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Hansard
- Start of Business
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- DOCUMENTS
- FEDERAL FINANCIAL RELATIONS AMENDMENT (NATIONAL HEALTH AND HOSPITALS NETWORK) BILL 2010
- BUSINESS
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- HEALTH INSURANCE (EXTENDED MEDICARE SAFETY NET - MIDWIVES) AMENDMENT DETERMINATION 2010
- CRIMINAL CODE AMENDMENT (CLUSTER MUNITIONS PROHIBITION) BILL 2010
- NATIONAL HEALTH AND HOSPITALS NETWORK BILL 2010
- AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL PREVENTIVE HEALTH AGENCY BILL 2010
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STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
- Great Barrier Reef: Project Catalyst
- Infrastructure
- Ovarian Cancer
- Flinders Electorate: Infrastructure Charge
- Tan Kien Ly
- Minister’s Awards for Excellence for Employers of Australian Apprentices
- Turkey: Republic Day
- Murray-Darling Basin
- Professor Berni Einoder AM
- Kalamunda Schoolies Timor-Leste Project
- Australian Youth Climate Coalition
- TRAGEDIES IN INDONESIA
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QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Economy
(Abbott, Tony, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Economic Reform
(Owens, Julie, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Electricity Prices
(Andrews, Kevin, MP, Abbott, Tony, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Broadband
(Rowland, Michelle, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Electricity Prices
(Van Manen, Bert, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Banking
(Jones, Stephen, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Banking
(Hockey, Joe, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Health Reform
(O’Neill, Deborah, MP, Roxon, Nicola, MP) -
Banking
(Hockey, Joe, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Carbon Farming Initiative
(D’Ath, Yvette, MP, Combet, Greg, MP) -
Banking
(Bandt, Adam, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Indonesian Tsunami
(Parke, Melissa, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Asylum Seekers
(Bishop, Julie, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Women in the Workplace
(Burke, Anna, MP, Ellis, Kate, MP) -
Asylum Seekers
(Briggs, Jamie, MP, Bowen, Chris, MP) -
Freedom of Information
(Saffin, Janelle, MP, O’Connor, Brendan, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Forrest, John, MP, Burke, Tony, MP) -
Economy
(Grierson, Sharon, MP, Emerson, Craig, MP) -
Cleaner Car Rebate Scheme
(Mirabella, Sophie, MP, Garrett, Peter, MP) -
Economy
(Symon, Mike, MP, Crean, Simon, MP)
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Economy
- PERSONAL EXPLANATIONS
- USE OF MOBILE TELEPHONES
- COMMITTEES
- DOCUMENTS
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- AUTONOMOUS SANCTIONS BILL 2010
- VETERANS’ AFFAIRS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (WEEKLY PAYMENTS) BILL 2010
- THERAPEUTIC GOODS AMENDMENT (2010 MEASURES NO. 1) BILL 2010
- BUSINESS
- GOVERNOR-GENERAL’S SPEECH
- HIGHER EDUCATION SUPPORT AMENDMENT (FEE-HELP LOAN FEE) BILL 2010
- AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL PREVENTIVE HEALTH AGENCY BILL 2010
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ADJOURNMENT
- Apprenticeships
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Burma
Palestine - Road Infrastructure
- Ipswich Region Community Church Day of Honour
- Dunkley Electorate: Frankston
- Moreton Electorate: Seniors
- Grey Electorate: Road Conditions on the Birdsville Track
- Makin Electorate: Greek Community
- Foetal Alcohol Syndrome
- Canberra Electorate: Telstra Awards
- Infrastructure
- Adjournment
- NOTICES
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Main Committee
- Start of Business
-
CONSTITUENCY STATEMENTS
- Stirling Electorate: Neighbourhood Watch
- Calwell Electorate: Radio 3ZZZ
- Macarthur Electorate: 24-Hour Fight Against Cancer Macarthur
- Parramatta Electorate: Merrylands Baptist Church
- Grey Electorate: Bedford Industries
- Deakin Electorate: Building the Education Revolution Program
- Dunkley Electorate: Small Businesses
- Corio Electorate: Youth Leadership Awards
- Bradfield Electorate: San Run for Life
- Page Electorate
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THERAPEUTIC GOODS AMENDMENT (2010 MEASURES
- VETERANS’ AFFAIRS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (WEEKLY PAYMENTS) BILL 2010
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
- BUSINESS
- Adjournment
Page: 1902
Ms OWENS (9:50 AM)
—I rise to recognise the Merrylands Baptist Church community for their outstanding contribution to the cause of global justice and poverty reduction. The church has a very active and successful group that they call ‘Catalyst’, a group whose objective in life is to change people’s views about the need to act on poverty and to better inform their community, and they regularly organise really quite innovative and inspirational events in Merrylands to raise awareness about global poverty and the Millennium Development Goals.
In the past I have attended their fifth birthday party, designed to recognise the unacceptably high number of children who do not reach their fifth birthday. The birthday party was for those who never reach the age of five. They presented me at that time with a tiny little white jumpsuit—for probably a one-year-old—and asked me to bring it down to the foreign minister of the day. Attached to it were cards with the name and address of each person that participated and birthday wishes for children who died before the age of five. It actually looked quite pretty until you realised what it was—one card for every child who died during the four-minute period it took them to write the cards. One of my staff, Jacinta, whose job it was to enter all those names in our database, found it quite a traumatic experience as well. But, again, I would reiterate that they are a quite remarkable group of people.
This week they sent me down with something else. They sent me down with a banner. I know we do not have props, so I will not open it, but it would in fact cover this entire desk. It is a banner covered with 150 hand prints and it comes with a card which I will read. By imprinting their hands on this banner, they say:
… we promise to remember the poor, we promise to remind our leaders to keep their commitment to the poor. As a sign of our promise we make this hand print. Together our hands are a message to our leaders to act with justice and to remember the poor.
In the next day or so I will present this banner to our foreign minister, but before I did that I wanted to bring it to the House and indicate to the members of the House that 150 members of my community have attached their hand prints to this banner to remind us of our commitment to the poor and to meeting the Millennium Development Goals as a nation.
I commend these people from the Merrylands Baptist Church; they are an extraordinary group of people. When they first started this program, there were very few of them who understood or who were informed about the issues that face some of the most disadvantaged people in the world. That is certainly not the case now. They keep me on my toes. They visit me regularly and they contact me regularly, in many ways, to remind me of our obligation. Thank you.