Terrorist freed now, though plotted to bomb Lucas Heights nuclear reactor
Willie Brigitte walks out of prison | Herald Sun, 13 Dec 10, AUSTRALIA’S most notorious terrorist, Willie Brigitte, has been freed from jail on good behaviour, despite having served less than half his sentence for plotting to bomb the nation’s nuclear reactor.The Caribbean-born Muslim convert, who lived in Sydney, was sentenced in France in 2007 to a maximum nine years for joining an al-Qa’ida-backed Pakistani terror cell that had conspired to blow up the Lucas Heights nuclear plant, Australia’s electricity grid and/or a military base.But the Sunday Herald Sun has learnt the 42-year-old extremist walked free from a French jail on September 25 this year……Willie Brigitte walks out of prison | Herald Sun
Australia’s intelligence analysts warn against attack on Iran
Australia’s top intelligence agency has also privately undercut the hardline stance towards Tehran of the United States, Israeli and Australian governments, saying that Iran’s nuclear program is intended to deter attack and that it is a mistake to regard Iran as a ”rogue state”.
WikiLeaks | fears of potential nuclear war in the Middle East, Sydney Morning Herald, Philip Dorling December 13, 2010 AUSTRALIAN intelligence agencies fear that Israel might launch military strikes against Iran and that Tehran’s pursuit of nuclear capabilities could draw the US and Australia into a potential nuclear war in the Middle East. Continue reading
Protest against Germany as a ‘nuclear waste toilet’
Local bishop Hans-Juergen Abromeit warned that the responsibility for nuclear policy should not be given over to market forces. He said it was impossible to be proud whilst Germany’s association with nuclear waste continues.”[The waste] poses a massive threat to people, animals and the environment for hundreds of thousands of years,” Abromeit said.
Anti-nuclear protesters call Germany ‘nuclear toilet’ Deutsche Welle by Joanna Impey 11.12.2010 Demonstrators have gathered in the north-eastern German town of Greifswald to protest against the government’s nuclear policy ahead of another transport of nuclear waste from German and French research facilities. Continue reading






