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World Youth Day!

July 3rd 2008 00:45
Sydney-siders face 'unreasonable interference' during World Youth Day

Pope Benedict addresses a youth rally crowd


Pope Benedict will arrive in Sydney amid tight security. (Reuters, file photo: Erin Siegal)


Draconian, repugnant and unnecessary. These are just a few of the criticisms of special regulations coming into force for the upcoming Catholic World Youth Day event in Sydney.

Civil libertarians and legal experts say the regulations could see situations such as someone deemed to be wearing an offensive T-shirt being arrested and given a hefty fine.

New South Wales Police say the measures are designed simply to ensure that World Youth Day is a peaceful and happy event.

The event runs from July 15 to July 20, but from today until the end of the month the regulations come into force.

Under the regime SES and Rural Fire Service volunteers will assist police in bag checks at World Youth Day locations.

And anyone deemed to be causing annoyance could be arrested and fined up to $5,500.

New South Wales deputy police commissioner Dave Owens says the regulations do not restrict democratic rights.

"If people wish to lawfully protest, we will facilitate those protests as long as they are law abiding," he said.

"Police officers always maintain a discretion, and I expect them to use that discretion."


There have been suggestions that people could be arrested if they wear a T-shirt that promotes the use of condoms. Mr Owens refused to rule that out.

"There are individual circumstances that will have to be dealt with individually," he said.

'Repugnant'

President of the New South Wales Bar Association Anna Katzmann says she does not understand why the regulations have been brought in.

"They are repugnant for two reasons," she said.

"First of all the Government has by-passed the normal parliamentary scrutiny that would be available if they were introduced by an Act of Parliament," she said.

"Secondly they are an unreasonable interference with people's freedom of speech and movement."

She says there is a chance people could be arrested for trivial offences in the areas that have been declared as special World Youth Day zones.

"These World Youth Day-declared areas are numerous and they encompass places like Sydney University and the Opera House. Places that you and I would travel to regularly, not just churches or church schools," she said.

New South Wales Council of Civil Liberties president Cameron Murphy says he is opposed to the proposed measures.

"A police officer may find someone's T-shirt annoying and on that basis issue them with a fine," he said.

"That sort of thing is likely to escalate any problems that occur rather than prevent them."

The Greens have joined civil libertarians and the Bar Association in calling for the regulations to be cancelled.

Based on an AM report by Barbara Miller.
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For the love of late night coffee...

April 14th 2006 05:20
Welcome to the first installment of Late Lattes, your first call for after hours cafes in Sydney!

Our inaugural pick is a tad suburban in Pennant Hills, but only really a stone's throw away from the North-western and North Shore suburbs (there's no traffic at 10pm - or you can catch the train). The aptly named Insomnia is open til midnight and easy to find at 114 Yarrarra Road, just off Pennant Hills Road and opposite Pennant Hills Station.

It gets very mixed reviews on the dubbya dubbya dubbya, but its all about careful choices: DO try the Chai tea (latte or "punjabi" - meaning, erm, "Indian"?!), the cappuccinos, the flavoured coffees, the double ultra turbo mega shake, and the burgers. DON'T order the iced chocolate (made with drinking chocolate - what were they thinking??) and although the bruschetta topping is very nicely prepared, the bread went a bit chewy and was buttered (WHAT?! I hear you say; yes, buttered). The jury is still out on the Caesar Salad. But the Chai, oh the Chai. It's flakey shavings in a transparent teapot - so fun to guess what's in it!

There has been a high turnover of staff in recent years (not to mention several changes of ownership) and I think it's destabilised its cult following. Never fear, though, I predict the new owners will have a better grip on the situation as the owner/manager is often there to supervise. Staff who were hired very young are starting to grow up and get better at their jobs, and for a café with a fair bit of table space, I've never had to wait long for my order.

Look Mum no hands!
Yes there are one or two tables too close to the café fridge, but on the plus side you can stare and salivate at them to your heart's content. Yes the lights are too bright for any real atmosphere, but it's well and truly the venue for a good old catchup/gossip/deep and meaningful so you're not there to smooch or slouch in a corner.

I looked around and the punters were so engrossed in their respective conversations I'm sure as far as they were concerned they might have been in a below freezing Guatamalan strip club watching a human sacrifice* and they wouldn't have noticed or cared.

Take your mum, take your boyfriend, take your long lost friend from primary school - it's the perfect coffee establishment while you argue, cry or reminisce about the ABC afternoon shows you watched when you were 10 (complete with theme tunes… "the power is yours!") at a time you would never have been allowed to stay up until when you were 10. Unless you have cooler parents than I do. Bet you had icecream for breakfast, had a pool and a Nintendo and a Barbie Dream Home too… bet you were a spoiled brat and now you've turned out to be a loser… *cough*

Whatever criticisms may or may not have been alleged tentatively or otherwise, it's cheap, it's clean, it's got a funky sign, and it's a damn sight better than having that late night chat in your car - depending, of course, on the context of the word "chat"...

Obviously if that's just what you told your parents, you kids better stay in the car.

Meanwhile, watch your diet and remember that "only Irish coffee provides in a single glass all four essential food groups: alcohol, caffeine, sugar, and fat." (Alex Levine)

Finally, for the morbid among you, check out the guy who uses his dead wife as a coffee table! Only in America...

Coffee Irish Yoda likes!


*Disclaimer: hypothetically… I'm sure Guatamalans are very nice people!
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Stay tuned...

March 27th 2006 04:38
Hold your breath, make a wish... Come with me, and you'll see there's a world of pure imagination: in Sydney!
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