This weekend marks the beginning of the APEC meeting in Sydney. It also marks the beginning of some major interruptions and disruption for the people of Sydney.
Goeroge Bush is not eligible to stand for election aagin and there is a federal election due here. Many of us hope that this year is also the end of the road for the current Prime Minister. It seems that he has decided to host a farewell shindig for his mate, George. Possibly a knees-up do for himself too.
APEC is meeting here in Sydney.
President Bush is arriving a couple of days earlier than originally planned and bringing an entourage of several hundred. This is adding some millions to the already astronomical costs of hosting this shindig for George. The Herald has an article on some of the disruptions to the city. This fence is disgusting. There are designated checkpoints for those who need to enter the fenced area or even to cross the road. It runs alongside the Quay, around past the Opera House, up through the Botanical Gardens and through a business section of Sydney. It appals me.
The Sydney metropolitan area has been given a public holiday next Friday, supposedly in honour of the meeting. Rubbish! Sydneysiders have been told to stay out of the city. Not much honourable about that. Businesses are wondering where their compensation is coming from. Probably nowhere. The place is swarming with police, defence force personnel, security guys, whatever. Known "troublemakers" have been warned that if they enter the city, they will be arrested. Troublemakers is not my word, by the way. It comes from the government. Some buses have been converted to mobile prisons with cells. Some prisoners have been given home detentions so the gaol cells are freed for those arrested during expected protests. Fighter jests will patrol an exclusion zone over Sydney. Orders are to shoot down any plane trying to enter that zone. Major interruptions to train services and othr public transport have also been announced. I live near one of Sydney's major roads. A long section near me has been branded a clearway with long hours for over a week. How do shopkeepers and businesses get to cope with something like that?
There is obviously much more than the public has any knowledge of.
I'm glad I will be away next weekend. I'll be attending a conference in Mittagong in the Southern Highlands. This was arranged well before details of the meeting began to emerge and I'm thankful I'll not be around.
I suggested to my son that the government could have bought an ailing country property, renovated it and declared an exclusion zone around it. This could well cost less than the huge sum spent so far. It could then be run as a tourist resort and make money, instead of costing mney for the people of this state.
At the end of such a conference, the heads of state usually parade in hideous shirts or other ghastly mementos of the conference. They look self conscious, as well they might. I wondered aloud what would be produced this time. Swaggies bush hats with bobbing corks to keep the flies off? Very Aussie. My son suggested budgie smugglers. He then suggested that Howard and Bush may well not be able to fill these, a sentiment I would not normally make in public, but one I agree with.
Scroll down the page from that link or go here for a very funny video on budgie smuggling. A bit crude, but scenes like this can be seen on any Sydney beach in summer.
Recent Comments