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The ‘Art’ of Distraction
by barra Friday, May 30 2008, 10:33pm
international / social/political / commentary

There is something not quite right about the current hysteria surrounding the work of internationally acclaimed Australian artist, Bill Henson. The speed at which police became involved in Henson’s latest exhibition and the dense, but leading comments made by high ranking politicians regarding some of the works may indicate that ‘things are not what they appear to be!’

Bill Henson in his studio
Bill Henson in his studio

Two senior conservative politicians, Brendan Nelson and Tony Abbott have VERY CLUMSILY attempted to inject Henson’s artistic images into a known pornographic context – the Internet and digital computing! It is hoped that guilt could be established by association, notwithstanding the images have been deliberately taken out of context to facilitate a desired interpretation, but to what end -- that is the question?

A law degree is not required to realise the police have virtually no case against Henson; could it possibly be that authorities wish to test laws relating to the possession of questionable but legally arguable images on personal computers? Pursuing wider more pervasive powers is an obsession of regulatory authorities; police constantly seek to broaden the scope of what defines criminality; wider definitions offer new opportunities for charging citizens and regulating society!

It appears that the introduction of a raft of ‘new sweeping terrorist laws’ by the previous conservative government did not provide police with the powers they required. The possession of legally RE-DEFINED nude imagery would snare a wider range of citizens than attempting to lay charges for ‘sedition’ – a laughable failed strategy of the former Attorney General, Philip Ruddock.

The political aspects of this case are intriguing. It is known that conservatives have little appreciation for the arts; the current conservative Prime Minister views Henson’s Art as “revolting,” which is more an indication of his limited appreciation or perverted mind than anything else! The greater impact for Australian society, however, is the PM’s abandonment of the traditional SUPPORT BASE his party once offered the Arts and Artistic community. Australian Artists have realised they are NOW on their own and have united in support of the besieged, Bill Henson.

The whole sordid affair has become an international embarrassment for Australia. It seems we have taken yet another retrograde step by voting Kevin Rudd into office. The retrogressive, parochial stamp Rudd wishes to place on government/Australian society is now plain to see.

The PM is currently under immense pressure for his many failures to deliver on promises made to the public. The current furore over Henson’s work, which the PM is complicit in creating serves two purposes. Storm-trooping police invading social spaces once free of brutish interference sends threatening signals to amenable minds but the other much sought after effect is DISTRACTION! The PM couldn’t be happier over the furore the Henson affair has created. It distracts the public’s attention away from his MANY POLITICAL FAILURES, not the least being his failure to ease the burdens on average Australian citizens.

Rudd has failed in so many areas it is appalling. After the NSW Coroner determined the identity of the murderers of the ‘Balibo five,’ Rudd failed to demand the surrender of the Indonesian killers to Australian authorities – a truly despicable, cowardly, response.

Rudd has failed to deal adequately with the clearly incompetent AFP chief, ‘drunken dropkick,’ Mick Keelty, for attempting to frame a dark-skinned Indian, Dr. Haneef, on terrorism charges – Keelty wasted $7.5 million of taxpayer’s money in his misguided attempt to assist former PM and war criminal, John Howard! Keelty needs to be stood down in lieu of a REAL inquiry, not the current toothless charade Rudd has arranged to preserve the status quo!

Rudd has also failed to honour his promise to bring the troops home from illegal wars in Iraq and Central Asia.

Rudd has failed to deal with the rapacious mining companies that plunder our nation and pilfer our precious water and other resources while the nation's essential services and infrastructures are left to deteriorate. The relatively tiny population of Australia has been largely excluded from receiving benefits from the current resources boom! The Australian people require equity and leadership not a corporate lackey in office!

Rudd has insulted the Chinese -- our most valued trading partner -- and kowtowed to the Americans, a nation in rapid decline. The foreign Minister, Stephen ‘kneepads’ Smith, who wasn’t able to locate Kosovo on a map, immediately recognised the secession of the province on orders from America – wipe your mouth, ‘kneepads!’

In fact Rudd and his mob of no-hopers are proving to be even more servile, incompetent AND SOCIALLY REPRESSIVE than Howard and his conservatives. What a tragedy the once supportive of the liberal Arts LABOR PARTY has become!

A final question to the hypocritical, conservative Christian, Mr Rudd; exactly what aspect of God’s body -- in whose image we are supposedly created -- do you find “revolting?”

Remove the puerile, incompetent, little coward from office!

COMMENTS

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Worth a thousand words...
by Jade Saturday, May 31 2008, 12:24am

Link to interesting video about Bill Henson's photographic work:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XaEi9ESRB8o

Mining Companies: Licensed to Plunder
by Aileen Kwa via reed - IPS Saturday, May 31 2008, 9:14pm

GENEVA, May 31 (IPS) - Metals and mineral mining have been notorious for the "resource curse" they have inflicted on the communities who live where they are mined. Today, as prices are high, the appetites of these mining companies are on the increase.

There are new investments in oil in Angola and Uganda, and in metals in Madagascar and Ghana. These come from both China and the traditional corporations in the "new scramble for Africa".

More and more, companies' interests are protected by investment and trade agreements, allowing companies the ability to sue states if government action or legislation is seen as impinging upon their profits.

"Even more than agriculture, for metals, it has always been big business," Thomas Lines, whose forthcoming book 'Making Poverty: A History' will be published in July, told IPS. "Mines are a big thing. You need a lot of capital behind you. So it tends to be done by big corporations.

"The mining industry is well known for its 'enclave' projects. The mining company is given the right to exploit the mine. It puts in the infrastructure, gets the stuff out, and negotiates with the government on the terms of payment. What all too easily happens is that the mining company makes a lot of money out of it and a very few in government get paid off. Locally, it provides some employment, but it is often quite vulnerable employment in pretty harsh conditions."

Lines shows in his forthcoming book that mining has been a significant creator of poverty. By the late 1990s, least developed countries (LDCs) specialising in mineral exports showed the highest levels of poverty -- up to 82 percent of their people were living on less than a dollar a day.

"There is also the issue of land being taken up, not just by the mine itself, but by the transport infrastructure, roads and railways," Lines said. "Now, a lot more mines are open cast or open pit. Rather than drilling down below, they just have the whole top of the hill removed. This is far more environmentally damaging.

"And there can be other environmental consequences such as pollution. It depends on the nature of the commodity. When gold is being removed from ore, they can use cyanide, and if they are not careful, it could get washed into the rivers, causing contamination."

Citing an example of the 'enclave' nature of the industry, Lines said "bauxite for aluminium has been the main export industry of Guinea. But there are few benefits for the people. It is an enclave industry. It takes place in a corner of the country. Bauxite is shipped out. The money comes in and doesn't get shared."

Clearly, a lot more government regulation is needed, yet the ability to regulate has been progressively stripped away from governments.

Salimah Valiani of the Canadian Labour Congress has been tracking Canadian mining activities in Canada and in the developing world. She shared her views with IPS.

"In the era of structural adjustment and the free market starting from the 1980s, governments were told that they had to open up mining to private interests. Social controls around mines were stripped away.

"In Papua New Guinea, a few cents from every dollar of nickel used to go to the community livelihood fund. Governments were advised to remove these things as a way to 'attract' investments."

New tools to protect corporate interests are constantly being evolved. These tools are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Nathalie Bernasconi, an attorney at the Washington-based Centre for International Environmental Law (CIEL) drew attention to the 2,500 bilateral investment treaties (BITS) that governments around the world have signed to protect the interests of companies.

"These treaties are based on principles such as non-discrimination (companies from any country must be treated similarly) and national treatment (foreign companies must be given the same treatment as local companies)," Bernasconi told IPS. "But there are also other rules, which can be very problematic, such as on expropriation. A domestic regulation that limits the profitability of an enterprise can sometimes be seen as amounting to expropriation, so that the government has to pay compensation."

She noted that it is not just the substantive rules that are tilted in the interest of the companies, but that agreements also give investors procedural rights: investment treaties often allow investors to sue host governments directly under international arbitration, but not vice-versa. There are now many such investor-State cases, a new development which Bernasconi said started to pick up with the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

In South Africa, she said, the government enacted two legislative acts in 2004 to stimulate economic growth and address a major obstacle to realising the country's full economic potential -- inequality. That is one of the legacies of decades of apartheid, and governments have pursued laws to include all South Africans in economic growth.

Two laws, the Black Economic Empowerment Act and the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act, are now being challenged by Italian investors before an international investment tribunal.

Italian investors control about 80 percent of South Africa's natural stone exports, she said. "Now the mining companies from Italy are attacking the South African Black Economic Empowerment Act, a legislation for affirmative action. The mining companies say it violates the investment treaty between South Africa and Italy. The investors want to be compensated because South Africa is trying to redress the problems from apartheid."

Bernasconi said that CIEL has also been involved with the San Mateo community in Peru. "We brought the Peruvian government to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR). You have a Canadian gold mining company that had polluted the ground water, air and land, and had not dealt with the waste related to gold mining. There were enormous health implications for the villages located near the mining project, especially for children. We worked with the local communities there and won that case. The Commission requested that Peru ensure that the Canadian company clean up and remove the toxic waste."

But the kinds of actions the government has to take to protect human rights could potentially be attacked under investment treaties, she said. "And then the government has a conflict between adhering to its human rights obligations to protect the population, and protecting the gold mining company and its profits. If there is a BIT, the company could actually challenge the government.

"Investors may not always win, but they can bring these cases, and a government has to put a lot of resources into defending the legislation. It could also have a chilling effect on a government's ability to put in place good legislation. The government can be told, 'If you adopt this legislation, we are going to sue you'."

Another tool used to protect corporation interests is "host government agreements" (agreements between a government and a company) that are usually not made public, Bernasconi said. A recent study by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the UN Special Representative to the Secretary General for Business and Human Rights (SRSG), John Ruggie, shed light on such agreements in various sectors.

"Many of these agreements contain so-called 'stablisation clauses'," Bernasconi said. "The laws of the state are 'frozen' or 'stabilised' so that if the government changes the law, the company won't be subjected to it, or will have to be compensated for any losses occurred. Parliament can adopt a new legislation and an investor is immune for 20 years! The worst stablisation clauses are in the extractive industries sector. There is one where the freezing clause is 100 years!"

"We need to come up with a production model which is sustainable, both socially and ecologically," says Valiani. "A lot of mineral development is not sustainable. Given all the social and environmental consequences, we need to question our reliance on these extractive resources."


© 2008 IPS-Inter Press Service


 
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