Retired infantry officer. Conservative by nature and politics; Happily married and father and grandfather of eight. Loves V8 powered Range Rovers, Golden Retrievers, good books and technology and think there should be open season on Greenies. Born in the mid forties and overdue for servicing but most parts still work.

Legacy, Cambodia and cars

Legacy Militaria Auction…..now that explains my lack of blogging. Just after the planning week and conference for a reunion of 7RAR, my Vietnam Alma Mater, I had to catch up on work for the Cambodia project as the Professor running the Asian end came to Australia to see us. Much planning and spreadsheets in between evening dinners as we went firm on plans to set up a village in Kampot Cambodia as a pepper plantation with housing, wells, irrigation and farmyard animals to feed 20 families.

I penned this article for a local church newsletter this week – it explains what we are trying to achieve.

Kampot Cambodia. A long way from Brisbane but close to the heart of a group of locals intent on changing the lives of people in poverty stricken Cambodia. After the ravages of Pol Pot, Cambodia is in dire straights and needs help .During a conversation between three men In Hanoi two years ago they resolved to stop talking about it and actually do something.

Kampot, the name of a town and a province about 150 kilometres SW of Phnom Penh, is home to Cambodia’s pepper culture. Kampot pepper is renowned as one of the world’s finest and in Colonial days a French Chef in Paris wouldn’t dare offer diners a meal without Kampot Pepper. Pol Pot put an end to this very successful industry and it is the return of pepper cultivation that the group see as offering hope for the locals.

Prof. Adrie P. van Gelderen, an associate professor at Hanoi University believes that ” Education is the answer to structural and sustainable improvement of people’s living standards” He was one of the originators of the scheme along with Brian O’Reilly from Nudgee College. The plan involves purchasing 22 hetares of land (already achieved), building local architecture housing, digging wells and planting a small pepper plantation.

The Cambodians will be selected from dispossessed local family units and it is planned to have 20 such families involved within five years.

The mothers will be given a small plot of land to grow food, pigs and chickens will be provided along with fencing to secure them while the men will be paid local labour rates to develop the plantation and plant and tend other fruit trees for cash crops.

It is envisaged the project will eventuate in the parents becoming sufficiently secure so as to encourage them to send their children to the local school. While Professor Van Gelederen is handling the Asian end of setting up a local NGO in Kampot the Australian end, all recruited by Brian O’Reilly, travelled to Kampot last December at their own expense to see first-hand the magnitude of the problem.

Other than a second hand utility and a small salary for a Cambodian Project Manager all funds will go to the housing and plantation infrastructure. There will be no Toyota 100 Series vehicles or western salaries involved in the project.

In the hills around Kampot, where Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge made their last stand against the Vietnamese; where
previously they had summarily executed all the Village elders, the teachers, the beauracrats and trades people, there now exists some hope for the future and it’s people from our own community in North Brisbane that will make it happen


Kev Gillett
TAIGUM

When that was all settled I had to start a three week stint at Legacy helping with catalogueing, photographing, valueing and maintaining a database for some 400 lots whilst building a web page to make it available to our interstate and international bidders.

The website is here Go visit and peruse. You can download a catalogue and over the next two days all pics should be posted. Bid on some history (phone and email bids available) and help the War Widows and their kids. Legacy still has over 100,000 widows on their books.

Whilst at Legacy today I had to sort out computer problems but all I wanted to was play with my new car.

Ah yes…new car. I drive a Series II V8 Discovery and of late have been thinking of changing the V8 for a Discovery deisel. (I must have noticed the fuel bill) I took one for a test drive and was disappointed -moving from a 4.0 li V8 to a 2.6 li TD5 deisel does that to a man. I missed the flick of the right toe that pushed the 180 hp driven two tonne vehicle past all but the fastest traffic and I definitely missed the fact that the whole exercise was smooth and exhilerating.

My long suffering wife took one look at my face and remarked…” We’re not getting a deisel, are we?

No comment but the next day I heard of a good vehicle in a car yard nearby and went and looked at it. A 2001 V8 Range Rover (I’m moving a long way from the deisel). It looked great and drove well but it was relatively cheap so I presumed something was wrong with it. I took it the people who have looked after my Land Rovers for years and got them to give it a pre- purchase check over.

Nothing wrong with it….I did the deal.

I see the car as a means of winding up Greenies and all those who believe the Gospel of the Later Day Alarmists. You know the type…Tim Flannery, for example, who believes I should be walking to work or at most driving a Prius. Others suggest the sea rises will force me into a boat but I don’t believe that either. Some research indicates the Range Rover is one of the most prolific of all vehicles in manufacture of CO2. It continually rapes Mother Earth with it’s fuel sonsumption and if I concentrate I can terrify Greenies as I pass them on the highway.

In fact the vehicle is so bad that the company who make then have a Carbon-offset programme.

The vehicle behind is a 1966 Series Two Land Rover that has all the anti-green qualities of it’s big brother minus power, comfort, accessories and youth. My wife said it was one or the other so the old Landie is up for sale.

I’m glad she didn’t say it’s me or the car….I just hate hard decisions!

Near miss the only news

A Chinook is fired at without any hits and it makes the press. I guess you’d call that good news

AUSTRALIAN soldiers and journalists have experienced a close call in Afghanistan when Taliban insurgents fired on their helicopter. Television footage shot by SBS cameraman Jamie Kidston on board the chopper on Monday shows what appears to be a rocket-propelled grenade missing the Chinook by about 20m.

Australian commander at Kandahar, Lieutenant Colonel Kevin Humphreys said today the crew were unaware of the close call until after a review of the TV tapes.

A miss makes the news because journalists captured it on video but the crew and military pax on board wouldn’t have ever raised the issue.

Mildly interesting but really it’s just part of the job.

Both Josh and Liz come home

From Defence Media.

Following the successful recovery mission in Fiji last week, Special Air Service Trooper Joshua Porter will be returned home to his wife and family at RAAF Base Richmond on board a Hercules aircraft at 3pm today (Tuesday, 13 March).

A military bearer party comprising of seven of his mates will be on hand to honour their fallen comrade and accompany him on his return home.

Trooper Porter’s wife and family will receive the casket at a private family reception. The family has requested that the reception at RAAF Base Richmond remain a private activity with no media access, and that their privacy is respected during this difficult period.

From the ex military network.

It has come to my notice that Liz O’Neil, killed in theYogyakarta air crash, was the daughter of Keith and Lisa O’Neil. Keith was the Commanding Officer OF 8RAR in Vietnam.

My condolences to both the Porters and the O’Neils

Radical protesters get secret payout

I don’t know about you but I find this highly offensive. The S11 Protesters from the 2000 civil riots are to be awarded damages for being treated harshly by the Victorian Police. $700,000 to the protesters and $600,000 legal bill. A group of 47 litigants blamed heavy-handed policing for injuries sustained at a riotous anti-globalisation protest outside the World Economic Forum at Melbourne’s Crown casino in September 2000.

Mr Bracks said the court case had been dragging on for four years and said Victoria Police had settled the claim on the advice of their insurers, who wanted to cut their losses on ballooning legal costs. “(It’s) a good outcome which does not expose the police to further litigation,” Mr Bracks said.

There shouldn’t have been any legal costs; the whole debacle should not have got to court and how can anyone, in their right mind say it’s a good outcome.

In the State of Victoria criminals who suffered injuries whilst resistiing arrest or legal ‘move on’ orders can sue the police for the injuries that they brought on themselves. No wonder thousands of Victorians are flooding into Queensland every month.

Burke fiasco gets first Federal scalp

The height of the bar has been set.

FEDERAL Human Services minister Ian Campbell today resigned from Cabinet over his meeting last year with disgraced former WA premier Brian Burke.

Will Rudd go under or over the bar?

Meanwhile Kevin Rudd’s story is being attacked;

“I went, as I said the other day in Canberra, as the guest of (Labor MP) Mr Graham Edwards, so what I said the other day stands,” Mr Rudd told reporters in Melbourne.

“I went purely as Mr Graham Edwards’ guest,” he said.

The Weekend Australian quotes a Perth businessman;

…..(who was) one of Mr Burke’s clients (and) who was invited to the dinner, told The Weekend Australian yesterday the dinner was deliberately arranged and paid for by Mr Burke to introduce “a future leader of the Opposition” to West Australian businessmen, who were his clients, and also to state bureaucrats. The guest said the Labor leadership, including the previous leader Mark Latham, then leader Kim Beazley and Mr Rudd as a prospective leader, had been discussed at the dinner.

Labor’s more optimistic souls hope Rudd can ride out this saga. They point to his honesty in fessing up to making a mistake, and hope the cleanskin image has not been too badly tarnished.

Honesty? I thought he said he only went as a guest of Graham Edwards. He didn’t even know Burke was going to be there and now we hear Burke organized the whole dinner for Rudd…….tellng porkies in the House Mr Rudd?

Meanwhile, as if the Rudd/Burke controversy isn’t doing enough damage to Labour’s chances, Kevin Rudd has firmly committed Labor to scrapping the government’s Work Choices legislation, in an address to a party conference.

Mr Rudd vowed that if Labor is elected to office at the election expected late this year, it would “consign these laws to the dustbin of history”.

Small businesses are going to love that one.

Good week for us conservatives.

Rudd never knew Burke was a bad boy

Burkes influence moves east; Brian Burke, ex Premier of WA, previously charged and goaled for corruption, is shaking the ALP world as the West Australian Corruption and Crimes Commission releases daily reports on Burke’s control of the WA Carpenter government.

The Coalition in Canberra have spent all day attacking Kevin Rudd over his meetings with Burke and all Kevin can come up with is this;

“Would it have been better for me not to have met with Mr Burke, had I known what Mr Burke was up to at the time, of course,” Mr Rudd said.

“Did I have the faintest idea that Mr Burke was engaged in activities which are now the subject of the CCC, of course I did not.

Sorry, don’t believe him,. Burke is a personal friend of Kim Beasley and Graham Edwards; he is entrenched in WA Labour circles and is one of the biggest power brokers in WA. If Rudd didn’t know what was going on then he should be questioned for not having a tab on the ALPs machinations.

“So therefore, with the benefit of 20:20 hindsight, of course I would not have met with Mr Burke. I had no knowledge of those matters then.”

One wonders if Rudds 20:20 hindsight goes back as far as WA Inc. You remember Kevin? Paper bags of cash in his office safe..goaled for corruption….yeah that guy.

UPDATE: Maybe I missed this yesterday but it’s worth mentioning. Hidden in the text, halfway down the page is this startling revelation;

Mr Rudd said he was unaware of the ban on contact with Mr Burke imposed by then WA premier Geoff Gallop.

Everybody in Australia who reads newspapers was aware of the ban on contact with Brian Burke imposed by Geoff Gallop except Kevin.

Yeah, I believe that!

Happy Birthday

This week we celebrate a special birthday – Monica Lewinsky turned 31.

Can you believe it!!

Seems like only yesterday she was crawling around the White House floor on her hands and knees.

The honeymoon continues

Many have joined the “Wish it were so” division as the news that Maxine McKew has nominated for Bennelong hits the media. The ABC managed to extract a statement from former Liberal national president John Valder who tipped John Howard could lose his seat of Bennelong.

True, he could but there’s a lot of campaigning between could and did.

The ABC’s electoral analyst Antony Green suggests

Prime Minister John Howard should be worried that high-profile media personality Maxine McKew is standing as the ALP candidate in his electorate of Bennelong……

Maybe, but being a talking head high-profile celebrity is a long way from being a believable politician. After all, the other celebrity Garret, isn’t exactly starring.

A comment at Matt Price’s blog suggests it leaves Labor open to charges of seeking salvation in celebrity rather than with a battle-hardened, local candidate and he is not a Howard fan. He could be right though.

I imagine Peter Costello noticed the nomination with interest but I doubt he’s booked the removalist van to move to the lodge yet.

Shaping up to be an interesting battle.

And your point is?

Letter to the Australian;

CONSIDERING Prime Minister Howard has been so accomodating to US Vice-President Cheney, I wonder if he would be equally as welcoming to the Iranian leadership in return? I think it would only be fair to listen to Iran’s side of the story, considering Howard and Cheney have obviously been considering the possibility of attacking Iran during this rather bizarre visit by the US second-in-command.
Mike Anderson
Lyneham, ACT

Mike, you must have missed it. We have listened to Rafsanjanihe…in a speech a couple of years ago he stated that Nuclear weapons could solve the problem of Israel and added;

…. Muslims must surround colonialism and force them [the colonialists] to see whether Israel is beneficial to them or not. If one day, he said, the world of Islam comes to possess the weapons currently in Israel’s possession [meaning nuclear weapons] – on that day this method of global arrogance would come to a dead end. This, he said, is because the use of a nuclear bomb in Israel will leave nothing on the ground, whereas it will only damage the world of Islam.

What’s your next point Mike?

Shooting incident at Dili Airport

From Defence Media (no link)

Today at approximately 0850 hours the International Security Force (ISF) responded to a disturbance at the Dili Airport Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) Camp.

During the incident an ADF soldier was attacked with steel arrows which are potentially lethal weapons. He defended himself by shooting the attacker, resulting in the death of one Timorese national.

The ADF regrets any incident that involves the loss of life.

ISF soldiers operate under strict rules of engagement. These rules allow ISF soldiers to defend themselves, and other persons whom they are assigned to protect.

The incident will be fully investigated in cooperation with UNPOL and Timor Leste authorities.

Seems fair enough to me and even though it sounds one-sided, steel arrows and a determined assailant can be just as fatal as a 5.56mm round.

I’m just glad the digger survived.

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