AWB Fiasco III

Greg Sheridan in the Australian.

I THINK it’s time we all took a cold shower on AWB (formerly the Australian Wheat Board) and its participation in the Iraq oil-for-food scandal. According to the Volcker inquiry, about 2253 companies from 66 countries were involved in paying kickbacks to the Saddam Hussein regime as part of their trade under oil-for-food.

My thoughts exactly. If you do business in this part of the world you pay bakshees. If you don’t pay you don’t sell. Would ‘Tricky’ Rudd or Beasley have compensated the thousands of Australian wheat growers for loss of sales if the crop stayed in the bins?

No way.

Australians see that it’s all about the ALP trying to score a strike against the government; that the government most probably didn’t know about the details of the case and that after all, the AWB did what it was chartered to do – sell the wheat crop in extremely difficult circumstances. As well as getting money to the wheat growers for their efforts they most probably saved lives in Iraq. Kids had food for a change.

I guess that in the total absence of any coherent policies the ALP can not hope to win power; they can only hope to bring the government down by a technicality.

The broader question of corruption is very slippery. When people are accused of corruption, this normally means acting dishonestly, stealing money for themselves. Many people connected to the UN, such as Kofi Annan’s son Koji, made a lot of money personally through oil-for-food. No one is alleging that folks at AWB were improperly pocketing money themselves.

It’s not about the AWB, they are just the catalyst for the ALP to attack. There will be any amount of Australian companys who will have paid ‘fees’ to get goods over the wharves in Indonesia, through customs in some South African excuse for a country or even into a European market. It just happens and the only difference is the actual word used to describe the ‘fees’. In fact, if any company tells you they don’t pay ‘fees’ to get goods into Indonesia I would say they are telling porkies.

The ABC, SBS and ALP should get over it and start acting as a constructive opposition. There are plenty of bills to debate and the AWB will not cost Howard any votes.

Beazley and Downer on cartoons

OPPOSITION Leader Kim Beazley has condemned the publication in Australia of controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed.

Mr Beazley said he believed publishing the caricatures was “extremely unwise”.

“It’s an offensive cartoon and it shouldn’t be printed,” he said.

I’m sure he meant to say they are offensive cartoons.

Brisbane’s Courier-Mail newspaper has published one of the 12 cartoons, while political commentator Tim Blair has posted all 12 on his website.The cartoons, which were first published in Denmark, have sparked violent protests around the Muslim world.

Downer says;

“I see the cartoons they produce of me and John Howard and so on and they’re usually incredibly offensive but that is just the nature of our society.”

“I think around the world people have got to learn that not everybody needs to agree with them or have the same interpretations that they have of events or people, and they need to demonstrate a higher degree of tolerance.”

Mr Beazley also has condemned the global violence over the cartoons, as “absurd and disproportionate”.

It might be procative to publish the cartoons but the alternative is to be seen as buckling under fatwas and only printing in our media what these 7th century zealots authorise.

Not this little black duck.

Meanwhile, Al JAzeera reports that Iran is planning a series of Holocaust cartoons in retaliation

Iran’s largest selling newspaper has announced it is holding a contest on cartoons of the Holocaust in response to the publishing in European papers of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.

When no Mosques are destroyed, no riots eventuate, no Iranian flags burnt and no threats made they are going to appear stupid.

So stupid in fact that they won’t even realize it.

7th Century Q & A

From Arab News
Q. May I ask whether it is permissible to read the Qur’an without having performed ablution or wudhu?

The answer, whilst putting several scholars points of view, settles on this answer.
….. reading the Qur’an is a more involved task than holding it, and there is no disagreement among scholars that while it is better to have ablution before reading the Qur’an, it is permissible to read it without ablution.

Or thinking, as reader HRT suggests.

I’m not normally one to denigrate or redicule religion per se but for an article of this nature to be published in a major daily Arabian newspaper is akin to the Australian telling Catholics how to accept the host at Holy Communion.

They still have a long way to go.

AWB Fiasco II

From the Australian: Angry US slams Iraq bribe denials.

Well they would say that, wouldn’t they?

THE chairman of a powerful US Senate committee is demanding Australian ambassador to Washington Dennis Richardson explain the Howard Government’s role in the Iraqi wheat affair, saying he is “deeply troubled” by an apparent attempt to cover up the scandal.

It’s not quite the ‘US’ it is Republican Senator Norm Coleman, who is chairing the Senate’s inquiry into “illegal, under-the-table” payments to Saddam Hussein’s regime and I would suggest he is not so much ‘deeply troubled’ as ‘very excited’ at the possible damage to Australia’s wheat trade.

The good Senator represents Minnesota that just happens to produce 15% of the US Spring wheat crop.(scroll down) Now let’s see; spring in the US would be autumn in Australia which must be about when our summer harvest is ready for sale.

I’m not suggesting the man has any vested interests in knocking Australia’s wheat sales. I don’t have to, it’s obvious.

Neither am I suggesting the enquiry shouldn’t run it’s course but the media needs to point out obvious connections when they splash headlines scross their pages. Maybe if

Just a thought.

AWB fiasco

With Parliament still in Summer break the ALP are beside themselves with the AWB fiasco. Ever keen to prove Howard micromanages every single aspect of government they are braying in ecstacy trying to get the public to pick up on a connection between Howard writing a standard ‘PM encouraging the troops’ type letter and extrapolate that to mean he is saying ‘pay all the bribe money you need, just get the job done’

Not working, guys.

The media move into feeding frenzy mode nowithstanding there a very few morsels. Terry McCrann, writing in the Herald nails it with this piece.

THE John Fairfax print media group’s Marian Wilkinson clearly thought on Sunday night she had been handed the much-desired ‘smoking gun’. Pity for her, it was a smoking pop-gun.

That though didn’t stop Wilkinson, who preaches, so to speak, at the David Marr School of Hate-Howard Journalism, from throwing facts and fairness — to coin a phrase — completely overboard.

But the best take is at The Currency Lad’s place where he talks of an amusing outbreak of Howard Derangement Syndrome

Well worth the read.


Indons not allowed to get ‘lively’ news

From the JAKARTA Post under the banner “News from foreign broadcasters cannot be aired lively

For a moment I thought they meant the items must be presented in a sombre manner. But no…it’s just plain old censorship and accountability.

JAKARTA (AP): Indonesia next month will begin enforcing a law that bans local broadcasters from relaying live news packages provided by foreign stations like the British Broadcasting Corp.and Voice of America, Minister of Communications Sofyan Djalil said Monday.

Stations will have to first receive the broadcasts, edit them and then rebroadcast from a local relay station, he said.Sofyan said the reason for the law was so that viewers could hold “someone responsible” if the broadcasts were offensive.

The more things change…….

Amnesty say US shouldn’t kill enemy

From the Guardian/Observer

A missile fired from a Predator killed more than 20 innocent people in Pakistan earlier this month in a botched US bid to kill Ayman al Zawahiri, the deputy leader of al-Qaeda, and similar attacks have been made in Iraq, Yemen and on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

Excuse me. Where did the “innocent people” bit come from. According to an AP report;

… a provincial government of Pakistan had released a statement that said four or so “foreign terrorists” (they were not identified beyond that) had been killed in the CIA missile attack. And Pakistani intelligence officials told AP that Zawahiri had been invited to a dinner in the village but did not show up. Pakistan’s Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao would only say that there was a “possibility” that foreigners–presumably, militants–were killed in the strike. Officials in the tribal zone where the missile landed said separately that the strike was aimed at foreign militants invited to a dinner and that up to five of them were killed — the first such confirmation by Pakistan.

They then try and leave the impression that a previous Predator strike only killed one al-Qaeda operative but they use the “alleged” tag to indicate they don’t believe he’s a bad guy and that the US shouldn’t have struck.

An earlier case of what President George W Bush described as ‘sudden justice’ occurred in Yemen on 3 November 2002, when six men were killed in a car, blown up by missiles fired from a CIA-controlled Predator drone. One of the people in the vehicle was alleged to be a senior member of al-Qaeda, Abu Ali al-Harithi.

Reading that you would believe that maybe one guy was a terrorist and then only maybe when in fact he was a senior el Qaeda terrorist and the other five guys were also terrorists. Would a guy as senior as Abu Ali al-Harithi be driving around with the local boy-scout troop?

From the Age November 6, 2002

A missile fired by an unmanned American aircraft over Yemen has killed six suspected al Qaeda terrorists on the first occasion the Predator drone has been used outside Afghanistan.

A senior United States Government official said Yemeni officials had identified one of the men killed on Sunday as Abu Ali al-Harithi, an al Qaeda leader and one of the terrorist network’s top figures in Yemen.

Al-Harithi was one of the suspected planners of the October, 2000, attack on the USS Cole in which 17 sailors were killed while the ship was berthed in Aden and has been linked to the October 7 bombing of a French oil tanker off the coast of Yemen.

All this is good stuff until Annesty gets their hands on it.

According to Amnesty, under international standards, extra-judicial killings are always unlawful, and ‘a state of war or threat of war, internal political instability or any public emergency may not be invoked as a justification for such executions’.

The US are at war and some lawyer says they can’t kill the enemy. “Extra judicial” is a cute feel-good phrase that means nothing in the battle field.

What do they want the Yanks to do? Issue a summons?

Chicken Little was right after all.

Defence building collapses in Canberra.

Staff at the Australian Defence College began to evacuate after hearing rumbling in the roof of the five-year-old building about 4.15pm (AEDT) today.

Several people sustained cuts and bruises, but there were no serious injuries.

The roof collapsed into the top floor of the two-level building, Australian Defence College commander Major General David Morrison said.

“There was an indication that something was amiss and staff started to evacuate the building when the roof came down to desk top and filing cabinet level,” he said.

Eight people had been in the immediate vicinity of the roof collapse, but 20 were in the entire building

Does the reporter mean the Australian Defence Force Academy?

UPDATE: Readers tell me it is the Weston Creek Annexe, which houses the Command and Staff College, and the Defence and Strategic Studies Centre. There will some contractors in the ACT having a poor sleep tonight.

Good news for diabetics

INSULIN that is inhaled rather than injected could be available in Australia within a year.

The revolutionary form of insulin, which does not need to be administered with a needle, was approved by health regulators in the US yesterday.

Exubera, a dry powder insulin that more quickly controls blood sugar levels, has the potential to make treating diabetes easier for up to 1.4 million Australians who have some form of the disease.

“This will help improve the quality of life for the many Australians who have to inject insulin several times a day,” said Dennis Yue, head of the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital’s diabetes research foundation in Sydney.

“Exubera can be used by people with both type 1 or type 2 diabetes, but I think doctors will initially give it to adults,” Professor Yue said.

If you know a dibaetic make sure they know this – it will dramaticaly improve their quality of life

1 30 31 32 33 34 63