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New Zealand PM John Key pushes flag change after election win

WELLINGTON: New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said on Monday he would press ahead with plans to hold a referendum to change the national flag following his election triumph. The centre-right leader said he wanted the ballot next year on whether to ditch the current flag, which features the Union Jack of former colonial power Britain in one corner. "I'd like to get on with it, to me I'd like to do it as a 2015 issue," Key told commercial station Radio Live. "I'm obviously a big supporter of the change, I think there are a lot of strong arguments in favour of the change." Key has previously said he would prefer a new flag featuring the national plant, a silver fern, on a black background. Sporting teams such as the All Blacks already use a similar banner and Key argues it is instantly recognizable as a symbol of New Zealand in the same way the maple leaf is a distinctly Canadian icon. The existing flag was first used in 1869 and formally adopted in 1902. Its supporters say that New Zealanders have fought and died under it for generations and a change would dishonour their memory. But critics argue it is too easily confused with those of other former British colonies such as Australia, which has an almost identical design. Key, who increased his share of the vote to convincingly win a third term on Saturday, favours maintaining ties with Britain's monarchy, despite his support for a new flag.
New Zealand PM John Key pushes flag change after election win - The Times of India
 

Illusive

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apple

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apple

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Australia Special Forces enter Iraq on diplomatic passports

They beg for help and when someone sends some, they keep them out of the country.

Is good they want to solve their own problems, but they haven't been doing such a good job. Can guarantee any other countries considering assisting them would have noticed the Iraqi government's, seeming, duplicity.
 

sorcerer

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Australian Police Foil Terrorist Plot Linked to Islamic State
New South Wales police arrested two men in Sydney's suburb of Fairfield on Tuesday following a major counterterrorism operation. The men, aged 24 and 25, believed to be linked to the Islamic State, were charged with plotting to commit a terrorist act. According to the police, they planned to carry out the attack on the day of their arrest.

No details of the plot have been made public. However, the NSW Police Deputy Commissioner Catherine Burn said that law enforcement officers seized a video recording, an Islamic State flag, a machete and a hunting knife during the operation.

Australia takes part in the US-led international coalition set to destroy the radical Sunni group that declared a caliphate on the large swathes of land in Iraq and Syria under its control.

Read more: Australian Police Foil Terrorist Plot Linked to Islamic State / Sputnik International
 

sorcerer

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Internal Security Vs. Human Rights: Australia in Turmoil?

February 2015 may go down in history as the month that launched a resurgence of ethics as a higher priority in Australia's internal security policy. Never has there been so much questioning in the country of the ethical choices of its security agencies, whether that be the armed forces, the police, or the intelligence organizations – and their political masters on both sides of government.

There is little public consensus but there are rising calls for resolution of the key dilemmas as Australians of all political persuasion become more hostile to what they see as the cold-hearted posturing of some public leaders. The country that abducted aboriginal children from their parents over decades, but was later able to apologize, appears once again to be losing its moral compass. And all this comes at a time when the country, like others, faces grave threats from terrorism and illegal immigration.

The list of recent ethical controversies around internal security in Australia is not short, and the challenges are far from trivial.

On February 12, the Australian Human Rights Commission released a report on the impacts of mandatory detention on child asylum seekers. The children in camps are in Australia and in Nauru, most with family but some without. The Commission's report found fault with successive Australian governments (both under Labor and Liberal-National administrations) for systemic abuse of the human rights of children in the detention camps, resulting in their exposure to sexual abuse, other physical assault, and mental health problems while in the care of the government. Australian security agencies, including its armed forces, have been responsible for implementing different parts of the policy of mandatory detention as an intended deterrent to large scale people-smuggling operations through Indonesia of refugees and economic migrants. Both major political parties supported the deterrent intent but have been slow to adjust to the changing situation. Even though the boats have stopped coming, largely because of a tow-back policy on the high seas by the Australian Navy, there is still a large number of people, including unaccompanied minors, in internment camps. The Australian government has been negotiating with Cambodia, a well-known abuser of human rights, to take up at least part of the camp population as immigrants. Australia began releasing children from the camps, and the number is now down from just under 2,000 to around 300, according to statements made on February 12.

On January 29, a disbelieving country saw the spectacle of two deputy commissioners of the police force of New South Wales (the country's largest state) clash in public testimony at a parliamentary hearing over a long running scandal that involved warrants improperly obtained through the state's judges for surveillance of one of the deputy commissioners and up to 100 other colleagues. The leader of the state government, Premier Mike Baird, has seemingly been paralyzed in the face of this continuing public dispute, even though one of the deputy commissioners holds an operational role in counter-terrorism defense of the state. This high level public row over police ethics came only six weeks after a quasi-terrorist siege in Sydney resulted in the death of two people, and just two weeks before two men were arrested in Sydney and charged with preparing for a terrorist attack in the name of Islamic State.

At the same time, Australia (like all Western democracies) is struggling to come to terms with the ethics in balancing between electronic surveillance for national security and personal rights. Each few months seems to bring a new call for a further extension of the powers of intelligence agencies, courts or the government to impose new restrictions on pre-existing liberties. Each few months brings a new dilemma about the ethics of one or another of the country's security agencies or its military forces.


Public ethics in general have been under assault. There have been recent hearings in Royal Commissions into the institutional response to child sexual abuse and into corruption in the trade unions. And on the streets of Sydney, police this week shot and killed a young woman with a large knife, in circumstances that suggest both a lack of training and a lack of clear ethical guidelines about how to deal with people in such circumstances.

In January, the news broke that David Hicks, an Australian arrested in Afghanistan in 2001, detained at Guantanamo until convicted in 2007 by a U.S. military commission and widely reviled in the Australian community as a terrorist, had his conviction abdicated by a U.S. authority on the basis that it was unsound and obtained under duress. The U.S. authorities have yet to confirm the precise details, though Hicks is now in Australia, where he was imprisoned for a number of months after his transfer from Guantanamo to serve out in Australia the short sentence he obtained under a plea bargain. It appears that the U.S. legal system is yet to make a firm ruling on the Hicks case but the news only adds to confusion in Australia about the public ethics for handling terrorism cases. As Australian are near unanimous in opposing Islamic State, its government is facing a possible apology to a person they claimed was a fighting member of Al Qaeda.

There is one moral dilemma in the security domain where the Australian community is almost unanimous: their opposition to the imminent execution of two Australians convicted for attempted drug smuggling. Australia abandoned capital punishment half a century ago and since then has regularly campaigned for clemency for any of its citizens condemned to death overseas. In 2005, its federal police provided information to Indonesian authorities that led to the arrest and conviction of the pair, who were condemned to death. In the intervening years, the two were able to benefit from a moratorium on the death penalty under Indonesia's former President Yudhoyono. New President Joko Widodo, elected in November 2014, has reinstated the death penalty, giving rise to months of vigorous campaigning from Australia for clemency for the pair. The ethical issues around the involvement of Australian police in tipping off the Indonesians and thereby exposing the pair to the death penalty for drug offenses, seemingly in contradiction of Australia government policy on the death penalty, has now been put on the table by human rights activists, and even a former foreign minister.

Australia's prime minister, Tony Abbott, and many of his party colleagues, allege that the Human Rights Commission is politicized and stands discredited because of its report on child detainees. This exposes a larger dilemma. With no Bill of Rights, and only implied rights based on court precedents and common law, Australia now seems to have few formal mechanisms to help restore balance in the debate about the ethics of national security. This will have operational impacts for all security agencies in Australia until a much stronger consensus on basic values can be established. The country needs to institutionalize a formal and legally protected regime of human rights in which the ethics of national security can be more fully grounded.

Internal Security Vs. Human Rights: Australia in Turmoil? | The Diplomat
 

Zebra

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http://www.janes.com/article/51588/tkms-confirms-asc-acquisition-option

Julian Kerr, Kiel, Germany - IHS Jane's Navy International
20 May 2015

German shipbuilder ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS) has confirmed it would consider buying Australian government-owned shipyard ASC if it was chosen to design and construct Australia's Future Submarine under Project Sea 1000.

Torsten Konker, a member of the TKMS executive board, told Australian journalists in Kiel on 18 May that if selected, TKMS would not simply enter a supply contract with an Australian shipyard, but would be responsible for the programme and would do everything possible to ensure its success.

Asked if this would include offering to acquire ASC if it were available, Konker said, "We would consider buying it."

This stance was reinforced in Hamburg the following day when Dr John White, chairman of TKMS Australia and a previous head of the successful Anzac-frigate programme in which 10 ships were built to a TKMS design in Australia on schedule and within budget.
 

apple

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Story from an international publication about a European company.

Australia's new submarine fleet is going to be a very, very big contract and can understand why potential partners would be doing all they can to get it.

But can't see any indication, based on this story, that the Japanese still aren't the favoured option.

Australian military has had issues with buying European in the (very recent) past.
 

apple

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Latest Islamic terrorist incident.

The victim was Curtis Cheng a 58 year father of two who worked as an accountant with the police.

Once again, as the two other recent attacks, the Muslim was shot dead by the police.

http://www.theguardian.com/australi...unman-was-radicalised-15-year-old-reports-say

The kid (the murderer was 15) was an Iraqi Kurd, who are the people our army and Air Force are helping against ISIS
 

Zebra

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http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-05-08/turnbull-launches-election-campaign-with-jobs-pitch/7394168

Election 2016: Malcolm Turnbull announces double dissolution poll as Bill Shorten lays out plan


By political reporter Francis Keany
8 May 2016, 4:46pm

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull says Australians will go to the polls on Saturday July 2, after Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove accepted his request for a double dissolution election.

The Governor-General is set to dissolve Federal Parliament tomorrow morning with an eight-week marathon election campaign now officially underway.

Mr Turnbull told reporters at Parliament House in Canberra the election would be a "clear choice" for voters.

"To keep the course, maintain the commitment to our national economic plan for growth and jobs, or go back to Labor, with its higher taxing, higher spending, debt and deficit agenda, which will stop our nation's transition to the new economy dead in its tracks.

"It is the most exciting time to be an Australian.

"But we must embark on these times, embrace these opportunities, meet these challenges, with a plan and we have laid out a clear economic plan to enable us to succeed."........
 

Zebra

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self delete.................................................................................
 

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