A lot of recent linkage.
Human rights
The demolition of Melbourneās public housing towers and public housing tenantsā right to housing
for Right Now , Liberty VictoriaOn 20 September 2023, the Victorian Government released its Housing Statement ā a major package of government investment and reforms in housing.
Part of the plan is to demolish significant public housing estates across the state, including all 44 public housing towers across Melbourne by 2051. According to The Age, the 10,000 public housing residents were informed of the decision by Homes Victoria via leaflets the day after the announcement.
At this stage it is intended that the public housing towers in Carlton, North Melbourne and Flemington will be replaced with 30,000 new dwellings, of which only 11,000 will be earmarked for social housing. The remaining 19,000 dwellings will be private housing.
According to the State Government, the towers are āno longer fit for modern livingā and are unable to be retrofitted and therefore need to be demolished. However, leading experts from the RMIT Centre for Urban Research argue that there is no publicly available evidence to support this proposition and that demolishing the towers will in fact likely add further to the current shortage of public housing. Demolition will displace the closely-linked refugee and migrant communities that have called these estates home for years.
Just Stop Oil protestersā jail terms potentially breach international law, UN expert says
in The GuardianLong sentences handed to two Just Stop Oil protesters for scaling the M25 bridge over the Thames are a potential breach of international law and risk silencing public concerns about the environment, a UN expert has said.
In a strongly worded intervention, Ian Fry, the UNās rapporteur for climate change and human rights, said he was āparticularly concernedā about the sentences, which were āsignificantly more severe than previous sentences imposed for this type of offending in the pastā.
He said: āI am gravely concerned about the potential flow-on effect that the severity of the sentences could have on civil society and the work of activists, expressing concerns about the triple planetary crisis and, in particular, the impacts of climate change on human rights and on future generations.ā