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About this website

SydWalker.Info is a personal website. I live in tropical Australia near Cairns. I oppose war, plutocracy, injustice, sectarian supremacism and apartheid. I support urgent action to achieve genuine sustainability and a fair and prosperous society for all. I rely upon - and support - free speech as defined in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (see below).

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"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers"

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Unless otherwise indicated, material on this website is written by Syd Walker.

Anyone is welcome to re-publish material sourced from this site, as long as the source is acknowledged with a hyperlink.

Material from other sources reproduced here is presented on a 'Fair Use' basis. I try to cite references accurately. Please contact me if you have queries, comments, broken link reports, complaints - or just to say hello.

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Katter tops September searches
Sep 6th, 2010 by Syd Walker

I’ve never met Bob Katter and I’ve barely written about him.

So I was surprised when checking my September weblogs that the colourful North Queensland Independent MP – one of three independents who currently hold the future of the Australian Government in their hands – is by far this month’s number one search phrase for visitors arriving at this blog. He’s way ahead, outdoing luminaries such as Kaiser Wilhelm and Julia Gillard and much higher even than the delectable Julie Christie.

Bob Katter in Canberra

Bob Katter: hatless in Canberra

Right now, Bob Katter is defintely ‘the man’, as the Irish say. Like Bob Oakshott and Tony Windsor, the other two independents yet to declare their hand, he appears to be playing political poker with considerable skill.

Some journalists, especially nasty types in News Corp, thumped their feet on the ground in the days following the inconclusive August 21st election, demanding a rapid decision from politicians holding the balance of power. The loss of their own political influence to a handful of well-respected, very independent politicians was probably not to their liking. Realising in the end screeching is just as likely to be counter-productive, most of them have quietened down. Today it’s almost eerie. Journalistic chatter has subsided. It’s like the hush before a showing of cards.

Meanwhile, Kaiser Wilhelm rests in peace. Bart and Marge continue to fascinate the sexually curious. Benjamin Yahoo remains Prime Minister of Rothschildistan.

And after 24 years, whistleblower Mordechai Vanunu is still not free.

bob katter 99 16.50%
julie christie 26 4.30%
syd walker 25 4.10%
kaiser wilhelm ii 19 3.10%
bart y marge 16 2.60%
israel map 1948 14 2.30%
kaiser wilhelm 10 1.60%
symbols of hate 10 1.60%
david rothschild 9 1.50%
evo morales 8 1.30%
king david hotel 8 1.30%
bay of pigs 7 1.10%
frank lowy 7 1.10%
benjamin yahoo 6 1.00%
picture of our galaxy 6 1.00%
daniel lapin 5 0.80%
pictures of ghandi 5 0.80%
marge and bart 5 0.80%
malcolm fraser news corp 5 0.80%
mordechai vanunu 5 0.80%
julia gillard 5 0.80%
bart and marge simpson 5 0.80%
nathaniel rothschild 4 0.60%
marge nude 4 0.60%
map of palestine before 1948 4 0.60%
Foul deeds will rise: Abbott on the Sydney Hilton bombing
Sep 6th, 2010 by Syd Walker

On 24th August 1995, a Labor MP Chris Haviland introduced a resolution into the Australian House of Representatives.

It was a bold initiative .

Haviland proposed that this House (emphasis added):

  1. notes the unanimous resolution of the NSW Parliament of 9 December 1991 calling upon the federal Government to establish a top level, open, joint NSW/federal Government inquiry into the bombing of the Sydney Hilton Hotel on 13 February 1978 and pledging the full cooperation of the NSW Government;
  2. notes the recent statements of the NSW Premier, Mr Bob Carr, confirming his Government’s support for such an inquiry;
  3. requests that the federal Government immediately establish a joint federal/NSW Government inquiry, with the powers of a Royal Commission, into all of the circumstances and consequences surrounding the Hilton Hotel bombing, including the events leading up to the incident, the bombing itself, the conduct of the subsequent investigation of the bombing and all relevant matters;
  4. requests that the terms of reference for the inquiry include a full investigation of the role played by all NSW and federal Government agencies, including military and security organisations, before, during and after the bombing; and
  5. requests that any provisions existing in any federal legislation which would otherwise prevent full disclosure to the inquiry by officers, employees, agents or sub-agents of federal Government agencies of any information under oath relevant to the terms of reference be set aside for the purposes of the inquiry.

It was the era of the Keating Labor Government. The Federal Attorney General Michael Duffy wasn’t keen at all. His dismissive response concluded:

“People are concerned about these matters. We understand that. There are allegations that arise which have always been examined very carefully and have been answered in the most extensive detail. If you go through the Hansard and look at the answers and the work that has gone into it, you will see that we are still of the view that there is no need, no requirement, to have a new inquiry.”

Independent MP for North Shore, Ted Mack, took the opposite view. Mack was effusive in his praise for Haviland’s resolution. He said (emphasis added):

The member for Macarthur (Mr Haviland) is to be congratulated for bringing this motion before the House. The motion is supported by the Premier of New South Wales and unanimously by the New South Wales parliament. It is a motion undoubtedly supported by the majority of the people of Australia. The Premier of New South Wales is to be particularly congratulated for following through on the unanimous decision of the New South Wales parliament in 1991 asking the federal government to agree to a joint federal-state inquiry.

The New South Wales Premier’s recent action of making state files available to the public on the Hilton bombing is a breath of fresh air after years of deliberate frustration of any attempt to find the truth, although anyone who has followed the 17-year saga of conspiracy of public officials to avoid accountability will not be surprised to see the Premier’s good intentions white-anted.

Some might superficially ask: what is the point of trying to reopen a 17-year-old affair which has already been worked over by a major inquiry, several court cases, many reports and thousands of media reports? The fact is that the Hilton bombing is the worst act of political terrorism in this country’s history. It was the largest security operation ever mounted in Australia, involving all key security agencies. It was also the most outrageous failure of security in Australian history, yet no-one responsible for the security operation has ever been held to account.

Mack added:

I have asked some 70 questions in this House about the Hilton bombing. The answers have been grudging, evasive, on occasions wrong and permeated with a `neither confirm nor deny’ mantra. Yet what information has been gleaned has only added more questions and more doubts. There were hundreds of people in the bureaucracies and security agencies involved to some degree in the Hilton, and many of those have played a part in blocking inquiries ever since.

Most interesting, in the current context, was the contribution by a newly-elected MP for the safe Liberal seat of Warringah. He spoke at some length in support of Haviland’s resolution, showing detailed knowledge of the complexities of the case – as well as a combative, partisan character. His speech began:

In supporting this motion I would like to quote Shakespeare’s dictum: `Foul deeds will rise, though all the earth o’erwhelm them to men’s eyes.’ If that does not move this House, the example of the Minister for Human Services and Health (Dr Lawrence) should be enough to show what happens to those who stand in the way of truth.

The Hilton bombing was Australia’s greatest act of terrorism and it marred what up till then had been Australia’s greatest international gathering. As a result, a man was charged and convicted but all the time protesting that he was the victim of a frame-up. Eventually, after several years in gaol, he was completely exonerated.

Years later, another man confessed and, on the basis of that confession, was charged and convicted. But any confidence in our knowing what really happened depends entirely on the slender thread of the confession of an unstable and delusional man….

The speaker concluded (emphasis added):

Our job is not, here in this parliament, to specifically probe into the dark and murky labyrinth of the security forces. Our job is to ensure that people who can do that job are allowed to do that job. Our job is to help establish an inquiry which can get to the bottom of this matter. It is so important that we do this because the people of this country are entitled to believe and to be confident that the forces of government, the security forces of this country, are working for them and not against them. The people of this country are entitled to have confidence that the various arms of government are working in accordance with the law and not, as it very well may be in this case, against the law.

Let me say most categorically that truth has nothing to fear from an inquiry. The government should have nothing to fear from an inquiry. ASIO should have nothing to fear from an inquiry. The police should have nothing to fear, the army should have nothing to fear from an inquiry, because truth has nothing to fear from an inquiry. This government should not be so concerned about the cost of an inquiry because truth is priceless; truth is precious. Any government which is prepared to spend $17 million investigating war crimes that happened in another country 50 years ago should certainly be prepared to help fund an inquiry of this nature.

Let all the documents be considered. Let all the witnesses be examined. Let all the options be considered and canvassed. Let the best conclusion possible be drawn, because the fact is we do not need to have this issue hanging over our heads in the way the JFK murder is hanging over the heads of people in the United States. I say to the Attorney-General: don’t do a Carmen Lawrence on us. Don’t say to the parliament, `Of course I want the truth to come out, but I just don’t seem to be able to find a suitable venue in which to tell it.’ Don’t do a Carmen Lawrence on us, Attorney-General, because you are better than that. The ghosts of three innocent men are hovering over us today. Let us get to the bottom of this so that their souls can finally rest in peace.

The speaker’s name? Tony Abbott, MP for Warringah – currently leader of the Liberal Party and the Federal Opposition.

At the conclusion of contributions by the four speakers, the Deputy Speaker declared an adjournment and concluded: “The debate will be made an order of the day for the next sitting Monday.”

A month later, Chris Haviland returned to the topic. Here’s the extract from Hansard:

Mr HAVILAND (Macarthur) (5.58 p.m.) —On 24 August I moved a motion in the House of Representatives calling for a joint federal-state inquiry into the Hilton Hotel bombing in 1978. This followed, in 1991, the unanimous decision of the New South Wales parliament calling also for a joint federal-state inquiry. Since that time another motion has been passed in the New South Wales parliament, again calling for a joint federal-state inquiry. I notice that a similar motion to mine is now on the Senate Notice Paper for debate over there.

It is high time we got to the bottom of who was responsible for the bombing of the Hilton Hotel. I believe there are no further excuses. We need this joint federal-state inquiry. To not have an inquiry will mean that we will never get to the bottom of who committed these crimes. It is the worst unsolved murder case in Australia’s history. It was an embarrassment to Australia. I believe there will be a suggestion of a cover-up if people are not going to support an inquiry into this.

Bob Carr, the Premier of New South Wales, has supposedly opened the files held by the New South Wales government on this matter. When Terry Griffiths, one of the victims of the bombing, went down to look at the files he was told that eight particular files were restricted: he could not look at them. When he phoned the Premier’s office to ask why, he was told that the New South Wales government had opened the files but the Commonwealth government had placed restrictions on eight of those files. I would like to know why that is. There may be a very good reason.

Indeed, it is a debating point as to whether it is a good idea to just throw open files to the public anyway, given the sensitive nature of this issue. But, whatever the merits of that, it is high time we got to the bottom of this sordid issue and had a joint federal-state inquiry.

Mr SPEAKER —Order! It being 6 p.m., the debate is interrupted. The House stands adjourned until Monday, 16 October 1995 at 12.30 p.m., in accordance with the provisions of standing order 40.

That appears to be the last reference in Australian Hansard, to this day, on the topic of the Sydney Hilton bombing.

In March 1996, a Federal election was held.

Chris Haviland was deselected by the Labor Party for his seat in the run up to the election – somewhat unusually for a sitting member.

Ted Mack retired.

John Howard and the Liberal Party, who swept to office, promptly seemed to forget the Hilton bombing. With so much national focus on the Port Arthur atrocity from April 1996 onwards, it was easy to do…

As a backbencher in the early years of Howard’s new Government, Tony Abbott may not have held much sway at the time. But in September 2010 that’s no longer the case.

Whether he’s Prime Minister or not by the end of this week, Abbott could now set in motion the demand he so strongly supported 15 years ago.

This time – with his personal support and given the new balance of power in the House of Representatives and the configuration of the Senate – a resolution to establish this long overdue inquiry would undoubtably be carried.

Australian Conspiracy: the 1978 Sydney Hilton bombing
Sep 6th, 2010 by Syd Walker

Australian Conspiracy

Australian Conspiracy: the 1978 Sydney Hilton bombing

The main purpose of this post is to recommend the documentary ‘Australian Conspiracy‘ to a wider audience.

It can currently be viewed in six segments on You Tube (displayed below). A DVD is also available from FilmArtDoco.

Written by Daryl Dellora and Ian Wansbrough and produced by Sue Maslin, Australian Conspiracy was made in the mid-1990s and shown on Australian TV at the time. Norm Dixon’s February 1995 review in Green Left Weekly – The Hilton bombing revisited – is well worth reading. As far as I’m aware, Australian Conspiracy hasn’t been broadcast in recent years.

It’s a gripping, very well-made documentary – and a story of considerable contemporary relevance.

In the 15 years that have elapsed since it was made, little has changed regarding the subject of the documentary: the complicated saga of the Sydney Hilton bombing. The bombing incident that took place in Sydney in February 1978, causing three deaths and shattering the lives of survivors, remains a mystery, slowly fading from public attention.

Sydney Hilton Hotel bomb scene 1978

Sydney Hilton Hotel bomb scene 1978

That’s more than unfortunate. The Sydney Hilton atrocity, after all, was claimed by the authorities at the time to have been a terrorist attack – an event of extreme rarity on Australian soil. It had a major impact on the reorganisation of Australia’s ‘security forces’ – and led to a sharp rise in funding for the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO).

From the outset, investigating authorities also claimed the bombing was the result of a conspiracy. That is, they asserted it was not the work of a lone bomber. So… in 1978, using the terminology used by the authorities, Australia was the target of a terrorist conspiracy involving loss of life. A true landmark event for the ‘Lucky Country’!

Yet despite the great significance of the incident, the real culpits have never been publicly identified or brought to justice. There were notorious – and very confusing – trials in the decade following 1978. People did spend time in jail for the Hilton bombings. But they were not the killers. Even the bizarre character who claimed in the late 1980s to have been personally involved in the ‘conspiracy’, Evan Pederick, gave self-incriminating testimony at his own trial that isn’t credible.

Overall, justice has not been done in this important murder case.

As the documentary shows, due process was breached repeatedly in the investigation and subsequent judicial process. The inquest, held in 1982, was aborted before crucial evidence could be heard. Despite arrests, trials and incarcerations, it’s clear the real murderers have never faced trial. Instead, there’s abundant evidence of a long and tangled miscarriage of justice.

In the early 1990s, demands for a thorough and credible public inquiry into the bombing gained sufficient momentum to be the subject of a resolution unanimously endorsed by both Houses of the NSW Parliament.

Such an inquiry required Federal involvement. It has never taken place. In the mid-1990s, the Independent MP Ted Mack raised the issue in the Federal Parliament, but his queries led nowhere. Then in 1996, the conservative Howard Government came to power. Within months, the shocking Port Arthur massacre re-focused the nation’s attention. It appears no-one has since raised the issue of the Hilton bombing in the Australian Parliament.

Immediate press reaction to the Sydney Hilton bombing

Immediate press reaction to the 1798 Sydney Hilton bombing: a foretaste of 9-11

That’s not acceptable. As things stand, anyone who studies the case with an open mind is likely to conclude that powerful elements in the Australian security services, at the time of the Hilton bombings and for years afterwards, conspired (perhaps with outside parties) to carry out the bombings and pervert the course of justice thereafter. In modern parlance, the Sydney Hilton bombings were most likely an ‘inside job’ of some type. That’s important. Way too important to gloss over.

Thirty years after the Sydney Hilton bombings, politicians are  less keen than in the 1970s to ask probing questions about the security forces in this country.

In NSW, perhaps there’s a feeling that the need for self-examination has passed following the demise of the Special Branch in the late 1990s and other major reforms to the State’s police force.

Yet successive Australian Parliaments, in the first decade of this new century, approved quite staggering increases in expenditure on ASIO – amounting to more than 1,000% annual budget increase since 2001.

In that context, questions about the Sydney Hilton incident would have been appropriate. Does it make sense to fertilise a tree infested with rot? Why should an agency whose own bona fides remain under suspicion be given vast new powers and huge budget increases?

Those questions have yet to be asked.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Part 6

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