Art Sans FrontieresSEAS Art Basement, 66 Hindley Street, AdelaideUntil April 11 (auction at 7pm, April 11)
REVIEW BY JO ELLIS
ADELAIDE — "Nations have imposed borders but art and human rights transcend them", state the organisers of Art Sans
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HANS GEBZE is a West Papuan student based in Yogyakarta. He has been involved in political struggle since before 1998. He is a secretary-general of the Alliance of Papuan Students (AMP). Gebze spoke to 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳ Weekly's MAX LANE about the West
BY RUSSELL PICKERING
PERTH — Despite a hysterical campaign by the Western Australian media
and police opposing the right of young people to protest against the Iraq
war, a 400-strong anti-war rally was held by Youth and Students Against
the
BY
KERRYN WILLIAMS
CANBERRA — More than 100 people attended an anti-war teach-in on
April 5, organised by the ACT Network Opposing War. Most participants,
including students and academics, had attended anti-war protests in Canberra
and the
BY
PETER BOYLE
One of the most enthusiastic “peace monitors” at the April 2 Books
Not Bombs protest in Sydney was Doris Owens, 65. Owens was one of 11 people
charged with “treason” for urging young people not to register for the
military
BY
EMMA CLANCY
SYDNEY — The copious numbers of corporate journalists present at
the April 2 student anti-war rally may have spent four to five hours dashing
from one end of Town Hall to another in search of a violent spectacle,
but, unlike
BY JESS MELVIN
MELBOURNE — On April 3, a student from the prestigious Melbourne High School received a detention. His crime was mentioning the war in class and questioning his principal.
"I don't think it is appropriate for the school to be
91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳
WeeklyÂ’s ANDREW MARTIN spoke to protesters about why they were there.
“We’re here for the Iraqi people, to stop the war and to protest
against John Howard. He represents war, hate and anger. All he wants to
do is fight.
“The
Which of the greedy vultureswill be first to snatch the carcass?There's little hope they'llshare the spoils of war.Will Australia get its dollars worthof reconstruction contracts?Will Cheney get the oilit's all been for?
Johnnie can use our taxesno
When Iraqi TV offices in Baghdad were hit by a US missile strike on March 25, the targeting of the media was strongly criticised by human rights groups. However, much of the US corporate media cheered.
General-secretary of the International
BY ROHAN PEARCE
The British Guardian reported on April 1 that the US government is in the process of creating its own team of "weapons inspectors" to "disarm" Iraq's alleged arsenal of weapons of mass destruction (WMD). According to the Guardian's
Thanks to a compliant media, with reporters embedded in units of the US and British military forces invading Iraq, we are all being spared the sight and sound of things that would almost certainly turn us wild with anger and grief.
There were no
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