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Australian news, and some related international items

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News -week to 10th May

May 5, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The death of professional journalism?

11 May 2026 Noel Wauchope, https://theaimn.net/the-death-of-professional-journalism/

As a person who’s always been fascinated with Journalism, although myself pretty much an amateur, I have admired those writers who bring us the facts – “Just the facts, ma’am”. But in reality, even the facts can be used in a biased way. That is often done by the omission technique, by leaving out some of the facts.

So for me, all journalism has a bias, and I like it when a writer acknowledges that bias, and makes it clear. However, news and important events don’t happen in a vacuum, but in an environment of conflicting opinions and attitudes – involving people from different cultures, with different histories, emotions and ambitions. So the very best writers are able to step back a bit, and see the many shades of grey in a story.

And the other great qualities in a journalist are what I would call grace and respect. This becomes important in interviews. The really great journalist is one who knows the facts, and asks the hard questions in a courteous way. This is why I’ve always preferred the “mainstream” journalists, who have achieved that level of confidence, and have the backing, and funding, of a reputable professional journal to support their work.

But what’s happening now?

There are still some great mainstream journalists out there, doing their valuable work. I have mentioned some, in previous articles. But what about the current status of ‘reputable professional journals”?

In today’s news, one of the world’s top journalists is herself the news, on this very topic:
Christiane Amanpour Lays Out Her Fear for CNN With Blistering Attack on David Ellison’s CBS ‘Realignment’:

“Christiane Amanpour pointed to the “ideological realignment” at CBS News on Wednesday as she expressed her “concern” at what her own network might look like under the oversight of incoming owner David Ellison.

“Clearly I’m concerned, and I’m not sure how much I’m allowed to say about a corporate thing that’s underway, but I am, obviously, as a person, as a journalist with a record, concerned,” Amanpour said. “And I’m concerned based on what’s happened to the other things that he’s taken over already like CBS News right? I mean, do I have to list what’s happening there?”

Amanpour is not just anybody in the journalistic world. For one thing, Wikipedia lists her 35+ prestigious awards, and her membership of important global media organisations. She is a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for Freedom of Expression and journalist safety. I have admired her articles on world leaders, and controversial figures, and her respectful but persistent, questioning of them – for example, in interviewing Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

Some of Amanpour’s principles on reporting:

“There are some situations one simply cannot be neutral about, because when you are neutral, you are an accomplice. Objectivity doesn’t mean treating all sides equally. It means giving each side a hearing.” (The New York Times).

“Some people accused me of being pro–Muslim in Bosnia, but I realized that our job is to give all sides an equal hearing, but in cases of genocide, you can’t just be neutral. You can’t just say, “Well, this little boy was shot in the head and killed in besieged Sarajevo and that guy over there did it, but maybe he was upset because he argued with his wife.” No, there is no equality, and we had to tell the truth.” (The Guardian).

I think that I left out another quality essential in a great journalist – a humanitarian outlook, which clearly Christiane Amanpour has in spades. That is another reason why her concern about changes at CBS and CNN is significant.

For a long time, I’ve been worried about the mainstream media’s self-censorship, especially here in Australia, where we’re supposed to have such freedom of the press. How long is real freedom of the press going to last, here, or anywhere?

In the meantime, I do think that it is up to the ever-more important alternative media to keep on trying to get the facts out, but with recognition of those shades of grey, and some respect for the individuals involved in those events.

May 11, 2026 Posted by | Christina reviews | Leave a comment

The Distraction of Selective Justice

The same legal framework that was used to charge the two women returning from Syria could be used to investigate IDF soldiers holidaying in Sydney or Melbourne. Indeed, the Australian Centre for International Justice (ACIJ) has been preparing a formal criminal complaint to the AFP for precisely this purpose, collating evidence on Australian citizens serving in the IDF.

Legal groups have identified Australian dual‑nationals who have fought for, or are still serving with, the IDF.

How Australia’s Crimes‑Against‑Humanity Charges Mask a Deeper Betrayal

9 May 2026 Dr Andrew Klein https://theaimn.net/the-distraction-of-selective-justice/

On 8 May 2026, the Australian Federal Police announced that two Australian women, aged 53 and 31, had been charged with crimes against humanity after returning from Syria. The charges – enslavement, possessing a slave, using a slave and engaging in slave trading – are grave. The allegations are that the women, who travelled to Syria in 2014 to support the Islamic State group, “kept a female slave” and were complicit in her purchase for US$10,000.

The arrests were swift. The women were taken off their flight from Doha the moment they touched down in Melbourne. Police had been planning their prosecution for nearly a decade. Counter‑terrorism investigators described the case as a “very serious allegation” and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke accused the women of making “a horrific choice to join a dangerous terrorist organisation.”

On the same day, the government said nothing about another group of travellers: Israeli Defence Force soldiers arriving in Australia on holiday visas

I. The Swift Sword for Some

The contrast could not be starker.

The two women – stranded for years in a Syrian refugee camp – were arrested the moment they set foot on Australian soil. Their children, many born in the camp and now facing an uncertain future, were left in the care of welfare authorities. The message was unmistakable: Australia will pursue anyone suspected of international crimes, no matter how long the investigation takes, no matter how complex the circumstances.

That is not, in itself, objectionable. Crimes against humanity must be prosecuted. But the government’s selective enthusiasm demands scrutiny.

II. Open Arms for Others

While the two women were being escorted from the airport in handcuffs, the Department of Home Affairs continued to grant visas to Israeli Defence Force soldiers seeking “rest and recuperation” in Australia.

As one activist noted:

“The Australian government is currently granting visas to IDF soldiers so they can recuperate and relax after months of levelling Gaza. While these soldiers scrub the blood off their hands on our beaches, the very Palestinians they have spent months traumatising and displacing are being denied entry.”

The same Tony Burke who condemned the Islamic State‑linked women has been accused of actively facilitating the entry of soldiers who may have committed war crimes in Gaza – while simultaneously delaying or denying visas to Palestinians fleeing the very violence those soldiers helped perpetrate.

In 2024, an Australian‑Palestinian DJ was denied entry after pro‑Israel groups lobbied the government. Burke simply “didn’t approve or deny it on time. He just left it.”

This is not a conspiracy. It is a pattern.

III. The Legal Reality: Australia Has Jurisdiction

Under Division 268 of the Commonwealth Criminal Code, Australia has universal jurisdiction over war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. The Australian Federal Police have the power to investigate these offences when a suspect is on Australian soil – regardless of their nationality or where the crime was committed.

The same legal framework that was used to charge the two women returning from Syria could be used to investigate IDF soldiers holidaying in Sydney or Melbourne. Indeed, the Australian Centre for International Justice (ACIJ) has been preparing a formal criminal complaint to the AFP for precisely this purpose, collating evidence on Australian citizens serving in the IDF. Legal groups have identified Australian dual‑nationals who have fought for, or are still serving with, the IDF.

Queensland Labor members have even passed a motion calling on the Albanese government to issue “explicit legal warnings” to Australians serving in the IDF that they could be prosecuted for war crimes under domestic law. Yet the federal government has done nothing.

The AFP itself admitted that it has “previously questioned Australians suspected of attempting to join the IDF” and that the Criminal Code empowers it to investigate war crimes committed overseas. But questioning is not arresting. And arresting is not charging.

IV. The Distraction: Why This Matters

The Albanese government is not ignorant of the double standard. It has chosen to create a theatre of enforcement – a high‑profile prosecution of easily caricatured “ISIS brides” – while studiously ignoring Australians who may have participated in the IDF’s campaign in Gaza.

The effect is twofold:

1. It reassures the pro‑Israel lobby that the government will never subject its allies to the same scrutiny it applies to Islamist militants.
2. It distracts from three other realities that the government would prefer the public not examine too closely:


    • The cost‑of‑living crisis (inflation at 4.6%, fuel at $2.46/L, milk up 20c/L).
    • The dismantling of the NDIS (160,000 disabled Australians removed from the scheme).
    • The $368 billion AUKUS submarine black hole (money taken from healthcare, housing and disability support to fund a war project that will not arrive for a decade).

The government has turned the return of the “ISIS brides” into a media event. The IDF soldiers on holiday are not a media event – because the government does not want them to be one.

V. The Prime Minister’s Silence

Anthony Albanose has not been silent on Israel. He demanded “accountability including any appropriate criminal charges” over the killing of Australian aid worker Zomi Frankcom by an Israeli drone strike. He has even “pressed” Israeli President Isaac Herzog on the matter.

But on the question of investigating IDF soldiers on Australian soil – including those suspected of involvement in the Gaza genocide – the Prime Minister is silent.

When asked about the ICC arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant, his Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade issued a carefully worded statement reaffirming “respect” for the ICC but carefully avoiding any commitment to enforce them on Australian soil.

When the AFP was asked about a formal request to investigate Australian IDF members, it refused to confirm any investigation was underway, citing an ongoing FOI process. The result is a black hole of accountability.

VI. The Damage: Justice Perceived as Partisan

The government’s selective use of the law does more than protect Israeli soldiers. It undermines faith in the legal system itself.

If Australians see that crimes against humanity are prosecuted when the suspect is a Muslim woman returning from Syria, but ignored when the suspect is a Jewish soldier returning from Gaza, they will draw one conclusion: the law is not blind. It is political.

That conclusion is corrosive. It breeds cynicism. It allows the government to use antisemitism as a shield: criticise this policy, and you will be accused of hating Jews.

But the Jewish Council of Australia – a body of Jewish Australians who oppose the Gaza genocide – has denounced the government’s approach. Real antisemitism is not the same as criticising Israeli policy. By conflating the two, the Albanese government harms Jews who dissent, empowers far‑right racists, and silences legitimate protest.

VII. The Pattern: Extraction and Distraction

This double standard is not an anomaly. It is the same logic that underpins:

  • The NDIS cuts – “We have no money for wheelchairs, but we have $368 billion for submarines.”
  • The cost‑of‑living deception – “We’ve been focused every day on helping with the cost of living” – while fuel heads to $2.46/L and families spend $250 a week on groceries.
  • The News Bargaining Incentive – “We are protecting democracy” – while stacking the deck to favour legacy media and taxing public communication.

Extract from the vulnerable. Distract the rest. That is the government’s playbook. The “ISIS brides” prosecution is not justice – it is stage management.

VIII. What Is to Be Done

We cannot expect the government to change course. It has shown no interest in applying the law equally.

What we can do:

  1. Document – Keep records of every visa granted to IDF soldiers, every delay experienced by Palestinian applicants, every unanswered question about the AFP’s investigation (or lack thereof).
  2. Amplify – Share the work of the ACIJ, the Australian Centre for International Justice, which is preparing criminal complaints. Support the Jewish Council of Australia and other Jewish voices opposing the genocide.
  3. Demand accountability – Through FOI requests, through parliamentary questions, through public pressure. The government may ignore us, but the record will remain.
  4. Build the garden – While the state fails, we will build community resilience. Independent media, mutual aid, local food, local care. The extractive state cannot survive if we stop feeding it.

Conclusion

Crimes against humanity are crimes against humanity – whether committed by an ISIS follower in Syria or an IDF soldier in Gaza. The Australian government has the legal power to investigate both. It has chosen to investigate only one.

The “ISIS brides” case is not the problem. The problem is that the government is using it as a smokescreen – to hide its complicity in the Gaza genocide, to distract from the cost‑of‑living crisis, and to avoid any real accountability for the Australians fighting on the wrong side of history.

We are not fooled. We see the pattern. And we will not stop documenting it.

May 11, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Why Palantir Australia Sparks Growing Privacy Fears

8 May 2026 AIMN Editorial By Denis Hay  

Palantir Australia is expanding into defence, policing, and corporate systems. What dangers could this pose to ordinary Australians?

Introduction – The Surveillance Expansion Most Australians Never Voted For

Palantir Australia is becoming deeply embedded inside Australian government agencies, defence systems, intelligence operations, and potentially private corporate networks. Yet most Australians know little about the company, the technologies it develops, or the long-term consequences these systems could have for privacy, democracy, and civil liberties.

Another intelligence technology company, Babel Street Australia, is also involved in cyber intelligence and AI-driven monitoring systems. Together, these companies represent a rapidly growing surveillance technology Australia industry built around mass data analysis, predictive behaviour modelling, and artificial intelligence.

Supporters argue these technologies improve national security and risk management. Critics warn they may be laying the foundations for a future where governments and corporations can monitor citizens at unprecedented levels.

This debate matters because once surveillance systems become normalised, they are rarely rolled back.

If you value independent, fact-based analysis that challenges concentrated corporate and political power, please consider supporting Social Justice Australia.

What Is Palantir Australia?

A Company Born from Intelligence Agencies

Palantir Technologies was founded in the United States in 2003 with support linked to the CIA investment arm In-Q-Tel.

The company developed software capable of combining enormous amounts of information into highly searchable intelligence platforms.

Its major systems include:

  • Gotham, primarily used by military, intelligence, and policing agencies.
  • Foundry, used for data integration across governments and corporations.

These systems can combine data from:

  • Financial records.
  • Communications metadata.
  • Government databases.
  • CCTV systems.
  • Social media platforms.
  • Travel records.
  • Online activity.

Palantir markets its systems as tools for security, fraud detection, military coordination, and operational efficiency.

What Is Babel Street Australia?

AI Monitoring and Social Media Intelligence

Babel Street is another US-based intelligence technology company specialising in open-source intelligence and AI-driven analysis.

However, civil liberties groups argue the same systems can also enable mass surveillance and excessive concentration of informational power.

According to The Guardian, Palantir has expanded aggressively in

Its technology focuses on:

  • Social media monitoring.
  • Behavioural analysis.
  • Cyber intelligence.
  • Risk assessment.
  • Investigative analytics.

The company markets its products to:

  • Governments.
  • Defence agencies.
  • Cybersecurity organisations.
  • Law enforcement.
  • Corporate intelligence sectors.

Unlike Palantir, Babel Street has maintained a much lower public profile in Australia. However, reports suggest it has been connected to cyber intelligence operations and digital risk analysis systems.

The concern raised by critics is not simply the existence of these tools, but how rapidly AI systems are becoming capable of monitoring, analysing, and predicting human behaviour at scale.

How Active Is Palantir Australia?

Expanding Across Government and Defence

Palantir Australia has expanded into several major areas.

Defence and Military Operations

Australia’s Department of Defence has awarded contracts involving:

  • Data integration.
  • Battlefield analytics.
  • Cyber operations.
  • Intelligence coordination.

According to Crikey, Palantir has secured substantial Australian defence-related contracts.

Financial Monitoring

AUSTRAC, Australia’s financial intelligence agency, has used Palantir-linked systems for transaction analysis and financial monitoring.

Intelligence and Policing

Reports suggest Australian intelligence agencies have used Palantir software to analyse large volumes of investigative and communications data.

Critics argue this raises serious concerns around:

  • Oversight.
  • Transparency.
  • Privacy protections.
  • Data misuse risks.

Government Financial Investments

Australia’s Future Fund has invested heavily in Palantir shares, creating additional debate about public institutions financially benefiting from surveillance technology companies.

Which Australian Corporations Could Be Using These Technologies?

Surveillance Is Not Just a Government Issue

One of the most important aspects of this debate is that surveillance technology Australia is not limited to intelligence agencies.

Around the world, large corporations increasingly use advanced AI analytics systems to:

  • Analyse customer behaviour.
  • Detect fraud.
  • Monitor workers.
  • Assess risks.
  • Predict trends.
  • Track online activity.

Public reporting and procurement records suggest sectors potentially interested in technologies linked to Palantir-style systems include:

  • Banking and finance.
  • Telecommunications.
  • Airports and logistics.
  • Mining companies.
  • Insurance corporations.
  • Defence contractors.
  • Major retailers.

In some cases, corporations use these systems for legitimate operational purposes. However, critics warn the same technologies can also create highly invasive forms of digital profiling.

For example:

  • Workers could be monitored more aggressively.
  • Consumers could be profiled behaviourally.
  • Financial risk scoring could become increasingly automated.
  • AI systems could make decisions affecting people without transparency.

Ordinary Australians may not even realise these technologies are operating behind the services they use every day.

The Rise of Surveillance Technology Australia

Australians Are Becoming Digital Profiles

Modern surveillance technology Australia extends far beyond traditional policing.

AI systems can now combine information from multiple sources to build extremely detailed digital profiles.

This can include:

  • Spending habits.
  • Location tracking.
  • Social media activity.
  • Communication patterns.
  • Search histories.
  • Online behaviour.
  • Travel records.

Supporters argue this improves efficiency and security.

Critics warn it creates unprecedented concentrations of power over ordinary citizens.

The issue is not simply whether people have “something to hide.” The issue is whether democratic societies should allow governments and corporations to collect and analyse massive quantities of personal information.

Predictive Policing and AI Profiling

The Danger of Automated Suspicion…………………………………………………………………………………………

…………………………………… https://theaimn.net/why-palantir-australia-sparks-growing-privacy-fears/

May 10, 2026 Posted by | technology | Leave a comment

Women Deliver Conference. Glimmers of hope amid the doom and gloom?

by Aleta Moriarty | May 4, 2026

The Women Deliver conference in Melbourne exposed the global decline in humanitarian aid amid escalating conflict. Aleta Moriarty was there.

Women Deliver is the largest gathering of women leaders, rights advocates and activists anywhere in the world, bringing together 6,000 people from 189 countries.

Alongside the activists were former leaders Julia Gillard, Jacinda Ardern, Helen Clarke and Justin Trudeau, who confronted the defining crises of our time: a world at war, the global rise of authoritarianism, the unchecked power of corporations, and the systematic erosion of the multilateral system.

Out of it came the Melbourne Declaration for Gender Equality, a global commitment to rebalance power, resources and accountability for girls, women and gender-diverse people.

A world at war

Conflict was front and centre, with representatives from almost all conflict-affected regions and countries, including Myanmar, Palestine, Lebanon, and Afghanistan.

According to the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP), 61 active state-based conflicts were recorded in 2024,  the highest number since records began in 1946. The International Committee of the Red Cross puts the total number of armed conflicts at 130, double the figure of fifteen years ago. The Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED) estimates

“one in eight people worldwide is now exposed to conflict.”

The burden falls disproportionately on women and girls. UN Women reports that in 2024, approximately 676 million women and girls, 17% of the global female population, lived within 50 kilometres of active conflict zones, the highest share since the 1990s.

Sexual violence remains one of the most systematic features of contemporary warfare.  During the Bosnian War, rape was widely used as a weapon. Women were systematically detained, forcibly impregnated, and held captive until they gave birth, denied abortion by design, their bodies conscripted as instruments of ethnic cleansing. The erasure of a people, all delivered through the bodies of women.

The UN Secretary-General’s 2025 Report on Conflict-Related Sexual Violence documented an 87% increase in cases since 2022, widely acknowledged as a significant undercount, given the stigma, fear of reprisal and restricted humanitarian access that prevent reporting.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo alone, 38,000 cases were reported by service providers in North Kivu in the first months of 2025. In Sudan, UN Women reported a 288% increase in demand for lifesaving support following rape and sexual violence in April 2025.

These are not mere statistics; they are women, each one a universe of relationships and possibilities,

“unmade by atrocity and crime.”

“(We need) a little reflection of what is happening and what it does, conflict. What conflict does to an actual human being, right? said Afghan woman and refugee Zohra Mousavi from Bridge to Safety.

“We always forget about that, we forget about the lives of people. We talk about numbers. It becomes just incredibly difficult to then narrow it down to remember that we’re talking about humans.”

A flood of people

Conflict uproots lives on a vast scale. UNHCR recorded more than 123 million forcibly displaced people in 2024, approximately one in every 67 people on Earth.

Among the most acute situations is Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh, a country where the average income is around $2000 a month. It is the world’s largest refugee camp, home to around 1.3 million stateless Rohingya refugees, approximately three times the population of Canberra, with more than 75% of them women and children.

The camp is one of the most desperate and densely populated places on earth, with 47,000 people crammed per square kilometre and residents living in bamboo and tarpaulin shelters, acutely vulnerable to landslides, flooding, fires and cyclones.

“Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh…are living in such horrible conditions. I was there last year. Six thousand five hundred learning centres have shut. When I went, there were children roaming around in every single street trying to look for things to do when they should be at school, said Noor Azizah, survivor of the ongoing Rohingya genocide and co-executive director of the Rohingya Women’s Collaborative Network.

“We need funding to make sure our people are not just surviving. They need food. People are living on seven dollars a month now… And because people are not able to live with these short stipends, women are looking for jobs in really dangerous jobs, you know, leaving the camps, young children are doing sex work.”


Candy over human aid

At the very moment need has surged, the humanitarian system has been eviscerated. The withholding of support itself becomes a weapon, as deliberate and as deadly as any other. In addition, broader aid cuts have systemically targeted programming that supports women, whether this be for sexual and reproductive health or to support women’s rights.

Between 2024 and 2025, more than 30% of global humanitarian funding disappeared, driven primarily by cuts to USAID, but triggering wider contraction from other major donors, including Germany and Sweden.

Council on Foreign Relations reported that total humanitarian funding had dropped to 2016 levels, with agencies now forced to

cut food from the hungry to preserve dwindling resources for the starving.

Data from the Council on Foreign Relations starkly demonstrate this.

A paper published in The Lancet forecast that global aid cuts could result in between 9.4 and 22.6 million additional deaths by 2030. This is comparable to the number of deaths attributed to COVID-19, yet receives a fraction of the attention.

“This erosion of multilateralism is not part of efficiency, it is part of militarisation, it is not a reform or a merger, it is an attack and all of it must be resisted,” said Kate Gilmore, former United Nations Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights, adding, “The most critical impacts of the deliberate dismantlement are being borne by ‘we the peoples….

“(this) death march is not austerity, it is atrocity.”

The obscenity of the richest man in the world, holding a chainsaw, celebrating these cuts that have led children to die or enter sex work, should plague all our minds.  According to Forbes, Elon Musk’s net worth reached $800 billion in February 2026, exceeding the GDP of Sweden, Norway and Singapore. In 2025 alone, he added approximately $194 billion to his personal wealth.

Australia’s aid declining

Australia’s aid budget tells a story of quiet retreat. While nominal figures appear to be rising, the aid budget is going backwards once adjusted for inflation or measured against Gross National Income.

In 2025–26, aid represented just 0.63% of the federal budget, small by international standards, and it keeps falling.

Australians grossly overestimate our aid contributions. A 2015 survey found that 19% of Australians believed aid made up at least 5% of the federal budget, around 8 times more than the actual figure of 0.63%.

It hasn’t just been humanitarian funding that has been targeted, but the frontline humanitarian workers themselves, in numbers we have simply never seen before.

The last two years have been the deadliest consecutive years for humanitarian workers ever recorded. In 2024 alone, a record 383 aid workers were killed, more than double the annual average of the previous decade, driven primarily by the war in Gaza and the civil war in Sudan, which together accounted for the majority of deaths.

The Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement lost 38 staff and volunteers in 2024 alone, while 289 UN personnel were killed in Gaza,  the largest loss of UN staff in any single crisis in history. Likewise, among them was Australia’s very own Zomi Frankcom, struck by an Israeli drone while delivering food for World Central Kitchen in clearly marked vehicles. We still await the results of the official investigation.

“We are in the midst of a complete breakdown of the international system, said Agnes Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty International.  “In the past, we warned of the imminent possibility of the breakdown. Right now, what we are saying we’re past warning. We’re in the middle of it

“We have found that there are predators who are intent on destroying the system through violations of international law and of the multilateral system. But it’s not just that they violate it, that they are insisting that these (systems) are dead.”

Ushering in the preventable death of millions has left many asking how a system so fundamental to the world’s most vulnerable could be destabilised so rapidly and easily by so few.

This was one of the central questions at Women Deliver, and the answer many participants kept returning to was that the international multilateral system needs to decentralise. Get the money, the power, and the decision-making out of institutions that can be captured overnight, and into the hands of the grassroots actors already doing the work.

Connecting every crisis discussed at Women Deliver 2026 is not complexity; it is choice. The big question is whether governments like ours will make more humane choices, with real resources, real leadership. real accountability, and the political will to match.

May 9, 2026 Posted by | women | Leave a comment

Antisemitism. The Royal Conflation Commission is in session

by Stephanie Tran | May 6, 2026 https://michaelwest.com.au/antisemitism-the-royal-conflation-commission-is-in-session/

The Bondi Royal Commission started its public hearings this week, and the mainstream media is lapping up the antisemitism narrative while ignoring other Jewish voices. Stephanie Tran reports.

The first block of public hearings for the Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion began this week, focusing on the prevalence and key drivers of antisemitism in Australia.

Questions about representation and balance have already emerged, with critics arguing that the hearings are dominated by established, pro-Israel Jewish organisations, while progressive and non-Zionist voices remain marginal.

A number of peak Jewish bodies giving evidence, including the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, New South Wales Jewish Board of Deputies, Jewish Community Council of Victoria, Zionist Federation of Australia, National Council of Jewish Women of Australia, Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council and the Dor Foundation, are being represented by the same barristers and solicitors, Arnold Bloch Leibler.

In her opening remarks on Monday, Royal Commissioner Virginia Bell said she was “satisfied that these organisations represent the majority of Australian Jews”.


The hearings will also include evidence from senior community figures, with counsel assisting Zelie Heger noting that they will provide a “bird’s-eye overview” of antisemitism in Australia.

They include Australia’s Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism, Jillian Segal and Jeremy Leibler, partner at Arnold Bloch Leibler and president of the Zionist Federation of Australia.

Conflating Jewish identity with Israel


Peter Wertheim, co-CEO of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, told the Royal Commission on Tuesday that the pro-Palestine protests in the wake of October 7 were “shocking” and called the “endless repetition of the genocide charge” an attempt to “re-stigmatise Jews collectively”.

Bell granted limited leave to the Jewish Council of Australia to examine expert witnesses on the IHRA definition and survey data relating to antisemitic attitudes, describing it as representing “a distinct but much smaller section of the Jewish community”.

That characterisation has been contested by some Jewish academics and advocates, who argue that the Jewish community is far more politically and ideologically diverse.

Antony Loewenstein, an independent journalist, film-maker and author of The Palestine Laboratory, and an advisory committee member of the Jewish Council of Australia, said it was “highly questionable” whether the organisations appearing before the commission reflect the breadth of Jewish opinion in Australia.

“The Australian Jewish community is culturally, politically and religiously diverse, and

“it’s highly questionable if the most pro-Netanyahu, pro-Israel lobby groups represent the majority of Jews in the country”.


“Conflating Israel and Judaism, pursued by the so-called mainstream Jewish groups in Australia, is both historically inaccurate and dangerous, tying Jews to the actions of a genocidal Jewish state.”

Professor Linda Briskman, the Margaret Whitlam Chair of Social Work at Western Sydney University and also on the advisory committee of the Jewish Council of Australia, said her research into Jewish Australians critical of Israeli government policies pointed to a different picture from that presented by peak bodies.

Briskman co-authored Not in Our Name: Jewish Australians Speak Out, a report examining the experiences of Australian Jews who oppose Israeli policies and practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

“What we’ve found is that opposition to Israel’s actions is grounded not in the rejection of Jewish identity but in deeply held ethical commitments rooted in Jewish traditions of justice,” she said.

She added that Jews expressing dissenting views often face “significant personal and social consequences”, and said that

“antisemitism should be addressed alongside other forms of racism.”

“We should be concerned about all forms of racism,” she said. “Racism against Jewish people shouldn’t be treated as the exception. We know that Islamophobia has risen greatly since October 7, but that doesn’t get nearly as much publicity or attention.”

Jewish Council of Australia


The Jewish Council of Australia, which represents Jewish Australians and supports Palestinian rights while opposing antisemitism and racism, was granted leave on Friday to cross-examine expert witnesses on the IHRA definition and data relating to antisemitism. 

In a letter to supporters, executive director Sarah Schwartz said the group was seeking to raise funds to cover legal representation at the hearing.

“Pro-Israel legacy organisations, who receive significant public funding, have already formed a conglomerate and briefed a large team of barristers and lawyers,” she wrote.

Schwartz said the balance of representation would shape how the hearings are understood publicly, telling MWM,

“If the only Jewish groups represented in these hearings are Israel-aligned, it will have a significant impact on the narrative.”


IHRA definition

The hearings will scrutinise the use of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism.

In opening remarks, Bell acknowledged divisions within the Jewish community over the definition, noting concerns that it could be used to suppress criticism of Israel. 

“The Jewish community is not monolithic, and there exist divisions of view amongst them about matters that include the politics of the Middle East,” she said. “I’m conscious that some Jews and other members of the Australian community believe that the IHRA working definition of antisemitism can be weaponised in order to suppress criticism of Israel.”

However, Bell defended its use, arguing that conduct must be assessed in context.

“I consider that some of the criticisms of the IHRA definition proceed on a misconception,” she said. “The examples of conduct under that working definition that may constitute antisemitism are just that. In every case, the question of whether the conduct is to be assessed as antisemitic is considered in its overall context. 

“I expect the application of the IHRA definition will be fleshed out in the course of the evidence of witnesses in this first block of hearings by witnesses who have appropriate expertise.”


“When anti-Zionism becomes antisemitism”

Counsel assisting the Royal Commission, Richard Lancaster SC, said a key task for the inquiry “is to identify when anti-Zionism becomes antisemitism”. 

He described Zionism as “the belief in the Jewish people’s right to self-determination in their ancestral and biblical homeland of Israel”, which he said is a “core value” for many Australian Jews.

Lancaster said that some examples within the IHRA definition suggest that, depending on context, “it could be antisemitic to deny that right to self-determination,” attribute collective responsibility to Jews for the actions of the Israeli state, or express hatred on the basis of perceived loyalty to Israel.

“A further aspect of this is that current Australian political and social commentary undoubtedly displays many instances of very strongly expressed criticism of the polarising actions of Israel’s current government,” he added, stating that expert witnesses would be asked to help distinguish between legitimate political criticism and antisemitic rhetoric. 

“One of the experts to be called is Dr Dave Rich, who is the director of policy at the Community Security Trust in London, as research fellow at the London Center for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism,” Lancaster said.

Rich is a “is a leading expert on left-wing antisemitism”. He has rejected the UN’s finding that Israel has committed a genocide in Gaza, stating that UN’s finding “has put the final nail in the coffin of Israel’s reputation, but it is as shoddy and partisan as every other attempt to pin the genocide label onto the Jewish State”.

In March, Rich delivered a keynote at a conference launching a new national approach to addressing antisemitism in Australian schools, developed by UNESCO and implemented by the Office of the Special Envoy on Combating Antisemitism.

Stephanie Tran

Stephanie is a journalist with a background in both law and journalism. She has worked at The Guardian and as a paralegal, where she assisted Crikey’s defence team in the high-profile defamation case brought by Lachlan Murdoch. Her reporting has been recognised nationally, earning her the 2021 Democracy’s Watchdogs Award for Student Investigative Reporting and a nomination for the 2021 Walkley Student Journalist of the Year Award.

May 8, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Bondi Royal Commission. What this report refuses to see

COMMENT . This article and other coverage of this Royal Commission stress the unfair aspects of it, I have more confidence in it than those writers do.

Royal Commissioner Virginia Bell has a fine reputation as a judge, and did question Antony Loewenstein, and Professor Linda Briskman who gave the dissenting views of Jews wjo are critical of Israel

In opening remarks, Bell acknowledged divisions within the Jewish community over the definition, noting concerns that it could be used to suppress criticism of Israel.

by Andrew Brown | May 1, 2026, https://michaelwest.com.au/bondi-royal-commission-what-this-report-refuses-to-see/

“This report was designed to produce conclusions rather than find them.” A response to the interim findings of the Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion by Andrew Brown.

As an ordinary Australian who has read this interim report, I am left with one overriding feeling. Something essential is being sidestepped. Not accidentally. Deliberately.

I say that as the godson of two Hungarian Holocaust survivors. I know what antisemitism looks like. I know what it costs. I know where it leads when good people stay silent. That history lives in my family, and it is not abstract to me.

That is precisely why I will not allow the word to be weaponised. Antisemitism is too loaded with real historical horror to be deployed as a conversation stopper every time someone raises the death toll in Gaza. When that happens, it does not protect Jewish people. It uses their suffering as a shield for a government committing atrocities. That is its own kind of desecration.

Antisemitism is real and must be confronted without equivocation. That is not what this is about. This is about a commission that had the opportunity to honestly examine the social fractures in this country and chose, from the very beginning, to look away from half the picture.

A predetermined exercise


The Royal Commission was announced less than four weeks after the Bondi massacre, stood up under acute political pressure, with terms of reference drafted in trauma and shaped by the loudest voices in the room. The result was an inquiry whose outcome was visible from the day the Letters Patent were issued.

The terms cover four areas. Antisemitism. Law enforcement recommendations. The Bondi attack. Broader social cohesion. That is the entire scope.

There is no mention of Israeli government conduct.

No mention of Gaza.

No mandate to examine Islamophobia. No instruction to ask why social tensions rose so sharply or what role political decision-making played.

When it was suggested the Commission also examine discrimination against Muslims and Indigenous Australians, Commissioner Bell made clear the focus would remain on antisemitism.

A commission into social cohesion that cannot examine what broke it is not an inquiry.

It is a performance.

The conclusion preceded the evidence. The Commission was built around it.

What Australians have been watching

This commission speaks about social tensions as though they formed in the abstract. They did not. They formed in the palm of every Australian’s hand.

For two years, social media feeds have carried footage no broadcaster would air unedited. Hind Rajab, a six-year-old girl trapped in a car in Gaza, surrounded by her family’s bodies, calling for help on a phone. Then the two paramedics sent to rescue her. All of them killed.

Children pulled from rubble. Doctors dragged from wards. Journalists killed in targeted strikes, cameras still rolling. More than twenty thousand children dead. Australians have not read that number.

“They have seen those children’s faces.”

They watched Zomi Frankcom, an Australian aid worker delivering food in Gaza, killed when Israeli drones struck her clearly marked World Central Kitchen convoy in three sequential strikes. The IDF had her coordinates. Israel withheld drone audio from Australian investigators. Two officers were dismissed. Nobody was prosecuted.

The government accepted that and moved on. Most Australians did not.

That accumulation does not leave you. It builds. And then those same Australians were told by their political class that the primary concern is the feelings of the perpetrating state’s supporters. A Royal Commission is underway. Its terms of reference do not contain the word Gaza. Do not contain the word Palestine. That is not governance.

“That is gaslighting at a national scale.”

Whose voices this commission chose

Organisations like the Australia/Israel and Jewish Affairs Council and the Zionist Federation of Australia have spent two years defending Israeli conduct without qualification while saying nothing meaningful about Palestinian civilian deaths.

This commission has amplified those voices as though they represent all Australian Jews. They do not.

A significant number of Jewish Australians have marched, spoken out, and refused the script.

Their voices carry particular moral weight. They have been systematically drowned out by the loudest and most politically connected faction, one that deploys the language of antisemitism against anyone who pushes back. This commission should have made space for the full spectrum.

That it did not tells you everything about whose interests it was built to serve.

The indefensible conflation

Any attempt to connect pro-Palestinian protest with the Bondi massacre is not analysis. It is a smear. The attack was carried out by ISIS-radicalised individuals. The hundreds of thousands who marched were exercising democratic expression.

Conflating them insults the Bondi victims and criminalises a community of conscience.

And while the Commission examines the ideological conditions that produced the Bondi attack, it has shown no appetite for examining the structural ones.

The father allegedly owned six firearms, all legally held under the old rules. Under the new NSW regime, that likely would not stand as the new maximum is four. So the question is unavoidable:.

Did gaps in licensing and limits help create the conditions for this attack?

A credible inquiry should be examining that directly.

The political will summoned to stand up this Royal Commission at speed was apparently unavailable for the harder conversation about legally acquired weapons in suburban Sydney.

A UN Commission of Inquiry found in March 2025 that Israel’s use of sexual violence against Palestinian detainees was systemic, committed under explicit orders or with the encouragement of Israel’s military and civilian leadership. B’Tselem called the prison system a network of torture camps.

“Australian media buried it.”

This commission has proceeded as though it never happened.

This commission must state plainly that opposition to Israeli government policy is not terrorism. That grief for Palestinian civilians is not radicalisation. That the people who marched are not the people who killed. Anything less is not a finding. It is a cover.

This report was designed to produce conclusions rather than find them.

Australians who came to this process in good faith deserved better. They are watching. And they are not going away.

May 8, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

20 May Webinar – The dangerous world of AUKUS, US, military occupation and suppression of dissent

National Webinar, 20th May, 2026, 6.30pm AEST https://events.humanitix.com/the-dangerous-world-of-aukus-and-us-military-occupation

The dangerous world of AUKUS, US military occupation and suppression of dissent

Confronting laws restricting/suppressing protest speech and action

Speakers: Former Sen. Rex Patrick, Lawyer Nick Hanna ,Arthur Rorris ,Jorgen Doyle, Sen David Shoebbridge,

Facilitator Kelley Tranter.

An Australian Police Force unit has been created which will impact on protesting against AUKUS

The AUKUS AFP Command has been established under the Australian Federal Police (AFP), in conjunction with the Department of Defence.  The AUKUS AFP Command’s powers cover the security of AUKUS operations, extending to wider US military activity elsewhere.  Its activities are of considerable concern since among its roles is “Public Order Management” listing of “munitions” which include tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets and real firearms.

Is this the Australia we want for ourselves, our children and the world?

Since 2003 and 9/11 a raft of laws have been passed by successive Australian governments attacking our civil and democratic rights, including freedom of speech and political protest.  Some of these laws have been used against the environment movement.

More laws have been passed recently aimed at suppressing the huge upsurge of outrage against Israel’s genocide in Gaza, including draconian anti-protest laws in several states, and “hate laws” by the Federal Government.

More widely, protests are arising from concern with the huge diversion of public money for the AUKUS war pact and its nuclear submarines away from urgent social needs including the climate crisis.  Communities and environmentalists are concerned with nuclear exposures.  There is growing opposition to AUKUS embedding Australia in another US-led war, possibly a nuclear war.

These public concerns extend to the increasing US military footprint across Australia, enabled by the 2014 Force Posture Agreement.

Australian people have a proud history spanning 170 years of collectively on mass opposing and defying oppressive anti-democratic laws.  From the 1854 Eureka rebellion, the countless strikes by workers and their unions, against conscription and unjust wars, against the Vietnam and Iraq wars, and defending the environment.

Join this webinar, ask questions, discuss action.

May 7, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The UK Descends Into Confected Antisemitism Hysteria

Nate Bear, Do Not Panic May 05, 2026

The UK has descended into confected hysteria over antisemitism to protect Keir Starmer and Labour from being wiped out by the Greens in local elections this week.

The British establishment is well-practiced in manufacturing antisemitism hysteria, of course, having used it to destroy Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party when it got too close to power.

Now the UK’s political and media establishment is trying to pull the same trick, but this time on the Green Party and its Jewish leader, Zack Polanski.

This fresh round of hysteria really ramped up after a man with a history of mental illness (and of stabbings) stabbed two Jews in north London last week. Neither died and both will live. Omitted from almost all state-corporate media coverage was the fact that he also stabbed a third man, a Muslim. Also omitted was his history of stabbings (he previously stabbed his own dog, a Somali man, and two police officers), and his history of psychotic breaks.

Despite the circumstances clearly pointing to random attacks by a person suffering an acute mental episode, the police treated it not just as a planned antisemitic attack, but as terrorism.

The terrorism threat level in the UK was raised to severe.

I remember when terrorism used to mean car bombs, political goals, manifestos and scores of dead people, not a mentally disabled man with a butter knife scratching a few people.

But the attack was perfect fodder for the British media and political establishment, who blamed support for Palestine and opposition to genocide for enabling antisemitism, and instantly began demanding pro-Palestine protests were fully outlawed.

The environment of hysteria that ensued is hard to describe if you don’t follow British media or politics closely, but it has been extraordinary.

Keir Starmer gave a primetime televised address to the nation.

His speech was a complete misrepresentation of the facts of the case, completely omitting the Muslim victim, completely omitting the man’s history of illness and random stabbing attacks. But they were deliberate lies of omission critical to constructing an antisemitism narrative.

And it worked.

Every headline, every news broadcast for a week led with the story about ‘the antisemitism crisis in Britain.’

I remember when terrorism used to mean something. I also remember when antisemitism used to mean something. And implying all Jews support the actions of Israel used to be considered antisemitic.

But now that’s all anyone with political or media power does.

Starmer said that anti-genocide, pro-Palestine protests have created the environment for antisemitic attacks. The Green Party’s opposition to Israel’s genocide, the media said, has fuelled antisemitism. The Guardian had a story on the Green Party’s ‘struggle against antisemitism,’ a story which presumably included how just eight months ago the entire Green Party membership antisemitically elected a Jewish leader.

And when you deconstruct the logical conclusions behind the implication that Jews are being attacked because of what Israel has done, it will break your brain.

Firstly the implication that Jews are attacked because of Israel, not because of their religion, means Israel represents all Jewish sentiment……………………………….

We’ve reached the point where everything is antisemitism apart from the thing that is actually antisemitism.

And this is because the Zionists have lost the propaganda war. Genocide is not going back in the bottle. Everyone sees what Israel has done. Everyone can now see what Israel is: a genocidal settler-colony apartheid state run by ethno-supremacists.

The deliberate conflation of antisemitism and anti-Zionism then is intended to silence criticism of Israel, and erase the truth about what Israel is and has done.

It’s also intended to stop the Green Party inflicting a humiliating defeat on Keir Starmer and his Labour Party in local elections this week.

The establishment calculation is that if you can establish in the mind of progressives the idea that a vote for the Greens is actually a vote for hate, not a vote against genocide or apartheid, you can stop Labour bleeding leftist votes to the Greens.

If the Zionist establishment can reestablish that black is white, they think they have a chance.

But it goes even deeper than that.

The UK establishment aren’t just using the attack for rhetorical purposes, they are using it to actually get Green Party election candidates arrested.

Andrew Gilligan, a former adviser to Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak, and now a right-wing journalist, wrote a story about two Green Party candidates Saiqa Ali and Sabine Mairey who he said had made ‘antisemitic’ posts. Last week, he gloated that following his stories, they’d both been arrested…………………………………………………

Three people are stabbed every day in London. Over one thousand people a year, of all religions and none.

None of these ever warrant a national prime ministerial TV address.

Twenty-seven mosques in the UK were attacked between July and October last year.

No extra security funding (Starmer has promised an extra £25 million for Jewish areas). No discourse about Islamophobia. Just tumbleweed.

But a random attack on two Jews gets the full national psychodrama treatment because it can be so usefully weaponised to serve the interests of Zionism.

Are people going to fall for this?

I don’t think so.

Is Zack Polanski going to fall for this after seeing what happened to Corbyn?

Hopefully not.

We have more than enough evidence by now to know that you can never appease Zionists.

There is no middle-ground, no strategy of accommodation.

Any concession is interpreted as a sign of weakness. As Corbyn showed us, once they’ve drawn blood, they’ll bleed you dry.

The only anti-Zionist strategy that makes any sense is one of full confrontation.

The only route to victory is their full defeat. https://www.donotpanic.news/p/the-uk-descends-into-confected-antisemitism

May 7, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Australians speak of violence, beatings and sensory deprivation in Israeli detainment

2 May 2026 AIMN Editorial, https://theaimn.net/australians-speak-of-violence-beatings-and-sensory-deprivation-in-israeli-detainment/

2.5.26 Global Sumud Flotilla Aussies Update

Australians who were held in Israeli custody for over 30 hours, have spoken out about threats, violence, beatings and abuse.

Six Australians were captured by Israeli Defence Forces in international waters west of Crete at approximately 10am AEST time on Thursday 30th of May, and were released in Crete late last night (AEST time).

The Australians were aboard the Global Sumud Flotilla attempting to get life-saving aid to Gaza.

Three Australians Ethan Floyd, Zack Schofield and Neve O’Connor were taken to Sitia General Hospital in Crete for injuries, including concussion, bruising and cuts. Cameron Tribe, Dr Bianca Webb-Pullman and one other, Surya McEwen have also been released, unharmed.

173 other global humanitarian volunteers were also released, 30 of whom also went to Sitia hospital for various injuries.

Of huge concern, two leaders of the Global Sumud Flotilla, Thiago Ávila from Brazil, and Saif Abu Keshek from Spain, remain unaccounted for, with Israeli sources indicating they have been taken to Israel.

Ethan Floyd, Sydney student and Wiradjuri, Ngiyampaa and Wailwan man who is aboard the flotilla said: “We were transferred to another Rigid Inflatable Boat (RIB) and taken to a very large Israeli warship. From there we were held again in stress positions for 45 minutes to an hour, made to crawl along the floor before being thrown into an enclosure constructed from shipping containers.

“I witnessed people being shot with rubber pellets. I witnessed people being thrown to the ground, dragged along the ground by their limbs, people being forced to listen to the shouts and screams of people who were being beaten.

“We’ve been dumped in Greece without consular assistance. We were driven for hours through Crete with the promise that embassy officials would be there to meet with us, and when we arrived, there were none.”

Zack Schofield, climate activist from Newcastle: “We were surprised that they had gone 600 nautical miles away from Israel, with warships, a prison ship and special operations forces there to seize our boats, to kidnap us, to brutalise us and take us on board a prison ship with absolutely no charges being laid on us.”

“I was forced to sleep outside, and during the night, they flooded the deck with sea water, to wake people up and prevent them from sleeping.”

“The Australian Government has failed to stand up to Israel, despite the fact that Israel constantly violates every single international law that our nation claims to support, and has now just kidnapped six Australian citizens and tortured us because we are trying to get food to the people of Gaza.”

“Australians need to be really, really concerned that if we let Israel get away with these crimes with impunity, we are setting up such a dangerous world for ourselves.”

Neve O’Connor (from Melbourne): “We were 600 nautical miles from Israel, and being intercepted was not even on our minds. We saw flares go up. We saw people were sounding the alarms.”

“They threatened to shoot us if we didn’t move, and if we didn’t comply, they said they would open fire.”

“It was constant brutality and oppression, and then we tried to advocate for our rights, they just laughed at us.”

Senator Larissa Waters, Leader of the Australian Greens said: “This is yet another shocking breach of international law by Israel. In attempt to prolong its genocide in Gaza, Israel has seemingly kidnapped Australian citizens in international waters.”

“These flotilla participants are bravely trying to bring essential supplies to Palestinians under illegal blockade by Israel, and this act of piracy shows how far the Netanyahu Government will go to ensure the genocide continues.”

“The Australian government should be championing the actions of the brave flotilla participants, and must now strongly fight for them to be released.”

“Labor continues the two-way arms trade with Israel, has not put any sanctions on Netanyahu or his war cabinet, and invites their head of state to tour the country – even as they kidnap and kill Australian citizens.”

“Labor must stop ignoring Israel’s constant breaches of international law.”

Flotilla organisers and released Australians are calling a day of action on Monday 4th of May to put pressure on the Australian government to:

  1. Immediately and publicly condemn Israel for illegally kidnapping and detaining Australian citizens
  2. End Australia’s complicity in the genocide of Palestine, and support all efforts to deliver life-saving aid to Gaza
  3. Call for the immediate release of Thiago Ávila and Saif Abukeshek

Vision: For live updates see the Instagram accounts of the Global Sumud Flotilla and Australian delegation of the Global Movement to Gaza.

In a video message taken from Sitia hospital in Crete, Neve, Zack and Ethan allege that they were “beaten and tortured” whilst on an Israeli prison ship. They say they are on hunger strike. The full video can be found here.

Two leaders of the Global Sumud Flotilla, Thiago Ávila from Brazil, and Saif Abu Keshek from Spain, remain unaccounted for, with Israeli sources indicating they have been taken to Israel.

Zack Schofield: “Two of our comrades, Thiago and Saif, have been identified as leaders in the movement and remain upon that prison ship. We believe that they are being taken to Israel and likely beaten and tortured. We all three decided not to take any food from the Israelis as they continued their starvation of the Palestinian people, and until we know more about the health and whereabouts of Thiago and Saif we’re also continuing not to eat.”

It is understood that all other 173 global activists were released and are in Crete. Approximately 30 activists are at Sitia hospital after sustaining various injuries. They include: Australia 3, Canada 2, Hungary 1, Netherlands 2, New Zealand 4, Spain 2, Ukraine 1, Germany 2, France 1, Poland 1, UK 2, Colombia 2, Italia 3, USA 3, Portugal 1.

Unconfirmed reports are indicating that many of the activists are resisted deportation by plane.

Zack Schofield closed the video with a message for their loved ones: “We want our families to know that we are all well, and free Palestine, that’s why we’re here.”

Families of the released Australians are reporting their distress. Joanne Jarowski, Zack’s mother said: “In the wee hours this morning, we were greatly relieved to get a voice message from our son Zack, one of the 175 hostages held in an Israeli prison ship for two days, to say he was at Sitia Hospital in Crete for medical review. Israeli forces illegally detained him and the other aid volunteers for trying to bring food and medicine to the sick and the starving in Gaza. This is not a crime: in fact, International Humanitarian Law mandates rapid, safe and unimpeded passage of humanitarian relief for civilians. The real crime is keeping aid from civilians who are sick and starving to death.

“Zack was on a borrowed phone, and only had a few seconds to tell us he was in hospital for medical review and that he loves us. We want to know his complete medical assessment, and we really bloody want to know why our government hasn’t publicly condemned the kidnapping of our son and detaining him illegally on international waters – and also, when in heaven’s name our government will break their silence and business-as-usual as the genocide of Palestinians is perpetrated by our so-called ally, Israel.”

Families have been in contact with DFAT where they have been told that Australian Consular support workers are in Greece and attempting to get support to the Australians who have been released.

Juliet Lamont, Head of the Australian Delegation, who is organising from ports in Europe: “We are relieved our people are free. But let’s be clear about what happened – Israel abducted unarmed humanitarian volunteers to stop aid reaching the people of Gaza.”

“Children in Gaza are still starving. Aid is still being blocked. Israel is still killing Palestinians.”

“The Australian Government must support all attempts to ensure food, medicine and baby formula can reach the people of Gaza.”

“We call on Australians to join mass-mobilisations. Apply direct pressure on Wong and Albanese to ensure the safety of our humanitarians and the delivery of their life-saving aid.”

“Let Palestinians Live. Let aid flow. Cut ties with Israel!”

Text by Alexa Stuart, Subhi Awad, Jane Salmon for Rising Tide, Global Sumud Flotilla Australian Delegation.

May 6, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The IDF Kidnapped and Assaulted an Australian Citizen in International Waters | Michael West media,

2 May 2026 The West Report playlist

Australian activist Zack Schofield recounts the interception of the Global Sumud Flotilla, seized on the high seas roughly 600 nautical miles from Israel while attempting to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza. He describes detention aboard a prison ship, allegations of violence by Israeli forces, and the broader legal and political implications of the operation. The account raises serious questions about maritime law, the treatment of civilians, and Australia’s ongoing support for Israel, as pressure builds on the government to respond.

May 5, 2026 Posted by | weapons and war | Leave a comment

19 May – Webinar: No Nuclear Weapons in Australia

Go to https://actionnetwork.org/events/webinar-no-nuclear-weapons-in-australia

Start: 2026-05-19 18:00:00 UTC Canberra, Melbourne, Sydney (GMT+10:00)

End: 2026-05-19 19:30:00 UTC Canberra, Melbourne, Sydney (GMT+10:00)

Event Type: Virtual
A virtual link will be communicated before the event.

Host Contact Info: australia@icanw.org

No Nuclear Weapons in Australia: Webinar

As plans advance for Australia to host US nuclear-capable B-52 bombers and potentially nuclear-armed submarines, there are increasing concerns about the potential for Australia to unknowingly host American nuclear weapons in future. This is particularly concerning against a backdrop of Australia accepting US policy to neither confirm nor deny the presence of nuclear weapons.

Recently, over 150 civil society organisations across Australia and the Pacific launched the ‘No Nuclear Weapons in Australia’ Declaration calling on the Albanese government to push back on these policies of nuclear ambiguity and to reject Australia having any role in nuclear war. This declaration underscores that the security of a nation cannot be bought at the risk of the survival of humanity and the planet’s ecosystem, and that our region’s nuclear-free status is too precious to risk.

Join to hear eminent voices on nuclear policy, disarmament, advocacy and international humanitarian law in relation to Australia’s role in the global nuclear landscape. Together we’ll explore what the Declaration is asking for, what it means for Australia’s place in the Pacific, and what we can do together keep the pressure on.

The humanitarian consequences of even a single detonation, whether accidental or intentional, cannot be understated as it would be catastrophic and irreversible. No health system or humanitarian agency has the capacity to respond to the aftermath of a nuclear explosion; there is no “cure” for a nuclear catastrophe, only prevention. Beyond the immediate blast that would incinerate surrounding areas, the resulting radiation would inflict multi-generational health crises.

Speakers include:

  • Janet Craven, Director, ICAN Australia
  • Dr Emma Shortis, Director of International & Security Affairs Program, The Australia Institute
  • Joey Tau, Coordinator, Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG) and Chair of the Pacific Regional NGO (PRNGO) Alliance.
  • Prof Richard Tanter, Senior Research Associate at the Nautilus Institute, and Honorary Professor at the School of Political and Social Science, University of Melbourne.
  • Vince Scappatura, Sessional Academic in the School of International Studies at Macquarie University, and author of ‘The US Lobby and Australian Defence Policy’.
  • More to be announced

This event is co-hosted by ICAN Australia and the Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG).

May 5, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

‘Critical time’: Minister’s ominous nuclear warning as US looks to resume tests

Australia has delivered a message on nuclear weapons that could put Canberra at odds with the US and Donald Trump.

Benedict Brook in New York, April 29, 202 https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/military/critical-time-ministers-ominous-nuclear-warning-as-us-looks-to-resume-tests/news-story/2f432583102962402e8b922db84eeb8e

Australia has said “all nations” – including the US – should refrain from nuclear weapons testing after Donald Trump announced plans to potentially start exploding nukes for the first time in more than three decades.

Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade Matt Thistlethwaite said the globe was entering a “critical time” where limits on weapons of mass destruction are being eroded

He is in New York this week representing Australia at a United Nations review of efforts to stop the spread and use of nuclear weapons.

Mr Thistlethwaite also told news.com.au that on the sidelines of the meeting he had held “frank conversations” with nations such as Japan, South Korea and Singapore to get “assurances” on fuel supplies to Australia.

‘Critical time’ for stopping nuclear weapons

The UN’s Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) entered into force in 1970 and now has 191 signatories, with notable exceptions being nuclear nations India, Pakistan and Israel.

The aim of the treaty is to stop the spread of nuclear arms and push for disarmament.

But New START, the last agreement to prevent the US and Russia from building more bombs, expired in February.

There are now concerns that a global nuclear arms race could be on the cards.

On Monday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told the New York meeting, “for too long, the treaty has been eroding.”

“The drivers of (nuclear) proliferation are accelerating.”

There’s little expectation the conference will notably change that gloomy outlook.

Critical time’

Asked if Australians should be concerned about the threat of nuclear weapons, Mr Thistlethwaite told news.com.au the New York review “does occur at a critical time.”

“We’ve got increasing uncertainty in the global geostrategic situation, particularly around the Middle East and Ukraine, and there’s increasing tension within the Asia Pacific region.

“We’re going to make sure that Australia plays a role in de-escalation, supporting peaceful outcomes and upholding the international rules.”

“We want to see a world where the spread of nuclear weapons is prevented … and we’ve been a loud voice in ensuring that nations shouldn’t be involved in testing nuclear weapons anymore.”

No nation should test nukes – including US

But one louder voice doesn’t seem to be on the same page as Australia.

In October, Donald Trump said the US would resume nuclear weapons testing “on an equal basis” with other nations.

“That process will begin immediately,” he said.

Mr Trump’s comments have led to confusion about what new US nuclear testing might involve.

The last country to explode an actual bomb was North Korea in 2017. The US and Russia haven’t tested nuclear weapons since the early 1990s. But Vladimir Putin claimed recently that Russia had tested a nuclear-powered torpedo that was capable of carrying nuclear weapons.

Would Australia be against the US resuming tests with actual nuclear bombs?

“We’re against all nations testing nuclear weapons,” Mr Thistlethwaite said, who did not mention the US by name.

“We know Maralinga (the UK’s 1950s nuclear weapons testing site in Australia) had a lingering effect on the Indigenous community.

“We want to make sure that we don’t see those situations in our region again, or indeed anywhere in the world.”

Iran nuclear role ‘not appropriate’

There was uproar at the UN NPT conference when Iran was announced as one of 34 vice presidents of the event.

Assistant Secretary for the US Bureau of Arms Control and Non-proliferation Christopher Yeaw told the conference it was an “affront” that Iran had been appointed to the role.

“(It is) indisputable that Iran has long demonstrated its contempt for the non-proliferation commitments of the NPT.

Iran’s role was “beyond shameful and an embarrassment to the credibility of this conference,” he was reported by Reuters as saying.

Ms Thistlethwaite said Australia had “expressed its concern and opposition” to Iran’s elevation.

“That wasn’t the appropriate move, and we’ve expressed our support for the United States position”.

‘Frank conversations’ with oil nations

Mr Thistlethwaite added that he had meetings with countries on the fringes of the event, including those critical to Australia’s energy security.

“An important part of this trip is working with our international partners on securing Australia’s fuel supplies,” he said.

“Most of our refined oil products come through Southeast Asia, so I’ve had meetings with (South) Korea, Singapore, Japan, Vietnam … to reiterate the importance that open trade and supplies continue to get through.

“It’s been heartening to have those frank conversations with those partners, to get those assurances regarding continued fuel supplies and to ensure that they remain trusted partners for Australia.”

Mr Thistlethwaite mentioned Australia’s trump card with nations that export oil – Australia’s abundance of liquid natural gas (LNG), which many countries need just as keenly.

“We’re a big supplier of LNG exports to countries in the region, and we’ve been making sure that we reiterate that fact that we’re a reliable supplier that will continue and the relationship with those important fuel partners is in a pretty strong position.”

May 5, 2026 Posted by | politics international | Leave a comment

Toxic fantasy nuked; one year on from the Federal election 

, https://www.acf.org.au/news/toxic-fantasy-nuked-one-year-on-from-the-federal-election

Exactly one year ago Australians braved the how to vote cards, ate or avoided democracy sausages and used a pencil to help write the next part of the Australian story.

In the months leading up to the 2025 federal election, papers, airwaves and social media platforms were full of talk about nuclear. 

Then Opposition Leader Peter Dutton dubbed the 2025 federal election ‘a referendum on nuclear power’. It was the biggest policy difference between the two major political parties. The Coalition promised to build multiple nuclear reactors at seven sites across Australia while Labor, the Green and most independents opposed this nuclear plan and strongly supported renewables. 

Nuclear proponents spent large, promised much and did their best to sidestep scrutiny over cost, timing, water, waste and more. 

Environment groups joined with trade unions, public health experts, First Nation representatives and community members from regions targeted for reactors to make the case for a renewable energy future, free from nuclear risk and delays. 

The message was clear: Nuclear is too risky, too expensive and too slow. 

And at the end of months of talk, talkback, information stalls, protests and public forums, Australia voted. 

And voted unequivocally no to nuclear.

The Coalition had its worst defeat since the formation of the Liberal Party in 1944, and nuclear champion Peter Dutton became the first sitting federal Opposition Leader in Australian history to lose their own seat at a general election. Seven News political editor Mark Riley described the Coalition result as ‘catastrophic’, adding “the party that chose nuclear energy as its policy has exploded in a nuclear bomb set on them by the voters tonight.”

Voters saw the Coalition’s nuclear fantasy for what it was: a toxic furphy designed only to prolong the life of coal and gas. They made a conscious and clear decision to reject nuclear power and provide our politicians with a clear mandate to get on with harnessing Australia’s abundant renewable energy resources to power our country. 

Renewables already meet around half of Australia’s electricity needs, and this figure is growing every day. 

Responsible renewables mean lasting regional jobs, low carbon and proven power.  

Renewables also mean energy independence and energy security. Ships in the Strait of Hormuz might stop, but the wind and sun do not. 

One year ago, Australians had a clear energy choice – and right across the nation we made a clear energy decision – our energy future is renewable, not radioactive.

May 5, 2026 Posted by | politics | Leave a comment

Royal commission report doesn’t help us start making sense of Bondi terror attack

The Conversation, Keiran Hardy, Associate Professor, Griffith Criminology Institute, Griffith University, April 30, 2026 Justice Virginia Bell has handed the governor-general her interim findings from the Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese responded immediately by promising to implement all its recommendations.

The interim report recommends specific changes to counter-terrorism policy – and a speedy resolution to the lagging gun buyback scheme.

These sorts of changes may help. But they don’t begin to answer deeper questions about how a terror attack on that scale could occur in Australia. The commission is yet to examine how underlying conditions might have fuelled the attack, and what else governments, their agencies and we as a society must do to prevent such a tragedy from happening again.

What does the interim report recommend?

The interim report contains 14 recommendations, five of them confidential.

Of the nine public recommendations, nearly all focus on counter-terrorism policy and the ways government agencies operate. For example, recommendations three through six focus on the Australia-New Zealand Counter-Terrorism Committee: a high-level coordination body made up of senior members of government.

The interim report recommends the committee be included in the Australian government’s Crisis Management Framework. The committee should brief National Cabinet at least annually.

Recommendation seven says ministers on the National Security Committee of cabinet should participate in a counter-terrorism exercise within nine months of each federal election.

These changes will not stop a terrorist from committing another attack. And most Australians could be forgiven for having never heard of these committees.

There’s also no reason why this all couldn’t have been investigated, possibly more quickly, by the original, departmental inquiry announced by Albanese. This was to be led by former head of ASIO, Dennis Richardson.

Richardson recently resigned from the royal commission, saying he felt like an overpaid research officer. He was also worried the process would take too long to deliver concrete recommendations on policing and intelligence…………………………………………………………………..

What can we expect next?

Public hearings for the royal commission will begin next week. In the first round, people with lived experience of antisemitism are expected to give evidence.

After that, it remains to be seen where the inquiry will direct its focus.

Its terms of reference are extremely broad, covering antisemitism, social cohesion, training for law enforcement, border control and immigration, radicalisation, specific circumstances surrounding the attack, and anything else that might be “reasonably incidental” or relevant.

It has so far received more than 3,500 submissions. The commission must report back by December 14 this year, before the one-year anniversary of the attack.

To report meaningfully on all these topics on such a pressured timeline will be a monumental task. Some focus may be necessary, but there will be valid differences of opinion as to whether this inquiry is primarily about antisemitism, social cohesion, counter-terrorism, radicalisation, the Bondi attack, or all of the above.

At the moment, it is about all these things, which may ultimately undermine what it is able to contribute on any one.

Bell clearly knows the scale of the task. She has warned that “examining the ways in which we might strengthen social cohesion in Australia could well be the work of years, not months”.

For now, there is little in the interim report for Australians to start making sense of last year’s terror and tragedy in Bondi. https://theconversation.com/royal-commission-report-doesnt-help-us-start-making-sense-of-bondi-terror-attack-281859?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Latest%20from%20The%20Conversation%20for%20May%201%202026%20-%203756238464&utm_content=Latest%20from%20The%20Conversation%20for%20May%201%202026%20-%203756238464+CID_8e5ae0e85bb178c16e80a5a039f5de96&utm_source=campaign_monitor&utm_term=Royal%20commission%20report%20doesnt%20help%20us%20start%20making%20sense%20of%20Bondi%20terror%20attack

May 5, 2026 Posted by | politics | Leave a comment