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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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Darkness, the natural enemy of glitter, closed in on all sides. Cold fell from the sky as it can’t help but do beneath the stars as all those pesky humans generate all that futile heat. But I knew, as celestial bodies tsked and tutted at our kingdom of flesh, that a great and profound clashing of forces was about to erupt.

And I knew that this post was going to be my most controversial yet.

And I knew it could make or break this fledging blog.

And I knew that I would get on a roll here.

The armies were gathering, the revolutionaries arming, the rounds revolving, the avant garde rounding the corner to meet in the street as the War of the Worlds was about to begin, because I asked the question:

Is Parramatta still considered a part of Sydney???

Or do they get their own city now? Recent extreme makeovers to the CBD less travelled to seem to scream “YES! WE WILL BE AS BIG AS SYDNEY ONE DAY because we are not bound by the eastern coast!” but the undercurrent still muttered under its breath. Like Mother England Sydney is eager to retain her outpost centres, yet like struggling nascent nations across the globe, Parramatta is crawling out of reach.

At any rate, here is Parramatta’s secret:

Like Burwood, the nightlife in Parramatta is starting to bubble. Suddenly, there are restaurants aplenty with outdoor seating and menus almost as multicultural as Parramatta’s demographic. Don’t get me wrong. Parramatta is still all about the fluorescent lighting. The overbearing music was the only thing filling most of the bars.

And there’s some kind of subversive element that’s smart enough to come up with a piercing parlour called “Holier Than Thou” but too ignorant to appreciate the irony in a tattoo parlour’s sign peeling and fading to its current illegible state of disrepair.

Amongst all this is a beacon of grounded normality (please join me in my campaign to quash the insistent ‘normalcy’. This is not a word – it is a linguistic fiction created by one of the US politicians). It’s still a little too bright at night, but I imagine it calms its fluoro fury during the day –it’s colourful, it’s comfy, it’s cool.

Oh, you want to know what it is?

We could keep on talking about “it” if you like. You could pick something silly and use “it” for “it”. Go on. Try “it”. Insert “poodle spanking”. Or “cucumber crème brulee”.

Okay okay. On Church Street in Parramatta (main shopping drag, largely pedestrianised), heading away from the station, just before you get to Lennox Bridge, is Mars Hill Cafe at number 331.

And it tries really hard. And these days, with so many establishments folding like a little donkey trying to hold up the economy, I give points for effort.

For example, the proprietor of this particular establishment was not content to be called a barista. Nor a small business owner. Nor a waiter. Nor Irene (trust me, I asked). He calls himself a “Caffeine Dealer” on the “Frequent Flyer Card.” It’s a nifty little piece of advertising too, this card, and personally I think it’s a nice little guerrilla touch that kidnaps an opportunity that so many others let go by. I also know that:

1) they’re a bit left (apparently this coffee is “ethical” – a nice change from all that mercenary coffee I’ve been drinking lately, it’d just as soon stab you in the back while you’re raiding the biscuit tin);

2) they’re a bit muso (live no-doubt-boys-with-acoustic-guitars three nights a week);

3) they’re a bit arty farty (monthly art exhibits);

4) they’re a bit geeky (wireless internet – what a good idea – now we can all caffeinate attached to our other lifeblood);

5) but they’re also just a little bit pretentious: this is one of those ‘specialty coffee’ places. But I dig that. They still serve the boring kind. It just costs extra when they have to spend so much time doing chromatography and distillation and all that highschool science stuff to extract the caramel syrup from your latte.

It’s got one thing that so many CBD cafes lack and that’s personality. And coffees that don’t cost $3.50.

But it’s got one other thing that is very dear to my heart, and that is that they are open til late, or at the very least at 11.15 when Nice Guys finally finished – highly recommended but a good thing it was nowhere near dinner.

Stay tuned for a special SecretSydney edition later wording you up on 24-hour cafes – if you can’t sleep you might as well meet your fellow insomniacs.

So look past the setting sun (good luck with that), look past the unflattering lighting, and see a suburb that just might be a good bean waiting to be served in a better cup.

And in the end, wherever you stand, Mars Hill has funky chairs for you to sit.
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