2000_03_march_fact file india

Major airlines fly from Australia to New Delhi daily.

Best times to travel. Avoid June to September throughout out India. It is either unbearably hot or unbearably wet, or both. April-May is getting hot and humid, but the rains usually do not hit till June. Inland north gets cold at night (7 degree C) mid-November to mid-January.

Unless you take great joy in haggling with red tape, enjoy the frustration of delayed ground transport and like the romance of pot luck accommodation with no chance for redress, book in Australia. I travelled with India Nepal Travel Centre 02 92338600 himalaya@loom.net.au without a glitch.

Contact your own doctor or the Travel Doctor 62577156. Care without paranoia is essential for a good trip. Vaccination is not a requirement going into or coming out of India, but vaccination for the major diseases is highly recommended.

You must stay in Agra overnight to get a decent view of the Taj – dawn and/or dusk.
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2000_03_march_correction

A report on February 16 “”Most hacking being done from the inside” reported on a lecture given by the then manager of Australian Information Security Evaluation Program, Anne Robins, saying that Citibank had been defrauded of millions of dollars last year, lowering confidence in the bank. Such an event never in fact occurred. Ms Robins was merely giving a hypothetical example to illustrate a point in her address.

2000_03_march_columnour page

One of the joys of India is the way religious festivals are shared by people of all religions. This is particularly true of the Hindu festival of Holi.

Holi marks the end of winter. Typically, people celebrate with their families in the morning and around lunchtime hit the streets. They throw coloured water and powder (gulal) at each other. The colours mark rebirth. On the night before, bonfires are lit to mark a piece of Hindu mythology. An ancient Hindu king ordered his subjects to worship only him. But his little son refused, preferring to secretly worship the Hindu gods. The king found out and ordered his son to be killed. The king’s sister, Holika, said she had a shawl that protected her from fire, so she would take the boy into the flames and he would be consumed but she would be protected. But as stepped into the fire, the shawl wrapped around the boy and the sister was burnt.

The bonfires at the Holi festival mark the burning of Holika, in much the same way as we have Guy Fawkes day.
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2000_03_march_cir for forum

ACT Chief Minister Gary Humphries has put citizens’ initiated referendums back on the agenda. It had been very much on the agenda five years ago – – before Pauline Hanson rose to prominence. It was perhaps the beginning of the voter backlash against what was seen as the arrogance of government. Citizens’ recall and it citizens’ veto were also part of that agenda.

CIR is seen as a means of putting power in the hands of the people in the face of what is seen as uncaring or aloof government. Five years ago and the proposal was almost legislated in the ACT, only just missing out on the numbers.

Once again, it seems that CIR is being used to appeal to voters who feel that government is failing them. But in returning to this proposal, Mr Humphries seems to have misinterpreted the nature of voter disillusionment.

There is nothing much wrong with citizens’ initiated referendums. The details of the proposal worked out by the Liberal Party a couple of years ago seemed eminently workable. The argument against it – – that zealots would be able to get all sorts of lunatic schemes up – – does not wash. After all, 50 per cent of the voters have to approve a proposal before it becomes law. Surely, 50 per cent of the voters of the ACT are not zealots and lunatics.
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2000_03_march_april fool

Australians and New Zealanders will be driving on the right-hand side of the road within three years, according it to an agreement made by the Council of Ministers for Transport.

The change is to be made as part of the proposed US-Australia free trade agreement.

The council is made up of federal, state and in New Zealand Ministers for Transport. The Federal Government sought to have a public announcement delayed until after the federal election later this year. However, a copy of the agreement has been obtained by the The Canberra Times.

It is understood that US officials raised the question in talks on the free-trade agreement with the Australian officials and the Australian officials took the question on board. The US officials argued that there were questions of free trade involved.

The US position was that only if Australia and New Zealand drove on the right would there be complete freedom of trade in the automotive industry and industries associated with road construction.
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2000_03_march_alan bond for forum

The vox pop on Alan Bond has two sides. Those infuriated say his four years in jail is pitifully small compared to the amount of the fraud and the time served by others for petty theft under mandatory sentencing. They are infuriated by the likelihood he has spirited money away overseas which no-one can touch. And they are incensed that his sentence was reduced on a legal technicality.

On the other side, Bondy won the America’s Cup. He did not have any real victims. And he stood up and pleaded guilty. He did not skulk off like Christopher Skase.

But underlying the vox pop is a more alarming malaise: the failure of our legal system to deal with corporate fraud. Very few, if any, of the swashbucklers of the 1980s who came undone in the wake of the 1987 sharemarket crash got their just deserts. Plead not guilty or, if absolutely necessary, guilty in a heavily discounted plea bargain; hire some expensive lawyers; take up every technical point of law and evidence you can find and get off scot-free.
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2000_02_february_leader08feb israel

The Israeli people want peace. They just don’t seem to know who to get it. The trouble is they want peace on their terms. Every opinion poll suggests a yearning for peace and a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians. But every time an Israeli leader goes into negotiation, usually in the US, he has to worry about voter backlash. Inevitably, obvious and reasonable concessions to the Palestinians are not made. The Palestinians despair. Their leaders, too, worry about their political support. Violence erupts. Israelis and Palestinians on the street become more hard-line and peace, so close, becomes even further away.

It seems that every time Israelis elect a new leader the hawk of the election campaign becomes more dovish at the negotiating table and the dove of the election campaign becomes more hawkish as he realizes the prospect of electoral back-lash at re-election time. But either way, hawk or dove, no Israeli leader has been able to secure a complete peace agreement that sticks. Ultimately, the Israeli people are too fearful of the concessions it would take: acceptance of a Palestinian state; of a shared Jerusalem; of access to holy sites for all religions; and some concession about returnees.

The election of Ariel Sharon yesterday (Australian time) is unlikely to be a mould-breaker.
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2000_02_february_vail notes

Upmarket restaurant 11400 ft

Night sky. Groomed green light.

Beaver ck 200yo over built pretends to be Europe. Fairy lights one every small tree. 5-storey condos. Very rich (see RE ads) come here by skiiing is the great equaliser. Skiiinig ability has to be learnt, or partly comes naturally. It cannot be bought.

Odd scultures of 100 years ago or more. Lots of old and pseudo-old (as distinct from antique) furniture. Every painting seems to be an old master with dark brown wioth ornate gold frame. Trying to add age to a resort which is glaringly new and should be pround of it.

2000_02_february_un mandatory sentencing

Prime Minister John Howard has said the United Nations should butt out of the debate in Australia over mandatory sentencing. In doing so he, like heads of government in Australia of all persuasions, gets into a tangle of jurisdiction, principle and political expediency.

Mr Howard said that it was up to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan whether he wanted to raise the question of mandatory sentencing. He told ABC Radio, “”Australia decides what happens in this country through the laws and the parliaments of Australia. I mean in the end we are not told what to do by anybody. We make our own moral judgments. . . . The suggestion that in some way we are accountable to the rest of the world for something like this given the human rights record of this country. . . . Australia’s human rights reputation compared with the rest of the world is quite magnificent. We’ve had our blemishes and we’ve made our errors and I’m not saying we’re perfect. But I’m not going to cop this country’s human rights name being tarnished in the context of a domestic political argument.”
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2000_02_february_right to silence

In Australian law, the accused has the right to remain silent. And in most Australian jurisdictions, judges are not allowed to tell juries that they can draw inferences from silence. In the remaining jurisdictions, judges are only permitted very limited comment on the accused’s silence. Earlier this month, the High Court quashed the conviction of a man because it said the trial judge (in NSW) had over-stepped the mark.

The theory is that the right to silence and the right not to have juries draw inferences from silence are important for liberty and justice. You have to wonder. Outside the court system, people in everyday life learn about things precisely because they ask questions of people and draw inferences if they do not provide answers. It is a typical method of finding the truth by parents with children; teachers with pupils and employers with employees. But when it comes to the criminal law we get very precious.
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