The Independent Weekly | September 25, 2009
The Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement has made what it calls a reluctant and embarrassing plea to the public to help fund legal services for indigenous South Australians.
… [A] page two advertisement, which “reluctantly and embarrassingly calls on the Australian community” to donate $750,000, coincides with the National Indigenous Legal Conference in Adelaide and a visit by Commonwealth Attorney-General Robert McClelland. [more ...]
Comment:
The following comment was rejected by the editors of the The Independent Weekly.
Let me see. Have White tax payers fund the legal expenses of the Aboriginal thugs who beat them up in racist attacks because Whitey bashing is the hobby of choice for quite a large proportion of Australia’s indigenous population? Or bluntly: Have the victims pay for the defence of the criminals.
Makes perfect sense in a Marxist, hypocritical society that is anything but colour-blind. Abolish Aboriginal Legal Aid and make them use the same inadequate legal aid system that the rest of our penniless population are forced to use.
DOWN WITH BLACK SUPREMACIST ELITISM!
Cailen.




One Comment
A GREAT grandmother watched helplessly as her 80-year-old husband was kicked to the ground by four cowards posing as police officers in Elizabeth Grove. The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
Gloria Powardy – who is hooked-up to an oxygen machine 24 hours a day – said as her husband Bill opened the rear door of their home on Sampson Rd about 2.30am yesterday when the men bashed on it claiming they were police officers.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
Mrs Powardy, 73, said as her husband was opening the door, the men pushed it and smashed it into his face.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“He was really stunned, he went to the ground,” she said.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
The four men ran into the house demanding money from the elderly couple.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“I just said we have no money in the house, but they said we don’t believe you,” Mrs Powardy said.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“There was one that seemed to be the leader. He went in all the rooms, in and out, searching for money”.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
They took Mr Powardy’s watch that was given to him by his grandson and the couple’s mobile phones, but no money.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
Mrs Powardy said as her husband tried to get up off the ground one of the men kicked him in the back and then they pinned him to the ground.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“It was terrifying,” she said.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“Especially when I saw my husband, he’s my carer, laying on the floor bleeding.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“I’ve got a job to breathe and I’m trying to get them to go away.”
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
One of the other men told the leader, “they have had enough, let’s get out of here.”
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
They left but came back moments later demanding to be shown where the safe was.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
Mrs Powardy said the men left when she told them there wasn’t a safe.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“It was a very cowardly attack, but I think it is a sign of the times,” she said.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“Being a home invasion is one thing, but I could have died, I couldn’t breath.”
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
Mrs Powardy contacted the St Johns Ambulance Service through a medical alarm she wears, telling them to send an ambulance and to contact the police.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
Mr Powardy was taken to the Lyell McEwin Hospital and treated for facial injuries before he was taken to the Royal Adelaide Hospital to be treated for an eye injury.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
Chief Inspector Tony Crameri said people should be able to feel safe in their home.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.
“It’s a cowardly attack on two elderly people who were in bed at the time. People have a right to be safe in their homes, especially the elderly,” he said.
The men were described as as Aboriginal in appearance wearing hooded jumpers and dark clothing.