Showing posts with label port-augusta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label port-augusta. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

'Anna's nightmare' in detention's living hell

Australia: IN his whitewashed report on the detention scandals, government employee Mick Palmer refers to Cornelia Rau's four months in Baxter detention centre as "Anna's journey".

But he didn't live it and would have no idea in hell what that woman went through and you can immediately sense the cover up in his report because this was no journey but a living nightmare.

Using the name she took at the time of her admission to the South Australian holding centre, Mr Palmer tells how her mental health deteriorated inside Baxter, yet systemic failures allowed her to remain on the periphery of psychiatric care even after the intervention of the state's director of mental health.

In other words even though she was being caused a mental illness like in all institutional detention and prison systems she got little or no help. But this wasn't a one off case this is every detention centre and prison in Australia.

Apparently, Anna arrived at Baxter, on the desert outskirts of Port Augusta, on October 6 without any documentation on her medical history. She was assessed and screened by a contract nurse but things soon got out of hand.

"She was unco-operative during the medical induction, by crying, being confused and upset," Mr Palmer says.

However, if any person was dragged into detention on false premise that is exactly how one would react and this clearly shows that she was illegally detained which would cause someone a mental condition.

Perhaps quite angry, alarmed and frustrated by being restrained Anna obviously rejected her illegal and degrading treatment at the Baxter gate.

An assessment by Adam Micallef, a psychologist employed by Global Solutions Ltd, the company with the detention centre contract, was ordered for the next day as a "precaution".

And whatever he said was only going to be a 'Global Solution' regardless of his 'psych' credentials these people have an obligation to the system first and any assessment by a psychologist working for the system would advise the departments policy. The idea is that his priority would have been to get the detainee to accept the situation, no doubt.

Medical papers were sent from Brisbane Women's Correctional Centre, including discharge papers from the Princess Alexandra Hospital. Micallef decided her problems appeared "behavioural", rather than stemming from mental illness.

"Anna's behaviour continued to be bizarre," Mr Palmer says.

In other words she outright rejected what was happening to her and this would cause her frustration and anger as it would any other person who was being illegally detained in custody.

Critically, Micallef wrote that Baxter was not equipped to handle cases such as Anna's, and he recommended that she be moved to an all-female compound such as the one in Villawood detention centre in Sydney. The option was never pursued.

Critically? Baxter was not equipped to lock up completely innocent Australian citizens and Micallef could have recommended that she be set free if he'd understood her problem, but his obligation to his employ, his signed ethics and efficacy agreement with Global Solutions would have clearly prevented him from understanding her.

She should not be in custody at all she was most likely telling him this and obviously he was merely describing her frustration and anger as a mental condition and not listening to her plea for mercy.

Anna had been a month in Baxter when she was seen by the centre's consulting psychiatrist, Andrew Frukacz. Despite two attempts, he was unable to make a definitive diagnosis. He recommended she be assessed in a mental health facility.

But like Micallef he too would have and obligation to Global Solutions end of story and usually that is what happens in custody anywhere in Australia. If a detained person does not accept the view of the psychologist then the authorities send a person to a psychiatrist in the hope that if a person is 'medicated' that may relieve the pressure and strain of not accepting being detained in conditions that are unimaginable.

Furthermore, Frukacz did not acknowledge that Ms Rau had a serious problem of being illegally detained either and there is no mention of her asking for her freedom by him?

Acting on Frukacz's advice, attempts were made to bring in South Australia's Rural Remote Mental Health Service to assess Anna.

"The RRMHS triage team seemed unsure of their relationship with Baxter and said they would need to clarify matters and then get back," Mr Palmer says. "They did not do so."

On November 12, Micallef called a psychiatrist working at Glenside -- South Australia's only mental health facility -- to discuss Anna's "issues" with Baxter staff.

The psychiatrist advised that Anna's problems sounded behavioural but later told Mr Palmer no sense of urgency was conveyed to him at the time.

Behavioural "Not accepting one's situation" quote un-quote!

The next day the RRMHS took Anna off their books as to be placed at its allocated beds in Glenside. But no-one at Baxter was told.

Micallef sent Anna's psychiatric assessments to Glenside but there was not enough detail in the file to admit her to its waiting list.

On New Years's Eve last year, NSW psychiatrist Louise Newman, Adelaide refugee lawyer Claire O'Conner and a local doctor visited 12 detainees at Baxter.

After examining several of the detainees, they decided to commit two under the state's mental health act.

By January 4, Baxter staff urged Glenside to accept and assess Anna.

Three days later a rural doctor contracted to Baxter diagnosed possible "schizoid or schizotypal personality features and possibly schizophrenia", but further discussion with a Glenside psychiatrist resulted in no action.

On January 24, South Australia's then director of mental health services, Jonathon Phillips, offered to have Anna assessed at Glenside. Department of Immigration officials in Canberra sought RRMHS assistance to arrange this, but its director suggested she be examined at Baxter.

"It was clear the efforts made by Glenside, RRMHS and Baxter were unco-ordinated and no one took overall responsibility for the arrangements to admit Anna to in-patient care," Mr Palmer says.

Eight days later, after media reports of a mentally ill German woman in Baxter, it was finally decided that Anna be assessed under the Mental Health Act.

That same day, it was revealed she was in fact Cornelia Rau.

Ed: The poster spent 7 years in custody and has an extensive knowledge and understanding of not only how psychologists and psychiatrists work in the detention system in Australia but also, how they learned their trade as the "gate-keepers" to the role of abnormality.

Common sense is the first option in understanding Cornelia's diagnosis in relation to what she must have said. She was taken into custody as an illegal and treated as such and she would have told the 'authorities' and the 'medics' that story however that information 'somehow' fell on 'deaf ears' and was described in Psychiatric jargon as 'behavioural'.

By Jeremy Roberts, Richard Sproull and just Us 29 June 05

Did Cornelia Rau have a mental illness?

CORNELIA Rau returned to psychiatric care in Adelaide, just days after being released into the community, appears to be very suspicious indeed!

Submission to Senate: Inquiry into Mental Health 2005

We appreciate that the urgent issues of Human Rights and other abuses including institutionalisation and the use of force, and the lack of progress on Burdekin are being examined by the Committee.

Govt defends decision to detain Korean woman?

The Immigration Department says there was no unlawful detention in the case of a Korean woman recently held at South Australia's Baxter detention centre?

Rau ordeal a raw deal


Ms Rau spent time in a Queensland prison and a hospital before being handed to immigration authorities who kept her in detention for another four months.

Related:

Detention policy: Change Your Mind
It would not be wrong to answer in the affirmative. Another reason is that our political system is adjusting to the highly publicised breaches of human rights via individual cases such as Peter Qasim, Cornelia Rau and Vivian Alvarez Solon.

Psychiatrists dismiss Vanstone's call to limit role
Psychiatrists treating mentally-ill Baxter detainees have rejected the Immigration Minister Senator Amanda Vanstone's call for them to restrict their role to the immediate care of patients.

HREOC's deadline on child detainees passes
"We detainees request from human Australian to release us from Nauru cage" Years of waiting took their toll on asylum seekers. There are still two men there! They are suffering. (April 2006).

Tampering with Asylum
HAVE YOU EVER THOUGHT THAT AUSTRALIA'S recent policies on asylum seekers are wrong, but don't quite have the statistics to back up your views?

Baxter,'akin to the time in Nazi Germany'
I went to Baxter this Easter just past, and became more aware that this time is akin to the time in Nazi Germany when the concentration camps were being set up.

Asylum seeker denied medical help, court hears
An Iranian asylum seeker was denied access to psychiatric help, despite slashing himself several times inside South Australia's Baxter detention centre, the Federal Court in Adelaide has heard.

Once You've Been to Baxter You Can't Sit on the Fence
I spent this Easter in the desert. I spent this Easter protesting at Baxter detention centre to draw the world's attention to the injustice of Australia's racist and inhumane mandatory detention system and treatment of asylum seekers.

Detention Centres, Solitary Confinement
On Friday night the NSW Council for Civil Liberties awarded Sydney solicitor John Marsden honorary life membership. Julian Burnside was invited to make the speech in Marsden's honour. In the course of his speech, Burnside referred to the unregulated use of solitary confinement in Australia's immigration detention centres, criticising it as inhumane and also as unlawful.

MP urges asylum seekers' release
A federal Coalition MP has called for the release of all asylum seekers being held in immigration detention centres.

Australian held in Baxter detention centre
It has been revealed an Australian resident has been locked up in Baxter Detention Centre in South Australia for the past four months. Authorities had been unable to establish her identity since she was found wandering in far north Queensland last September.

Did Cornelia Rau have a mental illness?
CORNELIA Rau returned to psychiatric care in Adelaide, just days after being released into the community, appears to be very suspicious indeed!

Submission to Senate: Inquiry into Mental Health 2005
We appreciate that the urgent issues of Human Rights and other abuses including institutionalisation and the use of force, and the lack of progress on Burdekin are being examined by the Committee.

Govt defends decision to detain Korean woman?
The Immigration Department says there was no unlawful detention in the case of a Korean woman recently held at South Australia's Baxter detention centre?

Rau ordeal a raw deal
Ms Rau spent time in a Queensland prison and a hospital before being handed to immigration authorities who kept her in detention for another four months.

Australian held in Baxter detention centre
It has been revealed an Australian resident has been locked up in Baxter Detention Centre in South Australia for the past four months. Authorities had been unable to establish her identity since she was found wandering in far north Queensland last September.

Lawyers want Baxter detainee released for treatment !
Lawyers acting for a hunger-striking detainee inside South Australia's Baxter detention centre have asked the Federal Court to order a psychiatric assessment for the man, saying he needs to be in mental health care, not detention.

Baxter protesters 'being denied water, sleep'?
One of the three Iranian men has been on the roof of the gymnasium since Sunday last week, with two others joining him on Tuesday.

Detainees urged to abandon rooftop protest!
Kathy Verran from Rural Australians for Refugees, says one of the men has since come down and has been taken into the management unit. solitary confinement for Xmas?

Advocates warn of detention centre riot risk
A prominent refugee advocate warns South Australia's Baxter Detention Centre is on the brink of a major riot. A protest involving about 25 male detainees broke out at the centre on Tuesday, over a new system which is delaying the process of dispensing medication to detainees.

Advocates warn of detention centre riot risk
A prominent refugee advocate warns South Australia's Baxter Detention Centre is on the brink of a major riot. A protest involving about 25 male detainees broke out at the centre on Tuesday, over a new system which is delaying the process of dispensing medication to detainees.

Villawood detainees go on hunger strike
A refugee advocacy group says up to 200 detainees at the Villawood Detention Centre, in Sydney, have begun a hunger strike to draw attention to their situation ahead of the federal election.

Afghan children lose High Court battle against detention
Lawyers have lost their constitutional challenge to the detention of four children at a South Australian immigration centre. Four siblings from Afghanistan, aged between seven and 15, have been in detention since they arrived in Australia in 2001.

Democrats to keep up pressure over asylum seekers
The Australian Democrats will maintain their pressure on the next federal government over Australia's treatment of asylum seekers, if the party can retain its strength in the Senate.

Don't rock the Boat Howard!
PRIME Minister John Howard today denied the children overboard affair had swayed the 2001 election? Mr Howard has spent the week defending himself against claims he had been informed that nobody in Defence believed children had been thrown overboard by asylum seekers.

Baxter detainee continues hunger strike
A detainee at the Baxter detention centre near Port Augusta in South Australia has been on a hunger strike for a week. Sri Lankan Zeldon Daggie, 23, says he has been detained since arriving in Australia four years ago.

Senior cleric damns Baxter as 'disgraceful'
A senior world religious figure has called on the Federal Government to scrap its mandatory detention policy after visiting the Baxter detention centre in South Australia's north.

Australia's "GITMO" System
Australia's "GITMO" System In June 2002 on the PM program on ABC radio, PHILIP RUDDOCK is quoted as saying: "Well, let me just say, detention centres are not prisons. They are administrative detention.

Detention centre media ban criticised
The Howard Government has been criticised in a report by media freedom advocate Reporters Without Borders for stopping journalists covering the conditions in refugee detention centres.

Tuesday, April 6, 2004

Refugee protests expected to move to Sydney

Refugee advocates look set to protest in Sydney this Easter instead of the Baxter detention centre near Port Augusta in South Australia's north.

For the past couple of years large-scale protests have taken place at Woomera in 2002, then at Baxter last year.

Elicia Savvas was involved in last year's protest and says this year they want to take their message closer to the Prime Minister.

"There was a general consensus after the protest last year and following on through email discussion lists was that the protest would move to Kirribilli in Sydney this year," he said.

By Howard Out and Free Refugee 6 April 04

Related:

Baxter detainees' drug use 'not monitored'
The Australian Democrats say detainees at the Baxter detention centre in South Australia are being given high levels of psychotropic medication without adequate monitoring.

Legal action considered to return asylum seeker
The Australian lawyer for an asylum seeker stranded in an airport transit lounge in South Africa says she is looking at court proceedings to bring him back to Australia.

Santa Clause is coming to Baxter
On the 1st day of Christmas 'We give you the gift of peace'.
On the 2nd day of Christmas 'We give you the gift of Joy'.
On the 3rd day of Christmas 'We give you the gift of love'.
On the 4th day of Christmas 'We give you the gift of hope'.
On the 5th day of Christmas 'We give you the gift of faith'.

Ombudsman launches Port Hedland riot inquiry
The investigation comes at the request of the incoming Labor party president, Carmen Lawrence. Soon after the riot at the Western Australian detention centre about two weeks ago, Dr Lawrence released a statement alleging guards had beaten a 14-year-old boy and used a cattle prod on another.

Nauru staff 'fear children are next'?
The group representing the asylum seekers on Nauru has denied women and children have joined the strike and says they have not been asked to take part. [In other words "A" typical fear-mongering by Vanstone like kids overboard to gain some political leveraged!]

More asylum seekers join hunger strike
More asylum seekers in mandatory detention on the island of Nauru have joined a hunger strike to protest against the Federal Government refusing them refugee status. There are concerns that some of the hunger strikers may suffer serious injury or death from dehydration.

Australian Govt human rights record 'worsening'
Community groups have given the Federal Government five out of ten for its record on human rights this year. A national review conducted by groups including the Australian Council of Trade Unions and churches has concluded Australia's record on human rights has deteriorated.

Downer out of touch: Archbishop Carnley
Anglican Archbishop Peter Carnley has called on Alexander Downer to lift his game, saying the Foreign Minister has put Australia into a "difficult position internationally".

JUSTICE KIRBY: JUDICIAL ACTIVISM
Kirby's insight is decent, last week Justice Kirby threw at the Federal Government's barrister, the Solicitor-General David Bennett QC, in a ground-breaking case heard in the High Court, testing for the first time Australia's Mandatory Immigration Detention Scheme.

Howard Govt: Absolute vacuum on Compassion, Reality and Justice
The Northern Territory's Labor Senator, Trish Crossin, says the Federal Government showed no compassion for asylum seekers when it excised Melville Island from Australia's migration zone earlier this month.

Refugee policy, here is a new project: Burnside
The idea is to have thousands of Australian citizens writing to federal parliamentarians asking very simple, but hard, questions about the key aspects of refugee policy. I have devised a letter writing kit for this purpose. I attach a copy. It contains instructions which, are, I hope, fairly clear.

New A-G Ruddock has no regard for the independence of courts
As immigration Minister Ruddock's respect fell short of human rights when he tried to stop appeals introducing the Pacific Solution which means if an illegal immigrant is picked up in Australian waters by our navey they are sent elsewhere for processing. If their application for asylum is rejected they can be deported without legal appeal in Australia.

Judge renews child detainee release call
A Family Court judge, for a second time, has appealed to Immigration Minister, Philip Ruddock to address the issue of children in detention.

Ruddock to challenge Family Court ruling
Ruddock said it is unfortunate the Full Court of the Family Court made the decision. He said a successful High Court challenge could see the children returned to detention.

Children in Baxter Detention Centre: Tell me a fable...
Opponents vow to fight yesterday's Family Court ruling against the release of five children from South Australia's Baxter detention centre has strengthened the resolve of groups fighting the Federal Government's policy of detaining child asylum seekers.

Where did you say you reside Mr Carr?
New South Wales Premier Bob Carr says a protest outside Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock's Sydney home should have been called off for moral reasons. Mr Carr says people who want to protest against the Federal Government's immigration policies should do it in Sydney's CBD, not outside Mr Ruddock's home.

Three protesters tricked outside Ruddock's house
Protest organisers have been critical of police actions at a pro-refugee rally near Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock's Sydney home.

Australia: Child detention, tell me a fable...
Democrat's leader Andrew Bartlett wants all children in immigration detention centres released, in the wake of the Family Court refusal to put a stay on one of its landmark rulings.

Amnesty calls for release of children from detention centres
Human rights group Amnesty International is pressuring the Federal Government to immediately release children from detention centres in the wake of the latest report on detainee children.

Child detainees 'living in a nightmare', report finds
A report being released today documents disturbing evidence about mental health for children in detention centres. The report is a joint work by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists, NSW University and NSW psychiatrists.

Demonstrators prepared for Baxter protest
Thousands of demonstrators will converged at Port Augusta in preparation for this weekend's expected protest at the Baxter detention centre.

Wednesday, September 3, 2003

Adelaide's Glenside psychiatric hospital: Escape from hell?

A third person has escaped from the Adelaide's Glenside psychiatric hospital as health authorities prepare to begin a second review of security.

Police said a 22-year-old man fled the facility on Monday afternoon and was possibly heading for Port Augusta.

He was not serving a sentence for a criminal offence but was detained under the Mental Health Act.

However police warned that the man should not be approached.

His escape was the third in two weeks.

Authorities revealed another man held in a secure ward had escaped last Friday but was found about 90 minutes later.

On August 20, convicted killer Rene Wilson-Bosman escaped from Glenside by walking out of an open ward.

Wilson-Bosman, found guilty of the manslaughter and rape of an Adelaide grandmother in 1999, surrendered to police in Melbourne last Tuesday and was extradited back to South Australia.

SA Mental Health director Dr Jonathon Phillips said a review would be held into Friday's escape.

He also revealed that a review into the escape of Wilson-Bosman had revealed shortcomings in the system.

"There are systemic problems and you have to work immediately to rectify, to fix, those systemic problems," Dr Phillips said.

The review made eight recommendations, including suggesting risk assessments be performed following a change in a patient's behaviour and that nurses document patient activity every 24 hours.

Opposition health spokesman Dean Brown said the government must reconsider the use of Glenside to detain serious offenders.

"These incidents appear to be going from back to worse," Mr Brown said.

"Once again the lack of resources appears to be a major contributory factor."

By Valid Reason 3 September 03

THE EGG: Unfortunately the "lack of resources" probably means "lack of security guards & razor wire" in addressing "systemic problems" will they look at why someone would have a valid reason to get the hell out of there?

Tuesday, August 26, 2003

Ruddock to challenge Family Court ruling

Ruddock said it is unfortunate the Full Court of the Family Court made the decision. He said a successful High Court challenge could see the children returned to detention.

Tell me your fable...A fable...

Dale West from Centacare accompanied the children on the four hour journey from Port Augusta to Adelaide on Monday.

"This is a fairly euphoric time for them and we would expect that to be the case for the first 24 to 48 hours," he said.

"What of course we need to be very vigilant about is the impact on the children of all the attention of the days brought, of all the uncertainties of the last few weeks and of course the prolonged terms of detention that they've all served."

The fable...The fable...Ahh...

The Immigration Minister, Philip Ruddock, has vowed to challenge a Family Court ruling that granted the release of five children from detention.

But if he chose to lead by example then he would not be letting down all the parents and carers in Australia who know better.

On Monday, the Full Court of the Family Court upheld an appeal for the release of the five children, who are from one family of asylum seekers. Most likely under the heading Paramount Welfare.

The three girls and two boys have been placed in the care of Catholic welfare agency Centacare.

But Ruddock said it is unfortunate the Full Court of the Family Court made the decision. He said a successful High Court challenge could see the children returned to detention.

[Sounds like he's trying to buy the High Court decision?]

Ruddock says the matter will be heard in the High Court late next month.

"I think it's unfortunate that the court has in a sense dealt with these matters in a pre-emptive way because in doing so, by granting interlocutory relief which they've done here, there is the potential for the children to be at large for a time then re-detained if the High Court determines the Family Court has acted beyond jurisdiction," he said.

[But I think it is fortunate that the court has in a sense dealt with these matters with respect to the children because in doing so, by granting interlocutory relief, which they've done here, there is the potential for the children to be with the community.]

Tasmanian Independent Senator Brian Harradine says a decision in South Australia's Family Court vindicates his push for the release of all the children from immigration detention.

"there was a public outcry in Britan when it was revealed four children had been held in detention there for more than a year."

Senator Harradine says he and his supporters will be using the next parliamentary sitting to put further pressure on the immigration Minister, Phillip Ruddock.

"We'll be particularly focusing on the Minister's responses so that he does give an unequivocal response that all children behind bars should not be there."

[Most likely based on the rule that all children are innocent.]

The long-term future of the five children depends on a hearing in the High Court next month.

"The Commonwealth's view is that the Family Court is involving themselves in these questions and acting outside its jurisdiction."

"That's the view the Commonwealth holds and that's the reason we're testing the matter before the High Court."

[What? The children are not children? If our Commonwealth holds that view then we need don't need a Commonwealth.]

Premier Mike Rann welcomed the Family Court decision and the children's release.

"I think that it is iniquitous for a country like Australia to hold children in detention," he said.

"One can only guess at what damage that could do them, I have great confidence in Centacare, I think Centacare on so many fronts does so many good things for people, including the difficult area of advocating on behalf of refugees.

"I'm glad that the children have been released into their care," he said.

Tell me your fable...
A fable...
A fable...
A fable that will never end...
And now, I dream!
Dream!
Dream!

By Gregory Kable and Robert Miles 26 August 03

Related:

Children in Baxter Detention Centre: Tell me a fable...
Opponents vow to fight yesterday's Family Court ruling against the release of five children from South Australia's Baxter detention centre has strengthened the resolve of groups fighting the Federal Government's policy of detaining child asylum seekers.

Where did you say you reside Mr Carr?
New South Wales Premier Bob Carr says a protest outside Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock's Sydney home should have been called off for moral reasons. Mr Carr says people who want to protest against the Federal Government's immigration policies should do it in Sydney's CBD, not outside Mr Ruddock's home.

Three protesters tricked outside Ruddock's house
Protest organisers have been critical of police actions at a pro-refugee rally near Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock's Sydney home.

Australia: Child detention, tell me a fable...
Democrat's leader Andrew Bartlett wants all children in immigration detention centres released, in the wake of the Family Court refusal to put a stay on one of its landmark rulings.

Amnesty calls for release of children from detention centres
Human rights group Amnesty International is pressuring the Federal Government to immediately release children from detention centres in the wake of the latest report on detainee children.

Child detainees 'living in a nightmare', report finds
A report being released today documents disturbing evidence about mental health for children in detention centres. The report is a joint work by the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists, NSW University and NSW psychiatrists.

Demonstrators prepared for Baxter protest
Thousands of demonstrators will converged at Port Augusta in preparation for this weekend's expected protest at the Baxter detention centre.

Thursday, April 17, 2003

Demonstrators prepared for Baxter protest

Thousands of demonstrators will converged at Port Augusta in preparation for this weekend's expected protest at the Baxter detention centre.

The streets around Port Augusta are filled with dozens of demonstrator's vehicles including buses, trucks vans and loudspeakers.

Around 900 arrived this morning and were briefed to lay out and paint large banners.

Estimates of the number of protesters expected to converge at Baxter range from 3,000 to 20,000.

Police said they would be there however so far there is no sign of police.

Many are expected to arrive by bus tomorrow but a Port Augusta protester, Kim Smithers, says some residents say its about time and she has got a simple message for the protesters, "Bring your dog".

South Australia's Premier Mike Rann announced violence and that means his Government is prepared to be violent. It also means they will provoke and pre-empt demonstrators at Baxter over the weekend similar to tactics used by NSW police.

Books Not Bombs suffered from the same humiliation when violent police wound up demonstrators by surrounding them and confining them to a space and trapping them so they couldn't escape.

By Bring Ya Dog 17 April 03

THE DOVE: Police not violence! Beware the Wolf in sheep's clothing. That's right the undercover police, prepared to start something they themselves wanted to finish.

Monday, February 3, 2003

Masked group aids escape

ABOUT five people wearing balaclavas have helped asylum seekers escape from the Woomera detention centre, attacking and injuring two security officers. Port Augusta police inspector James Blandford said four or five people had helped six detainees break out from the South Australian complex about 1.15am (ACDT).

They then fled in two cars to McDonalds?

By Beyond Bars 3 Feb 03

The Great Australian Bite
When the Government stands by terrorism kits amid criticism and is issuing fridge door terror kit's, at $15m a 'waste' according to the critics? Perhaps critics who never went to war yet? And when masked groups are helping asylum seekers to escape and our Nuclear protesters are being arrested. Then where having our blood sucked out!