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Issue No. 171 21 March 2003  
E D I T O R I A L

Shock and Awe
And so it has begun, the cartoon caricatures are locked in; the cowboy and the tyrant his father created, locked in an endgame that will trash more than the infrastructure of Iraq.

F E A T U R E S

Poetry: If I Were a Rich Man
Through a distortion in the time-space continuum, we have found a recording showing how people a few years into the future will deal with health care.

Interview: League of Nations
ICFTU general secretary Guy Ryder on the war, core labour standards and why Australia is an international pariah.

Industrial: 20/20 Hindsight
A retrospective analysis of the Accord is needed to help develop future strategies. Is it worth trying again? And if so, what would need to be different?

Organising: On The Buses
A new rank and file leadership team is standing up for the harried bus driver in the run-up to the NSW State Election

Unions: National Focus
A gaze around the country reveals some inspiring and innovative organising initiatives, a fruitful connection with young workers in South Australia and some typically robust industrial campaigns reports Noel Hester.

History: The Banner Room
On the eve of it�s refurbishment, Jim Marr ventures into one of Trades Hall�s best kept secrets; the room that houses relics of labour�s halcyon days.

International: The Slaughter Continues
Chilling new statistics from Colombia's main trade union confederation CUT: nine trade unionists assassinated in the first two months of this year.

Legal: A Legal Case For War?
Aaron Magner looks at the legal implications of the crusade of the Coalition of the Willing

Culture: Singing For The People
When there�s a struggle for social justice, when a war is brewing or rights are being eroded, the first ones to pen, paper and protest are often the folkwriters.

Review: The Hours
On the eve of International Women�s Day Tara de Boehmler follows the tale of three women who would rather choose death than a life devoid of personal choice.

Poetry: I Wanna Bomb Saddam
Scarier than Star Wars, the latest weapon to be deployed in the battle for Iraq is the Singing Dubya.

Satire: Diuretic Makes Warne's Excuses Look Thin
Australian cricketer Shane Warne today admitted that he was still feeling the after effects of the diuretic he tested positive to.

N E W S

 Peace Marchers Warn Off Provocateurs

 Monk Ignores Job Losses

 Trade Warriors Turn to Water

 Gap, Target Pay Sweatshop Dues

 Firies Douse Insurance Blaze

 Kennett Delivers $2m Gas Bill

 Vials Sparks Security Scare

 Buggers Hit Six

 Rail Towns Win Jobs Reprieve

 Telstra Dotty Over Witching Hour

 Crow Eaters Choke on Waste

 CSL Boss in Political Pickle

 Lawyers Push Super Class Action

 Fair Clothing Activists Take Stock

 Activists Notebook

C O L U M N S

The Soapbox
Workers Friend
Shock jock Alan Jones snubbed his Liberal mates to bucket the Cole Royal Commission and launch Jim Marr's book

The Locker Room
Boer Bore Boring
In the face of oppression Phil Doyle falls asleep in front of the TV

Guest Report
Dead Labor
The Hawke and Keating legacy is John Howard, Leonie Bronstein argues.

Seduction
Hands Off, Tony
John Della Bosca argues the NSW Industrial Relations System gives his State a competitive advantage.

Bosswatch
Groundhog Day
Another year, another round of corporate excess. Bosswatch returns from its summer slumber to find the same old dogs up to the same tricks.

L E T T E R S
 I Miss Unions
 Viva Le Imperialists!
 The First Casualty
 Righteous indignation
 Dead Right
 Calling All Libs
 If George W Bush was an Australian Citizen...
WHAT YOU CAN DO
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News

Crow Eaters Choke on Waste


South Australian Aboriginal, environmental and community groups are joining unions resisting the Federal Government�s insistence on building a nuclear waste dump in the state.

The Howard Government has earmarked a site near Woomera for its proposed low-level radioactive waste dump with a final decision expected by the end of the month.

The CFMEU, the union with the most to gain from construction jobs, has slapped a black ban on the proposal and, last week, its action was endorsed by South Australia's peak union body, the United Trades and Labor Council.

State secretary, Janet Giles, said the proposal was adopted unanimously by her council's executive and meant members of 30 affiliated unions would refuse to be involved in constructing the dump.

"We're sick of the Federal Government gtreating South Australia as a wasteland," she said. "Our vote relects the views of the majority of South Australians who don't want the state to become a dumping ground for the country's poison."

The UTLC has committed itself to working alongside traditional owners of the Woomera site, the Kupa Piti Kunga Tjuta people, to prevent the dump going ahead.

South Australia has an unhappy history of radioactive pollution with a Royal Commission finding many Aboriginal people had been seriously affected by radiation poisoning from the Maralinga nuclear weapons testing site.

The new dump is being proposed primarily to dispose of waste from Sydney's Lucas Heights reactor. Environmental groups have raised serious questions about the wisdom of trucking hazardous materials from Sydney to Woomera, especially in an environment of international terrorist threats.


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