is an attempt to further intimidate me. If anything happens to me or my family here are his details to provide to police.  jack 58.96.105.106  He has a druid name email at txc. (0)

Doctors and other bruises
I am having various tests and analysis done with a range of doctors over the coming weeks so may not be as communicative as normal on this blog. Bear with me. Hopefully I will be back in the New Year fighting fit. (4)

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Hell on Nauru: shut it down

Internal Department of Immigration reports have confirmed what refugee activists and advocates have been saying for months: Nauru is a torturous hell hole that is destroying the lives of the refugees sent there writes Socialist Alternative.

The reports and incident logs, obtained by Farifax Media under freedom of information laws, cover the first three months of Nauru’s operation. They paint a damning picture. Repeated hunger strikes, self-harm and attempted suicide – things Socialist Alternative has reported again and again – are all too common.

In fact, reports of protests and self-harm have been frequently issued by the detainees themselves, but largely ignored by the big capitalist media. Mahdi Vakili, who is imprisoned on Nauru, wrote just last week: “One of asylum seekers who is living in my room, he sewed his lips … Also I saw some of asylum seekers who have been on hunger strike.”

Another report, issued from the asylum seekers’ facebook page on the same day, noted [Slightly edited for clarity]:

“On the 18th of February 2013 about 10 asylum seekers tried to escape form Nauru Regional processing centre in hope of finding freedom and relieving the mental stress of being in detention. After a short time they were arrested and they were returned to the centre. They said that they were threatened and intimidated by security guards.

“More than 13 asylum seekers went on a hunger strike and 4 of them decided not to take any water and foods. There was blood in one of the asylum seekers urine and the guards refused to send him to the medical services.

“On the 19th of February about 70 asylum seekers led a peaceful demonstration they yelled ‘Don’t kill refugees close Nauru! Where is justice, Where is freedom? On shore not offshore! Where are my rights? Death to racism! Death to discrimination! Down with racism! We want freedom! Aussie Aussie Aussie, stop killing refugees! Long live freedom! Long live justice! Long live humanity! Long live equality! Long live refugees! Protection not detention!’

“Today [20 February] one of the asylum seekers climbed on the top of the partially completed accommodation building and tried to jump off. One the officers grabbed his legs and pulled him back from the edge. Then the Wilsons guards lay the man down and put pressure on his neck also punched him.”

The conditions on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island, where another of Australia’s “offshore” detention centres is located, are no better. Detainees wrote last month:

“[W]e live in a very very bad situation here. We had 5 try to suicide here, in last two days, which no one has seen one of them, but the guard says they’re alive. We have women and children here. They shouldn’t see this kind of living. We all were a healthy people, but now all got sick, because of very hot weather, lack of medical facility, and mabye because of the pills we’re taking for MALARIA. Please help us …”

There are nearly 700 people locked in these two camps. In December the UN High Commissioner for Refugees described the conditions on Nauru as “harsh”. Now even Fairfax can report them as “hell”. Yet the government is expanding the centres to accommodate more, and has pledged almost $3 billion over four years to build and operate the camps.

The expansion of the prison camps comes at a time when single mothers are having welfare entitlements cut. To add insult to injury, Martin Bowles, secretary of the Immigration Department, reported to a Senate inquiry earlier this month that some of the costs of constructing the Manus Island facitlity may be counted as part of Australia’s so-called “aid” budget to Papua New Guinea!

Prime Minister Gillard’s response to the release of the reports was callous. Hunger strikes or attempted suicide “doesn’t get you anywhere”, she reportedly told journalists. Her words are as inhuman as they are predictable. This is exactly the sort of response these concentration camps are designed to produce. As Asylum Seeker Resource Centre founder Kon Karapanagiotidis said yesterday, “These are not camps for processing; they’re camps designed for the psychological torture of asylum seekers”.

The camps should be shut and those held inside should be released, granted permanent protection and paid compensation for the trauma this government is inflicting.

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Comments

Comment from Kay
Time February 28, 2013 at 3:50 pm

Well, if I was truly escaping genocide, rape and other threats or realities of violence, I think I would be glad to be safe from it – albeit in Nauru or Manus. I see the hunger strikes, attempted suicides etc as pressure being applied to try to change government policy – as sort of blackmail. Just for once I agree with Julia Gillard.

If these are economic refugees however, I can understand their frustration at not being able to get on and improve on the circumstances that probably prevailed in their country of origin. I would imagine it is a matter what has really driven these people to Australia.

But hey, this posting will probably just subject me to all sorts of obscene insults like before. God help anyone who has the temerity to have another view!