The Broome community and environmentalists around Australia are celebrating an important victory. Oil and gas producer Woodside Petroleum said it would not go ahead with a gas hub at James Price Point in the Kimberley.
Long-time Broome resident Nik Weavers told 麻豆传媒 Weekly: 鈥淲e've got rid of the one big thing we set out to do, which was to stop the project, so I feel really excited about that.鈥
Weavers, a member of the Broome No Gas group, said: 鈥淚 feel really warmed that so many other people have gathered [in Broome] and are feeling really good.鈥
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Bryte's new album, The Bryte Side Of Life, may urge his listeners to think positive, but it's not all sweetness and light. The Aboriginal rapper has lost none of the political bite that snarled from his award-winning first album, Full Stop, four years ago.
A strong gust of wind in Melbourne鈥檚 CBD caused a brick wall to collapse onto passing pedestrians, killing three people, on March 28.
The wall fronted the site of the former Carlton United Brewery on Swanston Street, which has been under redevelopment by the Grocon company for the past seven years.
Grocon is a household name, but for all the wrong reasons.
Thousands of construction workers protested against the company at another Grocon site on Lonsdale Street, just up the road from the collapsed wall, in September last year.
Rupert Murdoch's recent speech to the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) was so full of bizarre contradictions it could easily pass as satire.
He spoke proudly of the IPA's founders 鈥 his father among them 鈥 who came together in 1943 鈥渃oncerned about the drift to socialism鈥. He went on to say with a straight face: 鈥淲hat they wanted was simple: an Australia where men and women would rise in society not because they were born into privilege 鈥 but because they earned it with their hard work, their thrift, and their enterprise.鈥
English Premier League team Sunderland FC has sparked outrage by appointing Paolo Di Canio, who has publicly identified as a fascist, as its coach. The local Durham Miners' Association, with longstanding links to the club, has condemned the move.
Chile may have dispensed with military dictatorship, but agitating for workers鈥 rights can still get you assassinated.
Juan Pablo Jimenez, 35, was the president of the union representing workers at Azeta, one of Chile鈥檚 largest electrical engineering companies. On February 21, he was found dead in a pool of blood at his workplace, minutes after finishing a shift, a bullet lodged in his cranium.
The initial police report said it was a 鈥渂ala loca鈥 that killed Jimenez 鈥 a random stray bullet that supposedly made its way into Jimenez鈥檚 enclosed workshop.
Never have I witnessed a gap between the mainstream media and public opinion quite like the first 24 hours since the death of Margaret Thatcher.
While both the press and President Barack Obama were uttering tearful remembrances, thousands took to the streets of the UK and beyond to celebrate. Immediately, there were of what were called "death parties," described as "tasteless", "horrible," and "beneath all human decency""
When a political leader dies, it becomes compulsory to lie about their record.
While much of Britain openly rejoiced at the death of Margaret Thatcher, the media snapped into reverential mode, giving over hours of airtime and several thousand miles of column inches to representatives of the ruling class to solemnly recite myths about her achievements.
This wouldn鈥檛 matter so much if, like Thatcher, these myths were dead. But they are still shaping our policies.
No 鈥榚conomic miracle鈥
In a move that shows how little has changed since Ernesto 鈥淐he鈥 Guevara famously observed the maltreatment of Chile鈥檚 copper miners by foreign capitalists in The Motorcycle Diaries, more than 500 mineworkers have been summarily sacked by the Anglo-Australian mining giant BHP Billiton.
Their offence was to participate in strike action for improved pay and conditions at Escondida, an open-cut mine located in the arid Antofagasta region of northern Chile.
鈥淲e鈥檙e from the streets of western Sydney,鈥 chanted thousands of Western Sydney Wanderers' supporters as they marched onto Newcastle鈥檚 Hunter Stadium on March 29.
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