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Binoy Kampmark - Latest News [Page 114]

Target Indonesia: The Schapelle Corby Campaign

Tuesday, 11 February 2014, 5:17 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Schapelle Corby – and her relationship with a very specific part of Australian opinion – has been intense. In 2004, she was arrested at Bali’s Ngurah Rai airport in possession of 4.1 kilograms of marijuana. She was found guilty of smuggling and ... More >>

Between Illegality and Incompetence: Otis Pike and the NSA

Friday, 7 February 2014, 4:02 pm | Binoy Kampmark

History is by some marvels of anti-institutional warriors. Now, the names of Julian Assange and Edward Snowden tend to find copy and coverage, leakers and soldiers against tight lipped secrecy. But last month, when former New York Congressman Otis G. Pike ... More >>

Borgen meets Goldman Sachs: Denmark’s Dong Energy Adventure

Monday, 3 February 2014, 11:41 am | Binoy Kampmark

Broody Danish politicians have been hitting the screens for some time now, becoming the subject of celluloid chic. From more familiar territory in crime novels and series, Scandinavians are now moving into parliaments as drama. More >>

Tabloid Gold: Crime, and the Lure of Amanda Knox

Saturday, 1 February 2014, 12:00 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Often, the court room is a tragic amphitheatre, featuring battles which involve loss and gain. The discussion about rights outside the courtroom becomes secondary to the discussion about fortune, favour and good, plain mannered prejudice. More >>

The Realms of Impunity: GCHQ, Privacy and Murder

Friday, 31 January 2014, 4:15 pm | Binoy Kampmark

It will only get worse, but the last few days have been interesting in the accumulating annals of massive surveillance. Britain’s equivalent of the National Security Agency, GCHQ, has been placed under the legal microscope, and found wanting. More >>

Fictitious Withdrawals: The Myth of US Disengagement

Monday, 27 January 2014, 1:40 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Nothing happens at the supposedly dazzling do at the World Economic Forum held at Davos – at least, of the constructive sort. It is a heavily catered talk bonanza on what people have already agreed to. It has a huge pretence to discuss policy. More >>

When Deals are not Deals: The German-US No-Spy Arrangement

Tuesday, 21 January 2014, 1:08 pm | Binoy Kampmark

It was not bound to happen and it is unlikely to. The huffing that tends to accompany recrimination and disagreement about espionage revelations is predictable. Elected representatives need to earn their keep and stay in the good books of their electorates. More >>

Britain & the European Court of Human Rights | Binoy Kampark

Tuesday, 31 December 2013, 10:52 am | Binoy Kampmark

The cart of legal sobriety is truly getting away when parliamentarians start seeking exemptions from laws in the name of upholding them. The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg has been the solemn target for many a British politician since it came ... More >>

No to New Idolatry of Money: Pope Francis I on Capitalism

Tuesday, 17 December 2013, 11:51 am | Binoy Kampmark

Pope Francis I is no ideological jester. He should not fool any one at this point of time, nor is he attempting to. He is a formidable figure and has a sense of his enemies within the Church. He also knows the various precipices the world’s first ... More >>

Petitioning the Surveillance State: A Digital Bill of Rights

Thursday, 12 December 2013, 12:43 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Every global state, or clunky imperium, deserves its global counterpart, a balancing lever to ensure that it doesn’t fall into depravity. The state of global surveillance, so extensive it not so much subverts as pushes pass bills of rights and entitlements ... More >>

The Other Mandela: A Revolutionary Without Revolution

Monday, 9 December 2013, 11:11 am | Binoy Kampmark

The cloyingly sweet tributes to the late Nelson Mandela do as much to undermine the man’s legacy as they do to distort the record as to how various statesmen and their regimes responded to him when he was a full fledged activist. More >>

Grilling Rusbridger: The Guardian in the Dock

Thursday, 5 December 2013, 11:55 am | Binoy Kampmark

A few things have happened since The Guardian decided to storm the Bastille of surveillance with its cultivation of such journalists as Glen Greenwald and the recruitment of Spencer Ackerman. (We might also place Julian Assange in that heady mix, though that ... More >>

Comic Relief: Capitalising on the Useful Poor

Wednesday, 4 December 2013, 5:49 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Comic relief has become an industry, its own self-justifying premise. In January this year, BBC2 hosted its Great Comic Relief Bake Off. It had four million viewers, meaning that 16.3 percent of the audience was nabbed between 8pm and 9pm on one specific ... More >>

The Karzai Dilemma: The Puppet Who Refused to Move

Wednesday, 4 December 2013, 4:52 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Afghan leader Hamid Karzai is not conforming to his puppet status. He was meant to be the marionette of Washington’s confused and often incompetent policy in Afghanistan. With Karzai at the helm of a broken and mutilated state, the Coalition forces demonstrated ... More >>

Nipping Nuclear Buds: The Iran Deal

Wednesday, 27 November 2013, 11:54 am | Binoy Kampmark

This was the limited deal, one designed to halt Iran’s quest for a nuclear weapons option and stave off the proliferating actions of other states. It is a deal replete with unresolved issues – but then again, it was not expected to. More >>

Climate Change Saboteurs: The Retreat from Obligation

Tuesday, 19 November 2013, 12:53 pm | Binoy Kampmark

The climate change saboteurs are mucking in with their bits of devastating advice. Australia, as it promised to do with its new conservative government, has taken the lead against carbon pricing as a mechanism of curbing pollution. Its newly elected ... More >>

Free Speech: Narrowing Racial Vilification in Australia

Wednesday, 13 November 2013, 12:03 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Free speech has a shallow grounding in Australian jurisprudence. There are no express provisions for it in the Australian Constitution. It is striking that, for a country considered liberal democratic in character, suspicion of much in the manner of speech, ... More >>

Even Educated Fleas Do It: The Consequences of the Spy Feast

Friday, 8 November 2013, 12:16 pm | Binoy Kampmark

Everyone is doing it to everybody else. A norm, perhaps, or something like a misguided custom that evolves over time. The test in international law as to what the comity of nations accepts is often one of persistent usage over time. More >>

The Equine Sacrifice: Death at the Melbourne Races

Friday, 8 November 2013, 12:01 pm | Binoy Kampmark

The near inimitable Marx Brothers made a point of taking comedy to the races in 1937. Horse racing is central – as joke, as investment, as potential saviour for the doomed Standish Sanitarium. More >>

Killing Peace: Drones and Hakimullah Mehsud

Thursday, 7 November 2013, 10:52 am | Binoy Kampmark

In time, an insidious practice assumes the property of custom. It might seem barbaric and archaic, but as the great Sophist Protagoras claimed, man is the measure of all things. A ghastly measure, at that. More >>

   

 
 
 
 
 

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