Austudy Five

The Austudy Five was the epithet given to a group of five activists arrested in 1992 at a National Union of Students (NUS) national demonstration in Melbourne, Australia. NUS had called the demonstration around the Keating Government's proposed abolition of Austudy as a student grant to be replaced by a student loan. There were reportedly around 3,000 protesters who broke through police lines advancing on the steps of the Victorian Parliament. Demonstrators surrounded a police van after some demonstrators had been arrested, forcing the Victoria Police to release them. Three weeks later, police arrested the five activists in dawn raids, who were at the time, all from the International Socialist Organisation (ISO). They were charged with unlawful assembly, obstruction and illegal rescue; by where they would be held responsible for the actions of the entire demonstration. The Labor Left President of NUS at the time unsuccessfully moved to have the ISO expelled from NUS. Civil liberties activist Tim Anderson (political economist) described the case as "the most important political frame-up of the decade". The case and campaign to defend the five continued for two years before it was finally dismissed in 1994.[1][2][3][4]

The Austudy Five arrestees

References

  1. "Raising Melbourne's red flag" The Age, 23 August 2002. Accessed: 13 July 2009.
  2. "Fighting for student rights under Labor gov't" Socialist Alternative, Edition 119, August 2007. Accessed: 13 July 2009.
  3. "Civil liberties under threat" Archived 16 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Green Left Weekly, Issue 155, 17 August 1994. Accessed: 13 July 2009.
  4. "Victory for the Austudy Five" Archived 18 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Green Left Weekly, Issue 158, 7 September 1994. Accessed: 13 July 2009.
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