
Cheney, Visiting Kazakhstan,
Wades Into Energy Battle
From the NYT
By ILAN GREENBERG and ANDREW E.
KRAMER Published: May 6, 2006
ALMATY, Kazakhstan, May 5 — A day
after chastising Moscow for its use of oil and natural gas as "tools
for intimidation and blackmail," Vice President Dick Cheney visited
Kazakhstan on Friday to promote export routes that bypass Russia and
directly supply the West.
He's a step closer.. David Hicks right to British citizenship has been upheld by the UK courts.
A final appeal against Hick's eligibility has been rejected, clearing all legal barriers against Hicks claim.
The application for UK citizenship was made after a chance remark made by the Adelaide-resident Guantanemo inmate to his military lawyer, while discussing the Ashes cricket game in London, that his mother was British.
David's father Terry said from Adelaide today that the only real barrier for his son now was that it would be difficult for him to take the citizenship oath while being held in Guantanemo.

Speaking in Atlanta today, Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld was sharply questioned about his pre-war claims about
WMD in Iraq. An audience member confronted Rumsfeld with his 2003 claim about
WMD, “We know where they are.” Rumsfeld falsely claimed he never said it.
The audience member then read Rumsfeld’s quote back to him, leaving the
defense secretary speechless.
Parkin , to refresh your memory, was the Halliburton protester deported because ASIO knew that the Pentagon had a file on him. Embarrasingly for ASIO the file was of Parkin handing out peanut butter sandwiches as a means of protest.
Parkin's Australian legal team and his support group want to hear from those who met the man while he was here. Your written testimony that Parkin acted non-violently during his sojourn here wiould help to prove his innocence.
Parkin was detained at a Melbourne coffee shop while on his way to help present a workshop on passive non-violent resistance techniques. The Federal Police and Immigration officers placed him in solitary confinement, then flew him to Los Angeles in the company of two Australian Immigration officers.

‘Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
of detainees by U.S. forces is widespread and, in many cases, sanctioned by top
government officials, Amnesty International charged Wednesday.
The allegations, contained in a 32,000-word report released in New York
and London and posted on the human rights organization's Web site, are likely
to influence a U.N. hearing on U.S. compliance with international torture
agreements that begins Friday in Geneva. Amnesty International sent a copy of
the report to the U.N. Committee Against Torture, which is holding the
hearings.
From the BBC Full report here Repressive regimes are taking full advantage of the net's ability to censor and stifle reform and debate, reveals a report.
Written by the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) pressure
group the report highlights the ways governments threaten the freedom
of the press.
The report has a section dedicated to the internet and the growing roster of nations censoring online life.
This censorship is practised on every continent on Earth, said the report.

from the ABC …..
Philosophical about ALP policies
‘We will not be taking Medicare Gold to the next election
- new problems, new focus," Mr Beazley said.
But he says the party's focus at the next election will be
on fixing problems in the public hospital system.

from buzzflash …..
Stephen Colbert doesn't owe
anyone an apology for telling the truth through the use of poised, barbed wit.
No, George W. Bush owes the
nation an apology for lying, failure, arrogance, intolerance and greed.
The Washington press corps still
thinks that they are working for Pravda under Soviet Rule or are Royal Court
transcribers.
I'm feeling vindicated in getting the "heebie jeebies" in the casino the other night now that I know that ASIOs worried about terrorist attacks on Australian restaurants.
Why would I think that a casino atop a railway, adjacent to a Parliament House, might not be a great place to hang around? Let's look at what our attorney general and our chief of Intelligencehad to say today:
[from The Age]
ASIO has warned that terrorists could carry out attacks on
hotels and restaurants in Australia.
In today's Australian,
PROMINENT scientist Tim Flannery has called for an end to the
uranium debate, saying all alternative energy sources to fossil fuels
must be considered in the fight against climate change.
The author of The Weather Makers and director of the South Australian
Museum said yesterday he had softened his view on nuclear power.
Dr Flannery said the nation could not afford to get "bogged
down in a debate about the three mines policy" or nuclear power and
instead should develop a cohesive response to global warming. "People
say we can't have uranium mining because there's a danger of
proliferation and that's true," Dr Flannery said. "But we have to weigh
all of this stuff and deal with this in the context of threat to
climate change and that's why people are getting away with rubbish
about wind and uranium.
This piece is an edited and reordered version of Nine New's David Brent's account of an interview with the President of Costa Rica, a country with no army and, according to Brent, " one of the highest levels of literacy and healthcare in the world. There is much more to read here- I edited only to emphasise certain points, endeavouring nott to change the piece's sentiment.
Australia and the world could soon be hearing a lot more from Oscar
Arias because he says he'll intensify his fight against nations
increasing their defence budgets when he is inaugurated as his
country's president next week.

From the ABC …..
Costello plays down 'line-ball' rate hike
Federal Treasurer Peter Costello says today's interest rate hike is
a line-ball decision.
Mr Costello agrees, saying the standard variable rate is likely to be around
7.5 per cent.
"People will be paying more in relation to their mortgage and that will
have a dampening affect in relation to the economy," he said.
 ‘President Bush has quietly
claimed the authority to disobey more than 750 laws enacted since he took
office, asserting that he has the power to set aside any statute passed by
Congress when it conflicts with his interpretation of the Constitution.
Among the laws Bush said he can
ignore are military rules and regulations, affirmative-action provisions,
requirements that Congress be told about immigration services problems,
''whistle-blower" protections for nuclear regulatory officials, and
safeguards against political interference in federally funded research.’

‘In a replay of the Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
charade, neo-conservative supporters of George W. Bush are pushing the U.S.
intelligence community to take a more alarmist view about Iran’s nuclear
program - only this time, the nation’s top spy John Negroponte is resisting the
pressure unlike former CIA chief George Tenet.
Tenet joined in Bush’s hyping of the WMD evidence about Iraq - famously
telling the President that the case was a “slam dunk.”
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