Category: government


  • This content originally appeared on VICE News and was authored by VICE News.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • war memorial council members

    Why does Kim Beazley, chair of the $550 million Australian War Memorial upgrade, appear to hide his board roles at multinational weapons companies sponsoring the project? Who else is involved? Elizabeth Minter and Michelle Fahy go digging.

    Australian War Memorial Council website makes no mention of chair Kim Beazley’s roles with multinational weapons companies Luerssen and Lockheed Martin and is very coy about another Council member’s full-time role with French weapons multinational Thales, which has just been referred to the National Anti-Corruption Commission.

    A recent report by the national auditor general into the development of the Australian War Memorial found serious deficiencies. Steps were taken to dodge ministerial oversight; conflicts of interest were not adequately documented and declared; known conflicts were not adequately managed; key personnel did not declare prior employment with tenderers; and there were deficiencies in the quality of advice to the minister.

    One draft contract for $1.05 million was split into two contracts with the same supplier, with both contracts being signed on the same day. Another contract under an official order for a maximum value of $319,572 was later varied upwards to $999,999—one dollar under the $1 million threshold required for ministerial approval.

    The Australian War Memorial’s purpose is to commemorate the sacrifice of those Australians who have died in war or on operational service and those who have served our nation in times of conflict. It was designed as a place of quiet reflection and contemplation.

    Military Disneyland

    However, thanks to long-running sponsorship deals over the years with global weapons manufacturers, including BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin and Thales, the AWM is being transformed into a military Disneyland, which boastfully celebrates combat triumph with displays of military hardware and exhibitions.

    We now honour our dead in a place sponsored by the companies that are so handsomely rewarded financially by the wars that kill our citizens.

    In its report, the Auditor-General further noted that an entity’s culture will be determined by the “tone at the top” set by its leadership, noting that the AWM’s Council members and Senior Executive Service officers declare interests annually.

    However, the Auditor-General stated that “AWM did not undertake any specific probity planning or review its processes for Council and staff to reflect the increased probity risks arising from the scale and volume of the procurement activities relating to the $498 million development project.”

    Kim Beazley’s many roles

    Should the public be told, for example, that Labor luminary Kim Beazley, the chair of the War Memorial Council, which is responsible for the conduct and control of the Memorial’s affairs, is an adviser to Lockheed Martin and that he was also on the board of Lockheed Martin Australia for almost two years (2016-2018) in between his roles as ambassador to the US and Governor of WA? Lockheed Martin manufactures the lethal F-35 fighter jet that Israel is using to drop bombs on Gaza.

    Beazley’s 349-word profile on the website of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), where he is a distinguished senior fellow, similarly contains no mention of his roles with Luerssen Australian and Lockheed.

    ASPI’s mission is to contribute an “independent voice to public discussion” and “bring alternative sources of advice”  to “key strategic and defence policy issues”. Beazley writes regularly for ASPI, including this article on naval shipbuilding earlier this year, but he and ASPI neglected to mention that he is on the board of Luerssen Australia, which has the $3.6 billion contract to build offshore patrol vessels for Australia’s navy.

    Why is there no mention of Beazley’s close engagement with these multinational arms companies in his 350-word profile on the AWM website? Beazley’s profile mentions his role as Governor of WA, his dedication to federal politics for nearly 30 years, his ministerial portfolios, his Companion of the Order of Australia honour, his advocacy for Indigenous people and the community, his educational achievements, his US ambassadorial role, his roles in academia, and his distinguished fellowships, all of which indicate a lifetime of public service.

    The media release announcing Beazley’s role as Council chair on 2 December 2022 also omitted his Lockheed Martin and Luerssen roles.

    Conflicts of interest

    Also, why wasn’t the public told for a long time that another member of the War Memorial Council is a Key Account Manager with the French multinational weapons manufacturer Thales?

    Daniel Keighran, a Council member for eight years, has been employed for at least five years by Thales, a sponsor (corporate partner) of the War Memorial and one of the top handful of suppliers to the Defence Department in Australia.

    Thales was last week referred to the National Anti-Corruption Commission after the national auditor-general released yet another excoriating report into procurement by the Defence Department, finding evidence of “unethical conduct”. Thales received a $1.2 billion contract to run two Commonwealth-owned munitions facilities in 2020 despite an assessment that found its bid was “deficient”, “high risk” and did not offer value for money.

    Until recently, there was no mention in Keighran’s Council profile of his Thales role, as is evident from a snapshot taken on February 22, 2024, by the Wayback Machine, which takes snapshots of websites over the years.

    While the Council has since updated Keighran’s profile, his full-time employment at Thales is still only obliquely referred to as a ‘current association’.

    Memorial Rorts: how the Australian War Memorial expansion was rammed through despite public opposition

    War Memorial Council

    Sitting alongside Keighran and Beazley at War Memorial Council meetings are the chiefs of each military service, who are ultimately responsible for arms procurement. They are Chief of Army Lieutenant General Simon Stuart; Chief of Navy, Vice Admiral Mark Hammond; and Chief of Air Force Air Marshal Robert Chipman.

    Notwithstanding the deficiencies outlined earlier, the Auditor-General found that the management of the development project had been largely effective. In a media release, the Australian War Memorial welcomed “the positive findings of this report,” which “illustrate the significant achievements, particularly across critical matters involving probity and transparency.”

    The Minister for Veterans’ Affairs, Matt Keogh, said the government was concerned by the report and that “an urgent briefing” had been requested from the ANAO on its findings and recommendations,“ and we will discuss these with the Australian War Memorial’s management as a priority.”

    Australian War Memorial: from keeper of the flame to hider of shame?

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • David Shoebridge, Australia Senate, Defence

    On the last day of sitting before the winter parliamentary break, the Albanese Government, who’ve had bills delayed and amended, for the first time in the 47th Parliament had a piece of legislation voted down in the Senate. It’s an outcome that does not serve Australians well. Rex Patrick reports.

    Comedy in the Senate

    Last Thursday in the Senate, Greens’ Senator David Shoebridge rose from his seat and gave an impromptu speech on Defence. Anyone watching might reasonably have thought he was engaging in a moment of comedy, but he wasn’t; the topic was deadly serious.

    It’s hard to know where you end the list of defence procurement disasters which have happened because, whether it’s Labor in government or the Coalition in government, whether it’s Labor in opposition or Coalition in opposition, the usual practice is that the club doesn’t hold Defence to account.“

    The club just signs off on whatever new funding fantasy Defence comes up with and pretends that Defence can achieve it”, he went on to say.

    Dumb Ways to Buy: Defence “shambles” unveiled – former submariner and senator Rex Patrick

     

    Zero, zero, zero

    Shoebridge then made some blunt observations on submarine procurement.

    Two decades of this nonsense on submarines has given us a $20 billion hole. I’m trying to think how many submarines we got in the last 20 years – oh, zero. We’ve given $5 billion to the French for no subs, $5 billion to the US for no subs, $5 billion to the UK for no subs and $5 billion trying to keep the Collins class going for another ten years under an experimental project. How many new subs have we got? Zero

    He moved on to frigates.

    I think we were meant to get nine frigates for $45 billion. Now it looks like we’re going to get six frigates, and guess what the price tag will be? It’s $45 billion and counting.

    Let’s be clear: the $45 billion on the Hunter frigates is to date the single largest procurement contract ever signed by the Commonwealth, and it’s a disaster zone. How many Hunter frigates do we have? You’ll be pleased to know we have the same number of Hunter frigates in service as we have new submarines. Zero.

    He finally turned to the Navy’s Offshore Patrol Vessels

    Guess how many offshore patrol vessels are currently in commission after having spent more than $1 billion on the project? The exact same number of offshore patrol vessels are in commission as new subs and new Hunter frigates: zero.”

    A recent surface fleet review found that the Offshore Patrol vessel is too big to do patrol boat work and too small to put in any kind of conflict zone. At Estimates last month the Chief of Navy conceded the project was “… not an efficient use of resources …”.

    A mess that needs fixing

    Defence, by far, has the most public money committed to projects. If you wanted only one agency of government to spend money wisely, it would be Defence.

    Money committed to Projects by Agency (Source: Austender)

    Money committed to Projects by Agency (Source: Austender)

    But they don’t spend it wisely. Defence procurement is an absolute mess.

    The starting point for that mess is Admirals, Air Marshalls and Generals with little project and risk management experience making purchasing recommendations to Cabinet ministers with no experience in project and risk management.

    Senator Shoebridge rightly pinged the timidity of successive governments, cabinets and ministers when it comes to defence:

    They pretend they’re tough on Defence until somebody strides into the room with a little bit of gold braid on their shoulder and then there’s this obscene subservience from both the Labor party and the coalition: ‘Oh, Sir! Oh, Madam! How much money can we give you? Does it go ‘whoosh’? Will it go ‘bang’ at some point? Oh, that’s great! You can have the money.

    Oversight vacuum

    And that leads us to the failed Bill last Thursday.

    Defence has little oversight. Whenever they turn up to Senate Estimates or the Joint Parliamentary Committee on Accounts and Auditing, and the subject matter strays into areas of embarrassment, Defence pleads “it’s classified, we can’t talk about it.”

    In late May the Government introduced a Defence Amendment (Parliamentary Joint Committee on Defence) Bill 2024 that would establish a parliamentary committee that would meet in secret (by default) and have the power to inquire into just about any aspect of Defence.

    The Committee, as prescribed in the Government’s Bill, was to consist of 13 Senators and MPs; seven Government members and six non-Government members.

    The Liberals and Nationals went into a cataclysmic spasm. This would allow the Prime Minister to appoint a cross-bencher or two. OMG!

    We have 14 cross benchers in the House (out of 151 MPs – 9%) and 20 cross benchers in the Senate (out of 76 senators – 26%). Having their representation on the Committee is appropriate, particularly given that most Defence projects are so long they extend across parliamentary terms and indeed several changes of government. Both Labor and the Coalition are to blame for the many screw-ups and are hesitant to engage in vigorous scrutinise.

    So, Senator Birmingham moved an amendment to restrict the membership to seven government members and six opposition members. That amendment went down, the Government and cross-bench voting against his changes. This put a nail in the Bill’s coffin, ensuring the Coalition would eventually vote against it.

    Two-party squeeze

    Senator Shoebridge, rightly suspicious of the wording of Labor’s Bill, sought to amend it from seven Government members and six non-Government members (which could easily just mean opposition members) to seven government members, four opposition members and two cross benchers; one from the House and one from the Senate. That option was not supported by Labor or Liberal and was voted down.

    That left the original wording of the Bill, without Liberal or cross-bench support.

    The Bill went then went down in flames. It was Labor’s first comprehensive legislative fail in this Parliament.

    There were some happy winners though; Defence’s bloated and complacent bureaucratic leadership.  For them it’s business as usual; billions of taxpayers’ dollars to splurge with little scrutiny and even less accountability. There were, no doubt, a few bottles of (contractor supplied) champagne popping at Defence central on Russell Hill. They had dodged a bullet.

    Politics, as it so often does, got in the way of a good outcome for the Australia public.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Gaza, IDF

    What is the legal position of the estimated 1,000 Australians fighting for the Israel Defense Forces amid allegations of IDF genocide in Gaza and International Court of Justice proceedings? Michael West reports on the progress (or not) of Freedom of Information requests.

    What is the legal position of Australians fighting for the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) in Gaza amid claims of widespread breaches of international law in a conflict which has taken the lives of 40,000 people, more than half of them women and children? 

    As more countries sign up to South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice which alleges Israel’s military campaign in Gaza amounted to genocide, has the Australian government warned the estimated 1000 Australians either actively serving or enlisted as reservists of their risk of prosecution?

    In March, it was revealed that the British government received advice from its own lawyers saying Israel had breached international humanitarian law in Gaza but has failed to make it public.

    Freedom of Information (FOI) requests by MWM correspondent and former senator Rex Patrick asking for government advice on foreign fighters have been stonewalled by the Department of Foreign Affairs.

    Plenty of information, but sorry

    Responses during the processing of the requests show that there is a large volume of information surrounding the issue. Unfortunately, the government is not sharing its advice. On May 24, Patrick received this response from the Department for Foreign Affairs:

    “Even if we only provided the relevant parts of the Talking Points relating to your request, they would still comprise an estimated 300 pages. I also estimate the balance of the documents would. comprise a further 300 pages bringing the total number of pages to 600 pages, down from the original 1,300 pages.”

    The FOI was rejected on the basis that the documentation was too large. The exchange is published below. Meanwhile, independent legal counsel has found that there is a risk for these foreign fighters. Writing for MWM in October last year, Greg Barns SC found that there was a legal risk.

    Israel’s bombardment of Palestinians: is Australia complicit in war crimes?

    And three months later as the death toll rose dramatically, writing for John Menadue’s Pearls & Irritations, Greg Barns and Benedict Coyne found Australian citizens were at risk of being prosecuted under Australian law “if they commit, or are complicit in, crimes being perpetrated by the Israeli Defence Forces in Gaza.

    “Since the commencement of the Gaza war, when the Israeli government issued an order to 360,000 military reservists to engage in the onslaught of Gaza, multiple dual Australian-Israeli citizens returned to Israel to fight in the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF). This development saw some Australian media outlets appearing to celebrate the fact that Australian citizens were being called up to join the brutal onslaught of the beleaguered population of Gaza.”

    Although the IDF does not release official statistics in relation to serving foreign nationals, the Australian Centre for International Justice has reported estimates of up to 1,000 Australians currently serving in the IDF or being active reservists.

    “As the Australian Centre for International Justice noted on 22 December 2023 despite the knowledge about Israeli war crimes in this conflict, “it appears that the Australian government has failed to provide any public statements advising of the risks involved particularly in respect of the potential legal consequences and individual criminal liability that could arise from the conduct of Australian nationals participating in the conflict as a member of the IDF.” 

    Despite fears that Australian foreign fighters could be held responsible for war crimes, the Australian government has batted off FOI requests from Rex Patrick.

    A chronology of stonewalling

    On April 5, Patrick made a request to DFAT for

    Documents created or received by DFAT since 7 October 2023 that relate to Australian citizens serving in the Israeli Defence Force (IDF).

    April 29 – DFAT responded saying:

    Searches undertaken by MEB have captured documents consisting of over 1,330 pages. A large proportion of the documents are Talking Points and Senate Estimates Briefs. While these documents only contain a small amount of information relevant to your request, you have stated that ‘Where a record in part contains information relating to the above matter, I seek access to the entirety of the document’.

     May 4 – Patrick suggested a reduction of scope to:

    Correspondence/emails received from the Attorney-General’s office/ADG or the Foreign Ministers Office and ministerial briefs/talking points provided to the Attorney-General’s office/ADG or the Foreign Ministers Office documents created or received by DFAT since 7 October 2023 that relate to Australian citizens serving in the Israeli Defence Force (IDF).

    May 7 – DFAT emailed:

    The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (the department) is continuing to process this request. They requested an extension to Monday 27 May.

    Patrick reasonably took this to mean that the scope was now manageable.

    “I agreed an extension to Friday May 24, noting that Estimates started on Tuesday 28 May. Note that I advised them my deadline was related to Estimates.

    May 24 – DFAT wrote to Patrick formally saying that they were refusing to process the request.

    After careful consideration including with the relevant departmental areas, I consider that the practical refusal reason still exists. I am therefore notifying you of my decision to refuse your FOI request, in accordance with section 24(1)(b) of the FOI Act.

    I have once again considered the advice provided by colleagues in the Middle East Branch who were tasked with undertaking searches using your revised scope, and they documents they have identified. While your revised scope no longer includes … access to the entirety of the document where only part of the document contains information relating to your request, your request still includes all Talking Points. Even if we only provided the relevant parts of the Talking Points relating to your request, they would still comprise an estimated 300 pages. I also estimate the balance of the documents would. comprise a further 300 pages bringing the total number of pages to 600 pages, down from the original 1,300 pages.“They waited 20 days,” says Patrick, and in the meantime asked for an extension – to tell me that the request was still too voluminous.

    The information Commissioner guidelines to Agencies state:

    Agencies and ministers are only obliged to undertake a request consultation process once for any particular request (s 24AB(9)), but they may choose to continue discussions with an applicant in order to refine a request that is still too large or vague.

    Further proof Australia’s FOI regime is busted

    At least we know there is a lot of information floating around inside Government on this issue, says Patrick, and they are reluctant to hand it over easily.

    May 24 – Patrick immediately refilled two requests – one to DFAT and one to the Minister’s Office.

    June 12 – DFAT requested a 30-day extension.

    June 13 – Noting the history, Patrick said no.

    FOI is due on June 24.

    June 18 – DFAT invoked a privacy concern to extend the request to July 23, but indicated that they were intending to provide a response in the week starting July 1.

    June 24 – A short release of talking points from the Minister’s office showing the Government has legal concerns but it not weighing in.

    July 5 – Radio silence

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • DVA, Open Arms

    Senate hearings reveal a senior Veterans’ Affairs official dismissed a misconduct complaint against herself while managing a $2m BUPA contract which was referred to the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC). Stuart McCarthy reports on the escalating scandal in Veterans Affairs.

    A Senate Estimates hearing has revealed that the national manager of the Department of Veterans’ Affairs (DVA) ‘Open Arms’ veteran and family counselling service dismissed a misconduct complaint against herself “on behalf of the Minister”, while in a previous senior DVA role managing a $2.1 million “comprehensive health assessments” contract to the health care provider BUPA.

    The BUPA contract is the subject of “numerous” referrals to the National Anti-Corruption Commission, by at least two different complainants.

    Tasmanian Senator and former soldier Jacqui Lambie last night grilled DVA Secretary Alison Frame and other senior officials in a Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Estimates hearing. The hearing took place against the backdrop of the Defence and Veteran Suicide Royal Commission, which has already exposed the department’s “toxic culture” and is due to hand down its final report in early September.

    Lambie said numerous written misconduct allegations and corruption complaints have been made against one of the department’s most senior officials, who she named under Parliamentary privilege. The complaints relate to the official’s management of a $2.1 million dollar contract to BUPA and its “consultation sessions” for a program announced by then Veterans’ Affairs Minister Darren Chester in the 2019 Federal Budget. The program purportedly to conduct “comprehensive health checks” for a group of Australia’s most vulnerable veterans.

    One of the affected veterans seeking to be involved in the consultation sessions emailed Chester on 22 July 2020, alleging the DVA official:

    “… has admitted that she has been monitoring me on social media. I do not feel safe and have no faith that she would accurately record the conversation or report my views to the BUPA team. I am asking for your direct intervention Minister.”

    Two days later, the official who was the subject of the complaint, wrote to the complainant “on behalf of the Minister” and dismissed the complaint against herself.

    Even more alarming allegations, included in the NACC complaint cited by Lambie, are that the official cyber-stalked and gaslit numerous veterans who complained of conflicts of interest involving Professor Jane Burns – a central figure in the billion-dollar PwC/DVA “veteran centric reform” imbroglio – who was employed by BUPA while chairing a DVA national advisory committee.

    Why pay $1m when you can pay PwC $30m, and help yourself to free IP?

    The NACC complaint alleges the senior DVA official:

    “… stalked them on social media then sent them unsolicited emails designed to gaslight them as dangerously mentally ill, with the intention of triggering their deaths by suicide.”

    The official has since been promoted to national manager of the Open Arms veteran and family counselling service.

    Pushed to the brink

    Lambie asked the DVA mandarins testifying to the Senate hearing if the official “has been stood aside until the investigation is done, or what is happening here?” After the Chief Operations Officer pointed out that she would “not be privy to” NACC investigations and Lambie pressed the question about the subject of the complaint acting “on behalf of the Minister,” Frame replied:

    “Senator, everything you’re referring to is from 2020 … When I commenced as Secretary in January 2023, I was obviously informed about anything on foot, any current investigations into current complaints against staff, but I would not be looking at anything historical that pre-dated that which I was briefed about at the time I assumed the role.”

    Speaking to MWM on the condition of anonymity, the source of the 2020 complaint to Chester says “I felt like I was being bullied by one person with an ill-informed opinion, blacklisted unfairly and without right of reply.”

    The 16-year Australian Army veteran became seriously ill when they returned from East Timor, where they were given the controversial anti-malarial drug mefloquine during one of the Army Malaria Institute’s anti-malarial drug trials in East Timor at the turn of the century. The veteran said when they received the reply from the DVA official purportedly “on behalf of” Chester:

    “It pushed me to the point of suicide.”

    US drug Mefloquine and vet suicide epidemic

    Developed by the U.S. military in the 1970s and 80s and widely used by armies deployed in tropical areas since the 1990s, mefloquine is one of the known contributory factors in the international veteran suicide epidemic, including in Australia. Veterans continue to struggle to access appropriate specialist care due to accusations of malingering, or misdiagnosis with post-traumatic stress disorder or other psychiatric illnesses.

    Professor Jane Quinn from Charles Sturt University told MWM “mefloquine is a known neuro-toxicant that can cause severe or chronic neuropsychiatric symptoms in some people, including suicidal ideation and completed suicide, even at therapeutic doses.”

    The career neurotoxicology researcher, advocate and military widow has published numerous peer reviewed papers and provided expert testimony to official inquiries in Australia, the U.K. and Canada on the toxic effects of mefloquine, particularly among military veterans. “That this drug’s adverse effects have been underestimated in their negative impact on military personnel in both war and peacetime operations is a shameful chapter in our international military history,” says Quinn.

    Official ADF medical records from the source of the misconduct complaint include neuro-imagery showing they had sustained a brain injury consistent with decades of research on mefloquine’s neurotoxic adverse effects, after they were given mefloquine during the Army drug trial in East Timor.

    Veterans’ pleas fall on deaf ears

    Advocates have been pleading for a decade with Defence and DVA officials to conduct a dedicated outreach and rehabilitation program for affected veterans and their families. In 2016, former soldier Chris Stiles took his own life weeks after begging then Australian Defence Force (ADF) surgeon-general Tracy Smart for help at a public forum in Townsville.

    Another soldier involved in the same series of drug trials, former Army medic David Whitfield, pleaded with current Veterans’ Affairs Minister Matt Keogh when he appeared with his wife Alison in a live interview on the ABCs QandA program last year. Mr Whitfield died by suicide several months ago.

    Correspondence including emails between Smart, DVA and other Defence officials obtained by MWM suggest former DVA official Dylan Kurtz was involved in the inception of the BUPA program while employed as a ministerial advisor to Chester in 2019.

    DVA officials duck for cover

    When contacted by MWM, Kurtz, who has since moved to Services Australia, said “I would recommend you refer questions regarding this government decision to the media team at DVA.” The DVA media team did not respond to MWM‘s written queries. DVA Repatriation Commissioner Kahlil Fegan declined our interview request last week.

    In a 5 March 2019 email to a DVA official, Smart said of Chester’s budget announcement, “we sensed that the [minister’s office] was looking for a way to appease the concerns” of ADF veterans who were adversely affected by mefloquine and other anti-malarial drugs during their ADF service. According to U.S. and European drug safety regulators, mefloquine is able to cause “lasting or permanent” neurological or psychiatric side-effects, or “different kinds of permanent brain damage” in a significant minority of users.

    Smart has since been employed as a senior academic at the Australian National University. DVA documents also show that one of her senior colleagues at ANU was invited to participate in “clinical advisory workshops” for the BUPA program on the basis of her expertise in “medically unexplained symptoms,” while academics such as Quinn with published research on the toxic effects of mefloquine were excluded.

    Another Defence senior medical advisor involved in the clinical advisory workshops emailed her colleagues in September 2019 to raise concerns the BUPA program would undermine the continuity of care for the affected veterans, arguing:

    “The intent is to improve engagement with the health care system and appropriate care to optimise their health and wellbeing. … There is a risk that their care may become even more fragmented.”

    Current ADF surgeon-general Sonya Bennett was the Army Malaria Institute’s research manager during the anti-malarial drug trials, and co-authored a number of the clinical trial reports published in medical journals.

    Chester and Burns

    MWM also contacted Chester for comment last week, but he did not respond. Burns has previously denied involvement in the BUPA contract. She has also previously declined to respond to our queries on the department’s management of the “veteran centric reform” program.

    Paid to Not Reform: Veterans’ Affairs chucks $73m at PwC to dodge Royal Commission

    Former Army officer and military lawyer Dr Glenn Kolomeitz says the handling of the complaint against the DVA official “beggars belief” and is “indicative of the sort of conduct evidenced at the Defence and Veteran Suicide Royal Commission” Kolomeitz, who lobbied for a Royal Commission over many years, represented or advised witnesses who have testified at the Royal Commission and dozens of DVA clients including abuse survivors. He told MWM:

    “DVA has certainly come a long way, and ongoing systemic and process reform is clear, but this matter shows there are still people in that department who have not embraced positive change. Our veteran community, including future generations of veterans, cannot afford a return to the bad old days.”

    Director of Flinders University’s Open Door research initiative Professor Ben Wadham says the documents revealed in the Estimates hearing reflect an overall atmosphere of tension between DVA officials and their clients. Although he was unable to comment on the specifics of the complaints and says his experiences with senior DVA and Open Arms officials had been generally positive, Wadham explained:

    “Among DVA staff there are some who lack empathy, have inadequate training, suffer excessive workloads, or have a poor understanding of the needs of vulnerable veterans.”

    Institutional abuse

    Co-author of the forthcoming book Warrior Soldier Brigand on institutional abuse in the ADF, Wadham told MWM that although DVA is a public service institution rather than a military one, evidence from the Royal Commission and previous inquiries shows “a degree of institutional culpability in veteran deaths and trauma over time,” citing the Robodebt scheme as an example of how “institutions can be abusive.”

    The East Timor veteran who made the misconduct complaint to Chester in 2020 told MWM that the senior DVA official at the centre of this scandal “should be sacked,” but they would like to meet with Frame because:

    “At the very least, I would like an apology for serious breaches of ethics and privacy. And I would like to talk to Alison about how to fix this situation.”

    Kolomeitz told MWM after watching the Senate Estimates hearing, “hopefully DVA Secretary Alison Frame might be able to meet with this veteran because it looks like a good opportunity to maintain the momentum of reform and help improve how the department is working.”

    The Albanese Government’s draft legislation intended to fix the “not fit for purpose” DVA system identified in the Royal Commission’s 2022 interim report is expected to be tabled in Parliament later today by current Veterans’ Affairs Minister Matt Keogh. Whether the revised legislation will address the remaining systemic problems laid bare in last night’s Senate hearing remains to be seen.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Nuclear bomb test at Montebello Islands

    While Peter Dutton gets headlines for his nuclear fairytale and the Labor Government presses on with its AUKUS submarines, the fallout from nuclear bomb testing in the Pilbara in 1956 finally reaches court. Sue Roff reports from London.

    In 1956, on the remote Montebello Islands off Western Australia, an atomic bomb was tested. It was supposed to be no more than 50 kilotons, but in fact measured 98 kilotons, or more than six times the strength of the bomb dropped over Hiroshima in 1945.

    Ever since then, Australian and UK Governments have suppressed the facts and denied compensation to the victims. That may finally be about to change.

    Three months ago, veterans of Britain’s Cold War radioactive weapons tests formally launched proceedings against the UK Ministry of Defence, alleging negligence in its duty of care to the men themselves and their families before, during and after the tests that began at the Montebellos in 1952.

    Oli Troen, an Associate at the well-respected London human rights law firm of McCue Jury, told MWM, “The opening phase seeks the full disclosure by the Ministry of Defence of all records of blood and urine testing conducted during the weapons trials, with compensation sought for MoD negligence and recklessness if they were lost or destroyed.”

    At the same time, the veterans have made an offer to resolve their claim through the creation of a Special Tribunal with statutory powers to investigate and compensate if decades of cover-up are established.

    A very big bomb

    In October 1955, the Director of British atomic and thermonuclear tests in Australia, Professor William Penney, wrote to the Chair of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority about the two detonations that were planned for the Montebello Islands in May and June 1956:

    ‘Yesterday I think I gave you the impression that the second shot at Montebello will be about 80 K.T. [kilotons]. This is the figure to which we are working as far as health and safety are concerned. We do not know exactly what the yield is going to be because the assembly is very different from anything we have tried before.

    We expect that yield will be 40 or 50, but it might just go up to 80 which is the safe upper limit.

    In fact, in recent years, it has been listed on the website of ARPANSA [the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency] as 98 kilotons.

    atomic-weapons-testing-graph-only[1]

    Source: arpansa.gov.au

    The politics

    A UK memo found in the UK National Archives  that is undated but filed around August 1955, states:

    “TESTS IN Montebello ISLANDS (CODE NAME ‘MOSAIC’) 25 7.

    “We had agreed with the Australian Government that we would not test thermo-nuclear weapons in Australia, but [Australian Prime Minister] Mr. Menzies has nevertheless agreed to the firings taking place in the Montebello Islands (off the North-West coast of Western Australia), which have already been used before for atomic tests [emphasis added].”

    “As already explained, the Australians are very sensitive on the question of thermo-nuclear explosions, and although the true character of these tests is understood by the authorities immediately concerned, knowledge of the trials is restricted to a very small circle and no public statement has so far been made; when it is made, it will therefore require very careful handling.”

    “Apparently it is still being very carefully handled by government agencies. 70 years after the British atomic and thermonuclear tests started in Australia scores of files held in the Australian National National Archives are marked ‘Not yet examined’. We urgently need to create an independent archive of Australia’s nuclear past.”

    The fallout

    Montebellos Island blast

    Canberra Times, 20.6.1956 (trove.nla.gov.au)

    In Roeboure, some 200km away from the blast, a witness – then seven-year-old John Weiland wrote later of “hearing and feeling the blast before going outside to see the cloud. My mother said she remembers material falling on her. I was in primary school at the time and we all stood out on the verandah to watch the cloud.”

    Weiland later wrote to ARPANSA asking “if any testing was done or any follow up done particularly with the 30 or so children of the school. But I was told there was no radiation blown across from the islands.”

    In December 1957, eighteen months after the second G2 Operation Mosaic blast at the Montebellos, the five scientific members of the Atomic Weapons Safety Committee (AWSC) appointed by the Australian government published a report titled ‘Radioactive Fallout in Australia from Operation ‘Mosaic’ in The Australian Journal of Science.

    They stated that “After the second test [June 19, G2] the cloud moved northeast over the Timor Sea without approaching the mainland of Australia.’ However ‘a pronounced stable layer produced a marked bulge on the stem which trapped a small quantity of particulate material and this was spread to the south-east of the Montebello Islands …The more finely suspended material’ or ‘debris’ was dispersed in the first 48 hours …’ although there was light rain over Marble Bar.

    Thirty years after this AWSC report, the Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia issued its 1987 report after 18 months of hearings around Australia and in London. In relation to Mosaic G2 it reported:

    “7.4.25 The post-firing winds behaved similarly to those after Gl, i.e. they weakened and then began to blow to the south and east. An analysis of the trajectories of fallout particles showed that fallout at Port Hedland occurred 24 hours after the explosion and consisted of particles that originated from 20,000 feet in the region of the top of the stem and the bottom of the cloud….[RC 270, T24/57).”

    Clearly part of the main cloud did cross the mainland.

    The Royal Commission also concluded, “The Safety Committee communications with the Minister for Supply soon after the second explosion, when it reported that the cloud had not crossed the coast, with the implication that there was no fallout on the mainland, were misleading.”

    Nearly forty years later, in January 2024, John Weiland submitted a query to the Talk to A Scientist portal of ARPANSA, asking for information. The unsigned response four days later referred him to Appendices B & C of a 32 year old document attached to the official response. A report, ‘Public Health Impact of Fallout from British Nuclear Tests in Australia, 1952-57, has a diagram annotated ‘Trajectories taken by radioactive clouds across Australia for the nuclear tests in the Mosaic and Antler Series. The main debris clouds from Mosaic Rounds 1 and 2 are not shown as they remained largely over the Indian Ocean, moving to the northeast parallel to the coast.’ (emphasis added).

    This diagram doesn’t correlate with the maps in the Royal Commission Report north of Broome nor those of the AWTSC report in 1957 south of Port Hedland.

    Distribution of Fallout

    Butement et al, The Australian Journal of Science 20:5:1957 p.130

    The cover-up

    I have published extensive archival evidence about the score of coverups that have occurred over the past 70 years.

    They range from the agreement of Prime Minister Menzies to the progressive testing of hydrogen/thermonuclear devices in preparation for the full assembly in 1957 for the Grapple tests at Christmas Island, including testing less than two months before the start of the 1956 Olympic Games in downwind Melbourne, and Menzies’ hope of getting tactical nuclear weapons for Australia by his collusion.

    Qui custodiet ipsos custodes? Counting down to the 1956 Melbourne Olympics

    They also include the submission of ‘sanitised’ health data on Australian test participants to the 1985 Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia.

    I presented my concerns about the role of UK official histories of the tests in a seminar hosted by the Official Historian of the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office by invitation in February 2024.

    The victims

    Representing the victims, Oli Troen adds that “The Veterans previously sought redress through the English Courts, losing in the Supreme Court in 2012 when they could not prove they experienced dosages of radiation exposure. This meant they could not demonstrate their injuries resulted from that exposure.”

    Blood tests taken at the time and in the years after presence at a test site are key to proving whether the legacy of rare illnesses, cancer and birth defects reported by the veterans is due to radiation from the nuclear tests and whether the government is culpable and can now be held accountable for their suffering.

    A Freedom of Information tribunal has ordered the handing over of the blood tests of veteran and decorated hero Squadron Leader Terry Gledhill, who led ‘sniff planes’ into the mushroom clouds of thermonuclear weapons on sampling missions. This new case seeks to force the government to hand over such records for up to 22,000 UK veterans.

    Talking the Talk: Dutton dumps climate commitment, Labor speaks with forked tongue

     

     

    This post was originally published on Michael West.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • julian assange, anthony albanese

    Anthony Albanese has not been prominent on Julian Assange, rather he’s been defensive. But the PM and senior Labor figures were quick to claim credit on the news of Assange’s release. Rex Patrick cautions on success attribution.

    In July 2022 Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus discontinued the prosecution of Bernard Collaery, the lawyer for Timor whistleblower Witness K.

    It was not, however, an act of conscience. In his announcement Dreyfus stated that he, in making his decision, had “careful regard to our national security, our national interest and the proper administration of justice.”

    The truth of the matter was that the charges were dropped dominantly on national security and national interest grounds, after pressure from the Timorese Government and Australian fears of China’s expansion plans in relation to Timor.

    Foreign Minister Senator Wong confirmed this in an answer she provided a Senate Question on notice.

    I discussed the prosecution of Bernard Collaery with the President of Timor-Leste, Jose Ramos-Horta and foreign Minister Adaljiza Magno but telephoned shortly before the Attorney-General, the Hon Mark Dreyfus QC MP, announced the discontinuation of the prosecution of Mr Bernard Collaery on 7 July 2022. Both President Ramos-Horta and Foreign Minister Mango have issue public statements referring to our conversations”.

    Spies Like Us: how Timor’s oil and gas delivered justice to Bernard Collaery

     

    On Assange the Albanese Government has been equally weak. Albanese’s first mention of Julian Assange in the 47th Parliament was on 7 November 2022 in response to a question time inquiry from independent MP, Monique Ryan, asking if it was the intention of the Government to intervene to bring him home.

    Albanese responds 

    The government will continue to act in a diplomatic way, but can I assure the member for Kooyong that I have raised this personally with representatives of the United States government. My position is clear and has been made clear to the US administration that it is time that this matter be brought to a close.

    In February 2023 Albanese was caught out with FOI revealing that there was no correspondence (a key tool in diplomacy) on Assange between him and the US President, Dreyfus and the US Attorney-General, nor Wong and the US Secretary of State. 

    Documents show no sign Albanese government lobbied the US to bring Julian Assange home

    In March 2023 Senator Shoebridge took Wong to task asking what was discussed in relation to Assange at the AUKUS announcement in San Diego. Wong rolled out the excuse (that doesn’t tie in with their current success claims) “As you would know, this matter is before the UK courts. I appreciate that Senator Shoebridge has previously made comments, with which we don’t agree, about our capacity to intervene in legal proceedings of another country—another jurisdiction.”

    Pressure was put on the US Government by a parliamentary (not Government) delegation in September last year by Barnaby Joyce, Tony Zappia, Monique Ryan and senators Alex Antic David Shoebridge and Peter Whish-Wilson.

    Meanwhile Government briefs being circulated internally were discussing options to bring Assange home only by way of prisoner transfer if and after he was found guilty by the US.

    Jail, then jail, and more jail. Labor’s Assange strategy revealed.

    Finally, in February this year, a motion was moved in the House of Representatives calling for an end to the saga. The motion was not moved by Albanese, credit for that must go instead to Andrew Wilkie.

    “An Awkward Problem”: Julian Assange and the Australian dog that didn’t bark

    The political push in relation to Assange came predominantly from the Greens and independents. It undoubtedly played a part, coupled in with worldwide public pressure.

    But the reality is the plea deal is a deal orchestrated by lawyers in the US after the UK’s highest court granted leave for Assange to appeal against his extradition on the ground he was not protected by the press freedom provisions of the US Constitution.

    The lawyer’s presentation to the US Department of Justice would have leveraged off the difficult UK pathway moving forward, the complexity of a prosecution in the US, the likelihood that it would go all the way to the Supreme Court, worldwide pressure and time already served by Assange.

    So, forgive me if I looked at Albanese and Wong fronting the news as ‘success parasites’. Forgive me for feeling a little queasy seeing US Ambassador Kevin Rudd accompanying Assange in Saipan.

    The news about Assange is great. But the great news that goes with seeing him land in Australia must be accompanied by the appropriate attribution for the win. It’s those who have engaged in the long hard slog that deserve credit, not those who turn up for the cameras at the end.

    How can I be so confident that this is not the result of a key play by the Australian Government. Easy, they don’t really care. This is evidence in the prosecution of whistleblowers David McBride and Richard Boyle.

    Bob Carr tweeted this morning – “Whatever you think about Assange, the fact is he was imprisoned for one reason: he exposed a bloody war crime committed by US troops against unarmed Iraqi civilians.”

    My tweet in reply was “Whatever you think about David McBride, the fact is he was imprisoned for one reason: he exposed bloody war crimes committed by Australian troops against unarmed Afghans.”

    Assange’s return also occurs in the week following the Albanese Government leaving ATO whistleblower Richard Boyle hanging out to dry. The SA Appeal Court effectively declared that Federal Whistleblower protection laws are all but broken, and yet the Attorney General still won’t intervene.

    The good news for the Government is that the festering electoral sore of inaction on Assange has been cauterised. But the whistleblower persecutions continue.

    The return of Assange is not a signal to the electorate that the Albanese Government has found its way.

    And who paid for the flight home?

    Wikileaks, Julian Assange

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • REDSIX_suicide-prevention-app_dc[1]

    Allegations have emerged that senior officials from the Departments of Veterans Affairs (DVA) and Defence appropriated the intellectual property of a suicide prevention app from a veteran-owned business. Stuart McCarthy with the investigation.

    Consulting firm Deloitte was reportedly paid more than $1M by Defence to develop the mental health phone app HeadStrength, partially based on intellectual property (IP) from another company, RedSix.

    The chief executive of RedSix says the theft of his IP “almost destroyed me mentally, physically and financially.” It echoes a similar theft from Swiss8 by Defence and Deloitte previously reported in the Daily Telegraph ($).

    While the otherwise successful, self-funded RedSix was dumped by government officials after a ministerial endorsement and offers of financial assistance that didn’t eventuate, its competitor Innowell Pty Ltd – part-owned by PwC and co-founded by Professor Jane Burns while she chaired a DVA national advisory committee – was paid $30M to develop discredited suicide prevention software including trials involving DVA staff and clients.

    Paid to Not Reform: Veterans’ Affairs chucks $73m at PwC to dodge Royal Commission

    Numerous sources have told MWM that RedSix’s mistreatment was part of a wave of cronyism, IP appropriation, contract mismanagement, abuse of procurement procedures, financial inducements, misleading and deceptive conduct, gaslighting and other forms of orchestrated abuse by senior government officials and their consultants, during the controversial billion-dollar “veteran-centric reform” program.

    RedSix suicide prevention app

    RedSix chief executive Michael Handley, a former soldier who served in Somalia and Bougainville in the 1990s, registered his company in 2016 and developed his suicide prevention app over the next two years. Handley told MWM the process became his “passion and purpose to help others” by addressing “never before seen levels of veteran suicides,” costing $250,000 of his own funds, including a $100,000 personal loan.

    Launched in September 2018, within two months, the app was being accessed by up to 260 veterans per week. After further software development and a re-launch over the following 12 months, Handley says

    RedSix became the most downloaded mental health app for Australian military veterans by the end of 2019.

    In October 2018, Handley met Professor Burns at the Invictus Games in Sydney and was asked to attend meetings and briefings with senior staff from the re-branded Open Arms counselling service, Defence and DVA, health experts, consultants and advisers involved in DVA and PwC’s taxpayer-funded “reform” program. Burns emailed Handley soon after their initial meeting:

    “I do love what you’ve created, and when the time is right would love for you to meet with Steph Hodson from Open Arms – I introduced you to the Open Arms peer-to-peer support workers. … I am also really happy to make some connections into DVA and [Defence], and when you’re comfortable to the Minister’s advisors.”

    Handley was later requested to tender for mental health software development contracts, which did not eventuate despite RedSix being endorsed in DVA’s mental health and wellbeing strategy and action plan, signed by then Defence Personnel and Veterans’ Affairs Minister Darren Chester in May 2020. The official strategy included the written objective for the department to:

    “Continue the partnership between Open Arms and key veteran peer support groups to extend reach and provide support through existing peer-to-peer platforms, including RedSix, Swiss8, and Survive to Thrive.”

    When DVA Secretary Alison Frame was asked in Senate Estimates last year about her department’s partnership with Handley, her First Assistant Secretary Program Delivery, Leanne Cameron, said, “No, we have no formal partnership with RedSix,” then deflected the issue to Defence.

    RedSix vs HeadStrength

    Handley says comparing the RedSix phone app with the content of the HeadStrength app launched by Chester and Defence Force chief Angus Campbell in October 2020 shows Deloitte used his intellectual property without his permission while the firm was engaged by Defence in their million-dollar consulting contract.

    MWM does not allege IP theft or other wrongdoing on the part of Innowell or its employees. However, extensive correspondence between Burns and Handley does show that Innowell’s Burns was the instigator and primary facilitator in Handley’s engagement with government officials, their consultants and influential advisers.

    The documents also show that during the entire 18 months of her dealings with Handley, Burns at no stage told Handley she was his commercial competitor with a financial interest in Innowell, a company with $30M in Commonwealth government backing. Nor of the extensive collaboration between DVA and Burns in Project Synergy.

    Emails from Burns using her University of Sydney and BUPA email accounts also show that in 2020 she canvassed Handley, other veteran-owned businesses engaged with Open Arms, health information technology start-ups, universities and other organisations for involvement in a BUPA-led “industry consortia” bid for Commonwealth funding to establish a new Well & Productive Cooperative Research Council. One of the emails from Burns suggests involvement in the bid could provide

    guaranteed funds over a period of time, and a pipeline to market.

    Project Synergy

    Project Synergy was initially undertaken using a $5.5 million grant from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) to Burns’ Young & Well CRC, then continued under a University of Sydney/PwC joint venture funded by the subsequent $30M non-competitive health department grant.

    The funds were used to establish Innowell before it was gifted to the University of Sydney, PwC, Burns and her University of Sydney colleague Professor Ian Hickie.

    Involvement by the Open Arms veterans and families counselling service in Project Synergy included numerous trials and “participatory design workshops” for the Innowell software platform, published in journal articles co-authored by senior DVA staff including then Open Arms national manager Stephanie Hodson.

    Defence and Veteran Suicide Royal Commission evidence

    In sworn testimony to the ongoing Defence and Veteran Suicide Royal Commission and in numerous Senate Estimates hearings, former DVA Secretary Liz Cosson repeatedly claimed millions of dollars in external labour hire funding was required to clear an excessive backlog in veterans’ entitlement claims due to an ideologically driven DVA staffing cap imposed by the Turnbull-Morrison government.

    However, a 2021 Australian National Audit Office report on the Veteran Centric Reforms program (VCR) says that additional staff funding not forecast in the 2017 business case – prepared by PwC at a cost of $8 million in public funds – was needed to undertake core DVA business including claims processing, while full-time DVA staff were actually involved in VCR-related activities with Burns and other commercial actors.

    Open Arms’ involvement in one of the “participatory design” studies alone is estimated to have cost the taxpayer almost $100,000 in departmental operating expenses, over and above the $30 million already provided to Innowell by the health department.

    Six months after their first meeting, Burns messaged Handley on 8 April 2019 saying she had spoken to Hodson about RedSix and offering to “make a recommendation to Steph [Hodson] regarding the tech and how it functions.” She continued: “They are doing small pilots of work that is innovative – and also looking at better collaboration across platforms and sites.”

    This was a generic summary of the taxpayer funded work Burns was doing with Innowell and Open Arms for Project Synergy, but omitting details about Innowell, her direct involvement in “they” and her numerous conflicts of interest.

    When Handley expressed his frustration about the lack of tangible support for RedSix almost a year later, Burns responded by text message on 6 March 2020:

    “I’ve Spoken to Steph [Hodson], she will call you but they’re about to offer you a contract so don’t throw the baby out yet. I also thought you were in partnership with Swiss8. If not can you let me know as I’ve been pushing internally at BUPA for your inclusion in a [Joint Health Command] offering.”

    BUPA and Request for Tender

    Defence’s Joint Health Command had previously signed a multi-million dollar contract for on-base medical support to defence force personnel with one of Burns’ other employers, BUPA. Burns suggested in a message to Handley five months earlier that BUPA might consider designating RedSix as a “charity of choice,” trialling the platform “across a variety of workplace settings” with BUPA’s “wellbeing at work team” or even pitching it to the multinational tech giant Google.

    The Commonwealth government’s AusTender website shows DVA officials opened a request for tender on 14 August 2020 seeking to:

    “work with a panel of one or more contractors, to provide high quality holistic services, focusing on mental health and wellbeing and ensuring processes, practices and methods of engagement are based on, and respectful of, the needs of veterans and their families.”

    After Handley and others were encouraged to submit tenders including commercially sensitive information on their software designs,

    the request for tender was closed on 14 October without awarding any contracts. Defence’s HeadStrength app was launched one week later.

    Handley told MWM he is “still in shock” after his dealings with Burns and DVA and says the stress profoundly affected his physical and mental health:

    “The toll this has had on myself and my family both physically and mentally over the last three to four years has put me in hospital four times and destroyed my faith in the department of veterans’ affairs. This is un-Australian and parallels the behaviour of an organised crime gang. People need to be held to account.”

    Since her departure from the Open Arms national advisory committee, Burns has been a member of the National Disability Insurance Agency board and is now employed full-time as the NDIA’s “chief strategy and wellbeing officer.”

    When contacted by MWM, Burns declined to respond to questions on her communications with Handley, the overall management of the veteran centric reform program and her proposed Well & Productive CRC. The CRC’s website now lists her as the Acting CEO and says that its mission is “Harnessing human centred, integrated solutions to create mentally healthy workplace and improve productivity.”

    Among the other financial inducements paid by DVA to silence criticism and restore the department’s tarnished reputation during the VCR program was a series of “limited tender” contracts totalling $516,500 awarded to another Open Arms national advisory committee member, former Army medic Talissa Papamau, for operating the now defunct ‘Modern Soldier’ Facebook account including “educational resources” and favourable commentary on DVA initiatives.

    For Vietnam veteran and Stand Tall for PTS founder Tony Dell, these revelations are

    absolutely soul destroying, suggesting DVA staff and consultants involved in the VCR program were corrupt.

    “I feel everyone involved should be charged with manslaughter for every veteran who has died since this happened, and we should claw back the hundreds of millions of dollars that could have been used to save lives.”

    The Albanese government is expected to table proposed amendments to the “not fit for purpose” veteran entitlement legislation in parliament before the winter recess in July. Advocates have previously told MWM they anticipate the legislative amendments will fail to fulfil the intent of the first recommendation in the Royal Commission’s interim report last year.

    Did PwC consult on the final recommendations of the Senate Inquiry into PwC?

     

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • truck crashes

    Trucking deaths are rising in Australia amid worries over corner-cutting on safety and driver fatigue. Yet, for whistleblower Roxanne Mysko, exposing it means persecution. Andrew Gardiner with the investigation.

    Whistleblowers like David McBride and Richard Boyle incurred the wrath of vengeful bureaucrats despite the existence of protections spruiked as the guarantor of transparency and a bulwark against corruption.

    They are not alone. Courageous informants from across Australia have risked all over the years, with decidedly mixed results.

    And what of lesser known whistleblowers in, say, the transport industry? Trucking deaths are on the rise in Australia, including among drivers like Billy-Joh Watts, whose tragic death sparked a media stampede at a high-profile inquest in 2022.

    Can transport industry whistleblowers expect better protection from the courts and from relevant agencies like the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC)? Not if Adelaide grandmother Roxanne Mysko’s experience is any guide.

    Shooting the messenger

    An experienced safety compliance manager, Mysko, has told MWM of bullying, police involvement and court action that threatens to bankrupt and perhaps even incarcerate her in the coming weeks, following a brief and ill-fated stint at Express Cargo Services (ECS) of Port Adelaide.

    Roxanne Mysko, road train

    Roxanne Mysko, road train. Image: supplied

    MWM has also independently learned from sources of alleged safety issues at ECS – brought to the attention of the National Heavy Vehicle Regulator (NHVR), including:

    • Fatigue among company drivers and subcontractors, who are alleged to have worked up to 26 days straight (the relevant law states drivers must have a 24-hour break every seventh day);
    • No safety audits of 70 subcontractors from 2007 to 2020, many in violation of Chain of Responsibility (COR) requirements which began in 2014;
    • No licence checks on 70 subcontractors;
    • No vehicle maintenance audits over an extended period;
    • Speeding by trucks supposedly limited to 90 km/h;
    • No documentation for all COR safety procedures for any truck or freight movement anywhere in Australia.

    If proven, such breaches of safety law can incur seven-figure fines.

    Despite the purported protections of both whistleblower legislation and South Australia’s Work Health and Safety Act, Roxanne’s life was upended when ECS terminated her contract after just a few weeks on the job. In the weeks following her dismissal, sources say, it got much worse.

    Roxanne’s unceremonious departure from ECS turned her from a paid safety monitor to an industry outsider with plenty to say.

    What protections?

    In its pamphlet on the subject, ASIC says protections under the Corporations Act and other legislation are designed to “encourage whistleblowers to come forward with their concerns and protect them when they do (so they can) play an important role in identifying and calling out misconduct and harm to consumers and the community.”

    Angered by her sacking and confident she had full whistleblower protections, sources say Roxanne continued to liaise with safety authorities like the National Heavy Vehicle Regulator (NHVR). MWM has independently learned that she also sent copies to a partner company of ECS.

    But the extent of those protections is anything but clear. In later correspondence with Roxanne viewed by MWM, barrister Christian Haebich expressed his “doubt that (Roxanne’s) post-employment communications were protected by the whistleblower laws.” Roxanne disputes this, citing opinions to the contrary from other legal practitioners.

    ASIC has since made it clear in correspondence seen by MWM that copying the ECS partner company was a mistake: “that email was not sent to an eligible recipient” under whistleblower protections. In other words, what she wrote was open to potential court action by ECS.

    Within days, MWM learned that ECS had a copy of her missive and, via court action, secured a warrant for police to seize what she described as massive quantities of documents from her computer and phone. The company, sources said, also brought civil action against her in the Adelaide Supreme Court based on their claim of breach of contract, defamation, injurious falsehood, and tortious interference.

    Persecuting the whistleblower

    Nearly four years and one appeal later, Roxanne has been hit with $350,000 in legal fees by her erstwhile employer (meaning likely bankruptcy) and, sources say, the possibility of prison time on Contempt of Court charges after she allegedly sent another email (in violation of a court order) to the same ECS partner company she says breached her identity.

    Meanwhile, sources told MWM that the NHVR appears to have given ECS a ‘heads-up’ that they were coming to look at their operations before failing to take any meaningful action against the company.

    After approaching ECS for comment, the company’s lawyers sent MWM excerpts of a court order preventing Roxanne from sharing her allegations, warning that “any other person who knows of this order and does anything that helps or permits [Ms Mysko to disobey it] may be … punished.”

    MWM is not suggesting NHVR, ECS or its partner company have acted unethically or in violation of workplace or transport safety laws, and unless stated, has established the alleged facts around ECS’ safety record, opinions on the extent of whistleblower protections and subsequent conduct by the company, its partner and NHVR independently of Ms Mysko.

    Failing whistleblower legislation

    The case of Roxanne Mysko brings into sharp focus the limitations of whistleblower legislation.

    For one thing, protections would appear to be at their maximum while you remain employed by the employer you’re reporting, as Mr Haebich suggested in the letter seen by MWM. In many instances, would-be whistleblowers are less likely to turn on an employer if they still work there while, conversely, being dismissed can be the very catalyst for coming forward.

    Should losing your job curtail your rights and protections as a whistleblower?

    Sources say Roxanne’s mistake in contacting an ECS partner company not covered by her protections stemmed in part from her not knowing the ‘fine print’ around whistleblowing, details which are often decipherable only by paying through the nose for a lawyer. Roxanne is not a woman of means, and it appears the last thing she was thinking of when alerting others to what she saw as safety issues at ECS – a public service, in her eyes – was having to pay for the privilege of doing so.

    It turns out whistleblowing can be a costly proposition: it could cost you in lawyer’s fees before you proceed, and it could cost you much more if you get it wrong.

    For her trouble, sources have told MWM that Roxanne and her family have been allegedly harassed. She’s had several breakdowns, lost her income, seen her job prospects severely diminished, incurred a six-figure debt, and faces possible incarceration for Contempt of Court. Roxanne told MWM:

    I don’t laugh anymore, and have withdrawn from what was a very social busy life. I am now a recluse.

    What’s more, Roxanne faces more bills if she is to mount privately-funded action to redress at least some of what she’s gone through.“You may have been protected (while employed by ECS) – such that your termination may have been unlawful,” Haebich wrote in correspondence independently confirmed by MWM.

    She is in no position to privately fund such a counterclaim, and is on the lookout for pro bono representation.

    While sources say the well-resourced ECS was able to terminate, achieve a police raid of and sue its former compliance manager within weeks of her unearthing what sources say is a mountain of safety malpractice, Roxanne Mysko was hamstrung in her ability to fight back. Not only by a lack of funds (she self-represented in court) but by the mistakes she made under whistleblower laws, which can confound all but a select few.

    Meanwhile, those she thought would be in her corner – such as the NHVR – did little to address the alleged safety issues, sources add.

    The system was quick to sanction Roxanne Mysko over a few pages of correspondence, but on a far bigger issue – the safety of Australia’s truck drivers – it’s claimed that the machinery of regulatory action has scarcely trembled.

    “Let the whistleblower beware, lest they suffer my fate,” Roxanne admonished.

    Editors note: MWM contacted NHVR for its position on this story, but the agency declined to comment for legal reasons.

    Richard Boyle hopes dashed | The West Report

     

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus has the power to quash the prosecution of Richard Boyle. Image: Facebook

    The reasons of the South Australian Court of Appeal on why Richard Boyle will face criminal charges will make every Australian (except the Australian Tax Office leadership) sick in the stomach. Former senator Rex Patrick reports.

    Richard Boyle is a Whistleblower. Justice Doyle, with Justices Doyle and David agreeing, declared:

    The [ATO] accepts that the appellant is a whistle-blower as that term is commonly understood. [Richard] disclosed information to an authorised person pursuant to the terms of the Public Interest Disclosure Act. It was common ground on appeal that [Richard’s] conduct in disclosing the information attracted an immunity from criminal prosecution under the Act. [Richard], however, faces criminal charges, not for the disclosure of information he believed needed to be disclosed, but for his conduct in unlawfully gathering evidence he considered would support his disclosure …

    They went on to explain that Richard Boyle formally blew the whistle.

    It was common ground that [Richard], on 12 October 2017, lodged a public interest disclosure with the ATO and that it complied with the requirements of the Act. Information contained within the [disclosure] attracted the immunity.

    Botched

    The Justices then confirmed the ATO botched the processing of Richard’s disclosure.

    [Richard’s disclosure] was allocated to an authorised recipient for investigation pursuant to s 43 of the Act. His [disclosure] was not dealt with appropriately. By letter emailed to [Richard] on 27 October 2017, the authorised recipient advised that he had discontinued the investigation pursuant to s 48(1)(c) of the Act, having determined that the disclosure did not concern serious disclosable conduct. It is accepted for the purposes of this litigation that this decision was incorrect.

    The Court’s finding is consistent with that of the 2020 Senate Economics Committee (which I was a member of) which found the disclosure investigation was ‘superficial’.

    Conclusion of the Senate’s Economics Legislation Committee

    Conclusion of the Senate’s Economics Legislation Committee

    Vindicated

    The Court also recognised the conduct Richard blew the whistle on – the improper use of Tax Office garnishee notices to strip small business bank accounts of funds – was found to have been occurring.

    On 9 April 2018, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (“ABC”) presented a story called ‘Mongrel bunch of bastards’ as a Four Corners program. It featured taxpayers talking about their adverse experiences with the ATO. [Richard] appeared as a whistleblower.

    [SUPPRESSED]

    In March 2019, the Inspector-General of Taxation and Taxation Ombudsman released a ‘Review into the Australian Taxation Office’s use of Garnishee Notices’. The review was commenced “to maintain community confidence in the administration of the tax system after serious allegations were made about the [ATO’s] inappropriate use of garnishee notices on small businesses” by a current and former ATO officer on the ABC Four Corners program on 9 April 2018.

    Richard blew the whistle. His disclosure was not investigated properly until after Four Corners revealed the conduct and the then Minister commissioned an independent investigation. That investigation vindicated Richard’s concerns.

    But he still gets to face the music.

    The ‘making’ of a Criminal

    As Justice Lovell put it:

    The main issue on appeal is whether the appellant’s conduct in gathering evidence to support his disclosure of information also attracts the immunity under the Act.

    Much of the case, and potentially the following decades of Richard’s life, turned on the meaning of the word “making”. The legislation states:

    If an individual makes a public interest disclosure the individual is not subject to any civil, criminal or administrative liability (including disciplinary action) for making the public interest disclosure; …

    Noting the primary issue identified by the Court, the Human Rights Law Centre (HRLC), who supported Richard in his case, argued the immunity applied, but thoughtfully proposed that such an immunity should not be unlimited.

    They advised the Court “not every act preceding a [disclosure] would enjoy the immunity. The immunity was limited and would only exist if there was a nexus between the act and the disclosure, and only where the act is reasonably necessary for the making of a valid disclosure.”

    HLRC went on to submit that “the use of the expression “making” denotes a process rather than a focus on the actual moment of disclosure. A disclosure cannot be made, they submitted, without the steps being made to prepare it. Thus, those preparatory steps with sufficient nexus to the disclosure should be regarded as part of “making” the disclosure.”

    Light Verb, Heavy Verb

    It’s a debate most regular people would respond to with a “what the …” but it is what so often happens in courts. Richard’s immunity came down to an English language debate in the court room. Justice Doyle summarised that debate:

    Starting with the ordinary meaning of the verb “make”, a survey of dictionary definitions suggests it may be used in a range of differing senses. However, of relevance to the present matter, those meanings include meanings which are consistent with the arguments made by each of the parties. Consistently with [Richard’s] argument, “make” may mean to construct or create. Consistently with the [ATO’s] argument, it may also mean to bring about or cause to occur. Predictably, but unhelpfully, the appropriate meaning of the word “make” will often depend upon the context in which it is used, and in particular the noun which is the object of the relevant phrase or sentence. Related to this last observation, “make” is sometimes described as operating as a “light verb”; that is, a verb which has little semantic content of its own, but which forms a predicate with – and takes its meaning from – some additional expression, which is usually a noun. Whilst [Richard’s] meaning of “make” (construct or create) perhaps gives the word greater semantic force of its own, the [ATO’s] meaning (bring about or cause) is more consistent with its use as a light verb.

    The Court decided ‘light verb’ was correct in properly understanding the scope of the whistleblower protection. “Making” in the provision in the Act only refers to the act of submitting the disclosure. It’s only at the point of submission that the immunity kicks in.

    Richard will now face trial. A criminal trial.

    Drop the Charges

    There you have it. The clear lesson – DO NOT BLOW THE WHISTLE unless you are a barrister of King’s Counsel.

    It’s a fundamental tenet of the rule of law that no one is above the law. But we make exceptions. We let the police ‘break’ the law catching up to a speeding vehicle without alerting the speeding driver by the activation of lights and sirens. We grant criminal immunity to ASIO officers when they are involved in a special intelligence operation. 

    We need laws granting immunity for people making well intended, but unlawful, mistakes in preparing a whistle blowing disclosure. We also need a Whistleblower Protection Authority to assist whistleblowers know what the limits are.

    In the meantime, Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus, who wrote the broken 2013 laws that have failed Richard, could stop this tragic prosecution at any stage. He could do so recognising that pursuing Richard is not in the public interest – that this whole thing is a Shakespearian tragedy, and one that has a huge ‘chilling’ effect on whistleblowing in Australia.

    But instead of acting in the public interest, Dreyfus sits idly in his office doing nothing. Surely he has failed to meet his public interest obligations as Attorney-General of Australia.

    Richard Boyle appeal fails. Another deep blow for whistlebower protections.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.


  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Comprehensive coverage of the day’s news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice.

    The post The Pacifica Evening News, Weekdays – June 19, 2024. Boeing victims relatives call on federal government to fine the company $25 billion over two crashes. appeared first on KPFA.


    This content originally appeared on KPFA – The Pacifica Evening News, Weekdays and was authored by KPFA.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Richard Boyle

    In a unanimous judgment, the South Australian Court of Appeal has stripped ATO Whistleblower Richard Boyle of immunity from prosecution. Rex Patrick reports from the Court.

    The court has effectively declared that Australia’s Federal whistleblower protection laws are completely broken.

    Richard Boyle blew the whistle on the ATO’s egregious use of garnishee powers to strip funds from small business bank accounts. The powers were supposed to be used only as a measure of last resort, but the ATO was using them as a measure of first resort to meet their leader’s tax collection key performance indicators.

    Richard blew the whistle only to be prosecuted for breaking laws during the preparation of his public interest disclosure.

    It’s akin to someone jay-walking to save a child on the other side of the road, and then being prosecuted for jay-walking.

    Richard mounted and lost an immunity argument in the SA District Court. He appealed that loss to the SA Court of Appeal. The Court dismissed his appeal. The judgment reasons have been temporarily suppressed to allow Richard’s legal team to ensure nothing in the judgment will prejudice his criminal case, which will now recommence in the SA District Court.

    Court crushes whistleblower protection in Richard Boyle, Tax Office case

    The dismissal is not an indictment on Richard Boyle but rather on the poor state of our whistleblower laws.

    The Albanese Government has acknowledged that the Public Interest Disclosure Act is flawed, but it is content with Richard being persecuted because of those broken laws.

    The judgement comes just a month after war crimes whistleblower David McBride was marched off the jail for calling out the truth about Army misconduct in Afghanistan.

    Afghan war crimes whistleblower David McBride sentenced to prison

    Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus has the power to drop Richard Boyle’s prosecution with the stroke of a pen but has declined to do so. He seems happy for Richard to unfairly face the music. He seems happy to send the message to everyone – “don’t blow the whistle”.

    Dreyfus has failed to exercise his powers to drop Richard’s prosecution. Dreyfus has failed to strengthen our whistleblower protection laws. Dreyfus has failed in setting up a Whistleblower Protection Authority.

    Dreyfus is failing our democracy.

    Lendlease whistleblower and lawyer Tony Watson – the law is failing to protect whistleblowers

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • AUKUS submarines

    The Morrison Government encountered Opposition scorn for failing to include claw-back provisions in its JobKeeper program. Yet the Albanese Government is making the same mistake with its ‘JobGiver’ submarines program. Rex Patrick reports.

    On 23 November 2021, then-opposition Treasurer Jim Chalmers rose in the House of Representatives and delivered a fiery speech on the performance of the Liberal Coalition Government.

    When he spoke about managing the economy, Chalmers mentioned ‘JobKeeper and declared it the “defining example” of Coalition economic mismanagement.

    “JobKeeper was a great idea,” he said. “Frydenberg, the butterfingers of Australian politics, got his hands on it and he turned a good program into a program that wasted tens of billions of dollars, and that’s why the Financial Review wrote an article headlined ‘Frydenberg fires JobKeeper missile at himself’. If you look at that piece in the Financial Review, I think the key conclusion is that they describe the current Treasurer as ‘lighter than helium’.”

    He went on to describe the economy as a piece of software: “Wasting money is not a bug in this government; it is a feature of this government.”

    Three months later, opposition leader Anthony Albanese weighed in, describing to the House a Treasurer who had “not put in place appropriate protections for taxpayers’ interests when it comes to the JobKeeper program, resulting in

    over $20 billion going to companies that were increasing their profits.

    And that leads us to ‘JobGiver’.

    The money sinkhole

    On 13 March 2023, Prime Minister Albanese announced in San Diego that the AUKUS submarine program would cost a mind-blowing $368 billion. That’s $13,850 per man, woman, and child in Australia. And that’s not including the cost of managing the spent nuclear fuel for 100,000 years.

    At the time he offset the cost issue with a ‘jobs at home’ pitch. “The program will create around 20,000 direct jobs over the next 30 years across industry, the Defence Force and the Australian Public Service including trades workers, operators, technicians, engineers, scientists, submariners and project managers.

    In early September 2023, it was revealed that, as part of the program, Australians were to gift almost $4.7B in taxpayer’s money to grow the US submarine industrial base to enable the transfer of US Virginia attack-class submarines to the Royal Australian Navy.

    Along with a similar contribution to the UK, ‘JobGiver’ was born.

    JobGiver

    Shortly after the announcement, I FOI’ed the Submarine Agency for “The agreement between Australia and the United States that goes to Australia making significant financial contributions into the Submarine Special Activities Account”.

    I was concerned about the T’s and C’s. How would the money be spent? When would the money be paid to the US? Was there a clawback provision?

    The request was answered with a big fat “access denied”.

    JobGiver FOI

    Access denied (Source: FOI)

    The FOI matter is on appeal, but Senator David Shoebridge has been inquiring into the details at Senate Estimates. In an exchange with Vice Admiral Jonathon Mead, the head of the Australian Submarine Agency, he unhelpfully refused to confirm that the $4.7B would be returned to Australia if the US decided not to provide the Virginia submarines in 2035.

    Most likely, in other words, there is no clawback, just like ‘JobKeeper’.

    AUKUS risks unveiled – is Australia sleepwalking into a submarines disaster?

    A real risk of default

    The clawback matters, because

    the risk the US will not deliver a submarine to Australia is high.

    Whilst the US Congress passed into law, via the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, permission to transfer the first two of three to five Virginia class submarines to Australia, the approval contains a caveat.

    Before any US submarine can be transferred to the Royal Australian Navy, the US President must certify to the Congress that he or she is of the view that the transfer is not inconsistent with US foreign policy and national security interests.

    They’re ‘Humpty Dumpty’ words that will mean just what the President chooses them to mean – nothing more, nothing less. A future US President can kill the deal for subjective reasons at any time.

    But there’s a more objective threat. The US industrial base is not building enough submarines for its own needs, let alone ours. The magic build rate requirement for the US is 2.3 submarines per annum (to meet its attack and ballistic submarine needs, as well as Australia’s). Right now, the build rate is only 1.4, and with issues also plaguing their maintenance shipyards, there’s not a lot of optimism that it’s going to get anywhere near the 2.3 needed (apart from the blind optimism inside the Australian Submarine Agency and the Defence Minister Marles’ office).

    But wait, there’s more

    Of course, there are also risks in the UK ‘JobGiver’ payment we will make, again without a claw back. They’re unlikely to walk away from us on account of the perilous state of their submarine  industry,

    but they reliably deliver submarines that are late and over budget.

    The UK needs our money to assist them deal with their own moribund state. But their moribund state is exactly the reason they should not be our partner.

    The scam within a scam. US, UK officials are flying high on the AUKUS teat.

    When fending off his ‘JobKeeper’ fiducial failure, Frydenberg was at least able to say that the wasted taxpayers largely went back into the Australian economy. Chalmers won’t be able to say that of the ‘JobGiver’ money that’s going to the US.

    I say Chalmers, because Albanese’s unlikely to be around when the US say “sorry” to us. But there’s some chance that Chalmers will be Prime Minister in 2034/5. Whoever is shadow Treasurer at that time won’t be calling Chalmers ‘Helium Man’, like he labelled Frydenberg – rather it will be ‘Hydrogen Man’, on account of the fact that hydrogen is even lighter than helium.

    Will AUKUS FAUKUS?

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Former Prime Minister Hun Sen encouraged supporters of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party to “smash” and “destroy” opposition political activists in audio comments that circulated on Khmer social media this week.

    The Cambodian government has neither confirmed nor denied the veracity of the audio, which circulated widely on Facebook and other social media. Listeners say it sounds like the veteran leader, who currently serves as Senate president. It was purportedly recorded at a party meeting last week.

    “Please all city, capital and provincial presidents of the party, be informed that in the past few weeks I sent a decision pertaining to a group of people who are experts in destroying the grassroots,” Hun Sen says in the audio.

    “You must smash this force to a point that they no longer disturb us, let’s make it clear,” he said. “While we destroy their forces, we can persuade them to join us.”

    In August, Hun Sen stepped down as prime minister, a position he held since 1985, allowing his son to take over. But he retains power as the president of the Senate and head of the Cambodian People’s Party, or CPP.

    The run-up to the July 2023 parliamentary elections saw a months-long campaign of intimidation and threats against opposition leaders and activists. Some activists were persuaded to publicly switch their allegiance to the CPP. 

    Additionally, the National Election Committee ruled that the main opposition Candlelight Party couldn’t appear on the ballot, citing inadequate paperwork. The decision paved the way for the CPP to win 120 of 125 seats in the National Assembly.

    Cambodia also held Senate elections in February and local provincial, municipal and district elections in May.

    Care for the new ‘brothers and sisters’

    In the audio, Hun Sen urged CPP officials to work on persuading opposition activists to defect now – instead of waiting to act months before the next round of elections. 

    Cambodia has local commune council elections scheduled for 2027. Its next parliamentary election is set to take place in 2028.

    ENG_KMH_HUN SEN AUDIO_06132024.2.jpg
    Supporters of the ruling Cambodian People’s Party participate in a campaign rally in Phnom Penh on July 21, 2023. (Tang Chhin Sothy/AFP)

    Efforts should include incorporating party switchers into the CPP’s party structure and encouraging them to recruit more defectors, Hun Sen said.

    “I ask the provincial party and local party offices to expeditiously administer these brothers and sisters [defectors] so they do not feel left out, or that there is a lack of care for them by the local party branches,” he said. 

    “Let’s declare the incorporation [of the defectors] into the party from now,” he said. “Let’s break their grassroot bases now so that they do not have base support.”

    Hun Sen is an avid social media user, with 14 million followers on Facebook and 925,000 on TikTok.

    RFA messaged Hun Sen on Facebook on Wednesday to verify the audio, but he hadn’t responded by Friday. RFA was also unable to reach government spokesman Pen Bona for comment.

    ‘Psychological threat’

    Eng Chhai Eang, a former opposition lawmaker who now lives in the United States, said the audio was forwarded to him last week after a CPP official had sent it to opposition activists in Cambodia.

    He told RFA he believed the audio was real and reflects Hun Sen’s longtime approach to political opponents.

    Eng Chhai Eang continues to serve as the vice president of the Cambodian National Rescue Party, or CNRP, which was the main opposition party until it was banned by the Supreme Court in 2017.

    “His vicious deeds started after the CNRP dissolution,” he said. “He ordered attacks against those who refused to defect. Any activists were attacked.”

    The audio was probably intended as a “a psychological threat,” according to Rong Chhun, a prominent opposition activist who is an adviser to the opposition National Power Party, which was founded last year.

    Translated by Yun Samean and Sok Ry Sum. Edited by Matt Reed and Malcolm Foster.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By RFA Khmer.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Was browsing through a book shop a few days ago and found this one. It is so fascinating I read it within 48 hours. A real page turner. Its about the close friendship of our former Prime Minister, Scott Morrison, and the founder of Hillsong Church, Brian Houston, that hugely embraced religion, politics, power and …

    Continue reading BUY YOUR COPY OF ‘MINE IS THE KINGDOM’ TODAY. RIVETTING BOOK ABOUT PARTNERSHIP OF SCOTT MORRISON AND BRIAN HOUSTON.

    The post BUY YOUR COPY OF ‘MINE IS THE KINGDOM’ TODAY. RIVETTING BOOK ABOUT PARTNERSHIP OF SCOTT MORRISON AND BRIAN HOUSTON. appeared first on Everald Compton.

    This post was originally published on My Articles – Everald Compton.

  • Almost 100 parliamentary reports have had their recommendations dismissed by the Albanese government in the past month, as it works through a backlog of reports and recommendations that were never formally acknowledged by the former Coalition government. The brief formal responses being put forward say too much time has passed for a fulsome response on…

    The post Clearing the decks: 100 committee reports dismissed in a month appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Senator Barbara Pocock. PwC

    Was PwC commissioned to write the recommendations of the Final Report of the PwC Inquiry into PwC? Michael West reports.

    It was like the footy player whose team had driven all the way up the field only to spill the ball over the try line.

    After 14 months of inquiry, 60 submissions and explosive evidence of cover-ups, massive fees for no service, countless lies, and damning evidence that the privatisation of government has miserably failed, the Senate Committee on Finance and Public Administration has handed down its final report into ‘Management and Assurance of Integrity by Consulting Services Management and Assurance of Integrity by Consulting Services‘.

    Otherwise known as the PwC Inquiry … it’s a whitewash.

    The Report itself is fine. It goes into the Big Grift in detail, exposing the untenable conflicts of interest, rorts like the exploitation of Legal Professional Privilege, and much, much more.

    It’s the politics that are the problem. The recommendations. The Committee, stacked as it is with Liberal and Labor people, has delivered 12 recommendations while PwC itself continues to refuse to deliver information requested by the senators.

    There is nothing in this feeble set of recommendations to address the systemic problems and egregious waste which have arisen from the privatisation of government since Big 4 consulting fees began to go ballistic with the government of Tony Abbott in 2014. Okay, a couple of the disclosure measures are worthwhile but the rorts will henceforth roll on.

    But for Pocock and O’Neill

    Many readers will have been watching in admiration as a couple of the senators, principally Barbara Pocock and Deborah O’Neill held Big 4 feet to the fire during committee sessions. This was our politicians at their best. Alas, although the Greens chapter is the Report – “A Very Public Swindle” – is worth a read, the recommendations have been compromised because both Labor and the Coalition control the Committee and get millions of dollars in donations each year from EY, PwC, KPMG and Deloitte.

    The Big 4 has the political duopoly stitched up. Even this week, as Stuart McCarthy broke the story of the Department of Veterans Affairs slotting $73m to PwC to connive on how to avoid a Royal Commission, how *not to reform”, this committee and its findings present a case study in how to dodge reform.

    Paid to Not Reform: Veterans’ Affairs chucks $73m at PwC to dodge Royal Commission

    It should be said, despite many being crestfallen at the impotence of the recommendations, that the whole affair has been worthwhile in exposing the rorts, in bringing accountability. The effect of this, even as PwC is already plotting its comeback to government consultancy to milk the fat cow of bureaucracy, will be to moderate behaviour, to make procurement a better process.

    Yet the essential failures of the outsourcing of government remain; chiefly the massive conflicts of interest and the cost to the public purse. How can it possibly be more efficient to privatise government to people charging $500 per hour when public servants are already paid $50 per hour to do their job anyway?

    Ziggy plays for time: PwC’s dual ‘independent reports’ a dual whitewash

    Conflicts of interest

    The critical conflicts of interest are that the Big 4 run three businesses: consulting, audit and tax advisory. There is a conflict between the latter two as an auditor has to sign off financial statements as ‘true and fair’ while the tax advisor across the Chinese Wall of gossamer tries to push the tax laws and accounting to the very limit to rake profits offshore for their multinational clients.

    Then as evinced in the Inquiry, PwC well and truly breached its conflicts when it consulted to government on new tax laws while it was advising its MNC clients on how to skive out of paying tax by grifting those very laws.

    Auditors are meant to adhere to professional standards, and tax lawyers have their legal obligations, but consultants? Who regulates consultants? Nobody. And nobody effectively regulates the Big 4 because their are too big and too powerful. Imagine ASIC bringing a case against PwC, Deloitte, EY or KPMG?

    Accountants of Fortune

    After warning for years that this power and the conflicts of interest – indeed and poor audit standards – was a looming train wreck, the government turbocharged the train.

    The very first story we published when establishing MWM in mid-2016 quoted a former adviser and tax expert at PwC and EY, George Rozvany:

    “The Big Four have, under a Rasputin-like cloak of illusion strayed from their original and critical role of verifying the accuracy of financial accounts for all stakeholders, to be “accountants of fortune” merely representing the accounting position for multinationals and developing aggressive international tax avoidance practices.”

    Oligarchs of the Treasure Islands

    Meanwhile, government consulting revenues was exploding – delivering double-digit increases in annual revenue at all the firms. The gouge on Defence in particular is epic, with 2,000 consultants roaming about the Department down in Canberra with their special passes.

    Yet it has also infected almost every part of government. As Stuart McCarthy said this morning:

    “The long-awaited Senate inquiry report on the “big four” consultancies and their multi-million dollar contracts with federal government departments has been published, with 12 recommendations calling on PwC to publicly name the executives responsible for the Australian Taxation Office confidentiality breach, and improved regulation and management by the consulting industry and government regulators.”

    “During the inquiry, Labor Senator Deborah O’Neill and Greens Senator Barbara Pocock railed against the big four’s “toxic culture” in numerous media interviews. Despite all this colour and movement, there is no hint of accountability for the departmental secretaries and other senior government officials who approve and manage these contracts on behalf of the taxpayer.”

    Veteran scamming

    No mention of the billion-dollar “veteran-centric reform” scam is made in the inquiry report. Conceived to forestall the Royal Commission into defence and veteran suicide while retaining the “byzantine”, “archaic”, and “not fit for purpose” legislation at the heart of the veteran suicide crisis, and which the Royal Commission has since recommended be overhauled anyway.

    “PwC was paid $73 million for a “reform” program that resulted only in a bigger, more expensive and equally dysfunctional department while exploiting their access in the department to pursue their commercial interests in the dodgy health information technology start-up Innowell.

    “While it’s true PwC’s scamming of the veterans affairs portfolio took place under the Turnbull-Morrison government, the Albanese government is perpetuating the scam. The departmental spend on annual “upgrades” to the IT and management systems purportedly “reformed” at a cost of $1 billion has not changed, indeed its operating costs have increased.

    “Current veterans affairs minister Matt Keogh – a former Community and Public Sector Union delegate – has expanded the department by 500 staff while thumbing his nose at the Royal Commission’s recommendation to fix the legislation that drives his department’s bureaucratic dysfunction.

    What’s the scam? A bigger, more expensive self-licking ice cream,

    while nobody is held to account for a billion dollars in taxpayers’, money, flushed down the drain.

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Steven Miles and Rishi Sunak.

    Steven Miles would blanch at the comparison, but there are some unfortunate parallels that can be drawn between the Queensland Premier and foundering UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. Paul Syvret reports. 

    On Tuesday, Stephen Miles presided over his first – and if the polls are to be believed, his last – state budget as Premier, ahead of the Queensland election on October 26. 

    Towards the end of the carefully choreographed production – where almost every initiative of note had been buffed up and leaked to the media well in advance – his Treasurer, Cameron Dick, made a rather desperate plea. 

    The looming election, Dick said, was “not a referendum on the last nine years,” and implored voters “not to express an opinion about the past”.   

    Good government starts today … in heaven

    Judge us not on what we’ve done (or not done), but instead look at what we’re going to do … and look at all the billions in handouts that will rain down over the next 12 months. Good luck with that – just ask Tony Abbott how the infamous “good government starts today” line went for him after narrowly surviving a leadership spill. 

    Meanwhile, on the other side of the planet, a doomed Sunak was at the Tory Party campaign launch, announcing billions of pounds in unfunded tax cuts and all manner of other policy fixes which had somehow eluded the Conservatives for the past decade, with his Labour opposition describing the manifesto as the “most expensive panic attack in history”, and accusing Sunak of “cosplaying [failed former PM] Liz Truss”. 

    Like Sunak, Miles’ relatively recently ascended to the big chair in Queensland following the resignation of Annastacia Palaszczuk in December. 

    Like Sunak, he inherited a government that was looking tired and decidedly shop-soiled; in Queensland’s case facing major challenges on hot-button fronts such as public health, social housing, law and order and the ever-present cost of living crisis. 

    Chin up chaps! Better than Rishi and the Tories

    Throw into that mix some truly ham-fisted planning for the 2032 Olympics, and inept management of major infrastructure projects, and it’s easy to see why bookmakers have the Liberal National Party at un-backable odds to romp home in October. 

    While the Tories in Britain are, according to the polls, facing an electoral wipe-out following 14 years of misrule (with five different Prime Ministers over that period), the Brexit debacle, crumbling public services, COVID mismanagement and a faltering economy, the prospects for Labor in Queensland are dire, but unlikely to be a repeat of the electoral Armageddon that removed the Bligh Labor government in 2012.

    That bloodbath saw Labor reduced to just seven seats in Queensland’s 89 seat parliament. 

    Save the furniture!

    Miles and his Treasurer have in effect crafted a ‘save the furniture’ budget – a big-spending program where every voter wins a prize. There are stamp duty cuts, 50 cent public transport fares, $1000 power rebates, car registration reductions and a freeze on all government charges. Money is also going to food relief programs, law and order, a 10 per cent lift in health funding and $3.1 billion into public housing.

    A case of fiscal anaesthesia for political pain if you like. 

    Unusually for an Opposition in such a commanding position, the LNP said in advance of the budget that it would – in a clear attempt to neutralise Labor’s cost of living sugar hit – support every initiative. The scars from the Campbell Newman loss in 2015 – following three years of austerity, brutal public service cuts and an arrogantly libertarian approach to government – are still raw. 

    Crisafulli, Miles and Dick

    In this respect the “not Labor” (very) small target approach adopted by LNP leader David Crisafulli also has a fair bit of “not Campbell Newman” as subtext. 

    This will tend to limit their budget attack lines to accusing Miles and Dick of short-termism – focussing on the next four months rather than the next four years. 

    In short, while far from visionary, the budget does no real harm. Yes, the healthy surpluses – buoyed by bonanza coal royalties and stamp duty receipts – of the last couple of years will disappear, to be replaced by modest deficits. 

    And a deficit (2024-25) of $2.6 billion in the context of a $500 trillion economy and annual receipts of $88 billion is not cause for alarm. 

    But … for the consultants

    These deficits are largely the result of an expected slump in royalty revenues and the absence of any real structural savings measures beyond cutting back on external consultants and contractors. 

    Then there is the four year capital works program totalling $107 billion, with huge licks of money for energy infrastructure, new hospitals, transport investment, and of course the Olympic Games. This will push gross debt up to about $110 billion in four years’ time, which still represents only about 20 percent of GSP. 

    Two things here: firstly Queensland is the only state in Australia to have fully funded its long-tail superannuation liabilities, and secondly it still holds an extensive suite of major public assets such as ports and power generation giving it a much stronger balance sheet than most. 

    We are not they

    Still, the budget is unlikely to be a panacea for the Miles government. For the average voter who pays scant attention to daily politics – let alone the intricacies of fiscal aggregates – it provides not inconsiderable relief, albeit short-term.  But the LNP has pledged to honour the largesse, so for cranky punters its winner winner mud crab dinner no matter which way they vote. 

    Working in the government’s favour though is the LNP’s ‘nothing to see’ here camouflage campaign which, at least to date, has offered voters nothing in the way of vision or concrete policy beyond “we’re not the other mob” (and, don’t mention the war, but were not Campbell Newman either). 

    As The Guardian put it on Tuesday night, the budget has all the subtlety of a “going out of business sale”.   At this point though it would be fair to say that while Sunak is presiding over a liquidation sale, Steven Miles is hosting more of an end of season stock clearance. 

    The Palaszczuk ultimatum and the Miles ahead for Queensland, the “odd dichotomy” of Australian politics

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Innowell launch party

    The Department of Veterans Affairs paid consultants PwC $73 million to forestall a Royal Commission as part of a billion-dollar program intended to avoid reforming “not fit for purpose” legislation. Stuart McCarthy reports.

    The Department of Veterans’ Affairs (DVA) paid disgraced consulting firm PwC (PriceWaterhouse Coopers) $73 million to implement a “veteran centric reform” program aimed at forestalling the Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide.

    More than $1B in public expenditure sunk on this program has since become the justification for the government to avoid the “urgent” legislative reform recommended in the Royal Commission’s interim report. The program was used as an opportunity to promote a discredited software platform by health information technology (HIT) start-up company Innowell Pty Ltd, co-owned by PwC and established using a $30 million grant from the federal health department.

    Public advocacy for the Royal Commission began in earnest around the time of a 2015 Senate inquiry into the mental health of defence force personnel. These efforts were supported by media coverage highlighting a dysfunctional veterans’ affairs bureaucracy that the Productivity Commission found in 2019 was “not fit for purpose”, requiring “fundamental reform” to its “byzantine” and “archaic” legislation.

    Under the existing legislation, veterans are required to submit multiple claims for conditions resulting from the same injury or illness, a process that often takes months or years. This bureaucratic dysfunction has long been identified as one of the key factors contributing to the veteran suicide crisis.

    Veteran Suicides Investigation

    Days before a six-month investigation ($) into veteran suicides by award-winning journalist Ruth Lamperd hit the front pages in 2016, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called a press conference to announce a National Mental Health Commission (NMHC) review into suicide prevention services for veterans and families and re-announce several other initiatives from the previous budget.

    The NMHC was chaired by Professor Ian Hickie from Sydney University, who is notorious for criticising general practitioners and other primary health care providers for their involvement in patients’ mental health care.

    Three days before Turnbull’s press conference, DVA awarded PwC an $8 million contract to act as the department’s “primary strategic partner” in developing a second pass business case for the proposed “veteran centric reform”(VCR)  program.

    The Department was allocated funding in the 2016-17 Budget to begin planning to significantly improve its policies, provision of services, and information & communications technology (ICT) infrastructure. One of the key assumptions of the business case was that “no significant legislative reform” would be required.

    Actuarial modelling included in the business case suggested “reforms” to business processes, ICT and “departmental culture” would realise $500 million to $1 billion in departmental cost savings over the next 50 years, or $10-20 million per annum.

    The suicide ‘business case’

    Following the government’s April 2017 approval of the business case, DVA agreed to a $73M deed of standing offer with PwC, for consulting services to assist with the design and implementation of VCR.

    The initial $27.5M contract in 2017-18 was the single largest ($) government consulting services contract awarded that year, representing a quarter of the Commonwealth’s total spend on consulting services. KPMG was awarded $7.3M in contracts for VCR-related consulting services including “assurance activities.”

    The first $166M tranche of the VCR funding was announced by Turnbull’s Veterans Affairs Minister, Dan Tehan, in the 2017-18 budget. A 2021 Australian National Audit Office report shows that $653.7M was spent in the first three years of the six-year program.

    Analysis of this report, government budget papers, ministerial media releases and DVA annual reports suggest the program’s total cost exceeded $1 billion.

    There is a discrepancy of more than $300 million between the commitments identified in the budget papers and the program’s total estimated cost, largely attributable to the contracted labour hire needed to keep the department running while the program was being rolled out.

    Additional staffing costs were not included in the business case. ANAO has thus far declined to audit the rest of the VCR program subsequent to its 2021 report.

    Among the attendees at Tehan’s parliamentary house office party on budget night in May 2017 was Hickie’s colleague Professor Jane Burns, who declared of the $166M announcement over a glass of champagne “winners are veterans and families.”

    Burns, who chaired the DVA veterans’ and families’ counselling service national advisory committee, is the co-founder of the HIT start-up company Innowell.

    Innowell Pty Ltd

    Innowell’s primary business venture was the Project Synergy software platform, initially developed using $5.5M in federal health department funding,

    based partly on the discredited concept of gamifying a suicide prevention phone app.

    As the initial funding dried up, Hickie publicly lobbied Turnbull for further public funding in the lead-up to the 2016 federal election.

    In 2017 the health department awarded a $30M non-competitive grant to a PwC/University of Sydney joint venture to continue Project Synergy.

    Innowell was registered as a private company earlier that year. Burns’ co-founder was PwC partner Kristin Stubbins, who later became the company’s acting Australian chief executive.

    Weeks before the $30M grant was awarded, a 45% Innowell shareholding was given to PwC, with 45% going to the University of Sydney, 5% to Hickie and 5% to Burns. Turnbull later appeared in a live promotional video for Project Synergy with Burns and Hickie,

    without declaring Innowell was established as a private company using public funds.

    Tehan, Turnbull, Ley

    Malcolm Turnbull, Dan Tehan and Sussan Ley at a press conference addressing veteran suicides in August 2016.

    Failed software trials

    DVA clients and other vulnerable groups were used to trial Innowell’s software platform under Burns’ oversight as the national advisory committee chair and during the VCR rollout managed by PwC consultants.

    Despite an independent academic report finding in 2019 that there was no evidence the trials proved the software platform was effective, PwC publicly stated that the trials were “successfully delivered,” providing commercialisation and investment opportunities. The Innowell website now says the company “provides research-validated digital tools and personalised insights to connect your people to the support they need when they need it.”

    Hickie has complained that the current Senate consulting services inquiry poses a  “clear danger … that unnecessary and preventable harms are caused to many rather innocent bystanders.”

    He was awarded an AM on Australia Day this year for “distinguished service to psychiatric research and reforms as an advocate for improved mental health care and awareness.”

    Royal Commission

    The Royal Commission was eventually established in 2021 after a petition was signed by hundreds of thousands of members of the public. Then a motion was supported unanimously in both houses of parliament.

    The first “urgent” recommendation of its interim report last year was fundamental reform to the dysfunctional legislation identified in a succession of previous reports, including the Productivity Commission. The same dysfunctional legislation the government sought only to band-aid with the billion-dollar VCR program. Among the hundreds of Royal Commission witnesses was DVA medical adviser Dr Felix Sedal, who testified at a public hearing that the

    ‘reformed’ departmental IT system ‘was harder to use than the paper files.’

    But the Albanese government is now resisting these calls for fundamental legislative reform, on the perverse basis that it would be too expensive.

    Sources involved in the legislative consultation process announced by current veterans’ affairs minister Matt Keogh in response to the Royal Commission’s interim report say the minister intends to retain the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act – an inherently complex piece of legislation that retains the “archaic” processes identified by the Productivity Commission – with only minor amendment, for the sake of political expedience and concern over the cost of introducing new ICT systems and staff training necessitated by more fundamental reforms that would meet the needs of injured veterans and their families.

    Keogh has publicly highlighted the government’s efforts to rebuild the Australian public service after years of outsourcing by the previous government.

    The former Community and Public Sector Union delegate in 2022 increased DVA staffing by 500, at a cost of $234M, with a further $87 million to “modernise IT systems.”

    No cost savings

    Analysis of these figures shows that, rather than saving the department the $10-20 million per annum predicted in the PwC business case, the actual outcome of the $1 billion VCR program has been an increase in departmental operating costs of around $60-124 million per annum.

    Australian Peacekeeper and Peacemaker Veterans’ Association chairperson Ian Lindgren says he is “stunned” by Keogh and his department’s lacklustre response to the Royal Commission’s recommendation for legislative reform, telling MWM: 

    We believe the proposed legislation will fail to meet the Royal Commission’s recommendations.

    “The ‘simplified’ legislation will continue to create the angst, complexity, and trauma which contributes to suicidality in the defence and veteran community.”

    Lindgren participated in a “multi-act working group” led by senior DVA officials, but says the “purported consultation process” prompted him to withdraw on the first day of the activity. He says key veteran advocates “have been told that we will not know which elements of the recent consultation will be incorporated until the draft legislation is tabled [in parliament].”

    Royal Commission chair Nick Kaldas wrote in February this year:

    “It appears there has been a catastrophic failure of leadership at a government level and within the military to prioritise the urgent reforms and implement effectively the previous recommendations required to deliver improved health and wellbeing outcomes for defence personnel and veterans – and, as such, the senseless loss of life continues today. It is a national disgrace.”

    With a veterans’ affairs minister clearly more concerned about protecting the interests of his CPSU cronies than he is with properly reforming his “not fit for purpose” department, that same catastrophic leadership failure is now afflicting the Albanese government.

    The Senate Consulting Services Inquiry’s final report is expected to be published this week, while the Royal Commission’s final report is due in September.

    Ziggy plays for time: PwC’s dual ‘independent reports’ a dual whitewash

    This post was originally published on Michael West.


  • This content originally appeared on Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and was authored by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • International student caps

    New caps on international students coming to Australia will result in job losses and less money for research, and impact university rankings. But how will the caps work? Peter Hurley and Melinda Hildebrandt investigate.

    Just before the May budget, the federal government made a surprise announcement: it will introduce caps on the number of international students in the country.

    It is fair to say this plan is really worrying some Australian universities.

    This is because international education is a vital source of funding for Australia’s universities. Universities collected about A$8.6B from international students in 2022 – more than a quarter of all revenue.

    Given the sums involved, the introduction of caps has the potential to have the most significant impact on Australia’s tertiary education system in decades. But a major unanswered question is what the caps will be and how they will be calculated.

    What was announced?

    Education Minister Jason Clare introduced legislation to parliament on student caps almost immediately after the budget was released. This would provide ministerial powers to regulate international education in Australia by:

    • pausing the registration of new providers and new courses
    • limiting the enrolments of overseas students by provider, course or location, over a year
    • automatically suspending and cancelling courses.

    This comes as the government seeks to reduce net overseas migration (the increase in the number of people in Australia) to Canada and the United Kingdom, which have introduced changes to limit the number of international students in their countries.

    Net overseas migration

    Overseas migration underestimated

    As the Treasury explained last week, it underestimated net overseas migration by 25%. International students are the major cause of this.

    They are now at record levels, with about 870,000 current and former international students in Australia. They make up the largest part of the temporary migrant population.

    During the pandemic, the number of international students in Australia has more than halved. In December 2019, there were more than 630,000 international students in Australia. By December 2021, there were 315,000. Since Australia reopened its borders, the number of international students entering the country has rebounded much quicker than anticipated.

    Along with pent-up demand, the Morrison government introduced policies to encourage international students to return. This included removing caps on the number of hours a student could work and allowing students to stay longer after they have finished their course.

    Now, amid dual housing and cost-of-living crises, international students have also become a political issue. Not only is the federal government looking to decrease net overseas migration but the opposition wants to go even further.

    Growth in temporary imigrants

    Who is affected by this change?

    So far, the focus of the impact of international student caps has been on universities. But there could be much wider impacts on the economy and community if international student numbers are capped.

    One thing that is often lost in the debate is the diversity of the international education sector. Universities only make up about 40% of current international student enrolments.

    The remainder of the students are in private colleges, English language schools and secondary schools.

    International students are also important parts of Australia’s workforce. The occupation with the largest number of international students is “carer and aides”. This means industries like aged care and disability support rely on an international student workforce.

    In 2023, international education was also Australia’s fourth largest export valued at $48 billion. Of this, $17 billion was collected in course fees and the remaining $31 billion was spent in the broader economy.

    This means any change to international student numbers could have an impact way beyond the campuses of Australia’s elite universities.

    Students worforce impact

    Missing details

    During his budget speech, Treasurer Jim Chalmers focused on housing as a central to how caps will be calculated.

    As he told parliament:

    […] for too long, enrolments have grown without being matched by an increase in student housing supply.

    “We will limit how many international students can be enrolled by each university based on a formula, including how much housing they build.”

    But it is not yet clear how this will happen.

    It is also unclear how much international students are impacting upon housing costs. Some research has shown the impact of international students on housing and rental prices is small.

    One factor the government could consider here is how many domestic students are enrolled at a particular institution. This is so domestic students do not suffer from a cut that sees fewer resources where they study.

    In Australia, it is certainly true the larger, more prestigious universities have the most international students. But they also enrol huge numbers of domestic students.

    The largest private vocational colleges enrol almost exclusively international students, usually in courses like business and hospitality. As our analysis (below) shows, of the ten largest private providers, nine were private colleges where there were few domestic students.

    It is important to note, this is the part of the international education sector identified as having the most problems with compliance and exploitation. This is what the government has been keen to crack down on when it talks about “shonky” providers.

    Vocational colleges enrolment

    What happens next?

    The bill has been referred to the Senate’s education committee, which is due to report on August 15.

    In many ways “too many students” is a good problem to have. It demonstrates Australia’s international education sector is strong.

    But we have to watch out for unintended consequences. The diversity of the system – from elite, research universities educating both international and domestic students to private colleges largely educating international students – also needs to be taken into account.

    And to adequately understand the impacts, we need more detail now from the government about how they plan to do it.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    Migration: unis cry foul over attack on international student numbers

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Treasury Secretary Steven Kennedy has been reappointed on another five-year term as his department prepares to deliver the Future Made in Australia agenda. Mr Kennedy was originally appointed Treasury secretary in September 2019 after two years as secretary of the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Cities and Regional Development. He has served in the Australian Public…

    The post Gig Guide: Treasury Secretary gets second term appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Miami, June 6, 2024—The Committee to Protect Journalists welcomes the release of Cuban journalist Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca, but is deeply concerned he was forced into exile, and calls on Cuban authorities to allow reporters to work freely in the country without fear of reprisal. 

    Valle left Cuba for the United States on Wednesday, June 5, after serving nearly three years in prison, according to local press freedom group the Cuban Institute for Freedom of Expression and the Press (ICLEP), and the Miami Herald

    Valle was sentenced to five years in prison in July 2022 for contempt and sharing “enemy propaganda” in connection with a video posted on his YouTube channel, Delibera, of pro-democracy leaflets thrown from a building in the capital, Havana. 

    ICLEP reported that Valle Roca arrived in the United States on humanitarian parole, and that his release from prison was on the condition that he leave Cuba. 

    “Although we welcome Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca’s prison release, it is disconcerting that the Cuban government has forced Valle into exile rather than allowing him to do his job,” said CPJ U.S., Canada and Caribbean Program Coordinator Katherine Jacobsen. “The Cuban government should allow journalists to work freely, without fear of imprisonment or forced exile.” 

    ICLEP general manager, Normando Hernández confirmed in a text message to CPJ that Valle had safely landed in Miami with his wife on Wednesday.

    “After almost three years of unjust imprisonment, Yuri is finally free,” Hernández wrote on the ICLEP’s website

    Valle’s expulsion of Valle Roca is the latest example of a crackdown by Cuban authorities on independent media that began following street protests in July 2021 which began in response to longstanding frustrations with the government and restrictions on rights and scarcity of food and medicines. As a result of the government crackdown, journalists, activists and other civil society members were either jailed or forced to leave the island.

    Cuban law prohibits the establishment of independent media organizations outside the country’s socialist state system. Journalism is not one of the legally permitted professions under Cuba’s 2021 legalization of private business activity. Cuba’s updated ‘Social Communication Law,’ approved by Cuba’s National Assembly on May 26, 2023, prohibits the dissemination of information that aims to “subvert the constitutional order and destabilize the socialist State of law and social justice.”

    Valle had been held in pretrial detention since June 15, 2021, when he was arrested after police summoned him to allegedly close a 2020 contempt investigation. In June 2022, prosecutors requested a six-year sentence in his case.

    Valle has suffered from multiple health conditions during his detention, including complications related to his previous hunger strike, according to CPJ research.


    This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Nearly 1,000 people eligible for conscription into the Myanmar military’s ranks are instead seeking training from the shadow civilian government’s armed forces, the group announced. 

    The junta, which seized power in 2021 and has since faced increasing desertions and military losses nationwide, announced the implementation of the People’s Military Service Law in February. The military has since recruited about 9,000 people through two rounds of conscription based on a lottery system.

    Many young people have fled the country out of fear that they may be drafted. Recruitment by junta soldiers has involved coercing young people, including minors, threatening violence or property destruction and most recently, threats and heavy fines for parents of draft dodgers as a third round of conscription approaches, residents say.

    About 960 people have chosen to seek training under the civilian National Unity Government’s People’s Defense Forces, or militias opposing the junta, the group’s southern military office said in a statement on Wednesday. The statement included photos of a recent graduation. The N.U.G. was formed by members of the civilian administration ousted in the February 2021 coup.

    A 28-year-old man eligible for military conscription under the junta in central Myanmar’s Mandalay Division told RFA he initially planned on going abroad, like many people already have, but he was now aiming to join anti-junta forces.

    “At first I was hesitant to put my family at risk but now I canceled my preparations to go abroad and work and have decided to take up arms. Now I am preparing and am still trying to connect with the training group,” he said, asking to remain anonymous for security reasons. 

    “I can’t take it anymore, mainly because of the [junta’s] injustice, the way they are killing and torturing people. Most young people would make the same decision. This is the only way left for us to root out the military dictatorship.”

    The National Unity Government’s Southern Military Headquarters No. 3 began accepting trainees to undergo basic military courses in April and May, it said in its statement.

    RFA phoned the headquarters for more information, but it could not be contacted due to limited telecommunications access.

    Translated by RFA Burmese. Edited by Kiana Duncan and Mike Firn. 


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by By RFA Burmese.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The crew of Down Periscope

    Down Periscope is a submarine comedy; the Australian version is a comedic tragedy. Former Royal Australian Navy serviceman, Rex Patrick on the latest Defence debacle.

    ‘Down Periscope’ is a comical movie about an old decrepit submarine being turned into a winning capability. The real life ‘Down Periscope’ being played out in the Royal Australian Navy has an opposite plot and is a $30B tragedy.

    Measure Twice, Cut Once

    In 2019 the Navy decided to upgrade the search periscopes on the Collins Class submarines from an ‘analogue’ periscope device to a ‘digital’ optronic device. Subsequently Defence entered into a contract with Raytheon for $381 million to do the upgrade work.

    At Senate Estimates in February, based on a tip, Senator Jacqui Lambie asked Defence officials if there were installation issues with the new optronics masts – she suggested they didn’t fit. They took the question on notice, and then didn’t answer it. 

    They have also failed, in the 90 days since I submitted a ‘measure twice, cut once’ FOI application seeking details about the installation plans and troubles, to come back to me with the results of that FOI submission (the statutory processing time frame is 30 days). 

    Yesterday, before Defence Estimates commenced, the Minister for Defence Industry announced the optronics mast upgrade will not go ahead..

    Under questions from Senator Lambie this afternoon, the Chief of Navy denied that the decision not to proceed with the upgrade was related to an installation issue, but revealed they have spent $33 million dollar on the masts and will likely have to pay an additional break fee for the contract.

    That’s 33 million wasted! Cha-ching!

    But wait, there’s much more!

    The sad thing is, the optronics mast weight is practice waste. Practice makes perfect, and Defence are certainly well versed at wasting large sums of money, letting the taxpayer shoulder the cost and national security be what it is.

    Fifteen years ago, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd unveiled the 2009 Defence White Paper which included the planned replacement of the 6 Collins Class submarines with 12 future submarines.

    Construction of the first future submarine was to begin in 2016, in time for it to be fully tested, commissioned and accepted into service, ready to replace the first retiring Collins Class submarine in 2024 and thereby avoiding a capability gap.  

    Defence dithered and dathered on a replacement solution, first considering a son-of-Collins design (and actively discrediting all off the shelf submarine designs available at the time) and then a Japanese submarine, before contacting the French in 2016 to build 12 Attack Class submarines. 

    In September 2021, when Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced his AUKUS plans, the Attack class submarine program was cancelled. Unfortunately, a lot of the focus around that announcement was centred on the fallout between Morrison and French President Macron, which meant that the enduring loss of $4B (including an $830 million compensation payment to the French), money spent not achieving anything, was almost lost in the shadows.

    Cha-ching!

    Collins lifebuoy ahoy

    Along with the cancellation of the optronic mast and Tomahawk missile, the Defence Industry Minister (re)announced the Government would spend between $4B to $5B (officials later stated the cost would be $4.3B to $6.4B) extending the life of Collins.

    The Minister, in (re)announcing the extension, cast the expenditure as an investment. But the truth is, if Defence had been capable of buying a submarine in the 15 years since the program was announced, this expenditure wouldn’t have been necessary if Defence had simply approached the future submarine in accordance with the 2009 plan.

    So, hardly an investment, really just a waste.

    Cha-ching!

    Even more cost depths

    The $4.3B to $6.4B cost of the life extension covers upgrades to the Collins main motor, diesels and switchboards, not the ongoing sustainment cost.

    There bad news there. Coincidently on the day the Minister was (re)announcing the life extension project, the Chief of Navy was giving some advice to the Senate on the cost of keeping older ships going.

    The reality with the cost of ownership of warships is, there’s a slight premium at the beginning when you settle them into service and iron out any issues. Then that cost of ownership stabilises through life and then as they get older the cost off ownership increases, particularly as you are dealing with obsolesce issues and more frequent repair issues.”

    The cost of Collins sustainment has risen to $769 million this year, from $710 million last year. It’s a situation that keeps getting worse and we should expect it will continue to get worse as we move forward.

    Cha-ching!

    Boats no better above surface 

    Last year we learned that the future frigates, which was supposed to be a proven off-the-shelf vessel but ended up being a paper design, had gone from $45 billon for nine vessels (from an original $30 billion plan) to $65 billion.

    The government’s response to this blowout was to decrease the number of ships purchased from nine to six. So, we were buying nine ships for $45 billion and are now getting six vessels for the same price.

    Cha-ching!

    And to rub salt into the taxpayers’ wounds, the Chief of Navy, under questioning from Senator David Shoebridge, conceded that the offshore patrol vessel fleet we are getting for $4.7 billion dollars is “not fit for purpose”. It’s a Navy vessel that has “limited utility in combat operations”. Thank you Defence, and thank you consultants who analysed the market and advised them on the best way forward.

    Cha-ching!

    McHale’s Navy marooned

    Senate Estimates has revealed a naval shipwreck. Ignoring the $30 billion in waste described above, as hard as that might be, between Senators David Fawcett and Shoebridge, it was established that if we had to go into combat in the next couple of years, we’d be in a lot of trouble. When the balloon goes up you have to fight with what you’ve got, not what you expect to get in 10 years. 

    With no new (usable) ships to be delivered before 2032, two of our eight ANZAC class frigates being decommissioned, submarine docking times on the increase and the Navy relying on the hope that we’ll get some developmental mine warfare capabilities online sometime in the next 5 years, the total likely combat capability available (taking into account that not every ship the Navy has in the water will be available) will be:

    • 2 Collins submarines
    • 2 Air Warfare Destroyers
    • 4 ANZAC frigates

    For the billions of dollars we’re spending on our Navy each year, we could station one combat vessel every 3,220 km along our 25,760 km coastline. 

    Senator Shoebridge summed up the situation to MWM slightly differently. “With what we have available I’m confident we could take on the inhabitants of Heard Island, assuming we can get one of our two supply ships going”.

    Australia, Defence and the anti-Midas touch with submarines

    This post was originally published on Michael West.

  • Anthony Albanese at work

    Anthony Albanese’s diary proves a PM hard at work. But who did he meet with? Kim Wingerei checks in on the Prime Minister’s priorities.

    It took the endurance of MWM’s Transparency Warrior, Rex Patrick, to have the PM’s diary released after a protracted court battle for Freedom of Information. His FOI request was specifically related to “meetings/discussions (in-person or by remote means) between the Prime Minister and persons/entities external to the executive government.”

    Unsurprisingly – and in some cases understandably – many of the diary entries are redacted. The reasons given include relevancy (to the FOI request), Cabinet confidentiality (an often over-used excuse), the personal safety of any person (e.g. travel between meetings) or personal details.

    And there are oddities (why was the Qantas $6m 100th birthday party not noted?)

    PM Albanese’s Diary: complete and total surrender after long and expensive battle

    So who does the PM meet with outside of the daily cut-and-thrust of Parliament and the bureaucracy?

    Captains of (some) industries

    During 2023, Anthony Albanese had a dozen meetings and phone conferences with company CEOs and chairs.

    This included one-on-ones with Rio Tinto boss Jacob Stausholm, who also scored an Albo site visit in WA, and BHP Chair Ken McKenzie. Like most PM’s Albo did get to speak at the Business Council of Australia’s (BCA) annual shindig of C-suite and consultancy types. BCA’s Jennifer Westacott and Tim Reed also scored a meeting with the PM before the event.

    Anthony Albanese also met once with the CEO of Perdaman, the – ahem – exuberant Vikas Rambal. Perdaman is a WA chemicals and fertiliser company with a colourful history. Rambal was once in partnership with Indian high-flyer, Pankaj Oswal.

    WA Carbon Fiasco: Pilbara plant to blow more CO2 than Safeguard Mechanism will save

    The only other industry represented in meetings with the PM during 2023 was the Pharmacy Guild’s Trent Twomey. He didn’t meet with anyone from the health or aged care sector, nor anyone from growth industries such as IT, AI, renewables or rare minerals.

    Bankers, financiers and insurance execs were equally notable in their absence, as were farmers, educators, builders and supermarket bosses. In fairness, the latter may have been too busy attending Senate and other inquiries.

    He didn’t even meet with Alan Joyce! At least not one-on-one, although peculiarly, Albanese’s attendance at least one publicised Qantas event was absent from his diary (but not from the paparazzi).

    Qantas’ phantom flights – what’s the scam?

    We also noted only two meetings with union bosses in his diary, in contrast to twice as many meetings during the year with media execs from Nine Entertainment, News Corp and Foxtel (but not MWM!). Maybe a sign of him keeping his friends close but his enemies closer?

    Albo and the media

    The PM started 2023 with a frenzy of more than 20 media interviews during January 2023, excluding pressers and appearances at floods and other crisis events.

    Apart from the (not diarised) parliamentary ‘door-stops’, Albanese is not big on press conferences, preferring interviews. His favourites appear to be Rupert Murdoch’s Sky (with 14 appearances during 2023), ABC (although only once on Insiders) and, of course, Seven’s Sunrise and Nine’s Today Show, with 10 and 9 appearances respectively.

    His radio favourites are the ABC and 2GB, with Ben Fordham and Chris O’Keefe scoring six appearances between them through the year.

    That the PM spends time on media is a good thing, of course, but it is notable that he was particularly busy in the week before the Voice referendum on October 14, with 21 TV and radio appearances. A case of too much and too late?

    The Airbus Albo myth

    The Airbus Albo myth was created by The Australian and other News Corp rags, in their usual effort of discrediting a Labor PM. Albanese’s diary tells a very different story. He travelled to New Zealand once during the year to the obligatory international summits, and attended King Charles’s Coronation, as he would.

    There were no detours to seek out old relatives or side trips to Hawaii as Scott Morrison did, although he did have time to meet with the Oz’s royalist-in-chief, Greg Sheridan, just before leaving London. A sleeping remedy before his long return flight perhaps.

    The Albo diaries are a testament to a very busy man with little extra time on his hands. In the time-honoured tradition of Australian PMs, his only ‘vice’ appears to be cricket. But who would begrudge him three meetings to pick the right Prime Minister’s XI?

    Diary entries from January 1 to March 31, 2023

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    Diary entries from April 1 to June 30, 2023

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    Peter Dutton’s India escape and the secret meetings with the colourful coal baron

    This post was originally published on Michael West.