Sunday, 16 October 2011

Scammers hit householders

The Government and financial institutions across the country are warning the public to be vigilant of phone and internet scams in the lead up to Christmas.

According to banks, increasing numbers of people are being tricked into handing over money and personal information to scammers.

Many are falling victim to a new scam where householders are phoned by persons posing as a representatives from large software companies.

Callers claim there are viruses or errors on home computers which can be fixed for a small fee.

Worried householders hand over credit card details and download software onto their computers.

Gizmo computer repairs manager Ayesch Amir warns that large software companies do not call customers out of the blue.

"It's not likely whatsoever that Microsoft would be calling cutomers."

Mr Amir says companies like Microsoft do not have the capacity to identify errors on individual computers.

Despite this many people still receive these calls.

Floreat resident Harrison Hills recalls his experience with a scammer.

"“I had this guy call me up out of the blue and he said ‘we’ve identified some viruses on your computer’, he was with Microsoft and if he applied a software program to my computer he’d be able to fix it all. I just had to give him my credit card details as payment. ”

Fortunately, Mr Hills noticed something awry with the call and did not hand his over personal information.

”He was from Microsoft and I have a Mac, so it just seemed a bit weird as soon as he said that.”

But less savvy members of the public routinely fall prey to these scams.

For those who do give over credit card details and lose money to scammers, there is little that can be done to recover the funds.

Police and Nurses Credit Society web and electronic banking manager Michael Butcher says it is difficult for financial institutions to help customers recover funds.

“Financial institutions can help them to ensure there’s no further drawings on accounts and on cards, but recovering the money they’ve sent is very difficult because of the fact they have actually volunteered their information, it hasn’t been stolen, they’ve actually handed it over.”

Mr Butcher advises the public to be sceptical of such calls.

“If you get an unsolicited phone call where they're asking you to do things- download software, give out credit card details - just don't do it."

To learn more about protecting yourself against financial scams, go to scamwatch.gov.au.

*Radio Script

UN Calls for Nuclear Weapons Ban

Delegates have used this week's meeting of the United Nations General Assembly to push for a complete ban on nuclear weapons.

Currently, no multilateral treaty may force a nation to either disarm or reduce its nuclear stockpile.

The International Committee of the Red Cross is hoping this will change as it launches a global campaign against nuclear weapons.



Friday, 30 September 2011

Federal Government changes transgender passport policy

The Federal Government has recently changed its passport policy, making it easier for transsexual people to obtain a passport in their preferred gender.

The new guidelines from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade allow transgender people to obtain a passport in their chosen gender without sex reassignment surgery and allow a third gender option of X (indeterminate) for intersex people.

The new passport guidelines for transgender people state that a letter from a medical practitioner certifying that the person has had, or is receiving, appropriate clinical treatment for gender transition to a new gender, or that they are intersex and do not identify with the sex assigned to them at birth, is acceptable and sex reassignment surgery is not a prerequisite to issue a passport in a new gender.

“There are more transpeople out there than people think,” transgender lobby and advocacy group WA Gender Project secretary Zoe Hyde says.

“By and large they blend in, they look like any other person on the street, they’re going about their lives normally and the vast majority of people aren’t aware they have a trans colleague or a trans neighbour.”

This usually invisible group of people has serious concerns to face, that are slowly gaining society’s recognition.

“This is a great step forward for transpeople,” says Hyde.

“It means that transpeople can now travel without having to feel embarrassment, or in some cases discrimination.”

Equally important says Hyde is the third gender option available to intersex people.
“Most intersex people consider themselves either male or female, but there are some who consider themselves neither, and these people want to have access to a passport reflecting that,” she says.

The indeterminate gender option of X for intersex people and the ability for transpeople to identify their chosen sex on passports has been available to all 190 member countries of the United Nations’ International Civil Aviation Organisation since the end of World War II. Australia has just caught up.

Gold Coast clinical psychologist Ashley van Houten, researching the mental health of transsexuals living in their preferred gender, says the policy change is very significant in the affirmation of identity for transsexual people.

“Transsexuals can go through years and years and years of bringing their family on board, bringing their friends on board, bringing their work on board; and finally everything is going well, but in one minute just by handing over a passport, these years of hard work could be invalidated,” he says.

“They could be laughed at, ridiculed and humiliated. In some countries it is even illegal for a male to dress as a woman.  This new policy is so important.”

Van Houten says his research examines an area not yet studied in Australia or New Zealand.
“I’m looking at the mental health wellbeing of transsexuals once they start living in their preferred gender. Because you would expect that if I was male and I’m a transsexual longing to be female, once I’ve made that transition and start living as a female I should start to feel pretty good about life.

“I’m examining if that is the case or whether that’s mediated by something else –society.”

Van Houten says there is much confusion and misconception about transsexual people.
“We immediately associate transsexuals with transvestites, drag queens and drag kings. It really does a disservice to transsexuals. They’re born with a condition outside their control,” he says.

“There’s nothing they can do. It’s not a choice.”
Hyde concurs: “I think many people don’t take transpeople seriously- they think it’s something transpeople do lightly or on a whim, or maybe they just think transpeople are a bit crazy. However there is a growing body of evidence showing there’s some truth behind transpeople saying ‘I feel like a man or woman trapped in the wrong body’.”

Research by The Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, published in 2009, found that sexual differentiation of the reproductive organs takes place in the first two months of pregnancy, whereas sexual differentiation of the brain happens in the second half of pregnancy.

“This means that in the event of an ambiguous sex at birth, the degree of masculinisation of the genitals may not reflect the degree of masculinisation of the brain,” the study says.

“The human foetal brain develops in the male direction through a direct action of testosterone and in the female direction through the absence of this hormone. During the intrauterine period, gender identity, sexual orientation, cognition, aggression and other behaviours are programmed in the brain in a sexually differentiated way.”

The change in  passport policy is vindication for transsexual people. Although the Federal Government has taken steps to acknowledge transsexual people in their new lives with this policy, all state governments are lagging. Sex reassignment surgery remains a mandatory requirement to amend birth certificates.

The office of Western Australia’s Attorney-General Christian Porter says the State Government has not considered any change to existing birth certificate policy.

Van Houten says the inability for transsexual people to amend birth certificates to reflect their identity has serious ramifications.

“Some transsexuals have lived 40 years in their preferred gender but have decided for various reasons not to go through with surgery. They’re quite happy but at the same time they feel incomplete because their documentation doesn’t reflect how they have lived their lives,” he says.

“If I get a document that misspells my name; let alone anything else; I’m not very happy about it, but for transsexual people to get to the point where they’re living in their preferred gender there has been a significant road to travel.

“They’ve dealt with losing family, they’ve dealt with losing friends, they’ve dealt with being bullied at school. Often they’ve moved interstate away from family because it’s too painful. So after all that sacrifice you would expect validation to be fairly high.”

Gender rights group A Gender Agenda spokesperson Peter Hyndal says sex reassignment surgery as a requirement to change birth certificates is not only a denial of a person’s identity but a “fundamental breach of human rights”.

“It just doesn’t happen in civilised countries,” he says.

“The Government shouldn’t dictate what medical procedures people should or shouldn’t have. Everyone else has their sex or their gender recognised before the law, I think it’s a serious marginalisation of a group of people to say they have to be sterilised before they can be recognised.”

Hyde agrees the situation is a catch 22. “The surgery to construct male genitals isn’t available in Australia; it’s certainly not covered under the public health system. A transguy would have to travel overseas, the procedure can cost up to $100,000.00 and even then success isn’t guaranteed.

“It’s unjust for the State Government to mandate that you have to have surgery, but not provide it.”

When asked to name the best way to assist transsexual people in their transition and finding their place in society, van Houten lets out a long breath.

“Compassion,” he says. “Be sensitive to the little things, as a society we fear what we don’t know. If you don’t know take the time to find out.”


Friday, 22 April 2011

Prison Union Queries Transport

*Please note: I  do not have editorial control over articles in the Western Independent and do not condone the use of first names of deceased Indigenous persons in this article.

Aussie Uranium Still for Sale

Thursday, 7 April 2011

Unions Call to De-Privatise




Unions and interest groups presented the Western Australian Parliament with a petition to end the privatisation of custodial transport services during a rally at Parliament House.

The petition of more than 1,000 signatures presented to Greens Member Alison Xamon called on the Government to “terminate the G4S contract; and return custodial transport to the public service to make it accountable to the WA people and Parliament.”

At the rally, the Deaths in Custody Watch Committee backed by the Western Australian Prison Officers Union, the Community and Public Sector Union WA and church groups protested the continued provision of prisoner transport by private companies and in particular G4S.

G4S has been under attack from action groups since 2008 when Aboriginal elder Mr Ward died of heatstroke in the back of a prison van on a journey from Laverton to Kalgoorlie.

In January this year WorkSafe WA laid charges against the Department of Corrective Services, G4S and two guards in relation to Mr Ward’s death. 

Corrective Services has been charged with not adequately maintaining the vehicle in which Mr Ward died and G4S with not having sufficient measures in place to ensure the safety for the transportation of persons in custody. If found guilty both Corrective Services and G4S face fines of up to $400,000.00.

In a statement, WorkSafe said; “[it] considered that a police investigation was more appropriate than a WorkSafe investigation because the charges and penalties available under their legislation were stronger and more appropriate.”
 
DICWC treasurer Seamus Doherty said that the fact G4S was never taken to task is “appalling” and that private vendors were not held to the same level of accountability as services provided by the public sector.

“It’s not that we’re promoting the internal system, it’s just that there’s accountability with the Government, and the people and elections if something goes really bad,” he said.

WAPOU secretary John Welch said that the privatisation of  a service inevitably leads to the decline in the quality of that service. “The culture of companies that put profits before service, shareholders before services means that inherently we’re going to have these sorts of problems,” he said.

Welch said quality of service is determined by interactions and not just performance indicators.

Welch maintains that the quality of the transport service provided by G4S is effecting the ability prison officer’ to perform their jobs, placing increased pressure on the prisons sector. “It’s not unusual for our members to have to pick up funeral escorts, escorts to hospitals, medical appointments because the service provider G4S is simply unable to.

“They don’t have the necessary staffing levels to provide those services, it puts pressure on what is an already overcrowded prison system,” he said.

Several impassioned speakers at the rally, including DICWC deputy chairperson Marianne Mackay and Pastor Geoffrey Stokes said the privatisation movement was making money from the misery and suffering of the people.

“It's blood money that these people are making as far as I’m concerned,” Pastor Stokes said.

Friday, 18 March 2011

Split Seconds on the Perth Music Scene

Perth is a unique breeding ground for emerging bands, according to Split Seconds front man Sean Pollard.

Isolation coupled with the city’s tiny number of venues mean that up and coming bands have the opportunity to fine-tune their sound before gaining national exposure.

“You’re hidden away so you have a chance to play bad gigs and get better on stage,” Pollard said, commenting on the unusual elements that comprise the landscape of Perth’s live music scene.

Returning home to Perth after a year of travel, with an artillery of new song material, Pollard, a member of local outfit New Rules for Boats, decided to strike out on his own, recording EP Split Seconds and putting together a new band. “I had this whole set of new songs that I had to do something with,” he said.


Putting together a six-man-band to play his material live was an easy process for Pollard; “Perth’s pretty small,” he acknowledged. “So when dudes are good at something you see them around.”

The scale of the Perth music scene means that local musicians often play in several bands at once, creating a great web of individuals and bands, leading to a friendly yet determined rivalry. “It drives competiveness; it just makes everyone get better,” Pollard said.

“It’s good because you know everyone, and once you start becoming good, everyone notices straightaway, whereas  over east I think bands can get lost sometimes.”

Split Seconds were certainly noticed on the Perth scene this summer, playing major WA festivals Southbound, Big Day Out and St. Jerome’s Laneway and landing support slots for Tim Minchin and indie music legend Sufjan Stevens.“Yeah, it was a good summer,” Pollard said.

Gaining the attention of Perth punters is one thing but attaining national recognition is something with which local bands have had to battle, with nation-wide tours being out of reach for many; word of mouth, social media and radio remain as the avenues available to Perth bands trying to gain a foothold in the wider industry.

Fortunately for Split Seconds, the Australia’s national youth radio broadcaster Triple J has gotten aboard with the single Bed Down on high rotation at the station.

The band came to the attention of the Triple J’s music director Richard Kingsmill with their performance at last year’s One Movement for Music festival. “It was just luck really,” Pollard said. “Richard Kingsmill just happened to be at the pub at the time, and he liked what he saw I guess.”

Triple J is a massively influential force in Australian music, enveloping major media formats radio, print, television and online. “To build a fan base beyond Perth is really hard,” Pollard admitted. “Triple J really helps to speed things up.”
 
The band recently launched their EP Split Seconds at the Amplifier Bar and though they have plans to tour over east later this year, for the time being they are committed to staying based in Perth; "everything's here," Pollard said.








Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Welcome to Mental Blank

Hi there!
I'm Marissa and welcome to my blog, Mental Blank, a mini portfolio for my journalistic endeavours.
Please feel free to have flick through, read the stories and comment.