LL:DDV: Human Rights Justice for Asylum Seekers symposium
Human Rights Justice for Asylum Seekers symposium - Monday 11 September 2000 @ 7:00pm Please find attached information in relation to the "Human Rights and Justice for Asylum Seekers" symposium, scheduled for Monday 11th September 2000 (Monday week). Keynote Speaker:Justice Marcus Einfeld Other Speakers: Margaret Piper, Refugee Council of Australia George Lekakis, ECCV Time: 7:00pm Date: Monday 11th September 2000 Venue: Greek Orthodox Community Centre Level 1 168 Lonsdale Street (corner Russell Street) Melbourne Cost: By donation RSVP: ECCV on (03) 9427 1300 Regards Hakan Akyol Executive Officer ECCV LL.VI -- Leftlink - Australia's Broad Left Mailing List mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archived at http://www.cat.org.au/lists/leftlink/ Sponsored by Melbourne's New International Bookshop Subscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=subscribe%20leftlink Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=unsubscribe%20leftlink
LL:ART: Mexico Ordered to Pay US Company 17 Million Dollars
Inter Press Service http://www.oneworld.org/ips2/aug00/22_32_076.html TRADE-ENVIRONMENT: Mexico Ordered to Pay US Company 17 Million Dollars By Danielle Knight WASHINGTON, Aug 31 (IPS) - An international trade tribunal based here has ruled that Mexico violated the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and ordered the government to pay 16.7 million dollars to a US company. The tribunal found that Mexico violated NAFTA's Chapter 11 investor provisions by not allowing California-based Metalclad Corporation from opening a hazardous waste treatment and disposal site in San Luis Potosi, a state in central Mexico. Local government opposition to the project, says the tribunal, amounted to expropriation of the company's profits. The tribunal's decision is increasing concern that trade accords and institutions like the World Trade Organisation (WTO) can be used to trump local and national laws. ''It's a nightmare,'' said Dan Seligman, director of the Sierra Club's sustainable trade campaign. Seligman, who helped organise the protests last year in Seattle against the WTO, said the tribunal's decision is a ''wake-up call'' to anyone who cares about environmental protection. While the provisions in Chapter 11 were designed to ensure a corporation's investment would not be expropriated, they have become a strategic offensive weapon against environmental, public safety and health laws, he said. ''What we've seen in this case is that a corporation can sue governments successfully under NAFTA rules,'' said Seligman. In the early 1990s Metalclad received approval from the Mexican federal government to build a disposal plant capable of handling up to 360,000 tons of hazardous waste a year. The facility was ready to begin operation in 1995 but public protests against the plant prompted local authorities to begin investigating the potential environmental impacts of the treatment site. Local residents said they were never consulted about the facility by either the federal or state governments or Metalclad, and vehemently opposed locating a toxic waste dump in their backyard. When an environmental impact assessment revealed that the site lies atop an ecologically sensitive underground alluvial stream, the Governor refused to allow Metalclad to reopen the facility. Eventually, the Governor declared the site part of a 600,000 acre ecological zone, despite federal support for the project. Metalclad claimed that this action effectively expropriated its future expected profits and sought 90 million dollars in damages. Local environmental activists note that this figure is larger than the combined annual income of every family in the county where Metalclad's facility is located. The company filed its NAFTA claim in January 1997. Hearings were held last year and since then nothing was heard until the announcement Wednesday. The three-judge NAFTA tribunal, under the International Centre for Investment Dispute Settlement, an arm of the World Bank, gave the Mexican government 45 days to begin making the 16.7 million dollar payment to Metalclad. If it does not pay by that time, six percent interest, compounded monthly, will be added to the award. Grant S. Kesler, president and chief executive of Metalclad, said the 16.7 million dollars was a token amount of money and did not reflect the value of the project. ''The biggest losers of all are the people of Mexico who continue to have to live in a country that produces 10 million tons of hazardous waste a year and had only one facility in the whole country to handle it,'' he told reporters. The Metalclad case is just one of several cross-border disputes between companies and the three NAFTA countries. So far, at least seven cases challenging domestic environmental policies have been filed by corporations under the Chapter 11 clause in the three NAFTA countries. In one instance, the Canadian-based company Methanex Corporation filed against the United States, claiming the state of California's decision to phase out the use of its gasoline additive methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) cost the company 970 million dollars. California's governor, Grey Davis, ordered the use of MTBE halted by the end of 2002 after studies revealed unusually high - and potentially harmful - levels of MTBE in California's drinking water supply. Methanex's claim is still pending. In another case, the US-based Ethyl Corporation attacked a Canadian ban on the inter-provincial sale and import of a gasoline additive it produces known as MMT. Ethyl originally claimed 250 million dollars in damages for expropriation, or seizure of its potential profits. In July 1998, Canada withdrew the ban and paid the company 13 million in damages. ''Anytime any investment is infringed upon by regulation, anytime any worker safety protection puts any burden on a company, these companies may use this Chapter 11 system to directly sue sovereign governments -
LL:DDV: Crisis and Leadership
Freedom Socialist Party meeting Crisis and leadership lessons for today from the explosive '60s Wednesday 6 September, 7 pm Come to the kick-off of the Australian campaign to promote the new Red Letter Press book, Crisis and Leadership. Written in 1965 by veteran socialists, Clara Fraser and Richard Fraser, the work is an amazingly fresh discussion of problems that still bedevil freedom fighters today: racism, sexism, and lack of democracy, in society broadly and in the movements; how each liberation struggle fits in with the others; and what can be done to make a lasting difference. Solidarity Salon, 1 Appleby Cres, West Brunswick 3055. Dinner is served at 6.30 pm for a $6 donation. For more information phone: 03-9386-5065 To order Crisis and Leadership send a cheque payable to FSP for $22.45 ($19.95 + $2.50 postage) to PO Box 266 West Brunswick Vic 3055. Check us out www.socialism.com LL.VI -- Leftlink - Australia's Broad Left Mailing List mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archived at http://www.cat.org.au/lists/leftlink/ Sponsored by Melbourne's New International Bookshop Subscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=subscribe%20leftlink Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=unsubscribe%20leftlink
LL:PR: Dole Bludger
PRESS RELEASE PRESS RELEASE PRESS RELEASE PRESS RELEASE PRESS RELEASE The Artful Dole-Bludger, written, edited, laid out and hopefully not buried by Caroline Ambrus and Robert Verdon, has just been published by Irrepressible Press, PO Box 821 Woden Canberra ACT 2606 (http://www.irrepressible.com.au). Price $17 and $10 concession. See also http://www.alphalink.com.au/~agp/adb.htm. The Artful Dole-Bludger is an exposé of the idiocy of contemporary treatment of the unempoyed by that most-complained about of all government agencies, Centrelink (an institution which should perhaps be replaced by a computer in the interests of compassion). It is the story of Queanbeyan, NSW, 'character' Arthur/Martha, a sad case of multiple personality and artistic leanings. Arthur/Martha is are a very macho man and an ultrafeminine woman sharing the same androgynous and increasingly decrepit body. The Artful Dole Bludger tells the story of how, despite their incessant squabbling over Arthur's chronic alcoholism and anarchistic tendencies, they beat the system for the sake of their art. This is a breathtakingly funny and irreverent book. Caroline Ambrus is the author of The Ladies Picture Show (Hale Iremonger, 1984), The Illustrated Dole Diary (Irrepressible, 1998), and many other books. Robert Verdon is the author of The Well-Scrubbed Desert (Polonius, 1994), Her Brilliant Career (AGP, 1998) and My Cat Eats Spaghetti (Ginninderra Press, 1999). -- Leftlink - Australia's Broad Left Mailing List mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archived at http://www.cat.org.au/lists/leftlink/ Sponsored by Melbourne's New International Bookshop Subscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=subscribe%20leftlink Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=unsubscribe%20leftlink
LL:URL: Australian media lies
Mary O'Brien wrote: In their attempts to defame the s11 protests, the Australian TV news bulletins have been showing footage from a police riot outside the World Trade Organisation meeting in Seattle, USA, in November- December 1999. Australians (especially the media) should read a report on the Seattle police riot, published by the American Civil Liberties Union in the State of Washington (where Seattle is situated). The report, published July 2000, is entitled "Out of Control: Seattle's Flawed Response to Protests Against the World Trade Organization" The report is an indictment of the Seattle police. The report says: "Despite police and media descriptions to the contrary, the protests during the WTO conference did not constitute a riot. They were noisy and disruptive, yet demonstrators were overwhelming peaceful. Not so the police." The report goes on to describe the police riot in detail. Here is where to find the report: http://www.aclu-wa.org/ISSUES/police/WTO-Report.html -- Leftlink - Australia's Broad Left Mailing List mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archived at http://www.cat.org.au/lists/leftlink/ Sponsored by Melbourne's New International Bookshop Subscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=subscribe%20leftlink Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Body=unsubscribe%20leftlink