• Yemen: The forgotten war
    • Melissa Parke meets Yemenis who’ve lost everything in the conflict. Photo courtesy Melissa Parke.

    MELISSA PARKE was appointed by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in December 2017 as a member of the Group of Eminent Experts on Yemen. Despite strong opposition from the Saudi-led coalition, the Group’s mandate was renewed for a further 12 months by the UN Human Rights Council in September 2018.

    I DON’T want to live any more,” said the man standing in the rubble of his destroyed home.

    His teenage daughter beside him burst into tears and the younger daughter looked up at him, not understanding.

    The Saudi airstrike, in the UNESCO World heritage old city of Sana’a, had come without warning in the middle of the night killing all other members of the man’s family, leaving them homeless.

    They had no connection to any of the warring parties to the conflict in Yemen but were among its tens of thousands of civilian victims.

    “What is his name?” I asked the mother sitting on the bed at the hospital in Sana’a next to the emaciated body of her child.

    “Her name is Amal,” corrected the mother softly. “It means hope.”

    Heartbreakingly, this tiny girl is among the millions of Yemenis on the brink of famine arising from the severe naval and air restrictions placed on Yemen by the Saudi-led Coalition.

    “Please help us to find our sons and husbands,” pleaded the Abductees’ Mothers Association, describing the arrest and disappearances of their loved ones.

    One mother recounted having received her son’s lifeless, tortured body back, without explanation, after his disappearance two years earlier.

    The mothers have been bravely holding public demonstrations in Sana’a and Aden to demand answers, to demand due process and justice from parties to the conflict.

    These pleas have not only fallen on deaf ears, but worse, have led to violence, threats and intimidation from authorities.

    Among those detained in Yemen by both sides of the conflict are journalists and human rights defenders for having the temerity to report the truth or express an opinion.

    Sexual violence

    In the north of the country, practitioners of the Baha’i faith have been targeted by the Houthis, one leader sentenced to death earlier this year in Sana’a after a trial that neither he nor his family were allowed to attend.

    In the south, consistent reports have emerged of serious human rights violations in detention facilities controlled by the UAE, including large scale sexual violence.

    Women and children in Yemen are particularly vulnerable due to displacement, poverty and an atmosphere of indiscriminate violence.

    Children have been recruited by both sides to participate in the conflict.

    The conflict in Yemen, now in its fourth year, is a man-made disaster that has devastated the country’s health and water infrastructure and resulted in the deaths and maiming of countless people.

    Yet, the world’s worst humanitarian crisis is also one of the world’s most neglected.sd

    The Coalition’s air blockade of Sana’a international airport and the prohibition of international journalists and human rights organisations travelling on UN flights to Sana’a has contributed to the news vacuum.

    In late August this year the UN-appointed Group of Eminent Experts released the first report of their investigation, which found that serious human rights violations and war crimes had been committed by all sides of the conflict in Yemen.

    The report noted little attempt by the parties to minimise civilian casualties. (https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=23479&LangID=E)

    Among its recommendations, the Group of Experts called upon the international community to refrain from providing weapons that could be used in the Yemen conflict.

    It is the very least the world can do to prevent the further suffering of tens of millions of innocent Yemeni people.

  • Just for good measure

    SOMETHING rare happened after I ate dessert at the Measure Bar – I didn’t hate myself and feel like a bloated Baron Harkonnen.

    That’s because the dishes at this specialist dessert bar are perfectly balanced by chef Karmen Lu, making you feel decadent but not gluttonous.

    The atmosphere at this Beaufort Street haunt is very “date night” – tasteful bare-wood, abstract motifs and flattering lighting.

    But the real attraction is the dessert menu, a selection of nine painstakingly curated dishes, with a couple of “rotating” sweets to keep things fresh.

    The Choc Mint ($20) is a dark chocolate cremeux — think rich, dense mousse — sitting on a crunchy base, scattered with mint flavoured chocolate crumbles and popping candy.

    It’s accompanied by a side of minty gelato with delicate milky wafers.

    The cremeux could easily be overwhelming, but the sharp mint cuts perfectly through the rich chocolate flavours and there’s a nice interplay between the smooth and crunchy textures.

    I think this is the dessert that’ll actually make me say “yep, that’s a $20 dessert”.

    Critics agree and last year Measure won best new venue at the Australian Hotels Association awards

    My date went for the Violet Passion ($21). Even if you weren’t going to eat it, the presentation is amazing: it could pass for a Valentine’s day flower arrangement.

    Sweet

    The base is a firm passionfruit semifreddo topped with strips of dehydrated passionfruit curd.

    Amongst those coils are nested blueberries and tiny meringues, finished with chunks of violet jelly.

    The well-balanced dish is sweet, fruity and refreshing, and never cloying.

    The cocktails fit the dessert theme: There’s a pavlova-flavoured vodka cocktail, a peach bellini, and a liquid “lemon meringue” with Limoncello, vodka, Contreau, Drambuie and lemon.

    I tried their take on the old fashioned ($20), which adds salted caramel to the bourbon, Grand Marnier and bitters mix. Again, they were very restrained: Nothing here felt too sweet, and this still tasted like a strong, grown-up drink.

    The main game here is the evening desserts, but this year Measure started running high teas on the weekends and a brunch through the week, Tuesday to Sunday.

    Nothing’s boring or vanilla: The avocado on toast is enhanced with goat’s cheese and roasted cherry tomatoes. The scrambled eggs are miso-flavoured and include the sharp Japanese spice shichimi. Even the porridge sounds like it’s served up for royalty, accompanied by chai poached pear, quinoa granola and chai syrup.

    I’ll be back for brunch soon.

    By David Bell

    Measure
    642 Beaufort Street, Mt Lawley
    http://www.measurebar.com.au
    0457 552 245

  • Beat towards the calm
    • Aminah Hughes. Photo supplied

    THE title of Aminah Hughes’ new album, Blue Wooden Boat, harks back to a raucous New Year’s eve party in Fremantle.

    Things were getting feral at the hootenanny bash and the frantic drumming to welcome in the new year was annoying Hughes, so she wandered outside.

    “There was a beautiful blue wooden boat in the back yard, I got in and started singing,” says the Joondana songwriter.

    “People came out and lay on the lawn and I just sang for hours.”

    Hughes studied classical and baroque flute at UWA, but she wanted to dabble in other genres and dropped out.

    After completing a poetry minor at Curtin University, she decided to head to Ireland to find her muse.

    “I took my flute and went to the Sligo Jazz School to learn jazz.”

    Collaborating with Seamie O’Dowd, a celebrated traditional and blues musician, Hughes performed in Australia, Ireland and the UK, including the Galway Arts Festival and Bath Folk Festival.

    She toured with Californian songwriter Thom Moore (Mary Black) and appeared on Irish TV and BBC radio, as well as playing with the Sligo Baroque Orchestra.

    Blue Wooden Boat is a mix of folk, alt-country, blues, jazz and soul: “With a spoken-word twist,” Hughes says.

    The album has new original music, but also includes an Archie Roach song, a Joni Mitchell medley and a Russian folk song translated into English.

    Hooking up with fellow Australian musician Tommy Emmanuel in Ireland, they played a number of shows together and he was happy to guest on Blue Wooden Boat, despite a heavy touring schedule in Germany at the time.

    Recorded in Ireland, the US, Australia and Germany, Blue Wooden Boat also features Waterboys fiddler Steve Wickham, the Nashville gospel singers, and The McCrary Sisters.

    The album launch at The Ellington on November 14 will feature Perth musicians Russell Holmes, Jon Clements, Karl Florisson, Michael Perkins, and Kathy Potter

    By JENNY D’ANGER

  • Gig of the Week: BUSBY MAROU

    A HERALD PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
    To promote your upcoming gig email advertising@perthvoice.com

    BUSBY MAROU are flying high after an amazing couple of years. Their latest album Postcards From The Shellhouse debuted at #1 on the National ARIA charts and they sold 3,000 tickets to their first annual One Hot Night festival in Rockhampton.

    This year, after wrapping up a number of sold out shows down the east coast, the pair took a slight break and are now back with a special show at The Newport Hotel on Friday 9th November, presented by Footstomp music, Kadence Group & Select Music.

    A few months ago, Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced that Busby Marou would be the face and the soundtrack of the new Tourism and Events Queensland campaign with their much song Beautiful Road. It captures the spirit of the famous slogan ”Beautiful One Day, Perfect The Next”, that’s making a comeback as Queensland’s tourism catch-cry.

    “Thomas Busby and Jeremy Marou are not only two of Australia’s most popular musicians, they’re authentic Queenslanders who perfectly symbolise our enviable way of life,” said
    Kate Jones, QLD’s Tourism Industry Development Minister.

    “This last year has been huge and watching the crowds sing along to these latest bunch of songs has definitely been our highlight. We’re stoked the song is getting a lot of love.” Tom Busby

    Busby Marou – The Newport Hotel
    Friday 9th November
    Doors open 7:30pm
    Tickets at http://www.thenewport.com

  • Farnley delights

    GOLDEN orbs hang like exotic ear rings from an angel trumpet tree, its fragrant scent enhancing a vine-covered alfresco.

    There’s many delights at this Mt Lawley home, from a front courtyard protected by high hedges – creating a tranquil, sun-filled nook – to the numerous art deco features.

    Federation tiles add to the genteel elegance of the wrap-around front verandah, which overlooks the garden and water feature.

    Inside there’s a raft of lovely features including stained glass in the front door, rich jarrah floors, decorative ceiling roses, art deco fireplaces and soaring ceilings.

    Spacious

    Accessed through decorative arches is the formal lounge, with a lovely fireplace and ceiling rose, and a spacious office that would make a nice fourth bedroom.

    The thoroughly modern extension retains the home’s old world charm with banks of windows in the spacious kitchen/dining/family room.

    This area has delicate stained glass, including bright yellow primroses above the french doors.

    Red cedar cupboards enhance the walk-in-pantry and spacious kitchen, while black granite benchtops create a dramatic touch.

    At the front of the house is the main bedroom, where french doors, protected by white plantation shutters, open onto the verandah and secluded garden.

    Secure parking for two cars is accessed off a rear right-of-way, and there’s a large, powered workshop/storage area.

    This lovely four-bedroom home is perfect for a family, with space for peaceful solitude and places to share.

    Situated on Farnley Street, it’s in the high-demand catchment area for Mt Lawley Primary and High School, and close to Edith Cowan University.

    Just off Walcott Street, there’s a surfeit of shops, cafes and restaurants nearby, and the Perth CBD is six minutes away by car, or 15 by bus or bike.

    8 Farnley Street, Mt Lawley
    expressions of interest
    Carlos Lehn 0416 206 736
    Acton Mt Lawley 9272 2488

  • Health: Putting the bite on skin cancer

    A PERTH VOICE PROMOTIONAL FEATURE
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    NOTORIOUS as the world’s deadliest spider after notching up 13 fatalities, Sydney’s funnel web spider is getting a make-over as a potential life-saver.

    Researchers in Queensland have discovered that a compound extracted from the spider is highly effective in killing skin cancer cells.

    The research was led by Dr Maria Ikonomopoulou and Dr Manuel A Fernandez-Rojo from the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute in Brisbane, who say it could potentially lead to new melanoma treatments.

    “When we tested the Australian spider peptide on human melanoma cells in the laboratory, it killed the majority of them,” Dr Ikonomopoulou said.

    “We also found the peptide slowed the growth of melanomas in mice.”

    Dr Ikonomopoulou said they took their inspiration from research into a Brazilian spider which had also been found to have anti-cancer properties.

    But importantly, the peptide in the Aussie spider’s venom was found to be less harmful to healthy skin surrounding a tumour than its Brazilian cousin.

    Even more quirkily, the peptide kills the mysterious facial tumours that have bedevilled Tasmanina devils and led to massive decline in their numbers in the last decadex.

    “This research is still at a very early stage, but these results are very promising. There are many years of work ahead, but we hope that this compound could in the future be developed into a new treatment for melanoma and DFTD,” says Dr Ikinomopoulous.

    “These findings prompt us to continue investigating the potential of bioactive compounds derived from venom to treat melanoma, liver diseases, obesity and metabolism, as well as against the Tasmanian devil tumors in collaboration with the biopharmaceutical industry.”

  • REMEMBRANCE DAY 2018: A call to horns
    • Buglers get a fine tune before their Armistice Day tribute.

    BUGLERS, trumpeters, cornetists and flugelhorn players have responded with a virtual army to the RSL’s call to horns to help celebrate the 100th anniversary of Armistice Day.

    This year while the big Remembrance Day ceremony is being held at Kings Park, about 180 horn players around the state will mark the minute’s silence with The Last Post, many of them in Perth’s CBD.

    The 100 Buglers project was the brainchild of old mates Ted Tait, Barry Telfer and Peter Hind, who came up with the idea over a cup of coffee after last year’s Remembrance Day service, where they’d played The Last Post in the CBD.

    Mr Tait says they pitched the idea to Perth’s close-knit music community and before they knew it the message had spread like wildfire and they’ve not got musicians flying in from Darwin and South Australia to participate.

    It got so big they’ve even got participants playing in regional centres like Albany and Kalgoorlie.

    “What is really pleasing is how many kids from primary and high school have become involved,” Mr Tait says.

    Mr Tait was a member of the Australian Navy Band for 38 years and had the honour of performing The Last Post at the funeral of Claude Choules, the last veteran of the WWI conflict in Australia.

    The Last Post will be played on Remembrance Day just before the minute’s silence at 11am.

  • REMEMBRANCE DAY 2018: Staunch to the end

    AUSTRALIANS have served their country, when called on by the British Empire, as far back as the Crimea War in Europe and the Maori Wars in New Zealand.

    Australians were also involved in The Boer War in South Africa and the little-known Boxer Rebellion in China.

    A lot of Australians lost their lives in these battles.

    Then we came to World War I – the birth of the Anzacs.

    It was called the war to end all wars, 1914-1918, and again Australians rallied to the call.

    In the words of the first verse of the Ode to the Fallen – “They went with songs to battle!”

    True of eye

    These young Australians were excited and looking forward to the adventure as they marched down the streets of Fremantle, Albany and other capital cities, where they joined the convoy of ships bound for Africa and beyond.

    The verse of the Ode goes on, “They were young, straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow”.

    Then came the horrendous landing at Gallipoli, where over an eight month period we saw thousands of Anzacs killed and wounded.

    There is nothing truer, as the verse of the Ode continues, “They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted, they fell with their faces to the foe”.

    From Gallipoli onto France and Belgium the Western Front, the Australians faced fearsome odds and casualties were high, but the spirit of the Anzac lived on.

    World War I finally ended and the guns fell silent on the Western Front.

    The Armistice was signed on November 11 1918, putting an end to the war.

    A total of 61,919 Australians paid the supreme sacrifice; giving their lives for their country.

    Then, in what felt like the blink of an eye, World War II was upon us, and the sons and daughters of the Anzacs rallied to the call.

    They saw action in Africa, Europe, The Middle East, South East Asia, the Pacific and New Guinea.

    This time the war was closer to home. We saw the hospital ship, the Centaur, torpedoed and sunk by an enemy submarine.

    Everyone onboard the ship died including crew, doctors, nurses and wounded soldiers.  This occurred off the south east coast of Queensland, not far from Brisbane.

    There was the sneak attack by two enemy miniature submarines in Sydney Harbour, and closer to home the bombings of Darwin, Broome and other towns across Northern Australia.

    The brave sons and daughters of the Anzacs stood fast, and their courage and bravery assisted in ending the war and saving Australia from invasion.

    However, by the end of the war in 1945, once again thousands of Australian men and women had lost their lives.

    But we know the world can be a crazy place: in 1950 Australia answered the call of the United Nations and went to the aid of South Korea.

    Australia’s involvement had a huge impact on the cease fire in 1953.

    There was never a surrender or armistice signed between North and South Korea, and still there are tensions between these two countries.

    Once again hundreds of Australians were killed in action.

    We ask the question, when will it end? The names on the honour boards across the country continue to grow. Hundreds of Australians lost their lives in The Malayan Emergency, The Indonesian Confrontation and The Vietnam War.

    It didn’t stop there and there was The Persian Gulf Wars, East Timor, Iraq and the on-going conflict in Afghanistan.

    Many more Australians have been killed in action during these campaigns.

    During this short journey of Australia at war, over 103,000 Australian men and women have been killed in battle.

    Anzac Day and Remembrance Day pays tribute to all the men and women that have been killed in action, and acknowledges all those that have served in the defence of our country.

    At the dawn service on Anzac Day and on Remembrance Day – and every day – we will remember them.

    “Lest we forget”

  • REMEMBRANCE DAY 2018: Evocative concert
    • Brent Grapes and Dominic Perissinotto.

    A CONCERT of evocative poetry and music will commemorate this year’s Remembrance Day in Fremantle’s St Patrick’s Basilica at 2.30pm.

    For the Fallen will feature James Hagan reciting war poems while accompanied by musicians Eva-Marie Middleton (soprano), Michael Heap (baritone), Brent Grapes (trumpet) and Dominic Perissinotto (pipe organ).

    Following a wreath laying ceremony and The Last Post, the concert will open with a dramatic performance of The Hollow Men, composed by Vincent Persichetti.

    Originally written for trumpet and orchestra, the piece is an moving response to the poem of the same name by T S Eliot.

    For the Fallen

    For the Fallen will also include music by Benjamin Britten, Joseph Jongen and Ralph Vaughan Williams, and poems by Rupert Brooke, Ernst Stadler and Wilfred Owen’s famous Anthem for Doomed Youth.

    “The poetry and music reflections for this concert are drawn from many countries to show that no matter where we come from, the effects of war are universal,” Perissinotto says.

    “The concert includes music and poetry from United States of America, United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, Belgium, France, Italy and Russia as we move through an evocative concert program.

    “Through this integration of poetry and music reflections from international poets and musicians who have experienced the atrocities of World War 1, the program will honour those who have fallen.”

    The concert will end with a moving Brenton Broadstock composition that takes its inspiration from the Returned and Services League Burial Ritual.

    The piece features pipe organ, and trumpet passages reminiscent of The Last Post.

    For the Fallen is on at The Basilica of St Patrick in Fremantle on Sunday November 11 at 2.30pm.

    Free parking at St Patrick’s Basilica and in the grounds of the adjacent primary school.

    Pre-book at http://www.trybooking.com/TATI or pay at the door.

  • Cash catalyst for science
    • Simon Millman, Sutherland Dianella Primary School students Giselle and Kenzie, and education minister Sue Ellery getting hands on with some non-Newtonian fluids in their newly converted science lab. Yokine PS has one on the way. Image supplied.

    YOKINE primary school will get $25,000 to convert one of their classrooms into a science lab.

    The lab is part of the McGowan government’s $17 million program to improve science facilities at 200 schools across WA.

    Yokine primary school will put the cash towards lab and science equipment like renewable energy kits, digital microscopes, 3D printers, virtual reality headsets and robotics kits.

    Another Voiceland school, Sutherland Dianella primary, already had its science lab upgraded during the first round of funding.

    Future

    Mt Lawley MP Simon Millman says this program will prepare kids for the jobs of the future.

    “Sutherland Dianella Primary School has a strong STEM [Science, Tech, Engineering and Maths] focus which is integrated across all learning areas, and the newly converted laboratory means a greater learning experience for students,” he says.

    “I’m thrilled Yokine Primary School has been successful in the next round and will have a classroom converted to a science lab by 2021 – WA’s next generation will be inspired and supported right here in our community.”

    WA education minister Sue Ellery said “we know how important it is for today’s students to understand the concepts taught in science, technology, engineering and mathematics for their future job prospects.

    “These dedicated laboratories and resources enable schools to give students a feel for the interesting world of science from a young age.”