Showing posts with label Gough Whitlam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gough Whitlam. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 May 2015

1975 Juanita Nielsen - Rupert Murdoch co-incidence

In 1975Rupert Murdoch came back from England.



Herbert Bruce Rothwell - Australian Dictionary of Biography

adb.anu.edu.au/biography/rothwell-herbert-bruce-14194
Soon after, Rothwell shifted to London as bureau chief for Murdoch's News Ltd. With the ... Rothwell returned to Australia in June 1975 as editor-in-chief of the 

ch 12_phiddian.pdf - Flinders Academic Commons

dspace.flinders.edu.au/jspui/bitstream/2328/.../ch%2012_phiddian.pdf
by RA Phiddian - ‎2004 - ‎Cited by 4 - ‎Related articles
change in his and Australia's career marked by the events of 1975. While I deal with ...political life; and Rupert Murdoch's desire to shake up the postwar political, media and...... towards the government from 12 June 1975

Remember Gough Whitlam was going after Nugan-Hand Bank.
www.theherald.com.au/story/1418069/the-real-word-about-whitlam/
Apr 9, 2013 - So did Rupert Murdoch and prime minister Malcolm Fraser, who were ...By June 1975, the US embassy described the Whitlam government as  ...

On a slippery path to the cliff | The Australian

www.theaustralian.com.au/50th...a.../story-fnlk0fie-1226898596023
Mar 18, 2014 - By mid-1975 the wheels were falling off the economy — government spending ... in almost daily contact with proprietor Rupert Murdoch, wrote most of them. .... Kings Cross publisher Juanita Nielson disappeared on July 4,  

  1. Unsolved murder spurs writer to find answers | Alternative ...

    www.altmedia.net.au/unsolved-murder-spurs-writer-to-find.../1435
    Aug 2, 2008 - ... novel about the murder of Kings Cross newspaper identity Juanita Nielsen has finally been published. ... The Year that Was: Rupert Murdoch.


Friday, 31 October 2014

Gough Whitlam ...CIA? What about the influence from William Colby Nugan-Hand Bank

Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Activities of the Nugan ...

nla.gov.au/nla.party-627816
Stewart Royal Commission into the Activities of the Nugan Hand Group. Libraries Australia: http://nla.gov.au/anbd.aut-an36510566; NLA Persistent Identifier 

Biography - Francis John Nugan - Australian Dictionary of ...

adb.anu.edu.au/biography/nugan-francis-john-11266
In 1973 they set up a merchant bank, Nugan Hand Ltd, with a nominal paid-up ... Theroyal commission of inquiry (1983-85) into the activities of the Nugan Hand.

Frank Nugan - Spartacus Educational

spartacus-educational.com/JFKnugan.htm
However, it does show that Nugan and Hand now had a business relationship. There is.... The Stewart Royal Commission was published in June, 1985. 

How Aus bank financed the heroin trade | Green Left Weekly

https://www.greenleft.org.au/node/55553
Dec 7, 2013 - As some of the activities of Nugan Hand came to light following the appointment of a Royal Commission of Inquiry, the print media in Australia 

By year – National Archives of Australia

www.naa.gov.au › ... › Popular research topics › Cabinet › By year
Evidence presented to the Costigan royal commission, and also to the Stewart royal commission on the Terrence Clark drug syndicate and the Nugan Hand 

Whitlam, the CIA and Nugan Hand | Chasing Nugan Hand

nuganhand.wordpress.com/2011/01/.../whitlam-the-cia-and-nugan-hand/
Jan 23, 2011 - Whitlam, the CIA and Nugan Hand ... One of his foot soldiers in Laos was Michael Hand, co-founder of the Nugan Hand bank. .... Sleight of hand: The $25 millionNugan Hand Bank scandal 

Monday, 20 October 2014

Gough Whitlam dies 21 October 2014 report by Lenore Taylor The Guardian.com

Gough Whitlam I thought he would hang on to see the corruption we were unmasking in Kings Cross.  Gough hit the Nugan-Hand Bank, it is the year 1975 when Juanita Nielsen went missing in Kings Cross with the secret payments I right about to the Governor General John Kerr.

We have seen something, now a person who may know more has died.  Rest in Peace Gough Whitlam


Gough Whitlam, who was prime minister for just three years but became a defining political figure of modern Australia, has died aged 98.
The election of his government on 2 December 1972, with the famous “It’s time” election campaign, ended 23 years of conservative rule and its dismissal by the governor general Sir John Kerr on 11 December 1975 remains one of the most controversial events in Australian political history.
But in just three years the Whitlam government instituted sweeping changes that transformed Australian society as the baby boomer generation came of age.
In a rapid program of reform it called “the program”, the Whitlam government created Australia’s national health insurance scheme, Medibank; abolished university fees; introduced state aid to independent schools and needs-based school funding; returned traditional lands in the Northern Territory to the Gurindji people; drafted (although did not enact) the first commonwealth lands right act; established diplomatic relations with China, withdrew the remaining Australian troops from Vietnam; introduced no-fault divorce laws; passed the Racial Discrimination Act; blocked moves to allow oil drilling on the Great Barrier Reef; introduced environmental protection legislation; and removed God Save the Queen as the national anthem.
The former Rudd government minister Lindsay Tanner has written: “Whitlam and his government changed the way we think about ourselves. The curse of sleepy mediocrity and colonial dependency, so mercilessly flayed in 1964 by Donald Horne in The Lucky Country, was cast aside.”
But the Whitlam government’s economic record is more controversial. It came to power at the time of the first oil shock and failed to contain wages inflation. In 1975 it was embroiled in what became known as the “loans affair” when the minister for minerals and energy, Rex Connor, sought to borrow money for resource projects, outside normal treasurer processes, from Arab financiers using a middleman called Tirath Khemlani. No money was borrowed but the scandal deeply damaged the government.
Whitlam won a double dissolution election in 1974, with a reduced majority. But from October to November 1975 the parliament was deadlocked, with the opposition using its numbers in the Senate to refuse to pass the budget. When Whitlam visited Kerr to call for a half Senate election, Kerr instead withdrew his commission as prime minister and replaced him with the Liberal leader Malcolm Fraser.
Whitlam lost the election to Fraser after the national upheaval of the dismissal. He stood down as Labor leader and retired from politics in 1978.
A towering figure at 1.94m, with a deep resonant voice and an eloquent turn of phrase, Whitlam inspired a generation of progressive politicians and was widely referred to by just his first name. His is remembered for some of the most famous quotes in Australian politics, including while standing on the steps of the old parliament house after news of his dismissal. He said: “Well may we say ‘God save the Queen’ because nothing will save the governor general.”
He was a graduate of Knox Grammar and Canberra Grammar and joined the airforce after university, before studying law and being admitted to the bar. He married Margaret Dovey in 1942; they had four children.
He won the western Sydney seat of Werriwa in 1952 and was elected leader of the Labor party in 1967, succeeding Arthur Calwell.
After leaving politics he worked as Australia’s ambassador to Unesco, accepted several visiting professorships and, along with Margaret, received life membership of the Labor party in 2007.
Margaret died in 2012. Whitlam, by then using a wheelchair, had moved into an aged-care facility in 2010. He described her as “the love of my life”.
Prime minister for just three years, he brought in sweeping changes that transformed Australia and inspired a generation of progressive politicians
THEGUARDIAN.COM|BY LENORE TAYLOR