The Sydney Siege aftermath

http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/commentisfree/2014/dec/16/sydney-siege-should-not-be-used-to-justify-draconian-anti-terrorism-laws?utm_source=PoliticOz&u

The Sydney siege should not be used to justify draconian new anti-terrorism laws

” . . . .

From that point until yesterday’s terrible events, police and Asio had all the authority they needed to keep track of a man who revealed himself over the years to be really nasty and really crazy.

Old laws allowed police to bug his phones, intercept his emails and place him under surveillance. They didn’t even need a warrant to access his metadata and track down everywhere Monis had been and everyone he was talking to year after year.

They didn’t need fresh laws threatening journalists with 10 years’ jail for revealing Asio’s newfangled “special” operations. Look at the superb cooperation the press displayed during the siege: forgoing scoop after scoop to follow the police strategy of denying Monis the oxygen of publicity.

. . . . “

Man Haron Monis’s poison letters split the High Court and laid bare a flaw in the system

https://theconversation.com/man-haron-moniss-poison-letters-split-the-high-court-and-laid-bare-a-flaw-in-the-system-35557

by Jeremy Gans
Professor, Melbourne Law School at University of Melbourne

Man Haron Monis was a madman with a persecution complex, but his frustration with the legal system wasn’t without justification.

This week’s hostage tragedy in Sydney’s Lindt Cafe will cast a long shadow. It will force us to rethink our readiness for emergencies and the adequacy of our criminal justice system.

There has already been debate about NSW’s bail laws, in light of the fact that the hostage taker Man Haron Monis was on bail facing charges of being an accessory to the murder of his ex-wife, Noleen Hayson Pal, when he took 17 people hostage. Café manager Tori Johnson and barrister Katrina Dawson were killed. Monis also died.

A different part of Australia’s justice system provides a backdrop to Monis’s madness. A report in the Sydney Morning Herald claims “it has been Monis’s ongoing legal battle over his conviction for penning the poisonous letters to the families of dead Australian soldiers between 2007 and 2009 that has consumed him”.

This may not be idle speculation. Just last Friday, Monis had been pursuing that legal battle in the High Court of Australia’s Sydney courtroom, 100 metres away from the Martin Place cafe.

Monis’s obsession was not about the truth. He never denied writing offensive letters to the bereaved, nor did he show remorse for doing so. Indeed, he pleaded guilty last year and received a sentence of community service and a good behaviour bond.

Rather, his obsession was about the law. He has always maintained that the federal offence he was charged with and sentenced under – using a postal service to cause offence – was unconstitutional.

His argument is similar to one made in the United States a few years ago, after a fringe sect, the Westboro Baptist Church, picketed soldiers’ funerals with banners such as “God hates fags”. The US Supreme Court bench ruled eight members to one that a civil claim against the sect’s members for damages undermined their right to freedom of speech. But Australia’s constitution is different. We don’t have a Bill of Rights and only a narrow “freedom of political communication”. Monis’s constitutional claim was no certainty.

But here’s the thing that troubles me: despite several High Court hearings, and a full court judgment last year, the High Court has never resolved his claim. When it did issue its judgment on Monis’s arguments in February last year, an extremely rare thing happened.

The Court split evenly. Chief Justice Robert French and Justices Kenneth Hayne and Dyson Heydon agreed with Monis that the federal offence was unconstitutional, while Justices Susan Crennan, Susan Kiefel and Virginia Bell held that it was constitutional.

Because the Monis case was an appeal from NSW’s top court, the tie meant that the NSW decision stood. And, because the NSW Court of Appeal had already ruled against him, that meant that Monis lost his High Court challenge, despite the support of exactly half the Court’s judges.

To be clear, all of this was perfectly legal and proper. But I don’t think that this outcome was just. That’s because we still don’t know if the crime of using a postal service to cause offence is constitutional.

If anyone else has sent an offensive letter (or sends one today, say to Monis’s family) and is convicted of that same crime, then he or she is perfectly free to take a constitutional challenge all the way to the High Court for a fresh ruling. Anyone, that is, except Monis and his co-accused, who already lost that argument by a tie-breaker. I don’t envy the lawyers who had to explain all this to Monis.

It doesn’t have to be this way. For starters, there never have to be such ties in our national court. Australia’s High Court typically sits an odd number of judges to avoid ties, including a full bench of seven judges for constitutional cases like Monis’s.

But only six judges heard Monis’s appeal, because the seventh – Justice William Gummow – was scheduled to retire a week after the case was heard. In accordance with the usual practice, Gummow had stopped hearing cases altogether months earlier to avoid the risk that his retirement would come before the Court’s decision.

This same problem arises each and every time a High Court judge approaches retirement. Indeed, it’s happening right now.

The Court is scheduled to hear six judge cases in important matters through to June next year because two High Court judges are retiring in succession. Any one of them could be another tie.

Cases already at risk of being resolved, perhaps irreversibly, by a tie breaker include regulatory action over Sydney’s radio hoax tragedy, a native title claim over a World War Two training ground, and the aftermath of the collapsed tourism, property and finance group, Octaviar bankruptcy.

This situation is totally unnecessary. In Canada, judges are allowed to participate in judgments up to six months after their retirement. And when Canada’s top court recently found its numbers reduced to eight because of a constitutional challenge to one judge’s appointment, it seemingly responded to a likely tie in one case by scheduling the case to be argued again after the ninth judge was finally appointed.

In Australia, the same problem could be avoided by the government appointing the incoming judge a few months ahead of the outgoing judge’s retirement. That solution will cost a bit more in extra salary, staff and office space for the incoming judge, but there will also be savings in resolving legal uncertainty. For instance, the split outcome in Monis’s case could have been avoided if Justice Stephen Gageler had been appointed just one week earlier.

For cases not resolved in this way, there is another solution: simply allow people who lose because of a tie to bring another challenge if they wish. As it happens, that’s exactly why Monis was in the High Court last Friday. His counsel was seeking to have the Court hear his challenge again. The Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions argued that Monis should not be allowed a second bite at the cherry. He’d already “lost” and that was it. Monis’s counsel argued that he didn’t “lose” and, anyway, a tie-breaker wasn’t the right way to finalise a constitutional case.

After listening patiently for the allotted twenty minutes, Chief Justice Robert French and Justice Stephen Gageler dismissed Monis’s application. In hindsight, their reasons seem painfully abrupt: it would not be “appropriate” to move Monis’s hearing directly to the High Court “having regard to the history of the matter”.

The matter ended this week for Monis. But it ended without the legal claim that “consumed him” ever being properly resolved (and, indeed, with him being told he would have to pursue his claim for a second time through the complete hierarchy of NSW courts before our national court would even consider ruling on whether doing so was pointless.)

I am not saying that the High Court played even a slight role in this week’s tragedy. Monis was a madman, and would see even perfect justice as yet another conspiracy against him. What I am saying is that, because of a freak quirk in our court procedures, we cannot have the satisfaction of telling ourselves that Monis’s evil, unjust acts came despite him being given good justice by Australia’s courts. The flaw in our national court, while rare (and rarely tragic), is easily fixed.

Uta’s Diary, December 2014

Christmas 2014 in Dapto Shopping Centre
Christmas 2014 in Dapto Shopping Centre

NBN means ‘National Broadband Network’. We are the lucky ones, it has come to Dapto already!

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This is at the top story of Dapto Shopping Centre. This time I did not take any pictures downstairs.
This is at the top story of Dapto Shopping Centre. This time I did not take any pictures downstairs.

On the second Sunday of Advent we visited Monika and Mark. They had been in the process of celebrating three birthdays: Monika’s, Mark’s and the 21st birthday of Mark’s daughter Tiana. There was some cake left from the previous night of celebrations:

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When we were at Monika’s place another thunderstorm came up with heavy rain. This was about the fifth thunderstorm in a row. The clouds built up during the day and then it started to rain. A bit like in the tropics. The doctor had prescribed antibiotics for Peter’s infection. On the third Sunday of Advent was the first time when he did not have to visit the toilet that much anymore. Today he has to see the doctor again to find out about the test results.

These are some decorations from the shopping centre.
These are some decorations from the shopping centre.

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I asked Ayleen’s permission to take a picture of her Christmas Tree. I noticed quite a few gifts under the tree. In the conversation I found out that Ayleen’s family is very large. Sometimes they are close to thirty people when they meet for Christmas dinner with the extended family at a restaurant.

On the eve of the third Sunday of Advent I went to Mass with Ayleen. Her daughter Loraine was happy to take us there and back.

This is a photo of Ayleen and me at a Christmas party a few weeks ago.
This is a photo of Ayleen and me at a Christmas party a few weeks ago.

Friday, the 12th December 2014

We play Rummy with these tiles.
We play Rummy with these tiles.
We are about to have a coffee break.
We are about to have a coffee break.

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We like to have a game of Scrabble.
We like to have a game of Scrabble.

Here I repeat what I wrote already this morning in another post:

“Next Friday is going to be the 19th of December. On that day we are going to have a Body Corporate meeting in Wollongong. The following day, on the 20th, we are going to have a Christmas Party for the residents and some previous residents. And for Sunday, the 21st, Peter and I are being invited to a Christmas Luncheon in Sydney.

Christmas Eve we are going to have the family at our place as is traditional for us. Early the following morning on Christmas Day Caroline, Matthew, Peter and I are going to travel to Melbourne in a rented car.

Ah, and I forgot, this coming Sunday, which is the third Sunday of Advent, we are also going to be in Sydney to belatedly celebrate Caroline’s birthday. Last Sunday we went to see Monika for her birthday.”

Does this sound busy? Peter seems to think so. Both Peter and I have a few health issues at the moment. We just hope all will be well pretty soon despite our rather “busy” life.

Friday, the 13th December 2013 (continued)

I said I took a lot of pictures on that Friday. Here now are a few more of them.

I went through Lakelands Park early in the morning.

On the way back, looking at neighbours gardens, I took pictures of anything colourful in their gardens and last but not least also again a few pictures near the entrance to our home.

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The shoes that Peter loves.
The shoes that Peter loves.

17 Responses to “Friday, the 13th of December (continued)”

Ann Koplow
December 15, 2013 at 11:59 am Edit #
Thanks for all the great images. And so nice to end on love!

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auntyuta
December 15, 2013 at 12:32 pm Edit #
Thanks Ann. Have a great holiday season!

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elizabeth2560
December 15, 2013 at 12:36 pm Edit #
No sign of a “black” Friday anywhere in your photos. .
delightful post. 🙂

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auntyuta
December 15, 2013 at 2:08 pm Edit #
No “black” Friday, Elizabeth, indeed not at all. even though I tend to get a bit out of breath sometimes when I try to do things too quickly.

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gerard oosterman
December 15, 2013 at 12:53 pm Edit #
Love the ceramic elephant and the beautiful garden photos, especially the one with the gnarled tree tops.

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auntyuta
December 15, 2013 at 2:09 pm Edit #
Thanks, Gerard. 🙂

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berlioz1935
December 15, 2013 at 2:24 pm Edit #
Right you are Aunty Uta. I love those shoes.

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auntyuta
December 15, 2013 at 2:28 pm Edit #
Right, Berlioz, you should wear them again soon for a little run on the grass in Lakelands Park! How about it? 🙂

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auntyuta
December 16, 2013 at 6:23 am Edit #
Has been raining all night. Maybe the grass is a bit too wet this morning! Today, Berlioz, is the day when we finally have to put up our Christmas tree, right? 🙂

catterel
December 15, 2013 at 8:47 pm Edit #
What a pretty neighbourhood – and you even manage to make the graffiti bench look artistic! Am very envious of those shoes 😦

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auntyuta
December 16, 2013 at 6:20 am Edit #
I have similar shoes, Catherine, and they are really good for walking, a bit like walking barefoot. 🙂

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The Emu
December 15, 2013 at 10:07 pm Edit #
Thanks for sharing great pics Auntyuta, love the array of flowers.
Emu

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auntyuta
December 16, 2013 at 6:18 am Edit #
Glad you like them, dear Emu. Christmas is getting very close now! 🙂

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Robert M. Weiss
December 16, 2013 at 3:21 am Edit #
I really enjoy the flower photos.

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auntyuta
December 16, 2013 at 6:16 am Edit #
Thanks for this, Robert. 🙂

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Munira
December 16, 2013 at 7:38 am Edit #
I felt like I was walking with you today 🙂

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auntyuta
December 17, 2013 at 6:26 am Edit #
It’s great, Munira, to have your company. Thank you! 🙂

A Friday in December 2013

This was the last Friday before Christmas where I could play Scrabble with my friends. Early in the morning I had gone for a walk in Lakelands Park. Again I took quite a few pictures. I can’t help myself, when I have the camera with me, I usually start taking some pictures and then it just goes on and on.

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Ready to play Scrabble
Ready to play Scrabble
We deserve a coffee break.
We  had a coffee break.

Today is again the last Friday before Christmas where we can meet to play our games. We actually do not play only Scrabble, we do also play a few games of Rummy.

Next Friday is going to be the 19th of December. On that day we are going to have a Body Corporate meeting in Wollongong. The following day, on the 20th, we are going to have a Christmas Party for the residents and some previous residents. And for Sunday, the 21st, Peter and I are being invited to a Christmas Luncheon in Sydney.

Christmas Eve we are going to have the family at our place as is traditional for us. Early the following morning on Christmas Day Caroline, Matthew, Peter and I are going to travel to Melbourne in a rented car.

Ah, and I forgot, this coming Sunday, which is the third Sunday of Advent, we are also going to be in Sydney to belatedly celebrate Caroline’s birthday. Last Sunday we went to see Monika for her birthday.

Reforming France?

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/french-economy-minister-macron-seeks-to-reform-france-a-1007539.html

Thirty-six year old Economics Minister Emmanuel Macron has been tasked by French President Hollande with reforming the country. But it won’t be easy. Socialists view him with suspicion and the party’s left wing is already preparing for battle.

. . . . .

The minister for economics, industry and information technology unfurled his far-reaching vision for a reinvigorated France. He spoke of the common welfare, which needed to once again take precedence over individual interests. And he underscored his exposition with a quote from the Socialist reformer Jean Jaurès from the year 1887.

. . . .

Plötzlich Opa

https://www.google.com.au/webhp?source=search_app&gfe_rd=cr&ei=cRyIVNXdJM3u8wes54CAAQ&gws_rd=ssl#nfpr=1&q=Bavarian+tv+movie+pl%C3%B6tzlich

Tonight Peter and I watched a Bavarian movie online. It was a very enjoyable comedy. Going to the above Google link, I was able to find some write-ups about this movie and I copied some of it first in German and then in English. Keeping a diary about the movies I have seen, helps me to remember them better.

Click to access ph-ploetzlich_opa.pdf

Plötzlich Opa

Mit
Günther Maria Halmer
Max Felder
Christiane Blumhoff
Katharina Schubert
Hardy Krüger jr.
Laura Sonntag
Maria Bachmann
u.a.

Plötzlich Opa
Schnitt Anna Loewer
Mischung und Sounddesign
Michael Stecher
Ton Quirin Böhm
Musik Martin Unterberger
Szenenbild Andrea Douglas
Kostüm Ingrid Weiß
Kamera Helmut Pirnat
Buch Claudia Kaufmann
Redaktion Astrid Ruppert
Produzent Dieter Ulrich Aselmann
Regie Thomas Kronthaler

Nach dem Tod seiner Eltern soll
Jonas (Max Felder) beim Großvater
(Günther Maria Halmer) auf dem
Land ein neues Zuhause finden.
Opa Ludwig tut sich mit der plötzlichen
Veränderung zunächst
genauso schwer wie der Enkel mit
seinem neuen Leben zwischen
Kuhstall und Dorfkneipe. Mit klaren
Worten, kluger Nachsicht und
deftiger Hausmannskost gelingt es
der herzensguten Wirtschafterin
Rosi (Christiane Blumhoff) schließ-
lich doch, die beiden „Mannsbilder“
einander näher zu bringen. Für den
Großvater und seinen Enkel kann
ein neues Leben beginnen. Allerdings
realisiert auch die raffgierige
Verwandtschaft, was sie an dem
Jungen hat: ein beträchtliches Vermögen.
Und das wollen sie sich mit
dem Sorgerecht für den Jungen
sichern. Doch diese Rechnung ist
ohne den Großvater gemacht, der
sein altes Kämpferherz wieder
entdeckt, um seinen Enkel heimzuholen

Mit Ludwig hat es die Köchin und
Wirtschafterin Rosi durchaus nicht
leicht. Sein Hof ist überschuldet
und nur noch wenige Stammgäste
finden sich in seiner Gastwirtschaft
ein. Ludwigs Herz ist zu verschlossen,
um zuzugeben, dass er den Tod
seiner Frau nie überwunden und
sein Leben seither eigentlich nicht
mehr im Griff hat. Rosi kennt die
Qualitäten, die in dem „alten Dickschädel“
schlummern – und sie
weiß auch, dass es um Ludwigs und
natürlich um seines Enkels Willen
endlich an der Zeit ist, dass er über
seinen eigenen Schatten springt
und sein Herz wieder sprechen lässt.

Jonas findet in der Fremde, die nun
seine neue Heimat werden soll,
seine erste große Liebe. Dabei ist
es gar nicht er, der die Initiative
ergreift, sondern seine neue Klassenkameradin
Julia (Laura Sonntag).
Sie setzt sich für ihn ein, macht
sich für ihn stark, und gibt ihm das
Vertrauen, seine Gefühle nicht verstecken
zu müssen.

Auch Jonas intrigante Tante (Maria
Bachmann) weiß was sie will:
das lässt sie ihren Mann (Markus H.
Eberhard) und Jonas spüren. Doch
sie überschätzt ihre Qualitäten –
und unterschätzt den Eigensinn
von Ludwig und Jonas. Die gehören
schließlich zum selben Stamm.
Sonja Messner und ihr Gatte Harald
Julia ist stark, weil es ihre Mutter Carla
(Katharina Schubert) auch ist. Carla
bewirtschaftet einen Gnadenhof für
alte Pferde. Ludwig kündigt ihr den
Pachtvertrag, um das in Bauland
umgewidmete Land verkaufen und
mit dem Erlös seinen verschuldeten
Hof retten zu können. Dieser Plan
stellt das gerade gewonne Vertrauen
seines Enkels allerdings auf eine
harte Probe. Zum Glück steuert
Anwalt Patrick von Halen (Hardy Krü-
ger jr.) seinen Sportwagen in den
Graben vor Carlas Hofeinfahrt. Bis
dahin hätte es sich der Karrieremann
nicht träumen lassen, dass er
Carla und Patrick
aus Liebe zu einer Pferdenärrin seine
Karriere an den Nagel hängen, sich
für die Existenz alter Gäule einsetzen
und schließlich sogar einem widerborstigen
Großvater verhelfen würde,
das Sorgerecht für seinen Enkel zu
erstreiten.

http://www.diefilmgmbh.de/en/movies/ploetzlich-opa

A die film gmbh production for ARD Degeto

Following the death of his parents, Jonas (Max Felder) is supposed to find his new home with Grandpa (Günther Maria Halmer) in the countryside. Initially, Grandpa Ludwig has as much difficulty dealing with the sudden change as his grandson does living between cowshed and village pub. With straight talking, clever patience and hearty home-cooking, good-hearted landlady Rosi (Christiane Blumhoff) finally succeeds in bringing the two “fellows” closer together. A new life can begin for grandfather and grandson. However, the greedy relatives also realize what the boy has—namely a considerable fortune—and want to secure this by claiming custody of the boy. But their calculations didn’t take Grandpa into account, who rediscovers his old fighting spirit in order to fetch his grandson home.

Reviews:
Touching and told with Bavarian wit
TV DIREKT
Thomas Kronthaler staged this charming family comedy… with lots of esprit and sentiment
BERLINER ZEITUNG
… a family comedy with hardly a dull moment – well worth seeing

MY COMMENT:

I liked this movie very much. There were some very likable characters in it. The characters that were not so likable, made this movie into a good comedy by showing how ridiculous such characters can become if they show no heart at all.
Luckily the people with a lot of heart were determined to stick together. Finally they were able to get some help along the way. So all did end well. A real feel good movie with a lot of heart and a lot of laughs.
Grandfather Ludwig (Opa) for instance was depicted in the beginning as a very grumpy old man. He gradually changed and then he and his grandson Jonas did get on very well together. This was a joy to watch! There were other characters too that I watched with great joy as for instance Rosi, the cook, who was a real lovely elderly woman. Then there was Julia, the girl friend of Jonas as well as Carla, the girl friend’s mother, and the mother’s friend Patrick.
The aunt of Jonas was hilarious in her nastiness and so it went.
The film showed very interesting relationships between several generations of people and the story was filmed in a beautiful mountainous region of Bavaria, a southern part of Germany.