A march like we saw last week and theres been no indications of that just yet thats mainly because thats when the protest organizers can get more people out because theres no school and a lot of people dont work we havent seen anything about that and nor has the Legislative Council announce when theyre going to take their next step with this very controversial legislation that has brought tens of thousands of people out on the streets of hong kong houssam all right scott thanks very much. Mollys Prime Minister has declared 3 days of National Mourning for the victims of sundays attack on a village dozens of people from doggoned the doggone ethnic group were killed in violence between the medics herders and doggone farmers has killed hundreds of people in recent months more attacks are reported in the multi region Nicholas Hawk reports from the capital bamako. Barely visible mali and soldiers helicopters from the Un Peacekeeping force hovering over days after sundays deadly attack in Sec
Show up and be counted.
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In commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, days of action are being held around the country this Saturday, April 10.
The marches have been planned for some time, however, they are now also being held in protest for and solidarity with the families of the five First Nations people who have died in police custody since March 2.
The most recently death was that of a 45-year-old male inmate at Perth’s Casuarina Prison last week. Their death was the fifth in four weeks.
Published April 7, 2021
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On April 15, it will have been 30 years since the Royal Commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody, and a national day of action has been organised across the capital cities to demand justice for the over 450 Indigenous people who have died in custody since 1991.
A recent spate of deaths in custody – at the time of writing five people have died since the beginning of March – has further fueled the anger of Indigenous communities and their allies, reinforcing the purpose of the protests this weekend
Black lives matter, and this always was and always will be Aboriginal lands.
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The 26th of January is almost upon us and for Aboriginal peoples, Invasion Day is not a day of celebration, but a day of mourning and commemoration of survival.
2021 marks 251 years since James Cook landed on the lands of the Eora peoples, and the Europeans’ colonisation and attempted genocide of Aboriginal peoples began. Whether you’re a settler or First Nations, the 26th of January is a day to stand in solidarity and in mourning with the Aboriginal peoples whose stolen lands we all live on. It is a day to learn, to survive, to stand up, and most importantly, to listen.
Published January 20, 2021
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For non-Indigenous Australians, January 26 has in recent years been celebrated as ‘Australia Day’; for Indigenous Australians, it’s Invasion Day – a day of mourning and protests. The date, which marks the arrival of the First Fleet, has become a day of mourning for what those tall ships from England brought with them death, suffering, and the beginning of what’s now over two centuries of injustice and dispossession to First Nations people.