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the aussie republic is finally coming....
No big surprise to see Craig Foster elected chair of the Australian Republican Movement (ARM) last night. But in his first address to ARM members, he flagged a change to how the movement operates. Peter FitzSimons has been the leader of the ARM for the past seven years. The author, SMH columnist and former rugby union player has been the recognisable face of an organisation which has supported the idea of an Australian head of state since 1991. It counted FitzSimons, novelist Thomas Keneally and Malcolm Turnbull among its founding members, and the latter went on to spearhead the campaign leading up to the 1999 referendum which was defeated, to the surprise of many at the time. FitzSimons announced his resignation on October 1. Former footballer and SBS football analyst, now a human rights advocate, Craig Foster, was soon announced as the front-runner to take over. Foster’s first public human rights campaign was to bring home Bahrain footballer Hakeem al-Araibi. Hakeem had been granted political asylum in Australia, but was detained while on honeymoon in Thailand in 2018 at the behest of the oppressive Bahrain regime who wanted him extradited. Hakeem was eventually returned to Australia after intense international pressure was placed on FIFA as well as Bahrain. Foster used the worldwide publicity garnered through this campaign as a platform to criticise Australian refugee policy: Australia needs to look at how we treat every human being that comes to these shores, irrespective of how they arrive… We are all equal, and should all be treated with equal dignity, care and respect. Perhaps to underline his strong belief in equality, his first act as chairman of the ARM was to call for a change to its constitution to mandate a female co-chair. In the video published this morning, stating: I think it would be a wonderful message to every Australian to say that those in the highest leadership positions of the ARM movement are sharing the chair position between both a female and a male.
READ MORE: https://michaelwest.com.au/craig-foster-elected-chair-of-the-arm-and-he-wants-to-share-it/
IT'S TIME TO KICK THE ROYALS IN THE NUTS, EVEN IF WE "LOVE" THEM......
SEE ALSO: https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/45684 the queen knew....
JULIAN ASSANGE FOR FIRST PRESIDENT OF THE AR (AUSSIE REPUBLIC) !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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genocide futbol....
Olympic champion and former Labor senator Nova Peris has resigned as co-chair of the Australian Republican Movement in response to what she described as an “inaccurate and divisive” public intervention made by her fellow leader, Craig Foster.
Peris said her position with the ARM, a cause she has been prominently involved with since the lead-up to the failed 1999 referendum, was untenable following Foster’s publication of an open letter to FIFA and Football Australia calling for Australia to support Israel’s suspension from international football.
She said Foster’s emotive letter posted to his nearly 30,000 Instagram followers, which included a “flat-out wrong” statement about what the International Court of Justice had found about Israel’s conduct of the war in Gaza, risked sowing further social divisions.
“I don’t believe that inaccurate and divisive public statements like the one made to FIFA are appropriate,” Peris said in a statement to this masthead.
“Given our different styles of leadership and our different visions on how to promote dialogue, reconciliation and social cohesion, it is untenable for me to continue alongside Craig as co-chair of the ARM and I’ll be stepping down.”
Peris informed the Australian Republican Movement of her decision on Tuesday. Foster has been contacted for comment.
The ARM is the latest progressive organisation in Australia split by the effects of the war and humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
The October 7 attack on Israel by Hamas and Israel’s ongoing military response, which Gazan authorities say has killed 35,000 Palestinians, has created deep ructions within the Labor Party, arts organisations, universities and media companies and triggered mass demonstrations, boycotts and doxxing campaigns.
Peris is a staunch supporter of Israel and has publicly disavowed attempts by pro-Palestinian activists to co-opt the Aboriginal rights movement and frame Israel as the colonial oppressor of indigenous Palestinians, a construct which ignores the ancient, continuous connection Jews have to the same land.
Foster, a former Socceroos captain and a human rights activist, argues that Israel, through its “mass slaughter of innocent Palestinians” is in breach of international law. In his letter urging Football Australia to suspend Israel’s involvement in the world game, Foster said the International Court of Justice had deemed “plausible genocide” in Gaza.
Peris, in her statement, pointed out the court had made no such finding. The then court president who made the ruling, Joan Donoghue, has publicly clarifiedthat the court found that Palestinians have a “plausible right” to be protected from genocide.
The case against Israel, brought by South Africa, has not been tried. The court refused a request by South Africa to order a ceasefire in Gaza.
Peris also took issue with Foster’s characterisation of Israel as an apartheid regime, and said she observed during her recent trip to Israel that Arab Israelis enjoyed the full benefits of citizenship and political participation.
These rights do not extend to Palestinians living in the occupied territories, human rights groups have found.
More broadly, Peris argues it is not in Australia’s interest to import overseas conflicts and amplify them, particularly at a time when the polarisation of politics and the rise in hate speech are destabilising our liberal democracy and radicalising some young people.
“Criticism of Israel’s government or the conduct of the war is entirely legitimate,” she said. “Millions of Israelis do this every day. However, labelling anyone who believes Israel has a simple right to exist a ‘genocide supporter’ or calling for the destruction of the world’s only Jewish state ... is hate speech.
“We live far from many of the world’s conflicts. We could bring constructive thought leadership. Sadly, we are doing the opposite. The trend is to import foreign conflict into Australia and amplify it. Everything becomes binary. There is only right or wrong, oppressor or oppressed. Everyone has to ‘pick a side’.
“It should concern all Australians that some people are suddenly siding with a barbaric terrorist organisation and denying that Jews are indigenous to Israel, while hypocritically occupying stolen Aboriginal land.”
She argues that sport, like politics, is a powerful motivating force, and that dialogue rather than exclusion was the best way to promote reconciliation.
FIFA, the world governing body for football, was due to vote last Friday on the Palestinian Football Association motion to suspend Israel. Instead, FIFA president Gianni Infantino deferred the vote pending further legal advice.
Foster, in a letter to this masthead sent last week and before FIFA’s scheduled vote, said global sport has a duty to prevent “the gravest crimes against humanity”.
“Social cohesion is based on equality of treatment, of voice, of dignity for all communities, and a failure to speak the truth when any injustice occurs, no matter how difficult, leaves communities feeling abandoned, isolated and excluded,” he wrote.
“Sport must stand for all people, everywhere, and the only way to do that is to ensure that all states found to be in danger of committing genocide or guilty of apartheid have their membership withdrawn.”
Australia’s peak Jewish community representative organisation, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, wrote to Football Australia chairman Anter Isaac ahead of the scheduled FIFA vote urging him not to support the motion.
Two sources from Football Australia, speaking confidentially to discuss internal matters, confirmed that had the vote taken place, FA would have abstained. This is consistent with FA’s long-held position of remaining neutral in the Israel-Palestine conflict. The Socceroos are scheduled to play a World Cup qualifier against Palestine in Perth on June 11.
In a fresh development this week, a prosecutor from the International Criminal Court, a judicial body separate to the International Court of Justice, requested arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant and three Hamas leaders for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The request will be decided by a panel of magistrates.
Peris and Foster were appointed co-chairs of the Australian Republican Movement in March last year following the resignation of long-serving chair Peter FitzSimons, a prominent journalist, author and former Australian rugby player. The dual appointment required a change to the ARM’s constitution.
The resignation of Peris – an Olympic gold medallist with the women’s hockey team and also an Olympic sprinter, who later served as a Labor senator from 2013 to 2016 – comes as political support for a republic has stalled following last year’s failed referendum to establish an Aboriginal Voice to parliament.
Although Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is an avowed republican who has promised to put the question to another referendum, the Assistant Minister Responsible for a Republic, Matthew Thistlethwaite, this year described it as “not a priority” for the federal government.
The ARM normally holds its annual general meeting in October but is considering bringing forward this year’s meeting, which includes national committee elections, to August to avoid a potential clash with King Charles’ planned visit to Australia.
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nova-peris-quits-republican-movement-over-gaza-split-with-co-chair-craig-foster-20240521-p5jf9p.html
WE (GUS AND HIS PUB DRINKING MATES) SUPPORT CRAIG FOSTER. PERIS LOST THE PLOT....
MEANWHILE FREE JULIAN ASSANGE NOW...
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