Occupy Melbourne moved by police

I haven’t been particularly interested in politics for a while. Sure, the Arab spring has been interesting, but generally it’s been all doom and gloom. Today I awoke to news that a) Gadaffi was dead and we don’t know exactly how at this moment and b) the Melbourne Occupy movement was being shut down by police. The order had come from the Lord Mayor, who, last Tuesday was personally annoyed on radio by one of the leading occupiers. He ordered the police to perform the job. The Queen is coming here too, which probably had something to do with it. As far as I know the Occupy Wall Street movement which has spread around the world hasn’t been stopped anywhere else.

I listened to a main stream radio show which had a reporter on the scene, who described nothing of what I later learned had really happened. I watched a 24 hour news show on TV but nothing was showing about this police action, before I wrote what I did.

So here is what I wrote then:

As you see on  this video though, it appears that  the police were fairly mild in comparison with their behaviour on all the demos I’ve been on in my life.  I’ve seen plenty of police violence and been subject to it myself. I think back to the Springbok tour while South Africa was still an Apartheid state. The police on horseback lost control of themselves completely. Then there was the Richmond secondary college days. The conservative state government here closed a lot of schools but a couple were occupied. Then the police moved in and there was a picket line outside the gates. Later the police moved baton forwards into the picket. Those people involved all got compensation because of that police action.

Oh and the G8 and S11 protests……………the police were viscious. I remember people were bleeding from baton wounds to their heads. “Tomato sauce” said one of my co-workers at the time. No such luck for the people involved.

The reaction of people in general on talk back radio was different too. After all, 99% of us should be able to identify with the Wall St occupiers. It’s the 1% who own as much as the rest of us put together. So people were generally sympathetic to the protesters in Melbourne, which surprised me because at all other protests there are usually many complaints and abusive statements made about protesters.

Later I learned a few more things by people who I trust who had been there. Here is a report from a friend who was there. He got arrested for taking photos and reporting in to a community radio programme.

The occupy Melbourne protest today was as brutal as I have witnessed in over 30 years. The use of police horses and the special operation group to capsicum peaceful protesters was completely without justification.I was arrested for doing my job of taking photos and broadcasting directly to our radio station .The use of force was directly in contrast to the peaceful protest and the Lord Mayor Robert Doyle and the Victoria police should hang their heads in shame.

 

This was Denis Evans. His blog site where I’m sure he will soon write his version is at http://www.denisevans.com

I have also heard from two other sources that the police would surround small groups of protesters and spray them with capsicum and then remove and/or arrest them. Pressure points were being used to move people too. Police horses galloped through crowds. Police dogs were used.

The point of all this? The mass media does not tell the truth. One had  to be there to witness what really happened. The press cover up police brutality. I fell victim to that. If I can fall victim to it, and I’m a long term socialist who should have know better, then imagine what the general population comes to think?

I now think these young people were very brave in the face of what they stood up against.

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Night photography in Melbourne

I’ve been working up to forcing myself to use manual settings only on my DSLR Canon camera, so last night I saw a red sunset and I set out. There were others there, using Aperture priority, but I persisted with my task and my tripod. I ended up not getting a great shot of the sunset, but I ventured further and got a great shot of the Melbourne CBD from one side of the Yarra. Tomorrow night I intend to take shots of the New Year’s Eve fireworks, but from a distance, manually and I will have the assistance of a better tripod. My tripod is about 30 years old. I saw the new types last night. As it happened my son has been given a better tripod which allows me to move my camera around on an extension on the top, something I didn’t have last night. It also shows levels. I had to basically guess at holding my camera straight before.

You can view the night shots of Melbourne on my new Facebook page and it would be nice if you “liked” the page too!

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Windiest day in Melbourne ever

My fellow blogger has written about the windy day in Melbourne already, but I have a few things to add.

I was woken by an ear splitting cracking noise and looked out my window to see a whole lot of vegetation that wasn’t meant to be there. As it happens, I have some workers here extending my veranda and replacing rotting weather boards along the side of the house.

I went out to where they were and saw it. Next door’s massive gum had split a quarter of the way up and the very heavy tree trunk and branches were now on top of my roof. Luckily none of the workers were hurt, although one of them was working on the side of the house where the trunk came down. He was a little shaken, but boys being boys, wasn’t about to reveal that he’d just had a near death experience. They were attempting to ring the SES (State security service). No luck.

At the peak of the winds it was 132 kilometres an hour at one point in Victoria.
The SES received 1600 calls. I kept ringing for 8 hours with no luck, so there will be more calls from people like me to add to the tally. 215, 000 people across Victoria lost power. At least I didn’t lose that. The internet and radio suddenly became very important.
Traffic, public transport (a misnomer, as it is privatized), power was in chaos.
There was a lull for short time and I braved it down the shops. There I saw a huge tree totally uprooted and all the power out. I also saw in the distance the dust storm which also added to people’s woes.

It’s been a busy and weird day. I await the beautiful men in yellow, who may not arrive until 3am or something, but whom I’ll be very pleased to see. They are all volunteers.
Oh the insurance. Apparently my neighbour is up for that. His tree.

Posted one hour ago at Wednesday 1.30am on the ABC site

“More than 200,000 properties are without electricity and the State Emergency Service is working its way through more than 2,200 reports of fallen trees and damaged rooves”.

Mmmm. I think it’s safe to go to bed at 2.40am. I don’t think I’ll see the SES tonight.