BrisCAN-G20
Brisbane Community Action Network

G20 Media Accreditation
Copied from http://www.treasury.gov.au/PublicationsAndMedia/MediaReleases/2014/G20-media-accreditation-closing

Media accreditation closing soon – G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Meeting


30 January 2014

The first ministerial-level G20 meeting in Australia's host year will be the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting to be held in Sydney on 22-23 February 2014. As well as showcasing Australia, hosting the G20 gives Australia a valuable opportunity to influence economic policies globally and contribute to a healthy, growing and resilient global economy.

Registration for media accreditation for this meeting is closing Monday 10 February and media who are interested in covering this meeting will need to register on media registration page of the G20 website.

Media personnel and organisations must be accredited to access G20 Australia 2014 events and on-site media facilities. Media accredited to cover the Sydney G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting will have access to:

  • Set-up interviews with Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors within the official venues

  • Media Centre

  • Media opportunities

  • Official press conferences

  • Host broadcast and official photographer footage.


A schedule of G20 2014 meetings is available on the G20 website. More information about media attendance and facilities at other G20 meetings including the Leaders Summit in November will be released in 2014.

Contact: Treasury G20 Media and Communications
g20financemedia@treasury.gov.au
2014-02-04 15:08:16

G20 Community Information Forum Round 2

Another Round of G20 Community Information Forums are Happening


The local and state governments are putting on another G20 Community Forum in May. The more community members with an interest in G20 issues and how it affects ordinary people should find the forum interesting and helpful.


Briscan-G20 will also be attempting to organise meetings with the media present to keep up the alternative G20 dialogue that is generally missed in the mainstream media.


Details below:
About the G20 Community Info Sessions:

 Community Information Forums

 The G20 Taskforce is hosting two Community Information Forums in partnership with the Queensland Government, Queensland Police Service and Brisbane City Council on Thursday 1 May and Friday 2 May 2014. 

Thursday 1 May: 5.30pm – 7.00pm
Friday 2 May: 12.00pm – 1.30pm

 To register please complete the online registration form or call 1800 922 011.

 Registration for our #Brisbane community information forums opens today! If you’re a Brisbane local or business owner this is your opportunity to talk to the organisers of the #G20 Leaders Summit directly. The two forums will take place on May 1-2 at the Brisbane City Hall. Register online http://ow.ly/vKcsi or call 1800 922 011.
2014-04-17 13:56:56

“Operation Southern Cross” - You are under (more) surveillance!
On May 1, the new federally funded $4.5 million G20 Police Operations Centre in Brisbane was officially opened by Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister Josh Frydenberg.

The Brisbane Times** reported: “Queensland Police Minister Jack Dempsey said the “world first, state of the art” G20 Operations Centre would not look out of place on the set of Battlestar Galactica.”

“You won’t have people in different rooms trying to communicate – they’ll be linked directly to each other for the first time, which will be a distinct advantage,” he said.

Queensland Police Service Deputy Commissioner Ross Barnett said Operation Southern Cross, the G20 security operation, would be the largest peace time security operation in Australia’s history.

“We’ll also be doing a range of exercises to test our capabilities here … there will be rolling exercises over the next few months to make sure when we get to the G20 we’re as prepared as we possibly can be.”

Mr Barnett said the G20 Police Operations Centre would remain in place as a permanent legacy of the summit.

Thanks for the legacy G20!

[caption id="attachment_243" align="alignnone" width="300"]Surveillance cameras on a building Surveillance is everywhere! (Photo by Jonathan McIntosh)[/caption]

Heard of VLAD – aka the Bikie Laws – actually the Vicious Lawless Association Disestablishment Bill 2013?  The new Out of Control Event laws?  The G2O Act?  G20 governments use “law and order” campaigns to galvanise political support.  Couched in terms such as “Safety and Security” and marketed to the public as targeting undesirable elements, these laws impact on all of us.

Increased police powers and infrastructure developed ostensibly for the protection of the 20 heads of state who will be gathering in Brisbane for the G20 and their entourages – are already in effect and will remain in use beyond the G20 Summit in November.  Many see these laws as threatening to our civil liberties, our rights to assemble, organise and to associate.  There is also a noticeable trend towards militarising police services (ie police using armoured personal vehicles), increased police powers and an erosion of the separation between legislative and judiciary in government.

The G20 Act overrides the Peaceful Assembly Act – which, in effect, means, your right to assemble is contingent on state sanction.  The police have not ruled out using VLAD on G20 protestors and the new police party powers could see ordinary people punished for their friends, colleagues or associated “offences.”

Feel safer yet?  These laws do not protect us, they make us more fearful of each other and are a tool to silence dissent.  The brand spankin’ new state of the art surveillance centre will be monitoring the community well after memories of the G20 are faded… armoured personal vehicles, new weapons and increased police powers will no-doubt continue to impact the most marginalised members of our community well in to the future.  When Joh banned street marches in Queensland, people took to the streets.  Once again, the push to erode civil liberties must be taken as a call to action - these laws and these trends must be challenged.

---

One of the first steps to taking back control is getting informed.  The Caxton Legal Service will be presenting a series of community education sessions on G20 laws. The first session is this Thursday at 5:30 at the Brisbane Square Library (more details below).

We hope to see you there.

Caxton Legal Service presents...

G20 (Safety and Security) Act - Free information session for community members

An opportunity to understand the G20 laws and how they may impact upon you.

Date: Thursday 15 May 2014, 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Brisbane Square Library Community Meeting Room (Ground Level)
266 George Street, Brisbane City

RSVP essential to camielle@caxton.org.au or phone 3214 6333

**Full Brisbane Times story available here: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/queensland/questions-over-putin-as-g20-operation-centre-opens-20140501-37k7d.html#ixzz31VWei1mU.

More info:
2014-05-12 14:52:06

Visioning Another World Brisbane G20 Peoples Convergence

Nov 8-16, 2014


woman-speaking-out-300x300The G20 Leaders Summit will bring the leaders of the worlds’ 20 largest economies to Brisbane in November this year. The “austerity” budget that has just been delivered to Australians is a small taste of what people around the world have been experiencing under G20 driven economic systems -- systems which prioritise profit over community welfare and the environment. The G20 outcomes affect us all. With Tony Abbott at the helm, the G20 meetings will continue to make economic decisions which benefit the few at the expense of the many.

There is an alternative!

You are invited to join us in developing and advancing community generated answers to world economic, social and environmental problems. Join us in Visioning another World.

BrisCAN-G20 is a broad network of groups concerned about the social and ecological impacts of the G20. Included in this are concerns about the immediate repercussions of hosting the G20 in our region – such as the current diminishing of civil liberties – and the local and global perpetuation of the economics of privilege. We see the G20 as an opportunity to unite and work on transforming our society to a more just and sustainable one.

Peoples Convergence: We will be hosting and supporting a week symposiums, workshops, idea sharing, marches, film screenings, and other creative events November 8 -16 in Brisbane.

Visioning Another World: The G20 Peoples Summit will be a three-day festival of symposiums, idea-sharing, art, creative activities, education and action. It will take place in various location in Brisbane November 12-14, before the G20 Leaders Summit.

This will be followed by two days of creative action, education and solidarity while the G20 Leaders Summit is taking place, including the Peoples Rally and March on November 15.

The First Nation’s Decolonisation Before Profit program of events will run throughout the week, Nov 8 – Nov 16, andwill include a Global First Nations Conference - November 15-16 and an Eco-Village forum space.   See: http://brisbaneblacks.com/g20/program/

We welcome your involvement in any, or all, of these events.

The Peoples Summit (Nov 12-14): will bring together local and international thinkers to collaborate on broad themes:

  • The Economy: Growth Vs Sustainability,

  • Environment, Climate, & Earth Rights,

  • Dispossession Decolonisation,

  • Politics, Democracies ...existing and beyond?,

  • Social Justice: Human, Labour, Gender Rights.., and

  • De-militarisation & Peace.


The Peoples Summit will provide a safe, inclusive, family-friendly space to discuss the issues that really matter to us. You are invited to get involved by proposing, developing and collaborating on a section of the Peoples Summit program and/or organising a satellite event. Your involvement can take any shape: This may be a panel with a string of speakers, a key speaker with discussants, or a collaborative conversation space. It might be music or theatre or an art exhibition. It may be a film showing, a debate or a DIY workshop… it may be some other form of talk fest, forum, installation, performance or happening…

The Peoples Rally and March – Nov 15: While demonstrations will be taking place throughout the G20 Summit week, we are calling the community to rally together on the first day of the Leaders Summit. The Peoples Rally and March will be a colourful celebration of diversity and unity in action. Join us in this united call for global social and ecological justice!

Week of action: We are planning for vibrant community action to take place throughout the week of the G20 Summit. You are invited to contribute to the planned events and to organise your own creative response to the G20. Help form a peoples choir, start a radical cheerleading group, host an art event, put on a comedy or film night or gig… A calendar of events will be available on our website soon. You will be able to add your event, ideas or meeting to the program there.

More details: While we are still in the planning stages, venues and details of events are yet to be finalised. As your hosts, the Brisbane community hopes to make your participation easy and enjoyable! We are planning for both camping and billeting options, as well as support with food, First aid, transport and other daily needs.

How you can help: You can help by coming to organising meetings, organising an event of your own, contributing to our website, hosting a visitor, donating food, volunteering to cook, donating or loaning marquees, photocopying and printing, providing space for an event or meeting, sponsoring a guest speaker, participant or performer from overseas, volunteering to translate, interpret – sign language and other, play at a gig, donating some money…

To register your interest in the Peoples Summit, volunteer, donate your time, skills or money or for more information, please contact: (no longer available).

We look forward to Visioning Another World with you in the lead up to the G20 Summit in Brisbane and beyond.

FB event: https://www.facebook.com/events/294980230677344/

https://altmax.com.au/BriscanG20/index.html
www.facebook.com/briscan.g20
2014-06-01 22:08:24

Visioning Another World: G20 Peoples' Summit
 

summithead

Creative community responses to the G20 Leaders Summit,
Brisbane 12-14 November 2014



Bubbles


“Visioning another World”: The G20 Peoples' Summit will be a three-day festival of symposiums, idea-sharing, art, creative activities, education and action bringing together local and international thinkers on economics, environment, climate change, social justice, colonisation, rights, politics and peace. You are invited to get involved: Make something happen, propose and run a panel of speakers or a workshop, invite a guest speaker, create an event or performance! The Peoples' Summit will provide a safe, inclusive, family-friendly space to discuss the issues that really matter to us. Join us in creative collaboration, local community responses and global community action!



For more information:


Brisbane Community Action Network (BrisCAN) – G20
www.briscan.net.au
www.facebook.com/briscan.g20
mobile: 0411 118 737
email: (no longer available)

Alternative G20 - Working closely with Briscan, Alternative G20 is a global forum to support, report and evolve the outcomes of alternative G20 initiatives from each year to the next
http://brisbane2014.alternativeg20.org/
http://www.alternative.org

Note: This document was joint-authored by a BrisCAN working group.

2014-06-10 02:30:23

BrisCAN G20 August Happenings

BrisCAN G20 community action network: upcoming events and meetings



 1)   G20 Peoples March Working Group meeting &  G20 Peoples' Summit:   Ideas  Jam


2)   Listening post Project


3)   Street Medic Training


4)   Brisbane Community Action Network (BrisCAN) G20  General Meeting


5)   West Ender G20 Community Forum


 

 1)   G20 Peoples March Working Group meeting & G20 Peoples' Summit: Ideas  Jam


 Date:   Saturday August 9


Time:   2pm to discuss March


             3pm onwards to discuss Peoples Summit


Place:    State Library of Qld - The Edge –Coffee Lounge


Window Bay 7 is booked from 4pm.


You've probably heard that the G20 is on in Bris in November this year. To keep stuff interesting, critical and creative we are putting on a conference of our own over the three days before hand. We're hoping speakers, panels and conversations on a whole range of topics, along with music, art, theatre and more quality anti-capitalist community fun times than you can point an oppressive economic system at.


The Peoples’ Summit working group meets fortnightly at the Edge to share ideas and keep up to date with our tasks and preparation for this exciting event!   Join us!


This week the March working group will also meet at the Edge – one hour earlier to preparefor the all –in Peoples March on Nov 15 and to connect with Peoples Summit folks as there is a fair bit of cross over and coordination needed between the projects!


 

 2)   Listening post Project


Come along and have your say or get involved with the Listening post project…


Let’s talk G20: Community Listening posts


The G20 is coming to our community. What does that mean to you?


A listening post is a space for community conversations – a platform for engagement with ideas. There are no right or wrong answers – just a willingness to share and to discuss issues of import –or that impact our community- face to face - in public.


Let’s talk about the G20 coming to Brisbane.


You are invited to join us for a chat, fill out a simple survey, write or draw your thoughts, make a sign and take a picture, make a recording or video statement.


With your agreement, these will be later shared with others (including decision makers) via display- physical installation/internet so that community voices can be heard.


Have your say:


Every Friday in August


Date: Friday August 1,8, 15, 22,29, 2014


Time: 11am-1pm


Place: Outside “West End Markets” in front of Commonwealth Bank


           Corner of Mollison & Boundary& Melbourne Streets, West End


 

3)    Street Medic Training


Street medics are a community of first-aiders & health workers who are specifically trained to respond to the health needs of people at demonstrations, in progressive social movements, and at encampments.


Street medics are called upon to deal with a wide variety of illness and injury: crowd-control, chemical weapons decontamination, weather and temperature-related illness, altered mental status, sexual assault, and handcuff injuries, all in resource-scarce, unsecured environments. Street medics also provide preventative care and public health promotion in protester encampments.


Street medic care is ethical, empowering, and do-no harm.


This course is not limited to workplace firstaiders and medical professionals but a current and active first-aid certificate is strongly recommended. The course is no substitute nor will offer accreditation. Those with medical training will want to take this course as we cover many topics that are specific to protest healthcare. People with no healthcare background will learn valuable skills that can be used anywhere, not just at protests. In this highly participatory training, you will learn to use your skills in complex, high-tension, low-resource situations. Expect to have fun!


Training will be held on August 16th and 17th (Saturday and Sunday) 9am- 2pm each day.


Location: Brisbane …


Attendees are asked to contribute $25 to help cover costs for putting the training on. Spaces to undertake the training will be limited to 20 people. Please detail any of your needs when registering. Payment details will be forwarded with registration details.


Expressions of Interest are welcomed from all but as spaces are limited we will prioritise people with a commitment to forming a Street Medic Collective in Brisbane. All expressions of interest should be forwarded to the Collective’s email account (collective@melbsmc.org)


Pre-reading will be sent out and expected to be engaged with.


Any further questions can be answered on the Facebook page or by e-mail at collective@melbsmc.org


/event/brisbane-street-medic-training/


 

4)    Brisbane Community Action Network (BrisCAN) G20 General Meeting


Date:   Sunday August 24


Time:   9:30 am


Place:   Justice Place – 5 Abingdon Street Woolloongabba


 

5)   West Ender G20 Community Forum


What does the G20 Mean for West End?  Your questions answered.


Panelists: Sam Watson (Murri Community worker), Cr. Helen Abrahams, Scott McDougal (Caxton Legal Service), Robin Taubenfeld (BrisCAN) and senior Qld Police Service member 


Date: Sept 9


Time: 6pm


Place: Souths Leagues Club


 

For more information:


Brisbane Community Action Network (BrisCAN)-G20


Community Outreach Working Group


M: 0411 118 737


E:   (no longer available)


W: www.briscan.net.au


2014-08-08 00:29:22

Let’s talk G20: Community Listening posts

The G20 is coming to our community. What does that mean to you?


A listening post is a space for community conversations – a platform for engagement with ideas. There are no right or wrong answers – just a willingness to share and to discuss issues of import –or that impact our community- face to face - in public.


Let’s talk about the G20 coming to Brisbane.

You are invited to join us for a chat, fill out a simple survey, write or draw your thoughts, make a sign and take a picture, make a recording or video statement.

With your agreement, these will be later shared with others (including decision makers) via display- physical installation/internet so that community voices can be heard.

Have your say:

Every Friday in August
Date: Friday August 1,8, 15, 22,29, 2014
Time: 11am-1pm
Place: Outside “West End Markets” in front of Commonwealth Bank
Corner of Mollison & Boundary& Melbourne Streets, West End

IMG_1843 IMG_1844
2014-08-26 22:00:30

BrisCAN-G20 Response to Courier-Mail

Media Release



27 September 2014


 

BrisCAN-G20 spokesperson, Greg Brown said “The Murdoch media has scrapped the bottom of the barrel again with its irresponsible beat up and misrepresentation in today’s Courier Mail.”

“BrisCAN-G20 opposes the violence of climate change, the drive to war in the Middle East, the ongoing attacks upon civil liberties and workers’ rights in Australia, and the deprivations and hardships caused by LNP austerity budgets.”

Mr Brown said “BrisCAN-G20 is demanding a world with an economy that works for people and the planet, a world safe from the ravages of climate change and war, a world with good jobs, clean air and water and healthy communities. We call upon those associated with the G20, both internationally and domestically, to take up these issues.”

“BrisCAN facilitates vibrant community-based action for an ecologically and socially just world. We invite people to join us in fostering peaceful collaborations for progressive and positive change locally and globally in the lead up to the G20 and beyond.”

For more detail about BrisCAN-G20 visit briscan.net.au or www.facebook.com/briscan.g20, or phone Mr Greg Brown on 0409 877 528.
2014-09-27 12:43:52

Alternatives to the G20 – Newspaper Fundraiser

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Alternatives to the G20 – Newspaper Fundraiser


 

In less than two months Brisbane will be hosting the annual G20 summit where the leaders of twenty of the world's most powerful economies will meet to push ahead with the global economic growth agenda. At a time of dangerous climate change, rapidly increasing inequality and poverty, gross exploitation of Indigenous peoples and their lands and severe environmental degradation globally, issues of environmental and social justice are not on the G20 agenda.


In response a diverse range of community groups and members are putting on a range of creative actions and forums to occur in the week leading up to and during the G20 summit. This includes the Brisbane Aboriginal Sovereign Embassy's Decolonisation Before Profit program and Global First Nations Conference (see: http://brisbaneblacks.com/g20/program/), and the G20 Peoples Convergence and Visioning Another World: The G20 Peoples Summit (see: /).


To raise public awareness of the broad reaching impacts of the G20 a one-off “Alternatives to the G20” newspaper publication is being put together. The newspaper will present articles on a range of social, environmental, political and economic issues to highlight the effects of the G20 on people and planet. It will also include perspectives to contribute towards creatively visioning alternatives to the G20's agenda of economic growth at all costs.


To make this project a reality and have this publication circulating during the G20 funds need to be raised to cover the printing costs. This is a call out for donations of any amount, to contribute towards making this project a reality.


To donate please make a deposit into the following account. To ensure we can track donations please make sure you state that it's for the G20 NEWSPAPER and send an email to crystal.sky22@hushmail.com with the details of your donation.

  • Account name: Brisbane Community Action Network

  • Account number: 12069890

  • BSB: 313-140

  • Bank: Members and Equity Credit Union

  • Reference: G20 NEWSPAPER


Please circulate this widely amongst your networks!

2014-10-09 01:43:43

G20 Road Closures South Brisbane
The QLD Government has released road closure details for the period of the G20.  Several roads will be completely closed for the G20 and the week preceding, whereas some roads will be closed in only one direction and some will only be closed for the period of the conference itself. We have prepared a map specifying which roads will be closed and at what times for the convenience of anyone having to plan for travel during the period of the G20.  The maps have been compiled using data from the G20.org web site.  See here for more details of transport conditions in Brisbane during G20: Traffic and Transport G20.

(Click for larger view)




[caption id="attachment_649" align="aligncenter" width="600"]Road Closure G20 Road Closures South Brisbane[/caption]

South Brisbane


Closures from Monday morning 10 November to 5:00am Monday 17 November:


  • Russell Street: Closed between Grey Street and South Bank Promenade.



Closures from Tuesday morning 11 November to 5:00am Monday 17 November:


  • Grey Street: Closed between Melbourne Street and Glenelg Street.

  • Glenelg Street: Closed between Merivale Street and railway overpass.



Closures from Thursday morning 13 November to 5.00am Monday 17 November:


  • Hope Street: Closed between Peel Street and Melbourne Street. Local access will be maintained.



Closures from 7.00pm Thursday 13 November to 5.00am Monday 17 November:


  • Victoria Bridge: Closed.

  • Melbourne Street: Closed between Victoria Bridge and Cordelia Street.

  • Merivale Street: Closed between Melbourne Street and Ernest Street.

  • Merivale Street: Closed between Peel Street and Melbourne Street. Local access will be maintained.

  • Glenelg Street: Closed between Grey Street and railway overpass.

  • Glenelg Street: Closed between Cordelia Street and Merivale Street. Local access will be maintained between Cordelia and Merivale Street.

  • Grey Street: Closed between Peel and Melbourne Street.

  • Grey Street: Closed northbound between Glenelg and Ernest Street.

  • Russell Street: Closed between Cordelia and Merivale Street. Local access will be maintained.



Little Stanley Street, between Glenelg Street and Ernest Street will remain open but will operate one way northbound from the South Bank car park entry/exit. The following road closures will be in place on Saturday 15 November:


  • William Jolly Bridge: Closed southbound only and the eastern footpath will be closed (5.00pm – midnight).

  • Grey Street: Closed southbound, between William Jolly Bridge and Peel Street and the eastern footpath will be closed (5.00pm – midnight).

  • Stanley Place: Closed between Montague Road and Grey Street (5.00am – midnight).

  • Montague Road: Closed between Hope Street and Stanley Place (morning – midnight). Local access will be maintained.

  • Cultural Centre Tunnel: Closed (5.00am – midnight).



 

Brisbane CBD


Closures from 12:01am Tuesday 11 November to 5:00am Monday 17 November:


  • Adelaide Street: Closed in-bound between Ivory Street and Queen Street. Out-bound traffic will operate as normal.

  • Ivory Street: Closed in-bound between Brunswick Street and Ann Street and Story Bridge and Ann Street. Out bound traffic will operate as normal.

  • Queen Street: One lane closed in-bound, from the intersection of Adelaide and Queens Streets for approximately 100 metres. Out-bound traffic will operate as usual.



Closures from 7:00pm Thursday 13 November to 5:00am Monday 17 November:


  • Alice Street, Ann Street, Roma Street and William Street: Lane closures with through traffic permitted.

  • Victoria Bridge: Closed to traffic, pedestrian access maintained on the northside. Cyclists are encouraged to use Kurilpa Bridge.

  • William Street/North Quay: Closed between Ann and Elizabeth Streets.

  • Queens Wharf Road: Exit and entry via William Street will be closed, access will be available from the south.



Closures from 5:00pm to 11:00pm Saturday 15 November:


  • William Jolly Bridge: Closed to southbound traffic.


2014-10-10 02:37:01

Media Release - G20 is Austerity Summit

cropped-peoples-convergence-col_WEB.png



Media Release


“G20 is austerity summit” claims protest organiser


 

BrisCAN spokesperson, Adrian Skerritt said: “The G20 meeting will disrupt the lives of Brisbane residents from November 8 to November 16. But it won’t end there. G20 policies will continue to disrupt our lives long after the meeting is over.”


The G20 forum is committed to shifting wealth from the majority of citizens to the incredibly rich. They will do globally what Newman and Abbott are doing locally – sell public assets, outsource and cuts to social services.”


“The G20 is the Austerity Summit” claimed Mr Skerritt.


“What they can’t achieve through their budgets and trade deals they will attempt to resolve through war. Look at Obama and Abbott’s new war in Iraq and Putin’s use of military force in the Ukraine.”


The rally and march on November 15 will condemn G20 policies that create poverty and inequality. The march will also champion the values that should drive economic and political decisions – justice, sustainability, indigenous sovereignty and democracy.


“BrisCAN is demanding a world with an economy that works for people and the planet, a world safe from the ravages of climate change and war, a world with good jobs, clean air and water and healthy communities” said Mr Skerritt.


The rally will assemble at 11am November 15 2014 at Emma Miller Place (Roma St) and subsequently march past the G20 summit to Musgrave Park.



For detail about BrisCAN-G20 visit briscan.net.au or www.facebook.com/briscan.g20.
For further comment contact media spokesperson Adrian Skerritt on 0400 307 892.
2014-10-15 11:58:26 Media Release

Media Release: Brisbane Cultural Icons Reject G20 “Cultural Event”

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BrisCAN-G20 Media Release


October 16, 2014

 

Brisbane Cultural icons reject G20 “Cultural Event” as distraction from real issues


 

BrisCAN-G20 organisers welcome news that prominent Brisbane community broadcaster 4ZZZfm and iconic Brisbane bands SixftHick and Monster Zoku Onsomb (MZO) have taken a principled stand against the state sponsorship of local cultural events during the G20, on the basis of the economic and social policies it reflects. These Brisbane cultural icons are amongst the latest to join an array of community groups and individuals in boycotting G20 events.

The G20 'cultural events' are widely perceived amongst the community as a diversionary tactic employed by the government to discourage people from participating in the social change movements that target the State and Federal governments' economic, social and environmental polices.

BrisCAN spokesperson and community radio producer, Kim Stewart, says, “By staging a state-paid-for 'rent a crowd' event, the government are attempting to distract us from the real costs of their policies on the young, on the disadvantaged and on the environment.

Heather Anderson, Chair of the 4ZZZ board of directors says, “4ZZZ has a reputation for supporting the community and we can honestly say that the direction of the economic policies of the Newman government, the Abbott government and economic rationalism in general are not supporting the community. Newman has severely cut funding to the arts in this state. So we can understand why struggling artists might take the sponsorship gig, but it is important for 4ZZZ to place its principles first.”

SixftHick and MZO are known for their politically motivated lyrics in defence of the exploited and have performed to benefit social justice causes.

SixFtHicks' Geoff Corbett, says the band withdrew from the event after viewing marketing material touting the “G20 cultural celebration”: “I am not opposed to money changing hands if it is for compensation to artists/workers who are negatively impacted by G20.

“However it would appear this event is not about the supporting the Arts, it is about manipulation, diversion and political gain and as such the funding should not be stripped from the Arts sector. The G20 is not Expo 88 Brisbane! It is not just cause for "cultural celebration.

“I think that unfortunately a lot of people have been placed in a difficult situation. Workers/artists who live hand to mouth are the ones who are really being exploited/strong armed here. I understand if people take the $. We collectively pulled the pin because we would feel wrong about taking it.”

MZO, whose politically motivated performances make them unlikely to gain government approval, have been outspoken on the issue of tainted sponsorship. Sam Kretchmann says, “None of my musical heroes or music industry peers around the world would be caught dead performing for the official “G20 Cultural Celebrations". I am shocked and disappointed that while the eyes of the world are on Brisbane, my local fraternity have chosen the path to a quick buck and a lame attempt to "change the system from within”.

“You guys are not fooling anyone, and if you think that the Brisbane music community hasn't noticed this hypocritical stance, well you are wrong. There is still time to pull out of these events and send a strong message to your community, the community that has supported you over the years, and will still be here after the G20 has long gone."

BrisCan-G20 congratulate SixftHick, MZO and 4ZZZfm for their support of community interests over state profit-based agendas.

We extend a hearty invitation to all those artists who have declined the government's offer to particpate in the G20 event to join us in our People's Convergence November 8-15.

Media: Kim Stewart 0413397839

Web /
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/briscan.g20

Kim Stewart
Mob: 0413397839

Friends of the Earth
"Resist, Mobilise, Transform"
FoEB www.brisbane.foe.org.au
FoEA www.foe.org.au

Community Radio 4ZzZ102.1fm
Radical Radio Collective
www.4zzzfm.org.au

Psychologists for Peace
www.groups.psychology.org.au/pfp/
2014-10-16 13:59:18 Media Release

Brisbane G20 Peoples Summit: Visioning another world

peoples-summit-col_WEB_cr
Visioning another world


Brisbane G20 Peoples Summit


Nov 12-14, 2014

BrisCAN-G20 is a broad network of groups concerned about the social and ecological impacts of the G20. Included in these are concerns about the immediate repercussions of hosting the G20 in our region – such as the current diminishing of civil liberties – and the local and global perpetuation of the economics of privilege. We see the G20 as an opportunity to unite and work towards transforming our society into a more just and sustainable one.

We realise that solutions to global crises, such as the climate, and local issues, such as food sovereignty, come from empowerment and involvement of the people in our communities. While the G20 has effectively locked out NGOs and the public, we know that it is from organising and collaborating amongst ourselves that real and effective change can be made.

Visioning Another World: The G20 Peoples Summit will be a three-day festival of symposiums, idea-sharing, art, creative activities, education and action. It will take place in various locations in Brisbane November 12-14, before the G20 Leaders Summit. This event aims to bring together local and international thinkers to collaborate on broad themes: The Economy: Growth Vs Sustainability, Environment, Climate, & Earth Rights,Dispossession Decolonisation, Politics, Democracies ...existing and beyond?, Social Justice: Human, Labour, Gender Rights.., and De-militarisation & Peace.

We welcome your organisation’s perspective in these conversations.

Speakers at Summit events include:

  • Sharan Burrow, General Secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation

  • Sam Castro (Friends of the Earth)

  • Winnie Byanyima (OXFAM)

  • Lez Malezer, National Congress of Australia’s First People

  • Pat Renald (AFTINET)

  • Senator Larissa Waters 

  • Lex Wotton (Palm Island Community)


The Peoples Summit will provide a safe, inclusive, family-friendly space to discuss the issues that really matter to us.You are invited to get involved by proposing, developing and collaborating on a section of the Peoples Summit program and/or organising a satellite event. Your involvement can take any shape: This may be a panel with a string of speakers, a key speaker with discussants, or a collaborative conversation space. It might be music or theatre or an art exhibition. It may be a film showing, a debate or a DIY workshop… it may be some other form of talk fest, forum, installation, performance or happening…

The Peoples Summit will be followed by two days of creative action, education and solidarity while the G20 Leaders Summit is taking place, including thePeoples Rally and March on November 15.While demonstrations will be taking place throughout the G20 Summit week, we are calling the community to rally together on the first day of the Leaders Summit. The Peoples Rally and March will be a colourful celebration of diversity and unity in action.Join us in this united call for global social and ecological justice!

BrisCAN supports: First Nations’ responses to the G20 and the First Nation’s Decolonisation Before Profit program. This program runs through the week Nov 8 – Nov 16 and will include a Global First Nations Conference - November 15-16 See: http://brisbaneblacks.com/g20/program

We welcome your involvement in any, or all, of these events.

To register your interest in the Peoples Summit, volunteer, donate your time, skills or money or for more information, please contact: (no longer available).

We look forward to Visioning Another World with you in the lead up to the G20 Summit in Brisbane and beyond.

To find out more:

Brisbane Community Action Network (BrisCAN)
Mbl (61) 0411 118 737 email: (no longer available)

www.facebook.com/briscan.g20

To make a donation:

Bank: MECU
Account name: Brisbane Community Action Network
Account number: 12069890
BSB: 313-140

Please deposit by Internet banking, with "People's Summit" in the description (if you are happy for your donation to be used for any event of the Peoples' Convergence, there is no need to specify). Thank you!


DOWNLOADS:


Visioning Another World Poster
Expression of Interest Form for those who wish to present at the Peoples' Summit.
2014-10-17 01:38:23

Media Release: G20 Threat to Community Services Claims Protest Organiser

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Media Release


19 October 2014



“G20 threat to community services” claims protest organiser


 

BrisCAN spokesperson, Mr Adrian Skerritt, said “This November the G20 will be discussing further cuts to community services, including public education and health care.”

“The G20’s ‘fiscal consolidation policies’ will mean more of the attacks we have already seen from Hockey and Newman. These policies will disadvantage struggling families and people in the suburbs” claimed Mr Skerritt.

The 2013 G20 Action Plan spelt out how each nation planned to “balance the budget”. Canada agreed to cut the age pension; Italy and South Africa would cut social spending; Britain would cut unemployment benefits; Indonesia would cut fuel subsidies.

“Inside the Brisbane Convention Centre this November the G20 will be talking about plans to slash and burn the public sector.”

“Is this the kind of vision we want for the future?”

“We will rally on 15 November at 11 am at the Roma St Forum to demand that the cuts stop” said Mr Skerritt. “We invite everyone to join us.”

The rally will assemble at 11 am on 15 November 2014 at Emma Miller Place (Roma St) and subsequently march past the G20 summit to Musgrave Park.

For detail about BrisCAN-G20 visit briscan.net.au or www.facebook.com/briscan.g20.
For further comment contact media spokesperson Adrian Skerritt on 0400 307 892.
2014-10-19 12:20:27 Media Release

G20 Is Not Working: A Call To Action
[caption id="attachment_781" align="alignleft" width="300"]Photographer: Jonny White (G20 April 1st) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons London G20 2009[/caption]

Economic


G20 Solutions tend to focus on financial growth and security, figuring that if banks are sound then business can be funded and everything keeps rolling along happily. So money is poured into the financial sector in the form of stimulus payments. The second solution G20 focus on is removing impediments to big business, in particular global companies. For this, trade agreements and other mechanisms are used to "level the playing field".

The problem with these solutions is they are predicated on the idea that if you look after the big end of town, wealth will trickle down to the rest of us. The problem is, this "trickle down" effect does not occur. It seems that what happens is that wages, conditions, and goods and services all level out to the lowest common denominator while the "big end of town" continues to get bigger.

In June, Oxfam Australia's chief executive Helen Szoke said ''The Australia figures are quite staggering if you think that nine individuals have a net worth that is equivalent to the total 4.5 million people, or the bottom 20 cent of income workers - that's pretty stark.'' Her source was a Forbes and Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook study.

One of the reasons for the increasing gap between the rich and the poor is regressive tax rates. In the US in 1970 the income tax rate over $100,000 dollars was 70%. Now it's 39.6% for income over $225,000. Another is the holding down of incomes since the GFC, which have lost value in real terms while the profits of the multinationals and the bankers have gone up. Source, the federal reserves own 2013 Survey of Consumer Finances.

Indeed even when the G20 make sounds as if to recognise these issues, nothing happens.  In 2011, at the request of the G20 The Gates Foundation produced a report entitled G20 Report that recommended a financial transaction tax as a way to stem the flow of wealth from the poor to the rich.  The tax came to be known as the Robin Hood Tax.  The recommendation was not adopted.

It is not only personal income that contributes to the gap between the rich and poor.  Company profits are often able to escape taxation altogether, or be greatly minimised.  Again, the G20 recognised the need to address this issue, and called for the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting plan to address corruption and tax evasion.  The request was picked up and a plan developed by the OECD (see here: BEPS).  But as yet, G20 nations have failed to endorse the plan.  The Tax Justice Network have conducted ground breaking research into global tax evasion, revealing that 21 Trillion dollars (the entire GDP of the US is only $16 Trillion) is siphoned offshore before governments have a chance to tax it.   Many of the nations who host this offshore profit, have massive debts that cripple their ability to provide infrastructure and services to their people, yet their total debt is LESS than the offshore profits they are hosting.  But it's not dodgy no name banks who are holding the profits on behalf of western corporations: it is the very international banks of the G20.  And these banks are paying off the corrupt leadership of these debt ridden nations, or paying the public purse a pittance and threatening to go elsewhere if the host nation dares to tax them.

Even the IMF has criticised the lack of action on tax havens, as shown by the Tax Justice Network in the report IMF: tax havens cause poverty, particularly in developing countries:
The IMF report takes a swing or two at the OECD’s BEPS process. For instance, in a section on tax treaties which allocate taxing rights among countries, the IMF notes that not only are the OECD models (that are generally the basis for these treaties) skewed in favour of richer countries, as we and other have often remarked, but it also adds:
“At issue here are deeper notions as to the ‘fair’ international allocation of tax revenue and powers across countries (which current initiatives do not address).”

Which makes it all the more perplexing that the G20 nations have failed to endorse BEPS.

The G20 have recognised that the shift of wealth upwards is a threat to global economic growth. In 2009, the G20 adopted the 'G20 Framework for Strong, Sustainable, and Balanced Growth'  in which it required it's members to “promote balanced and sustainable economic development in order to narrow development imbalances and reduce poverty”.  Yet they seem so beholden to the business lobby that they have forgotten this framework.

Climate


If we turn to climate we find a similar scenario. At the 2010 G20 Summit in Soul the closing document expressed a commitment to “achieving a successful, balanced result that includes the core issues of mitigation,transparency, finance, technology, adaptation, and forest preservation”.  Yet the G20 have achieved almost nothing on these fronts.  The G20 have failed to provide effective leadership in developing effective world wide carbon reduction policy.  In energy production, the G20 have failed to implement removal of fossil fuel subsidies despite reiteration of the need to do so at many of the G20 summits.  In an age where governments are asking their people, through mechanisms such as the proposed Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement, to accept removal of barriers to trade such as local environmental laws, animal cruelty laws, food safety laws etc, they are then asking their people to accept fuel subsidies that favour the big emitters.  $528 billion world wide goes towards fossil fuels while $88 billion goes towards renewable energy.  On a proportional basis, per unit of energy, more subsidies go towards renewable energies, which on the surface makes it appear that renewable energy producers are better off.  however if this figure was reversed the uptake of renewable energies would occur much quicker and there would be a brake on fossil fuel use.  The benefit in carbon reduction would be immediate.  Of course on the end of this is a consumer of fuel paying more to get from A to B.  But the solution is not to bring everything down to the lowest common denominator.  Nor is it to heat the world's climate in the process, because doing so will only cost the average person on the street more in the long run, while, under current G20 economic models, the captains of industry will continue to do better and better.

Representation


In a very real way this highlights the flaw in the whole modus operandi of the G20 and their neoliberal theories.  That the G20 are not working effectively towards lifting up the world's populace economically, so that they can afford to make a real choice between using fossil fuels or an equally priced (and heavily subsidised - at first) renewable energy alternative, is a basic failure of democracy.

The G20 leaders are not listening to the people.  After the G20 summit, with all it's feel good statements about climate, the worlds poor and so on, they go back home to their economic rationalist advisors and their lobby money and fail to act.  The G20 is a Festival of Fakery.  The only real things that come out of the G20 are "back room" agreements that centre around access to resources.  "We'll open this market if you open that market".  The talk of caring for the environment, building alternative energy solutions, equality and eliminating poverty is all forgotten when the talk gets down to the nitty gritty.

Not only is the G20 failing on democracy for it's member nations people: it doesn't represent all the people of the world.  The G20 nations cover 70% of the world's people, and 90% of it's wealth. The last 30% with only 10% of the wealth are not represented in any meaningful way in the G20 discussions.  All South American nations excepting Brazil and Argentina, most of Africa and South East Asia are not represented.

First Nations


The people of the world's first nations are particularly under represented by the G20, primarily because their nations have been decimated by colonialism.  Indeed they are more often not even recognised as having sovereignty and it is expected that representation is covered by the nation under which they have been colonised.  What is not understood is that until sovereignty is recognised, first nations people are without land and without purpose.  They are adrift within the imperialist's world.

Where sovereignty is recognised through appropriate treaties, first nations people are able to rebuild their unique culture, laws and language. First nations people usually have very different economic models compared to the G20 member states.  They have closer affinity with the land and when it is destroyed by mining or environmental degradation the connection to their culture is in danger of being lost.

The economic and cultural needs of first nations people around the world are not covered by the G20.  At most you can expect token participation. Before first nations people can have true justice the world needs to divest itself of colonialism: it has to decolonise.  First Nation sovereignty needs to be recognised.  Anything less amounts to assimilation, and assimilation is genocide.

So Where To From Here?


It's fairly clear that the G20 process is not going to lead to a fairer cleaner safer world.  Even alternatives such as BRICS (Brazil Russia India China and South Africa) really only seek to provide the same economic rationalist approach in a way that more closely suits that particular subset of G20 nations.  What is needed is for the world's people to first become aware, and second, stand up to the G20 process and say "not in my name".  Like the Indignado movement in Spain, the Arab Spring, the Occupy Movement and now the Hong Kong democracy movement, there needs to be mobilisation against the economic rationalism that is leading to the destruction of our planet and the economic slavery of billions.  We need to break down the current paradigm that says "growth is good" and establish a global community that seeks to represent all peoples, to put people before profit, and to work towards and for Sovereignty, Society and Sustainability.

The story of how this is done is will be written by history.  But it starts with YOU!

 

 

References:

http://www.gatesfoundation.org/What-We-Do/Global-Policy/G20-Report

http://www.oecd.org/ctp/beps.htm

http://www.taxjustice.net/2014/01/17/price-offshore-revisited/

http://www.taxjustice.net/cms/upload/pdf/The_Price_of_Offshore_Revisited_Key_Issues_120722.pdf

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2012/jul/21/offshore-wealth-global-economy-tax-havens
2014-10-26 02:23:36 G20 Not Working Economy Climate Change Decolonise Sovereignty Neoliberal Updates

Media Release - International Union Leader Calls on G20

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International union leader calls on G20 to improve lives of working families.


 

Sharan Burrow, General Secretary of International Trade Union Confederation, will speak at the G20 rally on November 15. The ITUC represents 125 million workers across 125 countries.

Sharan Burrow, who will also participate in Labour 20, has called for a focus on jobs and wages at this November’s G20 leader’s summit.

“G20 leaders must prioritise jobs, wages and social protection to kick start the global economy and afford justice to working families.”

“The Labour 20 represents working people and calls on governments to take a courageous stand against the increasing American corporate model that is destroying the social balance in the global economy” said Sharan Burrow, General Secretary, International Trade Union Confederation.

The rally will assemble at 11am November 15 2014 at Emma Miller Place (Roma St) and subsequently march past the G20 summit to Musgrave Park.

For further comment contact media spokesperson Adrian Skerritt on 0400 307 892.
2014-10-28 14:00:38 Media Release

G20 Peoples' Convergence: Call Out for Community Support

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Brisbane Community Action Network - G20


www.briscan.net.au


www.facebook.com/briscan.g20


 

 

G20 has come and gone but BrisCAN still needs your help!


 

Urgent appeal:  West End Uniting Church


Roof Repair assistance needed after last Thursday's hail storm. Flea Market/Fund Raiser will be held at the West End Uniting Church on Sunday Morning (7th Dec), then from 3pm will be Raise the Roof fundraser, starting with the Fair Trade Fair, then followed by Carols by Candlelight at 6pm
/event/raising-the-roof-for-christmas/


 

BrisCAN needs your help with $$ for:



  • The Basement rent, and consumables such as internet credit, food and paint/materials.   The Basement is the BrisCAN arts/creative/media space.  A full proposal is being developed by the Space Collective.  Keep tuned.


Please donate!

Bank: Members and Equity Credit Union

Account name:BrisCAN(Brisbane Community Action Network)

BSB: 313-140  Account number: 12069890 

Non-monetary donations:

We need your gear:  Loans/donations:   Computers, printers, art equipment.

Donations of goods can be dropped off at 5 Paris Street, Call 0411 118 737 to arrange time.

For more information:
(no longer available)
mbl 0411 118 737

BrisCAN-G20 Statement of Unity

 

BrisCAN-G20 is network of groups and individuals concerned about the ongoing ecological destruction and social and economic and disparities perpetuated by G20 and the systems it represents.We live and take action on Aboriginal land and support First Nations’ struggles for land and culture.Bris-CAN facilitates vibrant community-based action for an ecologically and socially just world. We foster peaceful collaborations for progressive and positive change locally and globally in the lead up to the G20 and beyond.
2014-11-04 21:36:53 call out community support Peoples Summit Peoples Convergence Updates

Media Release: G20 Peoples’ Summit Showcases Vibrant Community Responses to Global Leaders' Conference
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G20 Peoples’ Summit showcases vibrant community responses to global leaders' conference


 
Visioning Another World: G20 Peoples’ Summit
Nov 12-14th
Various locations throughout West End and South Brisbane

 

Grassroots counter- G20 organising group, BrisCAN, have released the program for the Peoples’ Summit: Visioning Another World.

The program is available here: /briscan/G20PeoplesSummitProgram.pdf

The G20 Peoples Summit will be a three- day festival of symposiums, idea- sharing, art, creative activities, education and action. It aims to develop community responses to world economic, social and environmental problems.

It will take place in various locations across South Brisbane and West End, Brisbane, November 12- 14, before the G20 Leaders Summit.   All sessions are free and open to the public.

This event brings together local and international thinkers to collaborate on broad themes, such as economics, sustainability, social justice, human rights & climate change.

High profile speakers such as Senator Larissa Waters and international labour organiser Sharan Burrow will be speaking at events alongside local and grassroots community organisers. Local musicians, the Mouldy Lovers, These Dirty Bones and Hannaka are some of the talent who will are giving their time to this important event.
BrisCAN- G20 is a broad network of groups concerned about the social and ecological impacts of the G20. Included in this are concerns about the immediate repercussions of hosting the G20 in our region and the local and global perpetuation of the economics of privilege.  BrisCAN sees the G20 as an opportunity to unite and work on transforming our society to a more just and sustainable one.

The group has already garnered extensive media attention for having taken a strong, community oriented stand against the G20, and for showing the sort of action that is possible at a grassroots level.
2014-11-05 14:43:59 G20 Community Response Leaders Summit People Peoples Visioning Media Release

Become a Citizen Journalist at G20

Citizen Journalist – Independent Media Networking Meeting


Interested in media sharing or creative collaborations?
We will be opening the Citizen Journalist Media Centre at Wandering Cooks on Weds Nov 12.
You will be welcome to come in to use computers/wifi and space to share your G20 stories with the world!


Join us for a networking meeting:


Date: Tues Nov 11
Time: 4pm
Place: The basement at 5 Paris Street, West End


More info: 0411 118 737


Photographer

2014-11-09 00:44:55 Media Citizen Journalist G20 Updates

November G20 Peoples Summit Bulletin

In this G20 Peoples bulletin:


1) Peoples Summit and March Volunteer Help Wanted!

2) Citizens Media Networking Meeting

3) G20 Peoples Summit Program announced!

 

1) Peoples Summit and March Volunteer Help Wanted!

We need you! To make the Peoples Summit and March a success!

From Weds – Friday this week, we will be hosting the G20 Peoples Summit – and alternative to the G20 Leaders Summit. The Summit will be a festival of idea sharing, films, symposiums and creative community events about the climate, economy, human rights, ecological justice… and more. The G20 Peoples March will be held on Nov 15 (Sat) following the Peoples Summit.

Got skills to share or time and energy to contribute?
We need you! : stage managers, door people, first aiders, sign language interpreters, support people, kitchen hands, tech support, banner painters, electricians to check cables and gear, posterers, artists, citizen media makers and more.

Volunteer info sessions

Monday Nov 10: 4pm-7pm
Tuesday Nov 11: 4pm – 7pm
Place: 5 Paris Street, West End.
5 Paris Street, West End.
More info: 0411 118 737

2) Citizen Journalist – Independent Media Networking meeting:

Interested in media sharing or creative collaborations?

We will be opening the Citizen Journalist Media Centre at Wandering Cooks on Weds Nov 12.You will be welcome to come in to use computers/wifi and space to share your G20 stories with the world!

Join us for a networking meeting:

Date: Tues Nov 11
Time: 4pm
Place: The basement at 5 Paris Street, West End.
More info: 0411 118 737

3) G20 Peoples’ Summit program announced! Summit showcases vibrant community responses to global leaders' conference

Visioning Another World: G20 Peoples’ Summit
Nov 12-14th
Various locations throughout West End and South Brisbane

Peoples’ March - Sat Nov 15 @ 11am.
Roma Street Forum to Musgrave Park

Brisbane Community Action Network (BrisCAN) G20 is pleased to announce the program for the G20 Peoples’ Summit: Visioning Another World.

The program is available here: program

The G20 Peoples Summit will be a three- day festival of symposiums, idea- sharing, art, creative activities, education and action. It aims to develop community responses to world economic, social and environmental problems.

The Summit will take place in various locations across South Brisbane and West End, Brisbane, November 12- 14, before the G20 Leaders Summit. All sessions are free and open to the public.

The Summit will be followed by a Peoples’ March - Sat Nov 15 @ 11am. Roma Street Forum to Musgrave Park.
These events brings together local and international thinkers to collaborate on broad themes, such as economics, sustainability, social justice, human rights & climate change.

High profile speakers such as Senator Larissa Waters, international labour organiser Sharan Burrow and Oxfam International Executive Director, Winnie Byanyima,will be speaking at events alongside local and grassroots community organisers. Local musicians, the Mouldy Lovers, These Dirty Bones and Hannaka are some of the talent who will are giving their time to this important event.

BrisCAN- G20 is a broad network of groups concerned about the social and ecological impacts of the G20. Included in this are concerns about the immediate repercussions of hosting the G20 in our region and the local and global perpetuation of the economics of privilege. BrisCAN sees the G20 as an opportunity to unite and work on transforming our society to a more just and sustainable one.

For media, or further inquiries contact: 0411 118 737 or email: (no longer available)


BrisCAN-G20 Statement of Unity

BrisCAN-G20 is network of groups and individuals concerned about the ongoing ecological destruction and social and economic and disparities perpetuated by G20 and the systems it represents. We live and take action on Aboriginal land and support First Nations’ struggles for land and culture. Bris-CAN facilitates vibrant community-based action for an ecologically and socially just world. We foster peaceful collaborations for progressive and positive change locally and globally in the lead up to the G20 and beyond.
2014-11-09 01:20:44

Radical Times Presents: Lost Film Festival

“Lost” and rare documentaries from the 1970s and 1980s


presented by the Radical Times Historical Archive



1970 Moratorium demonstration in Brisbane – part of national protests against Australia’s military involvement in the Vietnam War © Fryer Library Click photo to go to ‘Radical Times Lost Film Festival'


Lost film festival is presented by the Radical Times Historical Archive

2014-11-10 05:26:33 Lost Film Festival Radical Times History Protest Australia Updates

Media Release: Peoples Summit Commences!
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MEDIA RELEASE


For immediate release


Date: 12 Nov 2014


 

The G20 Peoples’ Summit gets under way on Wednesday November 12 with a full program comprising 20 events at five locations around Brisbane.

As part of the Visioning Another World: The G20 Peoples’ Summit, a three-day festival of symposiums, idea sharing, art, creative activities, education and action, day 1 will include discussion panels and workshops on topics pertaining to austerity, food security, democracy the environment and feminism.

The G20 Peoples’ Summit will begin with a discussion at the Colossus Reception Hall led by John Quiggin on the topic of austerity, the G20 and growth.

John Quiggin is a professor of economics at the University of Queensland, author of many books and a proficient blogger. For many years he wrote a column for the Australian Financial Review and currently writes for Jacobin magazine.

In the early afternoon Stephen Keim and Chris Butler will be speaking at the Uniting Church in Vulture Street, West End on the attacks on civil liberties and democracy; spatial politics and the rights to the city.

Stephen Keim is a barrister notable for his strongly principled, though and controversial actions in various courtcases. Keim is a recipient of the Human Rights Medal, awarded to him by the Australian Human Rights Commission in 2009.

Chris Butler researches in the areas of law and social theory, urban governance and critical approaches to state power. His book Henri Lefebvre: Spatial Politics, Everyday Life and the Right to the City has been recently published by Routledge.

Later in the afternoon Samantha Castro will lead a discussion on feminism and patriarchy. Samantha Castro is the co-founder of Wikileaks Australian Citizens Alliance (WACA), the oldest support campaign for Julian Assange and Wikileaks in Australia. She holds a BA in Media and a Masters in Professional Communication. Her speciality is in Global Media and the War On Terror.

For full details of all the 20 events, speakers and venue visit program

 

For more information visit: / or see (no longer available).
2014-11-12 03:45:21 Media Release

Alternative Development & the Trading Model of Latin America Integration
[caption id="attachment_1130" align="alignleft" width="300"]Eulalia Eulalia[/caption]

The G20 People’s Summit series of discussions got underway in the West End with three events opening up the debate for an alternative to the economic and development models proposed by the G20 Leaders Summit.

At 199 Boundary Road, one of the six venues of the G20 People’s Summit, Eulalia Reyes-Whitey and Margaret Gleeson got proceedings under way with an informative look at the trading model being employed in Latin America and Caribbean under the auspices of ALBA.

ALBA, the Bolivarian Alliance for the People of America, was initially proposed by Venezuela charismatic and radical president Hugo Chavez in 2004, and backed by Cuba leader Fidel Castro, to counter the model of development favoured by the US and the neo-liberal school of economics.

Since its inception nine progressive Latin American and Caribbean countries, including Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Dominica, Ecuador, Antigua & Barbuda, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, devised and are implementing an alternative development model that favours fair trade as opposed to free trade; cooperation as opposed to competition; and social solidarity instead of exploitation.

If those seem to be lofty and grandiose ideals, an interesting set of figures challenges opposition to an economic system of development that favours isolation to regional integration.

According the statistics presented during the G20 Peoples’ Summit discussion by Eulalia and Margaret significantly tangible impacts can be measured in the member countries of ALBA, especially in the areas of women’s health, infant mortality, education and environmental protection.

It is also in the area of regional solidarity that substantial gains are being achieved. For example, Venezuela, as an oil producing country, guarantees cheaper fuels to its regional neighbours, whether they are members of ALBA or not; Cuba receives oil from Venezuela in exchange for doctors and highly trained health workers; and vaccines produced in ALBA member countries are distributed free to the region, impacting on the overall improvement of health and wellbeing.

ALBA aims to achieve justice, solidarity, cooperation and complimentarity with an approach reflected in a set of principles that guarantees commerce and investment do not merely become ends in themselves, but rather means to reach equitable and sustainable development, with a greater emphasis on local cultures and identities.

ALBA poses a challenge to the hegemony of the United States that has made the US brokered NAFTA and other free trade blocs unmanageable. In many ways the attempts to create a Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) is a direct response by imperialism to the challenges posed by the ALBA integration model. The progressive, and even some less progressive, governments of Latin America and Caribbean are clearly showing in practical terms that “Another World is Possible”.
2014-11-12 14:26:40 Alternative Economics Updates

Peoples' Summit Opening Day a Big Success
On Wednesday something reasonably unique occurred in Brisbane.  Rather than accept the mainstream G20 agenda, community and activist groups launched their own alternative Peoples Summit today.  The Peoples' Summit aims to explore economic solutions that put people before profit.

The opening day, day one of three, has been a huge success.  Attendees have expressed an appreciation that there has been an opportunity to contribute to the economic debate through workshops and to hear innovative ideas and solutions from speakers wide and far.  This is in stark contrast to the Leaders Summit, where ordinary people have no input and will only hear selected sound bites from the conference that represent what the press and the government decide people need be told.

We thank all attendees and presenters for their valuable contributions and participation.

 

[caption id="attachment_1155" align="alignleft" width="200"]Media Centre Opening 02 Tuesday - Media Centre Launch[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1156" align="alignright" width="300"]Media Centre Opening 03 Tuesday - Media Centre Launch[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1158" align="alignright" width="199"]Media Centre Opening 05 Tuesday - Media Centre Launch[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1157" align="alignleft" width="300"]Media Centre Opening 04 Tuesday - Media Centre Launch[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1163" align="alignright" width="300"]Welcome and Opening - Sam Watson 2 Welcome and Opening - Sam Watson[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1164" align="alignright" width="300"]Welcome and Opening - Sam Watson Welcome and Opening - Sam Watson[/caption]

 

[caption id="attachment_1153" align="alignleft" width="300"]John Quiggin - Alternative Economics Discussion 01 John Quiggin - Alternative Economics Discussion[/caption]

 

[caption id="attachment_1162" align="alignright" width="300"]Towards an Alternative Financial Infrastructure to Confront the Crisis Towards an Alternative Financial Infrastructure to Confront the Crisis[/caption]

 

[caption id="attachment_1161" align="alignleft" width="300"]Towards an Alternative Financial Infrastructure to Confront the Crisis 2 Towards an Alternative Financial Infrastructure to Confront the Crisis[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1151" align="alignright" width="300"]IMG_7696 Towards an Alternative Financial Infrastructure to Confront the Crisis[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1159" align="alignleft" width="300"]Stephen  Keim - Attacks on Civil Liberties and Democracy plus Spatial Politics and the Rights to the City 01 Stephen Keim - Attacks on Civil Liberties and Democracy plus Spatial Politics and the Rights to the City[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1152" align="alignright" width="300"]IMG_7729 MC Greg Brown - Attacks on Civil Liberties and Democracy plus Spatial Politics and the Rights to the City[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1160" align="alignleft" width="300"]Stephen  Keim - Attacks on Civil Liberties and Democracy plus Spatial Politics and the Rights to the City 02 Stephen Keim - Attacks on Civil Liberties and Democracy plus Spatial Politics and the Rights to the City[/caption]

 

 

 
2014-11-13 13:21:18

Media Release: G20 PROTEST GROUP AGREES WITH FORMER SOLICITOR GENERAL: ‘TOOLS OF PROTEST’ ARE OK

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*MEDIA RELEASE*MEDIA RELEASE*MEDIA RELEASE*MEDIA RELEASE*MEDIA RELEASE*


For immediate release November 12, 2014


G20 PROTEST GROUP AGREES WITH FORMER SOLICITOR GENERAL: ‘TOOLS OF PROTEST’ ARE OK


A protest group behind what is billed to be the largest demonstration against the G20 Leaders Summit in Brisbane has hailed former Queensland Solicitor General Walter Sofronoff's comments on the legality of protests items such as masks and loudhailers at G20 protests in Brisbane.

G20 “Peoples’ March” organiser Ewan Saunders said Mr Sofronoff’s comments at a recent public meeting convened by Caxton Legal Centre represent a victory for democratic rights in Queensland.

“Mr Sofronoff’s comments are just legal common sense and the fact that police have backed down from quite an anti-democratic position regarding community protests is a positive development,” Mr Saunders said.

“Police have until now made extra-legal declarations regarding certain items that are I think ordinary ‘tools of protest’ such as theatrical masks, loudhailers and protest banners; items that we have always considered we had lawful excuse to carry as part of peaceful demonstrations,” he said.

Until Mr Sofronoff’s recent statements, police had insisted that these were “prohibited items” even for the purpose of lawful assemblies, despite “lawful excuse” provisions in the G20 Safety and Security Act 2013.

Police have since backed down on this position according to a November 11 article from The Guardian Australia, but still insist that face masks are “banned”, despite legal opinion to the contrary.

Mr Saunders said: “By unilaterally declaring a blanket ban on ordinary protest materials, police were defying the intent of the legislation which is to prevent disruption to the G20 Summit while allowing ordinarily lawful activities including peaceful protest.”

“This could well have resulted in countless unlawful arrests of peaceful protesters at great monetary and social expense to the community.”

“It is simply not the job of police to seek to misuse legislation to stifle legitimate, lawful and peaceful protest, so I’m pleased to hear that they’ve adjusted their interpretation of the Act somewhat,” he said.

“I also think it’s worth asking where the initial, repressive interpretation of the G20 legislation originated, especially considering Premier Campbell Newman’s history of using the Queensland Police to help him avoid protest groups.”

“The police are here to protect the public, not to help politicians avoid embarrassment by frustrating community protest,” Mr Saunders said.

FOR MEDIA COMMENT, CONTACT: Ewan Saunders (BRISCAN-G20) on 0401 234 610

For more information on the G20 Peoples’ March and Peoples’ Summit, visit briscan.net.au
2014-11-12 20:30:24 G20 Act Prohibited Items Walter Sofronoff G20 Brisbane 2014 March Rally Demonstration Media Release

Can feminism smash patriarchy?
[caption id="attachment_1139" align="alignleft" width="199"]Sam_Castro Sam Castro[/caption]

Although the title of the discussion led by Sam Castro, Jess Harrison and Fran Morrell could have appeared rather ambitious, for the large group gathered at the Colossus courtyard there was no doubt that patriarchy is a redundant system that keeps women, and sometimes men, in a hierarchical system of oppression and disadvantage.

After a few points of introduction, Sam Castro was interested to hear from the participants what feminism means to a group of self selected women and men willing to enter into a debate that questions every aspect of daily life.

To frame the discussion Sam quantified that feminism is more than trying to achieve equality in a broken system; feminism is more than having 50 per cent of women sitting in boardrooms; feminism is more than co-opting women into militarism to go and kill people. It is a concept that looks at who we are as a community and as human beings, both as women and men; the issues that we face on the planet are founded on a structure created by patriarchy that it is just as repressive and oppressive to the men that dwell in that system as it is to the women.

“It is a fundamental structural issue in the society, both globally and locally, that hampers our capacity as human beings, campaigners, activists and engaged citizens to bring about forceful evolutionary change”, said Sam.

Jess Harrison recounted her younger days of activism in the West End, and how feminism allowed her to become more assertive, confident and, in her own judgement, “a bit arrogant”.

Jess also noted that sexual assault, and the silence around it, remains a major issue in every area of interaction between women and men. She recognised that sexual assault is a secret even in activist circles, and the need remains to get to a point where a woman experiencing sexual assault is believed immediately and the perpetrator leaves the organisation and is dealt with appropriately.

Fran Morrell took a more philosophical approach, claiming that as we’ve all grown up in patriarchal system feminism is not of a particular gender. “It is a way of approaching the world, and approaching others and approaching ourselves, and I think it has to be based in respect connection love and curiosity”, she said.

However, for at least one of the participants who works at the coalface of sexual assault service provision it was difficult to see feminism outside of men and women and the privileges that accompany that. One out of three women under the age of 18 is sexually assaulted in Australia and the devastating consequences on women and how they see themselves in the world affects them for the rest of their lives.

As the session drew to a close Sam Castro suggested that women and men should continue to meet regularly to discuss societal issues from a feminist perspective in a deteriorating environment, war and women disadvantage.

Sam Castro will speak at the G20 Peoples’ Summit Rally on Saturday 15.
2014-11-12 21:57:18

Media Release: Peoples' Summit Day Two Speakers
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MEDIA RELEASE


For immediate release


Date: 13 Nov 2014


 

The G20 Peoples’ Summit continues on Thursday, November 13, with a full program comprising 23 events at five locations around Brisbane.

As part of the Visioning Another World: The G20 Peoples’ Summit, a three-day festival of symposiums, idea sharing, art, creative activities, education and action, day 2 will focus the discussion and workshops on topics pertaining to climate change, including the Indigenous context, activism and solidarity between Australia, the Philippines, India and Greece.

The panel discussions and workshops will be facilitated by keynote speakers attending the G20 Peoples’ Summit, and well known activists that cannot attend but will link up via webcam.

Among those who will be participating from a distance is Derrick Jensen, who needs to attend to personal health issues in the USA and will provide an input via video calling.

Derrick Jensen is a coauthor of Deep Green Resistance, and the author of Endgame, The Culture of Make Believe, A Language Older than Words, and many other books.

He was named one of Utne Reader’s “50 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World” and won the Eric Hoffer Award in 2008.He has written for Orion, Audubon, and The Sun Magazine, among many others.

Elmer Labog, the Chairperson of the Philippines’ May Firs Movement (KMU) will lead a discussion on labour movements.

Elmer Labog heads the largest and the militant trade union centre of the Philippines, and the Vice-Chairperson of the New Patriotic Alliance of the Philippines (BAYAN) of which KMU is a key component. Elmer Labog is also a member of the International Coordinating Committee of the International League of Peoples Struggles. He has played a key role in worker and people’s mobilisations in the Philippines against US military bases and against neoliberal impositions such as the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation, the World Trade Organisation, and so-called Free Trade Agreements, the most recent of these being the People’s Global Camp in Bali during the December 2013 WTO Ministerial Meeting.

For full details of all the 23 events, speakers and venues visit program

For more information visit: no longer available
2014-11-13 00:45:22 Media Release Peoples Summit Brisbane G20 2014 Elmer Labog Derrick Jensen

Democracy & Justice in PPP’s
[caption id="attachment_1168" align="alignleft" width="300"]Vicky_Walters Dr. Vicky Walters[/caption]

Public Private Partnership, or PPP is a clever scribal abbreviation for government and private sector to conspire against the public interest to transfer social service to the private markets, thus legitimising the abuse of public resources because some people can pay for them, while legally depriving others simply because they may not have the financial means to bear the cost of the services or resources.

Simply put PPP’s involve contracts between the public sector and a private party, in which the private party provides a public service or project and assumes financial, technical and operational control over what may storically have been a social service or distribution of the commons.

The collusion between the public and the private can be best understood when the difference between customary funding and the new financing of services is put under scrutiny with the view of protecting the public interest.

Extension to the legal framework of how the private sector buys into government services is being mapped out at the G20 Leaders Summit, while the G20 Peoples’ Summit is exploring alternatives to resist what many describe as the pillaging of the public good.

At 199 Boundary Road Dr. Vicky Walters and Dr. Kshithij Urs shared their experience and research on PPPs in India’s water sector, highlighting the anti-democratic and unjust character of these partnerships and making the parallels with the agenda of the G20.

During their research and work in the state Karnataka Vicky and Kshithij uncovered problematic flaws in the practices of the state bureaucracy in modifying regulations, even those ratified by the Indian Constitution, that would smooth the way for the privatisation of water.

Kshithij witnessed the total absence of public consultation prior to the implementation of new government policies to privatise water in the state, and perhaps the powerlessness of the state authority to stand against the pressure of international financial institutions and central governments to enforce their conditions in return for humanitarian or development assistance.

Vicky received admission from the bureaucrat in charge of the water reform financing that the policy document he wrote was a front-loaded conditionality for a World Bank loan. In the city of Hubli-Dharwad where one of the World Bank funded projects was being implemented she was told by members of the project team that they lied to the public about the privatisation and user charges to get them to accept the project, undermining any kind of obligation to serve the interests of the public.

Active citizens are mobilising to resist the constant current of privatisation, locally and globally. A draft statement to be delivered to the G20 Leaders Summits was formulated during the discussion with Vicky and Kshithij.

The statement may include the following key points:

  • Public money should not be channelled into private operations;

  • PPP are step towards full privatisation;

  • Tax reform is misdirected exonerating corporation and big business from contributing their legal and fair amount of taxes;

  • PPP’s result in inequitable and unjust outcomes;

  • PPP’s are not partnerships but the privatisation of core government functions;

  • Major policy shifts should be democratically decided.

2014-11-13 13:22:58

Labour Movements
[caption id="attachment_1171" align="alignleft" width="300"]Elmar_Labog Elmar Labog[/caption]

Elmer Labog , the chairperson of KMU, the May First Movement (Kilusang Mayo Uno), the largest and the militant trade union centre of the Philippines, couldn’t care less if Tony Abbott shirt fronts Vladimir Putin, but he cares about Australian mining interests in the Philippines financing the military to kill mining workers struggling for their rights, and poising the environment.

The Philippines is the third largest producer of gold in the world, yet millions of people subsist on meagre incomes, hardly reaching the minimum wages standards.

One out of 10 workers leaves to work abroad, making labour export a huge source of income for the government while contributing to the trafficking of people in South East Asia and Middle East countries, where known abuse of guest workers occurs regularly but remains unpunished.

Like most resource rich countries where foreign capital dictates the terms, the sovereign owners of the resources hardly get any share of the wealth generated. The problem, according to Elmer, lies square at capitalism’s drive for profit.

The type of monopoly capitalism endured in the Philippines is not only driving profits and resources out of the country and of the reach of the people, but is also threatening the very survival of the planet. As Elmer stated “Production is social but appropriation is private, that is the fundamental contradiction”.

While the G20 agenda includes trade, jobs, infrastructure, investment and tax reform, climate change does not feature as a worthy topic of discussion. Yet, a year from the worst typhoon ever recorded, where 16 million people were affected, 6300 were killed, 4.1 million people were displaced and 1.1 million houses were damaged or destroyed, many people have not doubt that such disasters are brought about by extreme conditions of climate change.

Compounding the problem the people affected are the poorest farmers, fish folk, coastal communities and slum dwellers whose conditions are caused by the very particular social and living conditions brought about by the domination of foreign monopoly capital over a domestic, semi feudal order.

A mere 114 billion dollars has been spent for reconstruction purposes, which amounts to only a third of the funds required to rebuild the damaged areas. Yet, Barak Obama has requested that the Philippines government directs 50 million to fund military facility for the US.

The labour movement in the Philippines has not doubt that the neoliberal policies advanced by the G20 are taking a death toll on the people of the Philippines. Minimum wages is only 40% of the average cost of living for a family, while land grabbing continues unabated by foreign corporation.

The people from the Philippines are well aware that the interests of capital and labour will never meet. They are looking for solutions to reassert the sovereignty of the people. Worthy of consideration is to follow the example of ALBA, in Latin America, where governments are taking control over oil, land water, currency and banks.

ALBA has shown that a model of regional integration in which cooperation is replacing competition and humanity is rising over money can replace the neoliberal agenda and raise people out of poverty, improve education and health standards.

The G20 agenda cannot fix the problems that they have caused; neither they intend to. “Seriously, these leaders are not here to shirt front each other. If you ask me, we are here all the better to shirt front them”, Elmer said.
2014-11-13 21:57:55

Media Release: G20 Peoples Summit Final Day Program

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MEDIA RELEASE


For immediate release


Date: 14 Nov 2014


 

Everyone Gets Ice Cream

The G20 Peoples’ Summit wraps up on Friday, November 14, with another full program comprising 15 events at five locations around Brisbane.

There will be a series of films showing at the Uniting Church in Vulture Street, West End. The story of the Marikana miners shot down in South Africa is one of the main features highlighting the plight of of workers striking for a better deal.

The Everyone Gets Ice Cream Group will present a discussion on what exactly is the G20 and what are we to make of all the hype? This session will look at the history of the G20, this year’s agenda, the G20’s role in world politics, and its relationship to the global crisis of capitalism.

The following session will deal wit a global perspective of women in labour, arguing that it is the labour of the world’s workers that keeps capitalism ticking over, and the average worker is a woman. How does the exploitation of workers fit together with that of gender and what are the (often hidden) forms of labour that keep capitalist machinery going?

The late afternoon session is titled ‘After the G20’ & getting to ‘After Capitalism’. It will askwhat do we want to get out of our protests against the G20? What’s the connection of anti-summit protests like this to the abolition of capitalism and transformation of society on a broader scale? What sorts of strategies are open to us?  Which are effective?  In this open forum we will be introducing the ‘Everybody Gets Ice cream’ Bloc for the G20 Rally and create space for a discussion about how all our efforts can better fit with our attempts to emancipate ourselves and others around the world.

After the G20 People’s Summit the attention will be diverted to the Peoples Rally and March on Saturday 15, standing in solidarity with First Nations for Decolonisation.
The Rally will commence at Roma Street Forum and march to Musgrave. There will be music and more interaction in the park after the rally.

For full details of all the 15 events, speakers and venues visit /program/

 

For more information visit: /
2014-11-14 00:02:09 G20 Peoples Summit briscan Media Release

Media Release: Visioning Another World: The G20 Peoples Summit

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MEDIA RELEASE


For immediate release


Date: 14 Nov 2014


 

VISIONING ANOTHER WORLD:

THE G20 PEOPLES’ SUMMIT

Visioning Another World: The G20 Peoples Summit is a three-day festival of symposiums, idea sharing, art, creative activities, education and action. It will take place in various locations in Brisbane from November 12-14,and before the G20 Leaders Summit.

This event brings together local and international thinkers to collaborate on broad themes: The Economy: Growth vs Sustainability, Environment, Climate & Earth Rights, Dispossession, Decolonisation, Politics, Democracies, Social Justice: Human, Labour, Gender Rights and De-militarisation & Peace.

Speakers at Summit events include:

  • Sharan Burrow, General Secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation

  • Sam Castro (Friends of the Earth)

  • Winnie Byanyima (OXFAM)

  • Lez Malezer, National Congress of Australia’s First People

  • Pat Renald (AFTINET)

  • Senator Larissa Waters

  • Lex Wotton (Palm Island Community)


The Peoples Summit will provide a safe, inclusive, family-friendly space to discuss the issues that really matter to ordinary people.

The Peoples Summit will be followed by two days of creative action, education and solidarity while the G20 Leaders Summit will take place. This will include the Peoples Rally and March on November 15.

While demonstrations will be taking place throughout the G20 Summit week, we are calling the community to rally together on the first day of the Leaders Summit to what will be a colourful celebration of diversity and unity in action to assert global social and ecological justice!

 

For more information including venues and speakers visit: /

Full program at: program
2014-11-14 00:31:45 Media Release

Media Release: Sovereignty Society Sustainability

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SOVEREIGNTY SOCIETY SUSTAINABILITY


A New Agenda For The 21st Century


The BrisCAN-G20 Peoples' Summit concludes on Friday evening at the beautiful Princess Theatre, with talks by the following experts:


*Winnie Byanyima, executive director, Oxfam International
*Les Malezer, co-chair, National Congress of Australia’s First People
*Sharan Burrow, general secretary, International Trade Union Confederation
*Michelle Maloney, convenor Australia Earth Laws Alliance


Performance by Benedict Coyne & Hannaka

Speaker Bios:

Winnie Byanyima is a grass-roots activist, human rights advocate, senior international public servant, and world recognized expert on women’s rights, is Executive Director of Oxfam International.

Born in Uganda in 1959, Ms Byanyima earned engineering degrees in the United Kingdom and began her career as an engineer for Uganda Airlines. She was appointed to the diplomatic service in 1989, where she represented Uganda in France and at UNESCO in Paris. She returned to Uganda in 1994 and for the next ten years served as a member of parliament, created an all-woman parliamentary caucus, and was founding leader of the Forum for Women in Democracy, a national NGO championing women’s equal participation in decision-making.

From 2004 until 2006, she served at the African Union Commission to improve the institution’s governance and equality by establishing a program on gender and development. In 2006, she was appointed director of Gender and Development at the United Nations Development Program, working on development, climate change and economic policy. In that role, she co-founded a 60-member Global Gender and Climate Alliance of civil society, bilateral and multilateral organizations and chaired a UN-wide task force on gender aspects of the Millennium Development Goals, and climate change.

Lez Malezer is Co-Chair of National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples. He is a full-time delegate to the United Nations on Indigenous Issues. He held responsibility as Chairperson of the Global Indigenous Peoples Caucus when the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was adopted in 2007.Mr Malezer was a negotiator for the Indigenous Peoples in finalization for the ‘Nagoya Protocol’ under the Convention on Biological Diversity in 2010.From 2000-2002 he was executive assistant and advisor to the chairperson of ATSIC and in the late 1990s worked with FAIRA in Brisbane on Native Title Issues.

Sharan Burrow is the General Secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and a former President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) (2000–2010). She is the first woman to become General Secretary of the ITUC since its foundation in 2006, and was the second woman to become President of the ACTU.

Recognising the significance of her election as the first female leader of the world's largest international trade union organisation, in her acceptance speech after becoming General Secretary of the ITUC, Burrow underlined the necessity of female participation in organisedlabour. She is reported as having said:"I am a warrior for women and we still have work to ensure the inclusion of women in the work place and in our unions. The struggles for women are multiple – too often within their families for independence, then in the workplace for rights and equal opportunity, in their unions for access and representation and then as union leaders. But the investment in and participation of women is not only a moral mandate it is an investment in democracy and a bulwark against fundamentalism and oppression. Organising woman is and must continue to be a priority for the ITUC."

Michelle Maloney holds a Bachelor of Arts and Laws (Honours) from the Australian National University and has more than 20 years’ experience designing and managing climate change, sustainability and environmental justice projects in Australia, the United Kingdom and the USA. She is the National Convenor of the Australian Earth Laws Alliance (www.earthlaws.org.au ), the Chairperson of the Environmental Defenders Office Queensland (www.edo.qld.org.au) and the Australian representative on the Executive Committee of the Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature.

 

Friday 14 November 7pm Princess Theatre, 8 Annerley Rd, Woolloongabba.

For more information on the Peoples’ Summit program, see /event/sovereignty-society-sustainability-new-agenda-21st-century/
2014-11-14 05:24:01 Media Release

Death in Custody March
MarchThe tragedy of death in custody always evokes strong sentiments of anger, despair, disbelief and hunger for justice, and it was no different today at the rally held in Brisbane, hosted by the Aboriginal Sovereign Embassy to honour loved ones, who in the course of their lives were failed by the justice system.

The hundreds of people that gathered in Roma Street were united in the call for justice, and for the end of deaths in custody They listened to speaker after speaker recounting stories of their lived experience of losing family members at the hands of the police for trivial charges like unpaid fines or petty crimes.

Aboriginal people from across the country took to the stage to inform and disclose their grief. Shaun Harris, a Yamatji man from the Mid-west of Western Australia, and the organiser of the national day of protest for Miss Dhu, who died in custody in Port Hedland in May this year, after being detained by the police, also informed the people that as the rally took place a funeral of another death in custody was being held in Perth.

[caption id="attachment_1188" align="alignleft" width="199"]Lex.Wotton Lex Wotton[/caption]

Lex Wotton, from Palm Island, reminded people of the events of almost a decade ago, when Mulrunji Doomadgee was killed in the Palm Island watch house while justice has never been served.

The mainstream discourse often speaks of Aboriginal people being over represented in the prison population. Is there a right measure of representation for any race or group in prison? Or perhaps it is time to consider that the prison system is obsolete, and alternative models need to be considered if we are to build a just society?

Robbie Thorpe, from the Gunnai Nation, and a veteran of many years of activism to redress Aboriginal injustices, convincingly directs responsibility for the status quo with imprisonment and death in a failed system forced upon the people by a colonising power.

“Australia is a crime scene, and we are not going to get justice from criminals. It will remain that way until we have a treaty and a proper justice system”, said Robbie.

Robbie doesn’t believe that a treaty will be happening in the near future, but says “Aboriginal people aren’t going anywhere” and will continue to fight for their rights and determination.

Following the speakers, the participants braved the hot conditions and marched to Musgrave Park, a storical site for Aboriginal activism and struggle. The all march was flanked by a heavy police force presence, the constant hovering of police helicopter, but also the support of legal observers and street medics, the latter kept busy by attending to the needs of people who found he conditions trying.

The protest against the G20 continues at Musgrave Park, where the Aboriginal Sovereign Embassy is based, and with another march Saturday morning, again starting from Roma Street, demanding decolonisation before profit.

The march will run parallel with the Peoples’ March.
2014-11-14 16:01:45

Media Release: Peoples’ Final Statement Against G20 Policies
 

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Peoples’ Final Statement Against G20 Policies


VISIONING ANOTHER WORLD FOR SYSTEM CHANGE!


MEDIA ADVISORY


 

After an intense week long of events in West End Brisbane and Musgrave Park to debate G20’s false solutions to the financial, climate, food, energy, jobs and social crises, and inspired by the great street mass protests, the G20 peoples’ summit organizations will hold a final Press Conference to issue their final statement and comment on the final communiqué of the G20 Leaders and the flaws of G20’s Plan of Action under Australian presidency.

 WHAT:   Final Peoples’ Press Conference on G20 outcomes


WHEN:   Sunday, 16th November 2014 at 5pm (soon after the public release of G20 final conclusions)


WHERE:  Wandering Cooks / Peoples’ Media Centre, Cordelia Street (corner of Fish lane, half a block from G20 Convention Centre)


WHO: Representatives from Brisbane Community Action Network (BrisCAN G20) and community, and international delegates of Our World Is Not For Sale global network from Brazil, India, Canada and Turkey.


 

More information:

Robin Taubenfeld, BrisCAN G20: robintaubenfeld@hotmail.com / ph0411 118 737

Pierre-Yves Serinet, OWINFS G20: serinet.py@gmail.com / ph 0450 976 203
2014-11-16 12:59:58 Final Statement G20 Failed Policies Media Release

Media Release: Civil Liberties Rally

A rally in support of Civil Liberties and G20 arrestees will be held tomorrow morning, 4 December, at the Magistrates Court.  Three of the Arrestees have been charged with offences under the G20 Act relating to prohibited items, in this instance masks. Another has been charged with violating a Prohibited Persons order.


On 13 November Ross Barnett, Deputy Commissioner of Police, stated the QPS recognised that the wearing of face masks may be a means of political expression, and intention to wear a face mask at a rally was a “lawful excuse” under the G20 (Safety and Security) Act.  Barnett stated however that people who wear face masks can expect to be stopped and spoken to by police over the G20 weekend. He added that there was no guarantee that face masks would not be seized, and that this would be a matter of individual police discretion.


BrisCAN legal team worker Max Riethmuller stated that there was never any doubt as to the intentions of the arrestees:




"They were on trains or buses on the way to a protest.  They stated their intentions. They had other assorted protest paraphernalia. The arrestees had a 'lawful excuse' for carrying the prohibited items. It is arbitrary of police to arrest some but not others, and in fact it goes towards the development of an environment were people are cowed into not availing themselves of their rights.  It is a proxy restriction of rights."



Mr Riethmuller went further:




"These arrests highlight the danger that the imposition of the G20 Act represents.  This kind of legislation erodes personal freedoms, in particular the freedom of protest, a key right which often underpins all other rights.  In Queensland there exists the Peaceful Assembly Act, a piece of legislation that was won through the struggle of people who had to openly confront walls of police batons.  This legislation was enacted because it represented a basic standard upon which Peaceful Assembly rights must sit.  Any reduction of rights below this basic standard represents a grave threat to the right to protest.  The G20 Act represents such a lowering of the standard.


"One of the things protesters will be calling for at Thursday's rally will be the end of such open ended powers. They will also be calling for recognition that the G20 Act was not only unnecessary, but an erosion of the rights of protests that Queenslanders have enjoyed since the establishment of the Peaceful Assembly Act."



The rally will commence at 8.30am Thursday (4 Dec) at The Magistrates Court (west), 240 Roma Street.


Rally hosted by Anonymous Galactic and Anonymous Brisbane
https://www.facebook.com/events/553845741427094/

 

 
2014-12-03 22:36:37 Media Release

Activists lodge G20 Policing Submissions
G20 policing submissions lodged

Brisbane Activist Support Team (BAST) and other groups have lodged submissions to the Crime and Corruption Commission review on the G20 Act.

$450 million was spent on the security operation. Assistant Commissioner Katarina Carroll said the Brisbane G20 had set the benchmark for future summits. Speaking on the policing operation she said "I think this is the template for the future."

This is a problem for regional political activists.

The submissions below argue that the policing operation resulted in the suppression of civil liberties. The primary submission was hastily written but touches on the following themes:
• the application of the G20 Act resulted in a major suppression of civil liberties;
• the policing methods are a development upon the APEC policing;
• the policing methods were sophisticated, eg. in relation to negotiations with protest groups;
• that the police collaborated with a willing media partner to create a climate of fear to i) deter people and organisations exercising their rights in relation to peaceful assembly, and ii) indicate to protestors that the police held all the cards (relevant to negotiations);
• PR images about reasonable police, and the so-called water bottle diplomacy, are misleading and served to cloud understanding about the role of the police; and
• consequently the police claims about facilitating civil liberties is easily demonstrated as nonsense.

The submissions are linked below. The first "BrisCAn Activist Support Team Submission" includes an overview of concerns and reflections or reports from activists.  "BrisCAN supplementary submission" is a reflection on the G20 by Andy Paine, which had been omitted from the orginal BAST submission.

Greg from BAST is seeking comments by participants in the alternate G20 events in order to promote ongoing discussion about the G20 policing strategy and tactics. If you have comments on the above themes, the application of the Act etc please contact Greg at welfare_not_warplanes@yahoo.com.

BrisCAN Activist Support Team submission

BrisCAN supplementary submission
2015-04-25 22:58:49

National Rallies Call For Welfare Change

MEDIA RELEASE FOR RALLY


MARCH AUSTRALIA
Media Release 8 July 2015


National Rallies call for welfare change
March Australia is hosting the National Welfare March at a number of locations around the nation this weekend.

“The time is now”, said Loz Lawrey, a March Australia volunteer. “Attitudes to welfare and welfare recipients have to change. We've been talking to Centrelink clients and they tell us it's high time for this campaign. Australians expect fairness and equality, not a regime of fear-mongering and austerity”.

Mr. Lawrey said that many sectors of our society are either being publicly demonised by the Abbott government and the mainstream media, disadvantaged by funding cuts or simply ignored and left behind: the unemployed, sole parents, students, indigenous Australians, pensioners, students, sole parents, the disabled, domestic violence victims, war veterans, refugee asylum seekers, muslims and others. “People are sick of being vilified and abused by this government”, he said.

“Let's face it, this isn't just about people on welfare, we're talking about the poor, the more than 2.5 million people in this country living below the poverty line”, he said. “And all those who live on that line or just above it. Do we really want a divided, more selfish society with ever-increasing inequality? Is this really the Australia we want to live in? Because that's exactly what this government is creating. People want to know why Tony Abbott is pursuing policies that hurt so many in our community. The government keeps telling us that giving fair assistance to Australians who need support is unaffordable and unsustainable. We're calling them out on that. There's no reason a country like ours can't sustain everyone.”

Mr Lawrey said that the language used by government ministers and many journalists was causing social division and would result in increased inequality. “They call all welfare recipients 'dole cheats' and imply that all Muslims are terrorists”, he said. “What happened to the Aussie vision of unity, inclusion and multiculturalism? What happened to the fair go?”
Queensland volunteer Keith Davis points to the punitive welfare measures being introduced by the Abbott government as a form of blame-shifting. “Over the past fifteen years or so both the LNP and the ALP have set up a system that not only keeps people below the poverty line, it also punishes people for their disadvantage”, he said. “The government should take responsibility for the job shortage and do something about it rather than engaging in constant cost-cutting and victim-blaming”.

“A growing number of people are chasing a diminishing number of jobs. Welfare recipients are not having a whale-of-a-time at taxpayer expense. Applying for social security is guaranteed to force you into poverty. We are not a third world country, yet over 2 million Australians are subject to a regime of government-enforced poverty. Most of us are on welfare because there are simply not enough jobs out there. Poverty is a curse. If you need to apply for a Welfare Benefit then you will be forced into Poverty.”

Mr. Davis added that raising rates of welfare assistance would benefit all Australians. “We've just seen Greece reject austerity”, he said. “The Greek people tried it and they know it doesn't work. By cutting funding and punishing our most vulnerable, the government is choking the amount of money flowing through our economy. They are ignoring the most basic concept of economic and social investment: you have to spend money to foster growth. You have to make an investment in your own people. If money is the blood of our economy, we need a transfusion, for the health of our nation”.
For Information:

Loz Lawrey 0422 213 370
Keith Davis 0456 474 525
Candace Wirth 0420 420 842
The National Welfare March
https://www.facebook.com/pages/March-Australia-National-Welfare-March/1556559427941233
Rally Locations:
Saturday 11 July:
Gosford (Central Coast), NSW 10.00am
Contact: Jack Lloyd 0437586675
Launceston, Tas 10.00am
Contact: Alison Hosie 0455 289 128
Sunday 12 July:
Adelaide, SA 11.30am
Contact: Sarah Pinkie 0481 343 022
Wodonga, Vic 11.30am
Contact: Alan Lappin 0447 155 000
Brisbane, Qld 11.00am
Contact: Adrian Skerrit 0400 307 892
Evan Verner 0413 512 408
Hervey Bay (Fraser Coast), Qld 11.30am
Contact: Kathryn Wilkes 0422 681 287
2015-07-08 16:11:14 Media Release

Privacy and Security - Summary and Guideline for Further Research
An example of a Telecom Data Centre. Licensed under GFDL 1.2 via Wikimedia Commons.

Privacy


Metadata - what does it capture:

  • IP address endpoints on http traffic, but not https.

  • GSM MetaData - who you called/texted and when/where.

  • Public wifi hotspots not required to collect metadata.

  • https mail is secure from metadata protection except --->
    Five eyes agreement (Share intelligence - US UK NZ CANADA and AUST)
    Not secure if you email a non-https email account.

  • Metadata DOES NOT INCLUDE your content on Facebook, however obviously public shared data is available to anyone, and private or friends only data is available through PRISM (see below).


Subpoenas
Information held by Australian service providers, and sometimes international services can be subpoenaed. Example, copyright cases.

https://www.getup.org.au/campaigns/digital-freedom-and-privacy/go-dark-against-data-retention/go-dark-against-data-retention

National Security Agency

NSA have several mechanisms for tracking/collecting data.  The main methods are Internet Backbone interception and PRISM

  • Internet Backbone:
    AT&T, Verizon, Sprint have all provided NSA access to their networks.  This means NSA can monitor and collect data going across those provider's networks.   NSA have also been caught out intercepting routers enroute from manufacturer to customer and inserting software backdoors.  This means they can log any traffic that crosses that router once it is in operation.

  • PRISM. PRISM is a surveillance system that provides backdoor access to several main service providers.  It allows NSA agents to access data held on users of those services.   Known members of PRISM include:
    Facebook
    Yahoo (who fought it in FISA court but lost)
    Microsoft (and outlook.com)
    Apple
    Google
    AOL
    http://www.theverge.com/2013/7/17/4517480/nsa-spying-prism-surveillance-cheat-sheet


  • FISA Court. - sometimes supports NSA, sometimes limits it.  FISA is the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.  FISA is responsible for authorising or blocking NSA surveillance operations.


 


Security (Solutions)


Warrant Canary

Like a canary used by miners, if the canary dies, there is a gas leak.  Canaries will die from gas before humans, so a dead canary is advanced notice for humans of a gas leak.  Likewise, a warrant canary is a statement regularly updated by a provider indicating they have not been subject to a government warrant.  If the statement is out of date or missing, it means the company has been subject to warrant, and therefore your data held by the company may no longer be secure.

Warrant canaries are issued because warrant requests usually legally require the company not reveal that they are subject to a warrant.

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/04/warrant-canary-faq

TOR

Web browsing anonymity. IP address obfuscation. Slow, and can't be used for torenting since torenting breaks the anonymity. Outbound nodes can be compromised.

https anywhere improves security by ensuring all traffic is encrypted.

VPN - Encrypts traffic between the user and the vpn proivder
VPN providers can be subpoenaed - look for vpn that doesn't keep ip address logs.
Free vpn versus paid - pros and cons - Free VPN providers are less secure, unknown.  Large providers are more secure, but more likely to be subject to warrant.

https://www.torproject.org/projects/torbrowser.html.en

Private chat/call/email

Wickr - goes through central provider but end to end encryption - they don't know what you are sending.
Wick use Warrant Cannaries.

RISEUP - https secure email. Not encrypted at provider, but provider is trustworthy. They can still be subpoenaed. Riseup use a Warrant Canary.
https://help.riseup.net/

TextSecure, now Redphone - recommended by Snowden - encrypted, but some metadata can leak.

Skype - encrypted, but can be captured if Skype has been subject to warrant (whereas wickr data is fully encrypted end point to end point). Also meta data is leaky. No warrant canary - owned by MS so part of PRISM

All above chat/call methods rely on third parties
2015-11-19 10:43:52

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