Archive for March, 2021

$6 million announced to keep athletes on track – Premier of South Australia

The redevelopment of the SA Athletics Stadium will create 25 jobs and includes synthetic track replacement, security and access control system upgrades, universal design internal toilet upgrades, new external change room/toilet facilities and carpark upgrades.

This will add to the State Governments investment of $2.3 million which saw LED tower lights installed at the stadium last year.

Minister for Recreation, Sport and Racing, Corey Wingard, said it was crucial one of the states most important pieces of sporting infrastructure be updated in order to host of variety of events and athletes.

The Marshall Governments State Sport & Recreation Infrastructure Plan 2020-40 identified the SA Athletics Stadium as one of the state facilities which required significant investment for renewal and upgrade works, Minister Wingard said.

More than 250,000 people utilise the SA Athletics Stadium every year for high-performance training, athletics events, soccer games and hundreds of school carnivals and sports days.

Upgrading the stadium will create a positive experience for all participants at the venue and set them up for success whether it be encouraging junior athletes to continue being physically active or giving elite athletes a competitive edge.

Ensuring everyone in our state has access to high quality sporting infrastructure is one of the outcomes we identified in our Game On initiative to get South Australians moving.

Athletics SA President Jane Russo said it was an exciting time for athletics in South Australia, with funding being announced on the back of another major athletics infrastructure project being completed.

This funding will bring the SA Athletics Stadium up to a modern standard and make South Australia more competitive on the national stage, Ms Russo said.

With the brand new Bridgestone Athletics Centre also set to open shortly, athletics has never been in a better position in South Australia to support continued growth in the sport and be accessible to all.

This would not have been possible without the support of the State Government.

The SA Athletics Stadium redevelopment forms part of a vision to revitalise the Mile End Sports Precinct where construction on the Netball SA Stadium stage 1 project is nearing completion.

Since March 2018, the Marshall Government has invested almost $198 million in South Australian sport and recreation with an additional $160 million to be spent under the State Sport and Recreation Infrastructure Plan package.

Construction works on the SA Athletics Stadium are expected to commence in 2021, with an estimated completion date of the track by February 2022.

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$6 million announced to keep athletes on track - Premier of South Australia

Improved reservoir access just in time for Easter – Premier of South Australia

Myponga Reservoir on the Fleurieu Peninsula will allow on-water access for the first time including fishing and kayaking from March 28, adding to the current land-based recreational activities available such as walking and cycling.

Warren Reservoir near the Barossa Valley, which is already available for on-water access, will have revitalised facilities including an expanded carpark, new toilets, picnic area and wheelchair access ramp linked to the kayak launch area.

Minister for Environment and Water David Speirs said the two reservoirs are part of the Marshall Liberal Governments Opening up our Reservoirs policy which aims to create new open, green space for people to explore, drive increased tourism and create jobs.

Our reservoirs are a fantastic opportunity to improve recreational options across South Australia and to encourage people to get out and explore the great outdoors, Minister Speirs said.

To have improved access to both Myponga and Warren reservoirs just in time for Easter will be a timely boost for the Fleurieu Peninsula and Barossa Valley communities.

For far too long our reservoirs have been locked away and the Marshall Liberal Government is opening the gates to create new open, green space for people to explore.

More than 150,000 people have visited our reservoirs since we started opening them for recreational access and to be able to offer on-water access at Myponga will attract a whole new range of visitors to the region.

The increase in visitor numbers has been a big boost to our regional economies and businesses in Myponga and the Barossa Valley have reported a significant upturn in activity.

To have South Australians be able to go out on a kayak or drop a line for fishing at reservoirs across our state is an opportunity which will have significant environmental, social and economic benefits for generations to come.

The Marshall Liberal Government is investing a record $130 million across South Australias parks to boost nature-based tourism, create local jobs and improve conservation.

Protecting the health and quality of our drinking water supplies remains the priority and this has been possible thanks to improved water treatment plants, detailed water quality risk assessments, as well as increased site security and water quality control measures.

Signage at reservoir reserves clearly explain the dos and donts and its important all visitors to these places observe these simple rules while having a fun day.

More information about recreational access at South Australias reservoir reserves including conditions of entry can be found at reservoirs.sa.gov.au.

Myponga Reservoir Reserve is open for land-based recreational activities and shoreline fishing is also available with a permit. On-water access for kayaking available from 28 March 2021.

Bundaleer and South Para reservoir reserves are open for fishing, kayaking, walking, and cycling.

Hope Valley Reservoir Reserve is open for land-based activities including walking, running, cycling, and picnicking.

Happy Valley Reservoir Reserve will offer kayaking, fishing, walking, and cycling opportunities by the end of this year.

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Improved reservoir access just in time for Easter - Premier of South Australia

Blaming others for our own failures – National Herald

But viewing protests in the country receiving support from outside as synchronised acts is not necessarily or always an act of wisdom. With globalisation of the economy and extreme extraction of profit and natural resources, states are increasingly seen as siding with Capital and with powerful capitalists. It is easy to see why popular and individual voices are raised against such bias and inequality.

It is when the state fails to be responsive to protests and people that protests draw international attention and support. Support for Indian farmers have come from not just farmers in the US, Canada and Australia but also from the British Parliament and one of the most progressive Hollywood actresses, Susan Sarandon.

Sarandon, it is worth pointing out, has been the face of demands for raising daily minimum wages for American women. But she also criticised Hillary Clinton, with whom she had a close rapport, for waging war across the globe. If her support to Indian farmers is labelled as her opposition to the Indian Government or the ruling party, the media advisors to the government need to be changed.

Soros and his Open Society came up in eastern and central Europe after totalitarian communist governments collapsed in 1989. Soros and his Foundation supported the minorities and the persecuted, Jewish, Roma and others. His cause was seen as aligned with the larger American goal of freedom and his investment in such projects linked to globalisation of capital.

The Central European University which he set up has done enormous work in creating a new rung of an Eastern European, English- speaking elite committed to some sort of universal academic ethos. It was a praiseworthy exercise.

One may well have reservations about ulterior financial motives, i.e., fostering globalisation, but his critique of human rights violations in India by themselves do not call for a vilification campaign based on what he allegedly encouraged in central and eastern Europe and where of late he has been vilified.

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Blaming others for our own failures - National Herald

Not Nehru, but Government on trial – National Herald

There are very few persons in India, I suppose, whether they are Indians or Englishmen, who have for years past so consistently raised their voices against fascism and Nazism as I have done. My whole nature rebelled against them and, on many an occasion, I vehemently criticised the pro-fascist and appeasement policy of the British Government.

That is why we must dissociate ourselves from this war and advise our people to do likewise and not help in any way with money or menI stand before you, Sir, as an individual being tried for certain offences against the state. You are a symbol of that state. But I am also something more than an individual. I too am a symbol at the present moment, a symbol of Indian nationalism, resolved to break away from the British Empire and achieve the independence of India.

It is not me that you are seeking to judge and condemn, but rather the hundreds of millions of the people of India, and that is a large task even for a proud Empire. Perhaps it may be that though I am standing before you on my trial, it is the British Empire itself that is on trial before the bar of the world.

There are more powerful forces at work in the world today than courts of law; there are elemental urges for freedom and food and security which are moving vast masses of people, and history is being moulded by them. The future recorder of this history might well say that, in the hour of supreme trial, the Government of Britain and the people of Britain failed because they were drunk with the wine of imperialism and could not adapt themselves to a changing world. He may muse over fate, of empires which have always fallen because of this weakness, and call it destiny

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Not Nehru, but Government on trial - National Herald

How Abu Ghraib became a byword for the disastrous occupation of Iraq – Arab News

MISSOURI, USA: On Aug. 2, 1990, the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein ordered his army to invade and capture Kuwait. This ill-fated decision forever changed Iraq and the lives of all Iraqis and the first coalition war against Iraqi began on Jan. 16, 1991.

Some 30 years later, we are still assessing the consequences of the invasion of Kuwait. As part of its special coverage of the Gulf War, Arab News has done a deep dive into the topic to produce a multimedia feature titled Desert Storm: 30 years on.

Iraq between 1991 and 2003 suffered tremendously under international sanctions. Although the Oil for food UN program was designed to make sure no Iraqis went hungry under the sanctions, Saddams regime prevented food and medicine from reaching dissident populations still under his control (particularly Shiites).

As a result, some 500,000 Iraqi children are estimated to have died preventable deaths during this period. The brutal dictatorship that terrorized all Iraqis finally fell in the 2003 installment of the Gulf War. For a brief moment it seemed life would get better for the citizens of a country with one of the worlds largest proven oil reserves.

The successful coalition military campaign quickly degenerated, however, into a disastrous occupation. One event in particular came to symbolize everything the Americans did wrong in their occupation of Iraq: the scandal surrounding American treatment of Iraqi prisoners in the infamous Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad.

First came the very fact that the Americans chose the Abu Ghraib prison to house close to 4,000 prisoners (mostly Sunni Arabs suspected of participating in the post-2003 insurgency against the coalition occupation regime). Abu Ghraib had been infamous during Saddams reign, akin to Irans Evin prison in Tehran. Long before 2003, getting sent to Abu Ghraib stood out as one of the worst fates someone could face in Iraq.

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Instead of assuaging already suspicious Iraqis and reassuring them that post-Saddam Iraq would be different, the Americans simply took over Abu Ghraib and began using it much as Saddam had. Coalition forces likewise installed themselves in Saddams palaces (including the Green Zone in Baghdad), turning them into their new administrative headquarters for the occupation.

For many Iraqis, the message seemed clear: The Americans were the new Saddam, except this time Sunnis would take the place of Shiites and Kurds as Iraqs oppressed groups. Just in case anyone remained unsure about Iraqs new dictators, the Abu Ghraib scandal broke in April of 2004.

It began with the death of an Iraqi detainee being interrogated at the prison. Soon after, a US soldier discovered a CD-ROM disc in the prison with photos of prisoner abuse. He reported this to his superiors, who began an investigation (as is standard operating procedure for such reports).

The news program 60 Minutes soon obtained the graphic photos of detainees being tortured by their American guards and broadcast a story on the matter.

The photos of the abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib shocked the world. CNN summarized the types of abuse as follows:

Although most people think of Iraq as a very hot country, much of this torture occurred in December 2003 when temperatures in an unheated prison get quite cold and damp. Keeping the prisoners naked under such conditions, in addition to various forms of humiliation, stress positions, sleep deprivation, cold-water, high-pressure hoses, physical abuse and psychological abuse, certainly amounted to torture.

By early May of 2004, George W. Bush, then US president, appeared before news cameras around the world disavowing the abuse of prisoners and his regret for the humiliation suffered. The damage had already been done, however, as the evidence of torture and humiliation of Iraqis swelled the ranks of militant groups and fueled the insurgency in the country.

If the torture of prisoners in Abu Ghraib was intended to save coalition lives by forcing prisoners to divulge information about the Iraqi insurgents, it had very much the opposite effect. Responsibility for the whole sorry episode never ended up reaching very high up the American chain of command.

Although Donald Rumsfeld, who was secretary of defense at the time, testified before the US Congress and Senate, neither he nor President Bush or Vice-President Cheney were ever really blamed.

The narrative that emerged instead was one of a few bad apples on the night guard shift at Abu Ghraib. Low-level soldiers and civilian contractors received demotions, reprimands and prison sentences of a few months. The highest official sanctioned for the abuse was Janis Karpinski, the brigadier general in charge of several prisons in Iraq. She was rotated out of Iraq and demoted to colonel.

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For a country that prides itself on its human-rights standards and frequently chides foreign leaders from a moral high ground, this looked like a hypocritical outcome. Many thought it unlikely that higher level officers and government officials did not know what was going on in Abu Ghraib prison.

At the very least, President Bush, Vice-President Cheney and Defense Secretary Rumsfeld created the kind of standard operating procedures and climate that allowed Abu Ghraib to occur. They insisted on calling captured militants enemy combatants rather than prisoners of war so that they could send them to Guantanamo Bay without formal charges or Geneva Convention protections.

On other occasions they sent the captured fighters on secret flights to Egypt or secret CIA detention centers in Eastern Europe so they could be tortured there, far from the light of the world. They engaged in various forms of sophistry to classify things like water boarding enhanced interrogation rather than torture.

In the end, all of this hurt rather than helped the American cause. Such abuses gave the insurgents in Iraq the oxygen they needed to survive several more years than they should have. Some of the insurgents even eventually morphed into the self-proclaimed Islamic State or Daesh.

To be certain, some of the outcomes from Saddams 1990 blunder turned out for the better. Iraqi Kurds in particular found an opportunity to emerge from the ashes of Saddams genocidal policies against them in the 1980s.

The unacceptable risk that Saddams nuclear weapons program would have posed to the world a program which was just a few years short of completion in 1990 receded. However, as with almost all watershed moments in a countrys historical trajectory, the positive changes found themselves weighed down by the bad.

David Romano is Thomas G. Strong Professor of Middle East Politics at Missouri State University

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How Abu Ghraib became a byword for the disastrous occupation of Iraq - Arab News