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Adani sets its legal “attack dog” on civilian activist

<p>Adani <a href="https://www.adaniaustralia.com/-/media/200826%20MS%20Adani%20FINAL">announced on 26 August</a> that it’s planning to sue long-term environmental activist Ben Pennings for the alleged damages he’s caused due to his part in the ongoing campaign to prevent the Indian mining giant’s Carmichael coal mine from going ahead in Queensland’s Galilee Basin.</p> <p>Spokesperson for the <a href="https://galileeblockade.net/">Galilee Blockade</a>, Pennings <a href="https://twitter.com/BenPennings/status/1298832089572204544">tweeted</a> the following day that he’d only just learnt that in the lead up to the launch of the civil proceedings, Adani had secretly applied twice to the Queensland Supreme Court for permission to raid his family home.</p> <p>Adani has sought an Anton Piller order, which is a damaging legal manoeuvre that consists of an unannounced raid to prevent prior destruction of any evidence. In this case, two Adani solicitors, an independent lawyer and a computer expert were to be sent in to check electronic devices.</p> <p>As Pennings pointed out in a statement, Adani has been running an “<a href="https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-02-25/adani-attack-dog-law-firm-facing-legal-services-commission-probe/10831088">attack dog</a>” legal strategy created by a Brisbane law firm. This involves targeting financially vulnerable activists with legal tactics to get the Carmichael mine running as soon as possible.</p> <p>The first victim of this strategy was Wangan and Jagalingou man Adrian Burragubba. The traditional owner launched multiple court actions to stop the Adani mine. And the transnational company took him to court <a href="https://www.sbs.com.au/news/adani-bankrupts-traditional-owner-in-queensland">in August last year</a>, forcing him into bankruptcy, as it sought pending court costs.</p> <p>Targeting individuals</p> <p>“Serial coal miner Gautam Adani’s writ against peaceful campaigner Ben Pennings will send a shudder through every Australian who values democracy, free speech and the right to peaceful protest,” said renowned Australian environmentalist Bob Brown.</p> <p>“Adani’s writ follows his use of the court to evict Wangan and Jagalingou people from their land in the Galilee Basin where he is proceeding with an obscene environmentally-disastrous and unnecessary coalmine,” he told Sydney Criminal Lawyers.</p> <p>The former Australian Greens leader <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/the-stop-the-adani-convoy-an-interview-with-bob-brown/">led a car convoy across the country</a> in early 2019, calling for an end to the Adani mine, which is set to open up the Galilee Basin – one of the largest untouched coal reserves on Earth – to at least <a href="https://www.stopadani.com/why_stop_adani">eight more</a> mining projects.</p> <p>The decade-long campaign against Adani has made substantial impact. In late 2018, the company announced that it was scaling down its mine, as it couldn’t secure private sector investment here or overseas, after successful campaigns led financial institutions to <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/stop-adani-an-interview-with-the-galilee-blockades-ben-pennings/">boycott the mine</a>.</p> <p>So, since then, Adani has started to focus on its new tactic of singling out individuals.</p> <p>“Gautam Adani is echoing the American Wise Use Movement’s dictum that if you can’t win the environmental argument, take out the environmental advocates,” Brown maintained.</p> <p>Targeted intimidation</p> <p>After learning of Adani’s attempt to raid his family home, Pennings explained in a statement that he lives there with his wife and three children, one of whom has a disability. And he added that the corporation had done this in order to locate “corporate secrets” it believes he possesses.</p> <p>The attempt to have an Anton Piller order issued in relation to Pennings was made <a href="https://archive.sclqld.org.au/qjudgment/2020/QSC20-249.pdf">in early June</a>, and following its rejection, Adani and its Carmichael Rail Network appealed this decision in July, only <a href="https://archive.sclqld.org.au/qjudgment/2020/QCA20-169.pdf">to be rejected again</a>.</p> <p>The Supreme Court of Queensland found that Adani had failed to establish it was likely that Pennings had any “confidential information” stored on his computer. And it further cited an assessment of such orders as being highly damaging to those subjected to them.</p> <p>The raid on Pennings’ home was meant to benefit the mining giant in its civil action against the activist, which is supposedly all about protecting the right of Adani, its employees and its contractors “to carry out legal and legitimate business activities free from intimidation and harassment”.</p> <p>Adani further asserts that Pennings’ campaign has targeted other companies that were either existing or potential suppliers or had nothing to do with it at all. And the Indian corporation is seeking compensation in relation to trespass, inducing breach of contract and intimidation.</p> <p>The company then sets out that the civil action “is not about inflicting hardship on Mr Pennings”, rather it’s about protecting Adani’s rights to carry out its business and “give regional Queenslanders a fair go in terms of jobs and contracting opportunities”.</p> <p>Although, as Brown <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/the-stop-the-adani-convoy-an-interview-with-bob-brown/">pointed out</a> early last year, Adani is set to bring automation to regional Queensland, not employment.</p> <p>How good is silencing dissent?</p> <p>“This legal action does not seek to limit free speech,” Adani’s statement regarding the civil proceedings goes on to say. “As we have repeatedly stated, we believe a diversity of views is an important part of democracy.”</p> <p>However, it’s safe to say that the Indian mining giant is attempting to silence voices of opposition in the community, as while the sustained campaign against the mine hasn’t led to its abandonment, it has been effective in driving secondary boycotts.</p> <p>And it’s not only Adani that’s pushing for an end to these type of boycotts. This is something the prime minister and attorney general have had on their minds since prior to last summer’s unprecedented bushfire season reaching fever pitch.</p> <p>A <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/morrison-intensifies-campaign-to-silence-australians/">secondary boycott</a> involves activists putting pressure on a company, so it stops doing business with another. This type of campaign approach resulted in financial institutions globally boycotting investment in the Carmichael coal mine.</p> <p>Scott Morrison told a Queensland Resources Council luncheon <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/morrison-intensifies-campaign-to-silence-australians/">on 1 November</a> that he and Christian Porter were drafting laws that would allow for secondary boycotts to be outlawed in a similar manner to the way that they’re illegal in relation to union activities.</p> <p>“Environmental groups are targeting businesses and firms who provide goods or services to firms they don’t like, especially in the resources sector,” the PM said, as he laid out his plans to outlaw this type of activism, which allows “quiet Australians” to more easily participate in protest.</p> <p>“Nothing more clearly defines a Liberal Nationals Coalition government than our strong, full-throated support for traditional industries like mining,” Morrison added. “How good is mining for Australia?”</p> <p>In cahoots</p> <p>But prior to the enactment of any new laws, it seems that Adani will have to stick to its current legal tactic of trying to destroy the lives of individual activists with the aim of silencing them and deterring others to stand up to the company’s self-indulgent campaign to destroy the earth we walk upon.</p> <p>Of course, the mining giant shouldn’t have to wait too long, when you consider that the <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/turnbulls-new-laws-in-2018/">Turnbull government</a> rushed to amend the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/turnbull-clears-the-way-for-indian-company-to-build-adani-mine/">in mid-2017</a>, after a Federal Court decision threatened the validity of the Adani Indigenous land use agreement (ILUA).</p> <p>As for Mr Brown, he ended by saying that he’s “disgusted by this billionaire Goliath’s effort to silence an Australian citizen from speaking up for his heritage”.</p> <p><em>Written by Paul Gregoire. Republished with permission of <a href="https://www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au/blog/adani-sets-its-legal-attack-dog-on-civilian-activist/">Sydney Criminal Lawyers.</a> </em></p> <p><em> </em></p>

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Anthony Albanese bites back at critic: “Thanks for the advice mate”

<p>The new Labor leader may just be days into the job but he has already gotten a new influential leader offside.</p> <p>Anthony Albanese may be well on his way to repeating a deadly mistake former Labor leader Bill Shorten made by choosing not to support the controversial mining project Adani.</p> <p>However, he has proven he will not go down without his tongue firmly in his cheek after biting back at the former Queensland premier Campbell Newman.</p> <p>Albanese’s fence-sitting stance on Adani has caused grumblings in Queensland, which showed a huge swing against the Labor party in the Federal election.</p> <p>Mr Newman took to Twitter to voice his disapproval with Mr Albanese’s stance.</p> <p>“Memo to @AlboMP,” Newman wrote.</p> <p>“If you are visiting Qld today and you can't bring yourself to totally &amp; unequivocally back our coal industry and support @AdaniAustralia then you &amp; the ALP have not listened.”</p> <p>Mr Albanese swiftly responded, thanking the former premier for his advice – but not without a cutting few words afterwards.</p> <p>““Thanks for the advice mate but you went from 78 seats to 42 in one term, including losing your own seat and @QLDLabor went from 7 into Govt #JustSaying,” he tweeted.</p> <blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"> <p dir="ltr">Thanks for the advice mate but you went from 78 seats to 42 in one term including losing your own seat and <a href="https://twitter.com/QLDLabor?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@QLDLabor</a> went from 7 into Govt <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/JustSaying?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#JustSaying</a></p> — Anthony Albanese (@AlboMP) <a href="https://twitter.com/AlboMP/status/1133369496540930048?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 28, 2019</a></blockquote> <p>The cutting comment by Albanese received over 4000 likes on Twitter, with many mixed replies from the public.</p> <p>“Bom bom! Take that Newman,” one comment read.</p> <p>Another read: “This response is not what I would expect of someone looking to hold the position of Prime Minister,” which received a reply saying: “Sounds like a win to me.”</p> <p>“Well said Albo, I’ve been trying to tell him the same thing for awhile now, he just won’t get it or go away, the bloke is a pest and is now just taking cheap shots, don’t put up with his garbage that’s for sure,” a user commented.</p> <p>The Labor leader made his way to Queensland this week in hopes to repair damage down in the past by his own party and win back voters who went another way during the Federal election.</p> <p>In the past, Mr Albanese has voiced his disdain for anti-Adani activists who toured parts of Australia during the election campaign.</p> <p>“The truth is that that was incredibly provocative and did nothing to advance, in my view, a genuine debate about climate change,” he said.</p> <p>“On climate change, the science is in. We need to act. But to reduce it to a debate about a single mine is in my view very unproductive, it does nothing to advance the debate.</p> <p>“Good policy is about jobs, as well as about clean energy, as well as about making sure that we take the community with us.”</p> <p> </p>

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“Could you explain that for me?” Waleed Aly grills Anthony Albanese on climate change and Adani coal mine

<p>Labor’s potential new leader Anthony Albanese has deflected a question about how his party will reconcile its climate change policy with coal mining jobs.</p> <p>The Labor Party lost the federal election after its primary support in Queensland dropped to just 27.4 per cent, reaching a record low since 1996 when John Howard defeated Paul Keating.</p> <p>According to <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-05-19/election-results-how-labor-lost-queensland/11122998" target="_blank">observers</a>, Labor’s inability to negotiate its environmental agenda with its support for the multi-million-dollar Adani coal mine project led voters in key Queensland seats to opt for the LNP for better job security.</p> <p>Albanese, who could run unopposed as the new Labor leader after Chris Bowen left the race, said Labor would have “common sense propositions” under his leadership.</p> <p>“Labor has to stand for jobs, economic growth, good distribution when it comes to social policy and to stand up for the environment and climate change,” he said on<em> </em><em>The Project</em> Wednesday night. “I don't think there's a contradiction between the two things.”</p> <p><iframe src="https://www.facebook.com/plugins/video.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2FTheProjectTV%2Fvideos%2F829861854058236%2F&amp;show_text=0&amp;width=560" width="560" height="315" style="border: none; overflow: hidden;" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" allowtransparency="true" allowfullscreen="true"></iframe></p> <p>Host Waleed Aly asked Albanese, “How do you stand up for jobs and the environment if those jobs happen to be in the coal industry?”</p> <p>Albanese dodged the question, saying “good sustainability policy creates jobs”.</p> <p>“Look at the renewable energy target, we introduced a 20 per cent target and that has created many thousands of jobs around Australia,” the frontbencher said.</p> <p>Aly asked whether these jobs would go to coal mine workers, who will presumably lose their jobs as coal production declines.</p> <p>“We have the challenge to explain our position, clearly, we didn't do well enough and we need to engage with our base as well as people who didn't vote for us,” said Albanese.</p> <p>Earlier this month, Albanese slammed the “<a href="https://www.smh.com.au/federal-election-2019/they-think-everyone-wants-to-stop-adani-anthony-albanese-slams-left-wing-groupthink-20190509-p51lkn.html">increasingly extreme</a>” groupthink amongst voters that he believes is damaging Australian politics.</p> <p>“There are people in my electorate in the inner west [who] get really angry that I keep getting elected – because the people they speak to, they don’t know anyone who doesn't vote Green,” he said.</p> <p>“They think everyone wants to stop Adani. They think everyone wants particular things. They don’t know where Adani is! They don't! I asked someone the other day and they said, 'It's on the Great Barrier Reef.' Actually, it's not, you know.</p> <p>“The point I made is that not everyone thinks the same on any particular issue, including on this.”</p>

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