Tuesday, December 27, 2005

A statement that seemed to amuse a psychologist of my acquaintance - and employ: "I know I'm ridiculously rationalist and analytical, and that that makes me even more prone than most to self-delusion."
He: "You've got to write this stuff down!"

Monday, December 19, 2005



To: John Howard, Prime Minister of Australia

Given how stunningly out of touch you are with the people whom you seek to rule in so disdainful and highhanded a fashion – Howard got it wrong on racism, poll finds – would you please resign, immediately. Now that Costello is properly discredited, here’s your opportunity to pass on the baton to a Liberal with a heart, if there is such a thing on your benches. Clearly Vanstone and Ruddock sold theirs, years ago, so you’ll presumably need to look on the back benches.

Sincerely.

Saturday, December 17, 2005

This, apparently, is the house I will own the moment the moneylenders seal the deal for a pound of my flesh and 87.5% of my soul. Just NW of Green Lake.









Monday, December 12, 2005

To: John Howard, Prime Minister of Australia, & Kim Beasley, leader of the Opposition, blind men at the helm -

The ABC reports: "Opposition Leader Kim Beazley has said the Sydney clashes are 'simply criminal behaviour' and Mr Howard says he does not accept there is underlying racism in Australia."

How the country ended up with two jokers like you as its leaders baffles me. Which country are you looking at? Which country is all up in your face?

Astounded, and rather disgusted,

Sunday, December 11, 2005

To: John Howard, Prime Minister, Australia
Congratulations, here is the Australia that your callous leadership is producing, as The Age records: "Alcohol, the Australian flag and raw racism fuelled a violent rampage by thousands of young residents in Sydney yesterday, ... The mob wore varied uniforms. A few sported black swastika sweatshirts, but most the emblem of the Australian flag, the Eureka Stockade flag, or with hand-written graffiti on their bodies such as 'save nulla, f--- Allah'."
It's quite an achievement to have revived the bigotry that was synonymous with your party for decades before Australia benefitted from the introduction of democracy in the 1970s, only now to lose it again, over this last decade, to your goon mentality.

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Violence flares at Cronulla

...One of the messages had urged "Aussies" to take revenge against "Lebs and wogs". Another urged locals to rally at point on the beach today to take retaliation against "middle eastern" gangs...

Welcome to the Australia that Howard, his bigots, and their rule have ushered back in, after it was 25 years in abeyance.

Friday, December 09, 2005
















Saturday, December 03, 2005

Friday, December 02, 2005

To: Australian high commission officers Annette Morris and Ross Tysoe, Singapore

Thank you for everything you did in the case of Van Nguyen. Your dignified and compassionate completion of the gruesome task of identifying his body after his judicial murder, and returning him to his family, cannot have been easy, and I, as I'm sure so many Australians living in countries that retain this barbarous practice, am extremely grateful for the work you have done. I am sure this has been a wrenching time for you and your colleagues.

Again, with gratitude,
Lex Lasry QC, Empire Chambers, Canberra

Thank you for everything you did in the case of Van Nguyen. Your kindheartedness and determination endured even as the cause of justice suffered in this appalling case of judicial abuse. I can only hope, and imagine, that your work will have, and will, affect fairminded and humane citizens of Singapore, and other countries, including the United States, to reflect on the barbarism of governmental murder, and to voice their opposition to it. One can only hope that efforts like yours will in particular draw attention to the paradox that governments kill people whom they say cause grievous harm to innocent people, and in the process do grievous harm to innocent people of good conscience, such as Mrs Nguyen, and you and your coworkers on this case.
Death-row mates sing for Nguyen at the end
By Steve Butcher and Connie Levett, Singapore
The Age, Melbourne
December 3, 2005

"DO I have a chance?" he joked. As Nguyen Tuong Van stood in the doorway of his death row cell to face execution yesterday, just a short walk to the gallows, he turned to the Changi Prison guards who had grown to love him.

With just minutes to live, he posed the question using the prison slang traditionally used by inmates here as they leave for court to face trial — "Bu chance bu?" in Chinese dialect.

Nguyen's fellow death row inmates responded in song, joining together in a hymn as the seconds ticked towards 6am — and death.

Nguyen died a good and peaceful death, said Julian McMahon, one of his lawyers. Now Nguyen is finally coming home.

Three years after he told his mother he needed a holiday — which ended yesterday with his execution in Singapore for trafficking heroin — his body will arrive back in Australia tomorrow. He will come home in a coffin, on a flight with his mother, Nguyen Kim, and twin brother Khoa.

His mother yesterday prayed into the dawn at a convent chapel in Singapore as her son was hanged at 6am.

Before first light, at 5.15am, brother Khoa appeared on the median strip outside the prison, dressed in white. He slipped back inside a taxi as the media turned their attention to him.

Eventually he emerged, flanked by his brother's closest supporters, Kelly Ng and Bronwyn Lew, and three female former school friends. They were then admitted to the prison's reception centre to give them privacy as they awaited Nguyen's death.

Nguyen had spent a sleepless night on death row, comforted by Father Gregoire Van Giang, reading the Bible and reciting the 23rd Psalm.

"Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I shall fear no evil," the psalm says.

When the official execution party appeared at the cell door, which he had decorated with his drawings and photographs, Nguyen gathered himself. The group may have included the hangman, but it was not Darshan Singh, who was not officiating.

Nguyen walked with the priest to the gallows. Alongside him were prison officers who had guarded him for 20 months, some of whom had become close, according to lead barrister Lex Lasry, QC.

It was for the guards that Nguyen made his joke about his chances.

Mr McMahon revealed that during their last meeting on Thursday, Nguyen told him the joke about his chances would be one of the last things he would say to them.

"One of the endearing things about Van in the last year of his life, and especially in the last few weeks, was his capacity to be cheerful and witty," Mr McMahon said. "He thought it would be very funny if he said that to his guards just as he began his 45-second walk from his cell to the gallows."

Father Giang performed the last rites before Nguyen, hooded and handcuffed, was positioned on the trapdoor and dropped to his death at 6am.

The act was witnessed by a doctor, who pronounced him dead. Also present was a select group of prison officials, in all likelihood including the prison superintendent and a coroner.

Outside the prison walls was a small shrine of candles set on coloured paper with the familiar traced hands of the Reach Out campaign. Each paper had a message from a supporter who attended the midnight-to-dawn vigil in nearby Changi village. Every hour until 6am, two new candles appeared.

Khoa and his friends remained in the prison's reception centre until 7am before returning to the Marymount Convent to join his mother, Kim, Mr Lasry and his wife, Elizabeth, who has been comforting Mrs Nguyen all week.

Mrs Nguyen last saw her son alive on Thursday night, when she got to touch him one last time. The Singapore Government relented by allowing some physical contact — but did not allow a hug. As Mr McMahon explained: "There was a grille and they were able to hold each other's hands and Kim was able to touch Van on the face. She was talking to him and was able to touch his hair and face. She said it was a great comfort to her."

Yesterday, after the deed was done, it fell to Australian high commission officers Annette Morris and Ross Tysoe to identify and collect the body. They arrived at the prison at 10.20am in a Casket Fairprice Funerals van.

Half an hour later, in suburban Sin Ming, the van doors opened to reveal a body shrouded in white on an orange canvas stretcher.

Nguyen's body was quickly taken inside. At 2pm it was placed in the wooden coffin in a back room of the funeral parlour. Soon after a female embalmer was touching up his face and neck. A religious portrait rested on his chest. In his folded hands he clutched a cross and rosary.

The coffin was then taken to the Marymount Convent for a private family Mass.

His body will leave Singapore today.

On Wednesday, Father Peter Hansen will conduct a Requiem Mass, in English and Vietnamese, at Melbourne's St Patrick's Cathedral, to be attended by Nguyen's mother, family and friends.

From there, burial.

And may he rest in peace.

Photo: Kate Geraghty In remembrance: Nguyen Tuong Van's portrait sits atop his empty coffin at a Singapore funeral parlour after he was hanged yesterday for trafficking heroin.
To: Queensland Independent MP (Maryborough) Chris Foley

The ABC has you saying: "I am opposed to the death penalty and I feel desperately sorry for the family, in particular the mother of Van Nguyen," he said. "However I believe that it is an insult to war heroes of Australia to afford a convicted drug dealer the same one minute's silence."

Good lord, man. If you are so culturally ignorant as to consider Van Nguyen a drug dealer,, you have no place in public office.

Look around; learn something of the drug culture; and then presume to speak in public. Better yet, read a newspaper.

Pathetic!

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Nguyen hanged in Singapore
The execution in Singapore of Australian drug trafficker Van Nguyen has been confirmed.
- ABC Online

To: Lee Hsien Loong, Prime Minister of Singapore
What your government has done to Van Nguyen, after doing it to so many other people, is simply murder, and murder all the more grotesque for its cloak of government entitlement. You indulge in barbarity as if appointed by some god – an angry, depraved one. Anyone with even the slightest acquaintance with history knows, however, that tyranny never outlasts the human spirit, and one day your country will emerge from its dark ages of dictatorial rule and there will be no place for self-righteous, self-indulgent killers who seek to further their own interests and power by anathemizing their populations. In addition, please remember, every time you think of one of your children, or one of your parents, the agony that you have inflicted on the mother, brother, and friends of Van Nguyen. Remember it every time you wake, and let it multiply for every further killing in which, self-satisfied, your associates indulge.


To: Editor, ABC News Online
Surely your referring to Van Nguyen as "Australian drug trafficker" is gratuitous. A "drug trafficker" is someone who makes a practice of trafficking drugs, not someone who inadvisedly tries it once with some altruistic purpose in mind. In addition, even with the most constricted form of the "drug trafficker," your use of the term is factually incorrect. A drug trafficker is someone who successfully moves drugs from their origin to their destination, something which Mr Nguyen signally failed to do, thanks to the barbarism of his murderers.