Sunday, 31 March 2024

The forgotten political history of Australia's convicts.

Extract from ABC News 

ABC News Homepage


Among the convicts that were transported to colonial Australia, there was a small group accused of very different crimes to the others.

Of the roughly 162,000 convicts sent here from 1788 to 1868, there were at least 3,600 political prisoners including trade unionists, democracy advocates and Irish revolutionaries.

And far from abandoning their politics when they arrived, these people — along with many others — banded together to bring political resistance to the colonies.

It's a part of the convict story that's been lost, according to historians Hamish Maxwell-Stewart and Tony Moore, who have worked on a touring and online exhibit called Unshackled, currently showing at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery.

As part of a four-year project, their team used huge swathes of digitised information from Australia's UNESCO-listed convict archive, analysing trends across the decades of transportation and beyond.

"[We've] seen, for the first time, the scale of resistance," Professor Maxwell-Stewart, a heritage and digital history expert from the University of New England, tells ABC RN's Late Night Live.

Who were the political prisoners?

During the era of convict transportation, Britain was in the midst of the Industrial Revolution. This saw huge leaps forward in technology and development, but at a great human cost.

Pushback came from groups like the Luddites and the Swing Rioters, who protested wages and conditions. Some of these people fell afoul of authorities and were sent to what is now Australia.

George Loveless, for example, was a Methodist lay preacher and labourer. He led a six-person union, from the Dorset village of Tolpuddle, called the Friendly Society of Agricultural Labourers, who protested the lowering of workers' wages.

"There were unions in the north of England. That was permitted. But not in the south, on these grand landed estates," explains Dr Moore, the head of communications and media studies at Monash University.

In 1834, the six men were convicted with swearing a secret oath and transported to Sydney and Hobart, becoming famously known as the 'Tolpuddle Martyrs'. After protests back home, they were pardoned in 1836 and returned.

A painting of six men in white clothing and shackles, inside a cell
The Tolpuddle Martyrs were sentenced to transportation to Australia.(Getty: Universal History Archive)

There were also convicts who Dr Moore calls "the revolutionaries and rebels". This included more than 2,000 Irish radicals, from groups like the United Irishmen and Young Ireland.

In all, these political prisoners were "a who's who of colourful movements", Dr Moore says.

He specifically cites the Daughters of Rebecca, a group of "cross-dressing breakers of tolls and turnpikes" who were angered at the privatisation and tolling of roads in Wales.

An 1800s illustration of several men dressed as women destroying a fence, as others watch
Members of multiple protest groups — including the Daughters of Rebecca — were sent to colonial Australia.(Getty: Hulton Archive)

And while current research puts the total number of political prisoners sent to Australia at around 3,600, Dr Moore says it could be more than 4,000.

Some convicts were classified as "rioters or breakers of the peace or things that aren't political, like theft", he says. But when they looked into the records, they found they were on strike.

"So the count goes on."

The adventurous Thomas Muir

Thomas Muir is one of Dr Moore's favourite political prisoners.

Muir was an idealistic Scottish lawyer who advocated for democratic changes to the political system, leading the Society of the Friends of the People.

A late 1700s drawing of the head and shoulders of a man with light hair and fancy clothes
Thomas Muir was a Scottish lawyer and political reformer who was transported to NSW.(Supplied: State Library of NSW)

"He had the temerity to talk to and organise workers in 1790s Scotland and he had the temerity to be a media activist," Dr Moore says.

"[He was] writing, pamphleteering … distributing banned books such as [Thomas Paine's] the Rights of Man."

As part of the British government's crackdown in the wake of the French Revolution, he was found guilty of sedition and transported.

But Muir later managed to escape NSW on an American fur-trading ship.

He sailed across the Pacific Ocean and had a series of misadventures from Vancouver Island to Mexico City to Cuba, which included losing an eye when one of his ships was fired upon.

"This now-mutilated [but still] handsome young man made it to France. He's proclaimed a citizen of the republic and joined the directory of Scotland in exile," Dr Moore says.

The convict project

Many convicts undertook political action in the Australian colonies during their sentences.

But Professor Maxwell-Stewart and Dr Moore say there needs to be a rethink of the broader convict project in order to properly understand this.

"The convicts were in fact, an unfree labour force used and exploited … to build the colonies, to build the economy and to enrich the employers in those colonies," Dr Moore says.

"We've not really understood this in Australia — that [transportation] was a massive machine for building colonies."

In other words, many thousands of convicts were exploited under horrendous conditions to take the land of First Nations people and develop it for agriculture and other projects.

An 1800s illustration of two men whipping a shirtless man, whose hands are tied, with blood running down his back
Convicts built much of colonial Australia's early infrastructure and faced horrible punishment along the way. (Supplied: State Library of NSW)

Professor Maxwell-Stewart also points out that "one of the tricks that transportation pulled off was [it] greatly increased sentences".

"If you were sentenced to a stint in prison in Britain or Ireland, it's likely to have been measured in months [because] sending somebody to prison is insanely expensive … But if you got sentenced to transportation, the minimum sentence was seven years," he says.

"This is like minting 2 million years of unfree labour that the British can use. Effectively what they did is … steal time from [mostly] thieves to steal a continent."

So convicts rose up against this brutal — and lengthy — existence.

"Until now, we thought that there was really no solidarity from below," Professor Maxwell-Stewart says.

"But by digitally piecing together lots of court records and lots of punishment records of convicts, we now know that there were at least 11,000 collective actions across NSW and Van Diemen's Land that featured convicts protesting together."

The Battle of Castle Hill of 1804 was just one of these.

After a failed rebellion in Ireland in 1798, hundreds of Irish convicts were transported to NSW.

In 1804, many from this group planned to attack colonial government sites, commandeer a ship and return to Ireland to continue the fight there.

"The cry of 'Death or Liberty' rang out," Dr Moore says.

But the Castle Hill rebellion was unsuccessful, with its leaders and participants hanged without trial while others faced punishment like being banished to the Coal River (Newcastle) chain gang.

Women convicts

Conditions were especially harsh for the female convicts sent here.

"We are able to show that every day that a female convict was put in solitary [confinement], knocked 10 days off life expectancy," Professor Maxwell-Stewart says.

"[And] their sexuality was policed."

But the team's research showed that women protested against these kinds of conditions on an enormous scale.

"They ran away at a greater rate than male convicts and this is the only British unfree labour colony where that is true," Professor Maxwell-Stewart says.

"They also campaigned vigorously against being forced to work on a Sunday, which was notionally the day off for convicts."

Take Fanny Jarvis for example, whose story was uncovered by researcher Dr Monika Schwarz during the project.

Fanny was a servant in Staffordshire who, at age 16, stole clothes from her master and was transported to Van Diemen's Land in 1836.

An 1800s illustration of a small factory in Australian bushland
The Cascades Female Factory was a workhouse for female convicts in Hobart.(Wikimedia Commons)

She was a member of the "Flash Mob" gang and involved in one of the major riots at the Cascades Female Factory, where the women took control of the site.

"There was a network of protests and this young teenage convict was right at the centre of them," Professor Maxwell-Stewart says.

Convict stereotypes

It wasn't just strikes and other workplace actions undertaken.

"There was [also] media activism by the political convicts — they're editing newspapers whilst they're convicts here," Dr Moore says.

He also cites William Cuffay as someone who had a significant impact.

Cuffay was a Chartist leader, a trade unionist and a descendant of slaves. He was known as a gifted public speaker, often taking his message to the masses.

But in 1848, Cuffay was accused of "conspiring to levy war" against Queen Victoria and sentenced to 21 years in Van Diemen's Land.

An 1800s sepia illustration of a balding man in a jacket, in front of a window
William Cuffay was pardoned three years after his conviction.(Wikimedia Commons)

He was later pardoned but chose not to return to Britain, instead staying and campaigning for workers' rights and democratic reform.

"He becomes the Bob Hawke of Tasmania. He becomes a union leader, against the draconian Master and Servant Act [which was] a kind of Jim Crow-ish attempt to keep convict-ism after it's abolished."

Both Professor Maxwell-Stewart and Dr Moore hope their work will challenge some of the convict stereotypes.

"Convicts have either been seen as a situation comedy, like 'aren't those rascals lucky enough to come over to Australia where it's sunny', or the [author] Marcus Clarke version of the gulag from hell … where they lack agency," Dr Moore says.

"Whereas we are saying no, they collectively resisted, and they resisted at a great scale."

In doing so, "they were able to shape the beginnings of the labour movement" here.

And what were once considered radical or even treasonous ideas around workers rights, egalitarianism and democracy took root in the Australian colonies in the mid-to-late 19th century and continue to define us today.

Australian reportedly among three UN observers wounded while patrolling Lebanon border.

Extract from ABC News 

ABC News Homepage


An Australian is among three United Nations observers and an interpreter who have been injured while patrolling Lebanon's southern border with Israel, according to Lebanese media.

The UN peacekeeping mission known as UNIFIL, as well as unarmed technical observers known as UNTSO, are stationed in southern Lebanon to monitor hostilities along the demarcation line between Lebanon and Israel, known as the Blue Line.

Lebanese armed group Hezbollah has been trading fire with the Israeli military across the Blue Line since October in parallel with the war in Gaza.

Lebanese media, citing security officials, reported an Israeli drone strike targeted the observers in the southern village of Wadi Katmoun near the border town of Rmeich on Saturday.

The Israeli military has denied striking a UN vehicle in the area.

"Contrary to the reports, the IDF did not strike a UNIFIL vehicle in the area of Rmeich this morning," the Israeli military said in a statement.

Rmeich mayor Milad Alam told Reuters he heard a blast.

"Then [we] saw a UNIFIL car zipping by. The foreign observers were taken to hospitals in Tyre and Beirut by helicopter and car," he said.

Lebanon's caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati condemned what he called was the "targeting" of UN staff.

Hezbollah-run television station Al-Manar said the drone strike injured three workers from Australia, Chile and Norway, as well as a Lebanese interpreter.

The ABC has contacted the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Andrea Teneti, a spokesperson for the United Nations' peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon, said all four had been evacuated for medical attention.

He said they were "investigating the origin of the explosion".

"The targeting of peacekeepers is unacceptable," Mr Teneti said.

"We repeat our call for all actors to cease the current heavy exchanges of fire before more people are unnecessarily hurt."

On Friday Israel carried out its deadliest strikes in months on northern Syria's Aleppo province and said it killed a senior Hezbollah commander in Lebanon.

AP/Reuters

Saturday, 30 March 2024

World Court orders Israel to 'take all necessary and effective' action to ensure Gaza has access to humanitarian aid.

Extract from ABC News 

ABC News Homepage


The World Court has ordered Israel to "take all necessary and effective" action to ensure access to food and medical supplies for Gaza's Palestinian population in an effort to improve the humanitarian situation.

Thursday's unanimous order from the International Court of Justice's panel of judges came after South Africa sought more provisional measures, including a ceasefire, as part of its case accusing Israel of state-led genocide in Gaza.

Israel has rejected the accusations, saying it respected international law and would "expand" the current flow of humanitarian aid in Gaza.

In the legally binding order, the judges said Palestinians in the war-ravaged enclave faced worsening conditions.

"The court observes that Palestinians in Gaza are no longer facing only a risk of famine […] but that famine is setting in," the judges said in their order.

The measures are to be taken "without delay", the judges said, and should include "increasing the capacity and number of land crossing points and maintaining them open for as long as necessary". 

They told Israel to report back in a month on its implementation of the orders.

Children gesture in desperation as a crowd of people gather to get food offered by volunteers.
The UN and international aid groups say aid deliveries have been impeded by a number of factors.(Reuters: Ibraheem Abu Mustafa)

Gaza's governing body Hamas said the ruling did not go far enough.

Senior Hamas official Basem Naim said a permanent ceasefire was needed to end the suffering of Palestinians. 

"We welcome any new demands to end this humanitarian tragedy in Gaza and especially in the northern Gaza Strip," Mr Naim told Reuters.

"But we hoped the court ordered a ceasefire as an absolute solution to all the miseries our people in Gaza are living through."

South Africa also welcomed Thursday's decision, calling it "significant".

"The fact that Palestinian deaths are not solely caused by bombardment and ground attacks, but also by disease and starvation, indicates a need to protect the group's right to exist," the South African president said in a statement.

After initially sealing Gaza's borders in the early days of the war, Israel began to permit entry of humanitarian supplies.

It says it places no restrictions on the amount of humanitarian aid allowed into Gaza and accuses the United Nations of failing to properly organise the deliveries.

On Tuesday, the army said it inspected 258 aid trucks, but only 116 were distributed within Gaza by the UN.

The UN and international aid groups say deliveries have been impeded by Israeli military restrictions, ongoing hostilities and the breakdown of public order.

The Israeli foreign ministry accused South Africa of making "cynical attempts" to exploit the World Court to undermine Israel's right to self-defence and to win the release of remaining hostages.

Ministry spokesperson Lior Haiat said Hamas continues to hold some 100 hostages and the remains of 30 others either killed during the October 7 terrorist attack or who died in captivity.

"Israel will continue to promote new initiatives, and to expand existing ones, in order to enable and facilitate the flow of aid to the Gaza Strip … despite the operational challenges on the ground and Hamas' active and abhorrent efforts to commandeer, hoard and steal aid," he said in a statement.

"As has been repeatedly affirmed, Israel is committed to international law, including with respect to allowing and facilitating the transfer of essential humanitarian aid to the civilian population in the Gaza Strip."

Smoke rises around apartment buildings
Al-Shifa hospital and the surrounding neighbourhood has been the focus of intense fighting in recent weeks.(Reuters: Dawoud Abu Alkas)

The UN Security Council voted on Tuesday to demand an immediate ceasefire and the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages. The United States abstained from — but did not veto — the vote.

Israeli leaders have said Hamas can end the war by surrendering, freeing all hostages it holds in Gaza and handing over for trial those involved in the October 7 attack.

The Israeli Army said it continued to operate around the Al-Shifa Hospital complex in Gaza City after storming it more than a week ago.

Its forces had killed about 200 gunmen since the start of the operation "while preventing harm to civilians, patients, medical teams, and medical equipment", the Israeli military said.

Shortages of food, water and medicine

Gaza's health ministry said wounded people and patients were being held inside an administration building in Al-Shifa that was not equipped to provide them with healthcare.

Five patients had died since the Israeli raid began due to shortages of food, water and medical care, the ministry said.

Humanitarian aid is airdropped to Palestinians
Foreign countries have been delivering humanitarian aid via airdrops to overcome obstacles on land.(AP: Mahmoud Essa )

Ismail Al-Thawabta, the director of the Gaza Hamas-run government media office, said the Israeli army was carrying out "field killings and executions against hundreds of civilians" when asked about the Israeli Army statement.

"Everyone inside the Shifa complex are civilians, and there are no military personnel inside the compound," he told Reuters.

Al-Shifa, the Gaza Strip's biggest hospital before the war, had been one of the few healthcare facilities even partially operational in north Gaza before the latest fighting. It had also been housing displaced civilians.

Unverified footage on social media showed its surgery unit blackened by flames and nearby apartments on fire or destroyed.

The armed wings of the Hamas and Islamic Jihad militant groups said in a statement they "bombed, with a barrage of mortar shells, gatherings of Israeli soldiers in the vicinity of the Al-Shifa Complex," in a joint operation.

Israel said it is targeting Hamas militants who use civilian buildings, including apartment blocks and hospitals, for cover. Hamas denies doing so.

At least 32,552 Palestinians have been killed and 74,980 wounded in Israel's military offensive in the Gaza Strip since October 7, the territory's health ministry said on Thursday.

Thousands more dead are believed to be buried under rubble and more than 80 per cent of Gaza's 2.3 million population is displaced.

The war erupted after Hamas militants broke through the border and rampaged through communities in southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and abducting 253 hostages according to Israeli figures.

Two more hospitals besieged

In Rafah, where more than a million people have been sheltering, health officials said an Israeli air strike on a house killed at least 12 people.

Israel says it plans a ground offensive into Rafah, in the far south of the enclave, where it believes most Hamas fighters are now sheltering.

Its closest ally and main arms supplier, the US, opposes such an assault, arguing it would cause too much harm to civilians who have sought refuge there.

Israeli forces also continued to blockade Al-Amal and Nasser hospitals in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, while several other areas came under Israeli fire, residents said.

People huddle in front of the remains of a concrete building destroyed by a blast
Israeli air strikes have continued along the Gaza Strip.(AP Photo: Fatima Shbair)

The Palestinian Red Crescent said seven people working for the organisation arrested in a raid on Al-Amal hospital on February 9 had been released after 47 days in Israeli prisons.

Among them was the director of ambulance and emergency services in the Gaza Strip, Mohammed Abu Musabeh. Eight members of the association were still being detained, it said in a statement.

Israel said soldiers from its Commando Brigade had arrested dozens of Palestinian militants in the Al-Amal area and discovered explosives and dozens of Kalashnikov-type weapons.

The World Health Organization said Al-Amal Hospital had ceased to function due to fighting, leaving just 10 of 36 hospitals in the Gaza Strip partially operational.

AP/Reuters

Sheep are clever and important in many ways. Here are some ovine facts that may surprise you.

 Extract from ABC News

ABC News Homepage

As animals go, the sheep might be considered by some as the perfect embodiment of docility.

It seems like a sedate life, hanging out in paddocks as flocks of round cotton balls, standing around and chewing all day long.

The term "sheep" is also a metaphor for people who follow en masse without question.

But sheep are not mundane mindless mammals — not in the slightest.

There's plenty going on behind their horizontal pupils.

They're clever creatures, deftly thwarting our defences to get to the greener grass (or flowers, as you'll discover) on the other side.

Sheep can recognise and remember dozens of sheep faces. They can also recognise human faces, and like us, they prefer them when they're smiling.

And they've contributed far more to human existence than lamb chops and cosy jumpers.

Their history stretches back millions of years, when …

Sheep ancestors popped up in central Asia

There are hundreds of domestic sheep breeds today, from the Turkish Acıpayam to Zulu sheep in South Africa, but they're pretty much all one species: Ovis aries.

Their earliest ancestors evolved between 10 and 20 million years ago in the mountains of central Asia, according to Sally Coulthard, historian and author of A Short History of the World according to Sheep.

"That really early predecessor split and went different ways and some trotted west, into Europe, some went east into China and Siberia … and some even crossed over what would have been the frozen Bering Strait and went into North America," she says.

As populations separated, and were domesticated and bred, they developed unusual features, such as the twirly spiral horns of the Racka ...

A sheep with curly horns, with mouth open and eyes closed
The Racka was once the most common sheep breed in Hungary.(Flickr: Tambako The JaguarClose racka sheepCC BY-ND 2.0)

... the rabbit ears of the Border Leicester ...

A white woolly sheep with rabbit-like ears standing in a pen
The Border Leicester was first bred in England, near the Scottish border, in 1767.(Flickr: Xabier CidBorder Leicester • Leicester fronteirizaCC BY-SA 2.0)

... and the North Ronaldsay, which lives on a remote Scottish island and eats only seaweed.

Flocks are dynamic

It may not look like it as you drive past, but a flock of sheep in a paddock is a dynamic little system, splitting and rejoining as conditions change.

Sometimes they huddle together, and other times they spread apart — but rarely, if ever, do sheep hang out alone.

A team led by Stephan Leu, an animal behaviour researcher at the University of Adelaide, found a daily pattern to this ovine fission and fusion.

"The largest group sizes are early in the morning and late in the afternoon. And there's also another sort of peak in the middle of the day," Dr Leu says.

"They meet up with smaller subgroups and form these larger groups."

Those times coincide with lulls in sheep activity, when they forage less and rest more.

"The benefits of being in a larger group are, for instance, spotting predators," Dr Leu says.

"They form these larger groups to be protected because everyone is watching out for each other a little bit."

They're excellent problem-solvers

Like many domesticated animals, sheep are clever creatures. They can solve complex mazes, and remember the solution weeks, even months, later.

This is something sheep farmer and YouTuber Tara Farms knows only too well.

If there's a hole in a fence, the sheep are on it.

"They know where to escape through the fence. You can take a sheep out of a paddock and put them back in there three months later and they'll still find the same hole, if you haven't patched it," Tara says.

"They know."

YouTube Language warning! Tara Farms's Australian Sheep Farm Vlog.

But the measure of sheep intelligence is perhaps best illustrated by a mystery that hit the English village of Marsden in 2004.

Something was eating the flowers in the village's flowerbeds, and residents simply could not work out who the culprit was, Coulthard says.

There were sheep in the moors around Marsden, but the village was protected by sheep grids, and they were too wide for the sheep to leap over.

The residents finally decided to stay up overnight and watch — and what they saw amazed them.

"Apparently the sheep had learnt to do commando rolls over the sheep grids," Coulthard laughs.

The likeliest scenario was one or two sheep figured out they could lay on their side and roll across, then showed the rest of the flock, she adds.

"So not only is that showing amazing problem solving, but also the communication of knowledge, all of which are things that we associate with higher intelligence.

"Certainly after looking after sheep, I realise sheep are much cannier than people give them credit for."

They were used as contraception

Before rubber, condoms could be made from animals, including sheep — their intestine, to be specific.

"Sheep gut is actually fabulously flexible and robust, and really useful," Coulthard says.

Some of the earliest evidence for condoms in Europe was found in the 1980s.

Archaeologists excavated a toilet at Dudley Castle near Birmingham in England, which was sealed in the middle of the 17th century.

The ruins of a castle with a flag and cannon
Dudley Castle was partly demolished in 1646 during the English Civil War.(Flickr: Dudley Council, Dudley CastleCC BY 2.0)

Along with remains like coriander seeds and fish bones, the researchers found 10 animal membrane condoms.

Five were burnt and blackened, while the other five were nestled inside each other, like an intestine-condom-Matryoshka doll.

Making them took time and care, according to researchers who published the Dudley Castle condoms in Post-Medieval Archaeology.

The cut intestine was scraped, cleaned (possibly turned inside out), dried and cut to size, which was between 15 and 20 centimetres long.

"In many cases, the open end was trimmed with a ribbon tie," the researchers wrote.

They couldn't say whether the condoms were used primarily for contraception or to protect against sexually transmitted infections, but considering the laborious manufacturing process, a condom was a luxury at the time.

And there's a chance the Dudley Castle sheaths were not single-use.

"Whilst there is some dark staining on some of the Dudley Castle condom tips, some mottled dark patches also occur on … remains of the [condom] shafts; it is unclear whether or not these patches testify to repeated use," the researchers wrote.

Sheep have helped make babies too

Advances in artificial insemination were largely thanks to sheep (and some scientists, of course).

Back in the 1950s, Australia was well and truly riding on the sheep's back.

The US needed wool to make uniforms for soldiers heading to the Korean war, and they bought much of it from Australia.

The price of wool skyrocketed. Where before it sold for a few shillings per pound, woolgrowers suddenly got "a pound a pound".

Sheep needed to be bred to meet demand. Artificial insemination, where sperm from a ram is inserted directly into a ewe's uterus, was a way to do it quickly.

And a Hungarian agricultural scientist, who spent three years in a Siberian gulag then fled Europe during the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, would play a huge role in developing that technology.

That scientist — Steven Salamon — arrived in Australia, where he eventually made his way to the office of the University of Sydney's head of animal husbandry, Terry Robinson.

Professor Robinson recognised Dr Salamon's talent. They led a team that developed ways to freeze sheep sperm, and modify the female reproductive cycle so a bunch of ewes could become pregnant at the same time.

Artificial insemination was born. And it worked, says Gareth Evans, an animal reproduction researcher at the University of Sydney.

"If you get a particularly valuable ram, it might be able to cover 50 ewes or something in a season … whereas it could be many hundreds through artificial insemination," Professor Evans says.

These days, artificial insemination — sometimes known as intrauterine insemination — is a fertility treatment for human animals too.

As is in-vitro fertilisation or IVF … and this had its origins in sheep, too.

In the 1960s, a young agricultural scientist named Alan Trounson, working in a southern NSW woolshed, wondered why some sheep had more lambs than others.

He soon realised it came down to the number of eggs the ewes produced.

After studying embryology, he and collaborators worked on a solution for women who were struggling to conceive. It involved increasing egg production, which increased their likelihood of falling pregnant — just like he'd seen in sheep.

And these days, one in 18 babies in Australia is born via IVF.

Check out What the Duck?! presented by Dr Ann Jones for extra reasons to thank sheep, and subscribe to the podcast for more.