from the box

Thanks for all the fish

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

English Refugees enter Australia illegaly
About 50,000 people are illegally living and working in Australia, mainly holidaymakers who don't want to leave our sunny shores.

Figures released by the Department of Immigration (DIMIA) yesterday show more than 40,000 of the overstayers had entered Australia on visitor visas, and most had stayed up to a year over their entitlement. The typical culprit is likely to be a man from Britain aged from 24 -31, or an English woman over 60. Golly, where are the screams? Should we shoot the planes out of the sky? If refugees come by boat we shoot them out of the water

The effort to locate overstayers had been helped by the establishment of a "Dob-In Line". Immigration Minister and National Obesity Winner Amanda Vanstone said dobbing in people had been "a raging success."

Scared of Santa
And who wouldn't be? In some of these Scarey Santa Shots the jolly fat man is just appalling!

Sunday, December 25, 2005


Howard's Criminal Crony to head 'Fair Pay' Commission

photo ; Harper, the man who "loves sweet baby Jesus', runs a business into the ground, lies to the authorities, trades while insolvent and steals the wages from the staff.

John Howard has leapt to the failed businessman and thief's defence. This is the criminal crony who will head Howard's key workplace agency, the Fair Pay Commission, saying he has been unfairly attacked over his failed company that went belly-up owing workers more than $700,000.

Workplace Relations Minister Kevin Andrews, who appointed Professor Harper to the high profile job in October, said the government was aware of the economist's history with the company.

"There has been absolutely no wrongdoing,'' Andrews said. "Prof Harper is an eminently qualified person to head up the Australian Fair Pay Commission. The revelations do not cloud Prof Harper's appointment in any way, and only add to his qualifications for the position."

Prof Harper was a director of the Australian Derivatives Exchange (ADX), a futures exchange that went into administration after trading for some months while insolvent, breaching the operating licence.

Make sense to you? A man who breaks compamy law to ensure his own profit, then leaves the workers out in the cold without their pay. Great material for a 'fair pay' Commissioner.

How on earth can we expect any justice from a failed businessman, criminal and thief?

Friday, December 23, 2005

Realistic Nativity
A nativity scene that includes naked women and transvestites standing near the baby Jesus has caused outrage in Italy.

The scene was created by the Scuotto siblings from Naples, who are famous for carving traditional nativity scenes. Their latest, more controversial, offering is now on show at the San Giacomo church in Rome. Father Raffaele has refused to remove the set despite members of the congregation expressing their outrage at the "blasphemous" scene.

Defending the sordid depiction of the birth of Christ, Salvatore Scuotto said: "Such scenes are a part of reality. The real scandal is when figures such as George Bush are used in nativity scenes".

Missing Lions?
Five lions have been found in an abandoned circus truck in the middle of a Brazilian motorway in the middle of the interstate road between Uberaba and Conceição das Alagoas.

A police spokesman said "We could not believe our eyes and ears when we saw all those lions together in this abandoned truck in the middle of the road - and boy they looked hungry!"

Meanwhile the lions are being kept at a police station where they are eating 10 kilos of meat per day each.

How's your DNA?
An aristocrat is planning to give his £1million mansion away to a total stranger - with the right DNA.

Baronet Sir Benjamin Slade, 59, will hand it over to the person with the closest DNA match to his. "None of my relatives wants anything to do with my dump. So as long as the new man pays the bills and looks after the place, I don't mind who inherits it."

He tried to sell the restored nine bedroom house with 1,500 acres, three lakes, 430 cattle and 12 peacocks in North Newton, Somerset, but couldn't find a buyer.

He and partner Kirsten Hughes, 39, do not want the responsibility of the home anymore. Sir Ben said: "If I had the choice I'd live in a council house."

A TV firm filming his quest has so far traced 5,000 Slades in the US with a potential heir in North Carolina. How's your DNA?

The Gasman Cometh
A couple who waited all day for a gasman to reconnect their supply were shocked to discover that an engineer had called at their home at 3am.

Michael and Catherine Hopcroft from Bristol woke to find a card from Wales & West Utilities on the doormat. "Did they really think we would be up? I really couldn't believe it, I thought it was a joke."

The gas was first shut off at the couple's home as a precaution while workmen dug up the road outside to fix a gas leak. They were told in the afternoon that the work had been completed and an engineer would visit shortly to reconnect the meter."

Wednesday, December 21, 2005







A whippet wears Christmas deer antlers at an international dog show in Kiev, December 18, 2005. REUTERS/Ivan Chernichkin
For Australians

While you're sending xmas cards etc to your mates, spare a thought for the pollies who need a little encouragement at this time of year

Send your MP a xmas greeting

While you're about it, read the latest on Your Rights at Work

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Six Degrees

Here's a way to test the theory of Six Degrees of Separation in the Kevin Bacon Game The object of the game is to start with any actor or actress who has been in a movie and connect them to Kevin Bacon in the smallest number of links possible. Two people are linked if they've been in a movie together. For example, Alfred Hitchcock can be connected to Kevin Bacon by :

Alfred Hitchcock was in Show Business at War (1943) with Orson Welles, and Orson Welles was in A Safe Place (1971) with Jack Nicholson, and Jack Nicholson was in A Few Good Men (1992) with Kevin Bacon

Yahoo offer interesting info on the old 6 degrees. The theory that everyone in the world is separated by at most five acquaintances was first proposed in a 1929 short story by the Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy in a story called "Chains".

In 1967, psychologist Stanley Milgram tested the theory by sending several letters to random people in the Midwest of USA. The letter featured the name, address, and occupation of a single person on the East Coastof USA and participants were asked to forward the letters to the people who they thought were most likely to know the person. It took an average of five intermediaries to reach the target.

The experiment came into some scrutiny afterwards, but the results were published in Psychology Today and gave birth to the phrase "six degrees of separation." John Guare popularized the term with his play, which later became a film starring Will Smith.

The original 1967 experiment was repeated in 2001 with email, with these
Similar Results

Spookey!

Monday, December 19, 2005




Merry Xmas All
A guinea pig wears a Santa Claus costume at an animal show in Moscow November 27, 2005. Moscow's Club of Friends of Guinea Pigs organised an exhibition of their favourite pets on Sunday that included a fashion show and a sprinting contest. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Coca Cola is introducing a new slogan (while busily introduces a whole new set of beverages that are not Coca Cola) and getting ready to flood the market with the new slogan: ‘Welcome to the Coke side of life!’.

They are optimistic that they can get most of the supermodels in the world to appear in the adverts since most of the supermodels in the world spend most of their time stumbling around on the coke side of life.
Vale Jack Anderson

Jack Anderson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning muckraking columnist who struck fear into the hearts of corrupt or secretive politicians, inspiring Nixon operatives to plot his murder, died Saturday. He was 83.

Anderson gave up his syndicated Washington Merry-Go-Round column at age 81 in July 2004, after Parkinson's disease left him too ill to continue. He had been hired by the column's founder, Drew Pearson, in 1947. The column broke a string of big scandals, from Eisenhower assistant Sherman Adams taking a vicuna coat and other gifts from a wealthy industrialist in 1958 to the Reagan administration's secret arms-for-hostages deal with Iran in 1986.

Anderson's column appeared in some 1,000 newspapers in its heyday. Anderson took over the column after Pearson's death in 1969, working with a changing cast of co-authors and staff over the years. Considered one of the fathers of investigative reporting, Anderson was renowned for his tenacity, aggressive techniques and influence in the nation's capital.

Anderson won a 1972 Pulitzer Prize for reporting that the Nixon administration secretly tilted toward Pakistan in its war with India. He also published the secret transcripts of the Watergate grand jury.

Such scoops earned him a spot on President Nixon's "enemies list." Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy has described how he and other Nixon political operatives planned ways to silence Anderson permanently - such as slipping him LSD or staging a fatal car crash.

Peace and Goodwill
A lion cub caresses a domestic cat as another lion rests in a private house in Kharkov, about 450 km (279.4 miles) northeast of Kiev December 15, 2005. The three-month-old lions live in the house of Tatyana Efremova who also keeps a number of other exotic animals. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich

Friday, December 16, 2005






Gems from the Archeological Photo Contest

There are more online at
Contest Entries
101 Dumbest Moments in Business
I've just been reading the 2005 annual review of the most shameful, dishonest, and just plain stupid moments of the past year. (By Adam Horowitz, Mark Athitakis, Mark Lasswell, and Owen Thomas)

Some of the "moments" are funny, some are nauseating

Example One : James Joseph Minder, chairman of gunmaker Smith & Wesson, is forced to resign when newspaper reporters discover that, before becoming a corporate exec, he'd spent 15 years behind bars for a string of armed robberies and an attempted prison escape.

Example Two When you're a bike-lock maker whose slogan is "Tough World, Tough Locks," it doesn't get much tougher than finding out that most of the locks you've been making for the last 30 years can be picked with a Bic pen. That, sadly, is what happens to Ingersoll-Rand subsidiary Kryptonite in September, after bloggers begin posting videos showing just how easy it is to pop open the company's ubiquitous U-shaped locks

Example Three A clerk at the Fashion Bug store in Greensburg, Pa., accepts a $200 bill—and gives the customer $100.58 in change—even though the bill is festooned with clues that it might not be legal tender, including a picture of President George W. Bush and the serial number DUBYA4U2001.

101 Dumbest Moments in Business

Friday, December 09, 2005

Funeral of Nguyen Tuong Van

More than 3,000 people attended a funeral service yesterday for 25-year-old Nguyen Tuong Van, expressing the deeply felt public opposition to his barbaric execution by the Singapore government last Friday.

Mourners lined up outside the entrance to St Patrick’s Cathedral in East Melbourne up to an hour before the 11 a.m. service to sign their names on condolence sheets. Many wore white—the traditional colour of Vietnamese mourning.

While media outlets, including Melbourne’s Age newspaper, had insisted the previous day that Van’s funeral not become a protest against the death penalty, the thousands who attended his service were determined to register their abhorrence of a young life cut short and of the practice of capital punishment worldwide.

Those who filled the cathedral’s wooden pews, and the aisles and church perimeters, represented a broad cross section of ordinary working people. Old people and young, Vietnamese and Australian, immigrants from every continent, university, TAFE and high school students and entire families attended the nearly two-hour requiem mass, many with small children in strollers.

Outside on the cathedral steps, speakers broadcast the service to the dozens of mourners spilling out into the forecourt. The funeral mass was conducted in English and Vietnamese.

An order of service handed to mourners contained the final words of Van Nguyen written just two hours before his hanging.

Nguyen was arrested at Singapore airport in December 2002, en route to Australia, carrying 396 grams of heroin. The offence carries a mandatory death sentence in Singapore, yet the Howard government made no attempt to save the life of the Australian citizen of Vietnamese descent, and opposed legal attempts to block his execution by an appeal to the International Court of Justice.

The outpouring of opposition by ordinary people was in stark contrast to the response of the Labor Party. Victorian Labor Premier Steve Bracks, who had earlier stated that he would go about business as usual on the morning of Nguyen’s execution, told the press on Tuesday that he would not be attending the funeral because he did not want to “glorify” Nguyen.

Eulogies delivered at the service by Van Nguyen’s friends and by his defence lawyer Lex Lasry QC, described Nguyen’s sense of compassion and concern for others.

Lasry addressed the service both as a lawyer and on behalf of the family. “Those of us who practice law do so because we believe in the system of justice. For us Van was enormously defendable.”

Quoting the words of Martin Luther King, “injustice anywhere affects justice everywhere”, Lasry made clear that Nguyen’s execution had broad legal and political implications.

“Aside from the political debate on capital punishment which will go on, many ordinary people have felt for Van. He reawakened within them strong emotions of humanity and compassion.”

Bronwyn Lew, a close friend of Van’s who had campaigned tirelessly for the overturn of his death sentence, said that Van Nguyen had touched many lives. With just days left to live, he wanted to answer each and every one of the letters of support that he received in his prison cell. “He believed we have to make use of the time we have left. His selflessness was unparalleled.

“He was the baby in death row and the big brother to those in need.” In Singapore, she said, relatives of Nguyen’s fellow death row inmates attended a service in appreciation of Van’s support for their own departed loved ones.

As Van Nguyen’s mother Kim began her long walk down the cathedral’s central aisle, followed by her son’s coffin, the thousands of assembled mourners broke into spontaneous and sustained applause.

Outside crowds stood by in silence as Nguyen’s coffin was placed inside a silver hearse. As the funeral cortege pulled out from the cathedral grounds, Kim waved at people through an open window to show them her appreciation for their support.

Hundreds of people took copies of an article published by the World Socialist Web Site condemning Nguyen’s execution as an act of barbarism. People who spoke to WSWS reporters expressed their utter disgust at the Howard government and the Labor opposition for their desertion of the young man. They also spoke out against capital punishment and a range of other issues, making clear that they had taken the opportunity of the funeral service to demonstrate their solidarity with Nguyen’s family and their hostility to what they regard as the increasingly cruel and inhumane nature of the present political and social order.

Stephanie Logan, an older woman, said: “I think this execution is completely barbaric. I come from Italy—this is what used to be done there in the 1800s. I can’t believe this is happening. It is disgusting. I blame both Howard and Labor.”

Mary, a mother, declared: “It is callous and barbaric. Van Nguyen should have got jail, not this hanging. It is just terrible. If it was John Howard’s kid, they would have got him out. On Friday, Howard just went to a cricket match. The government just wouldn’t do anything.”

A group of young journalists from Indonesia doing a short course at RMIT university attended the funeral and expressed their opposition to the death penalty:

Yuven said: “My opinion is that I reject the death penalty, because everyone has to be given a chance to rearrange their life and future. I think everyone has a right to improve their life. In the church, people are in tears, many Australians are crying. There was a feeling last Friday that protests took place everywhere in Australia.”

Augustinus added: “The service was very respectful of Nguyen. I am totally against capital punishment. Nguyen had already prepared himself to face death. He is at peace now. This is the same as in Indonesia. There should not be the death penalty.”

Otniel said: “I hope this is the last time for an Australian to face the death penalty.”

A retiree who attended, Jenny Lovell, told WSWS: “The government is a bunch of corrupt cowards. They do what they do for political expediency and nothing else. The execution is barbaric. What has it improved in the world?

“All they care about is big business and their mates in government. I suspect that Howard actually concurs with the death penalty.

“The leaders in Australia don’t win the respect of other countries. They’re hypocrites. I’ve just written a letter—in it I said that the symbolism for Howard as prime minister is a gantry with four nooses surrounded by nine rifles. It is a frightening image.”

Jim Felkins, a driver, together with his younger friends Steve, unemployed and Denise, a housewife, expressed their anger at the government. Steve said: “Look at all this legislation going through parliament—industrial relations, anti-terror, welfare to work. We can’t win—it’s either one party or the other. Most people aren’t aware, they’re just going about their daily duties. I’ve got a degree, but I can only get part-time or casual jobs. When I go to Newstart they want me to do work for $14 an hour, or they keep sending me to do the same course over and over again. I don’t know how many times I’ve learnt to write a resume.”

Denise agreed: “I’ve got three children. Under the new law I have to find work next year. I haven’t worked for 12 years. Look at the way they’re treating people with disabilities. The service was really moving, I didn’t known Van—but I feel as though I have known him. He seems like a lovely person. I didn’t cry as much at my own dad’s funeral. To die like that for a silly mistake! I’m so glad I came to the funeral.”

“Look at the media,” Steve pointed out. “They talk about potential terrorists, but is it a beat up? The Muslim cleric who said something two weeks ago—there is great outrage. The media plays a big role in all this.”

Jim Felkins said: “It’s all owned by Kerry Packer or Murdoch, they own every paper in the world. Look at the ploy with China—they go along with all the crimes against humanity—Murdoch will give them good press so he can get his place in China.

“As for Van Nguyen, after what we did to Vietnam, they deserve a bit better than this. It was very moving. It has touched me so much. I’ve lost two sons, and this was like another one.

“Personally, I can’t retire, I can’t afford it. I’ll have to work till I die. This is what it will be like for a lot of people under the new legislation. I work for $15 an hour, a 12-hour day, no holiday pay, no sick pay and no penalty rates in the middle of the night. The government is looking after their rich mates, getting richer and richer. I voted Liberal, I’ll never vote for them again as long as I live.”

Jan, a mother, said: “I’m from Ireland and my mother’s cousin was hanged in prison there in 1946, so this execution has really affected me.

“I was in the UK for five weeks recently and the government wanted legislation to keep people locked away for 90 days. It didn’t get passed for 90 days, only for 28. We know all about that sort of treatment in Ireland.”

Charlotte Lobo, a 20-year-old Engineering-Computer Systems student from RMIT, declared: “I don’t believe in the death penalty. I know he did something wrong but he should not have to pay with his life.

“I think that if the government had got involved three years ago rather than before the last clemency appeal, then something might have been done. But from what I can see, I don’t think that happened.”

Charlotte attended the service by herself. She said that many RMIT students had “put in their hands” for Nguyen. The hand became a symbol for the “Reach Out” campaign initiated by Van Nguyen’s friends Kelly Ng and Bronwyn Lew. Charlotte said thousands of high school and university students had traced copies of their hands with a message for Nguyen and calling on the Singapore government to grant him clemency.

Lobo said her whole family was opposed to Nguyen’s execution.

Con, a small businessman, asked angrily: “Is there an opposition on anything? The way society is now, it is just all about money. At the end of the day you have to have social equality and social justice. There is no social justice in what has happened with this execution. Van Nguyen co-operated with them completely. It is really sad—he realised he had made a mistake.

“The Singapore government and the Australian government are both only interested in international co-operation with the big boys and big business. The small fry get sacrificed.”
Welfare out the window

Costello's 10th budget will push tens of thousands of welfare recipients into paid work under the theme of "responsible measures today, opportunities for tomorrow".

"At the moment we have hundreds of thousands of Australians of working age who have no obligation to look for work even though they are capable of it and that's going to change" Costello said.

Broadly based tax relief is expected to be part of the carrot-and-stick plan to lift Australia's workforce participation rate to help tackle the future cost of the ageing population.

Carrots will include a tax relief package for high income earners worth at least hundreds of millions of dollars.


Sticks will include forcing single mothers to look for work once their youngest child reaches school age and a tougher work test for new disability support pension applicants.

Unemployed people risk longer suspensions of their dole if they fail to meet job search obligations. Those who do not turn up for a job interview would have their payments suspended immediately for two days, and their income support would be cut off for eight weeks if they missed three appointments in a year.

Centrelink would be pushed to suspend payments more often when a Job Network provider reported that someone had failed to turn up. Exemptions would be made for people with disabilities such as episodic mental illnesses.

Mr Costello hopes his 10th - and possibly last - budget will be seen as a bold reform plan that will rein in the nation's skyrocketing welfare bill and put downward pressure on interest rates.

But economists have warned that further tax cuts could increase spending and inflation, encouraging the Reserve Bank to lift interest rates.
From Welfare to Work

Newstart
Full NSA will continue to be paid while a person’s income remains below $63 per fortnight. Commencing 1 July 2006, income between $62 and $250 per fortnight will reduce NSA by 50 cents in the dollar, extending the current range by $108 per fortnight. For income above $250 per fortnight NSA will be reduced by 60 cents in the dollar

Sole Parents
Parents receiving Parenting Payment prior to 1 July 2006 will be able to remain on Parenting Payment under the current entitlement, that is, until their youngest child turns 16. Whilst remaining on Parenting Payment until this time, this group of parents will have a year to seek work voluntarily from 1 July 2006 or when their youngest child turns 6. After that they will become subject to an obligation to seek part-time work. Sole parents on Newstart will continue to receive a pensioner concession card and Pharmaceutical Allowance. Partnered Parents on Newstart will continue to receive the Health Care Card.

Parents applying for Parenting Payment on or after 1 July 2006 will receive parenting payment while their youngest child is less than 6 years old. When their youngest child turns six, this group of parents will receive enhanced Newstart and be subject to an obligation to seek part-time work of at least 15 hours per week.


Mature aged Australians on Newstart Allowance.
From 1 July 2006, the same job search obligations will apply to persons aged 50 – 64 receiving Newstart Allowance as they do for other jobseekers. This measure is expected to lead to savings of $70.5 million over three years.

However, mature aged Newstart Allowance recipients will not be required to participate in work for the dole. Those aged over 55 will also be able to meet their obligations through part-time and voluntary work.
Easy Jail Break
A prisoner has escaped from a small jail in Brazil after a policeman left him in charge while he popped out for lunch.

Policeman, Jose Wilton de Lima, had grown to really trust the prisoner, known as Cristiano, and regularly left the prison in his hands. But finally Cristiano took advantage of the the policeman's lunch break by freeing two other inmates and driving off in his police car.

De Lima, who has been dismissed from his job, said: "I believed he had reformed."

The prisoners are still at large.



Convict wins luxury holiday
Sergei Repinovsky filled in a ticket for a local prize draw sent to him by a relative - hoping to win a teapot for his cell. But instead he won the top prize of an all-expenses five-star trip to London including seven nights in a luxury hotel.


Prisoner escapes for a Big Mac
An escaped prisoner was caught trying to get back into a Tennessee jail with four MacDonald's hamburgers.

He was carrying a package containing clothes, liquor, prescription pills, crack cocaine - and the burgers.


Woman in Male Prison wants to stay
A Peruvian woman spent a month in a male prison in Argentina after she was mistaken for a man. When she was finally discovered and transferred to a women's jail, she asked to be transferred back.

Carla Aguilera was arrested for robbery but told police her name was Manuel Martin Aguilar. She was checked by several policeman but none noticed she was a woman.

An anonymous phone call alerted the police to Mrs Aguilera´s real gender and after a medical examination she was sent to Ezeiza female prison.

A police spokesmperson said: " She insists she is a man and wants to be transferred back to the male prison".



Cold-Hearted Cuts to the Poorest
Howard's massive welfare overhaul will force disability pensioners into work, and put them on the lower Newstart allowance.

Single parents will also be moved to the lower benefit after their youngest child turns eight, but will have to look for work when that child turns six.

It's aimed to get 190,000 people off welfare and back into looking for work.

The government's welfare reforms are just the latest assault on poor people in a world where paid work is increasingly seen as the only way citizens can contribute. The social benefits of treating people humanely and generously have been obscured by propaganda aimed at stigmatising the unemployed as bludgers.

Welfare to Work isn't designed to increase employment opportunities. Rather, it's a punishment to those who would choose an 'easy' life on welfare.

Meantime, more tax cuts have been passed for those earning over $100,000 p.a.



Bright Lights over Melbourne's Northern Suburbs
A bright object streaked across part of Victoria Wednesday night lighting up the sky as far as Mildura .

The bright, blueish light was seen about 11.30pm.

"The time it took, you could have taken out your mobile phone and taken a few shots of it," said Constable Peter McNair, a policeman based in Mildura who was on patrol about the time the light was seen just after 11.20pm last night.

"It looked like a falling star. It was going in a north direction, and then it split into two which was quite extraordinary. Normally a falling star would ... fade away - this actually kept going. It looked like it was going to hit the earth. It was
like a bluey colour. It was amazing. The night before ... about the same time, about 11.45pm, exactly the same thing happened as well," he said.

Bev Leach was driving to Mildura from Merbein at 11.20pm when she saw what she said was a bright light coloured green, red and white.

"I watched it for a little while and it separated into two in the sky. It came apart. It took me by surprise, it just happened so quickly," she said.

"It was fairly large. It was long. It had like, tails at the back, like streamer tails at the back of it. It was all lit up and flashing."

Was it a meteor? Space junk? UFO?

Thursday, December 08, 2005


Social Intelligence
Young foxes, or kits, scamper in a cage in Siberia, Russia, where they are part of a 45-year research project to domesticate foxes. Each generation has been selectively bred for tameness—fearlessness and nonaggression toward humans. By now the foxes in the project behave like pet dogs, barking and wagging their tails at humans.

Also like pet dogs, the domesticated foxes can "read" human cues (pointing, for example) much better than their wild cousins or even tame chimpanzees. These highly intelligent creatures learn rapidly, a sign of advanced social intelligence.

These are the animals that Princess Anne, royal parasite, lover of cuddly wild life, hunts down on horseback with a pack of hounds racing to rip the living fox apart. It's called "sport" Tally- ho!

Friday, December 02, 2005

The boy has been murdered. I have no more to say, just tears.

Here's what Michael Leunig has to say

A minute's silence, a minute's sadness
Then it's back to the madness:
Official murder, official violence;
A minute's lonely, wretched silence.
Legalized Murder
The death penalty is a vestige of barbarism.

The death penalty is a violation of the most basic tenet of human rights: Each and every person has an inalienable right to life. This is a right so valuable and precious it may never be abridged, even by the most horrific of cases. International organizations have long recognized the affront and challenge to human rights presented by the death penalty, and each year the list of countries ending this cruel practice grows longer.

As for the little runt, PM Howard stated clearly that capital punishment is a matter for the States but he must know himself that Australia is obliged by international agreements and longstanding bipartisan policy to overturn any such state government law.

What the hell is going on in this man's mind?
This morning Singapore will hang Nguyen Tuong Van

And apparantly we have a country full of politicians who are against the death penalty. Attorney-General Philip Ruddock stated his "strong abhorrence of the death penalty under any circumstances". Proudly wearing his little Amnesty International badge that Amnesty International have repeatedly called for him to remove, he claims he will be personally be affected by Nguyen's execution. He is a liar. This is the same Ruddock who publicly endorsed the role played by our Federal Police in exposing the so-called Bali Nine to the death sentence.

Prime Minister Howard says he "abhors" captial punishment too, but when the Bali bomber Amrozi was sentenced to death by Indonesia in 2003, he loudly applauded it and tapped into public fear and loathing by encouraging a debate about capital punishment in Australia. Everyone knows he's a liar.

He went so far as to suggest that Victoria's Liberal Opposition might like to put capital punishment on the agenda. In a radio interview, the PM said that he respected Indonesia's right to execute whoever they saw fit. He also told CNN he would absolutely support any decision by Iraq to execute Saddam Hussein.

However, our PM tells us Sigapore is a "sovereign nation" and we cannot dictate to a sovereign nation. It's a different matter to invade a sovereign nation, much less dictate terms, when it's called Iraq.



From correspondent Paul Hogan