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Come The Revolution

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Greece

Greece, Local

Among the gum trees of Greece

Alex Mitchell/August 9, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

Driving north from Athens to the secluded beach and headland at Sounion the other night, Oz-born journalist Brian “Digger” Williams drew our attention to the avenues of giant eucalyptus trees along the way. They look like the “ghost gum” variety we have in Australia except that the trunks are not long and slender, they are…

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Greece, Visual Arts

Where Theseus sailed

Judith White/August 7, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

One of the first Greek myths to made a deep impression on me as a child was the story of Theseus and the Minotaur. Theseus, son of King Aegeus, left Athens to defeat the Cretan monster and secure the supremacy of his home state. He succeeded with the help of Ariadne, princess of Crete, who…

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Greece, Middle East, Visual Arts

Ex-Defence Minister threatens to tell all

Alex Mitchell/August 7, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

As noted in previous despatches, Greece’s vast over-spending on arms was one of the compelling reasons for its debt crisis as well as the corrosive spread of corruption among the political classes. We have been receiving a daily diet of reports on the impending trial of former Defence Minister Akis Tsochalzopoulos, a senior member of…

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Eurozone, Greece, Theatre

History is both alive and dead

Alex Mitchell/August 5, 2012March 2, 2013 /1 Comment

In just four days in Athens we’ve visited the Benaki Museum, the magnificent ruins and museum at Delphi, climbed to the Acropolis and inspected the Parthenon, and been to the Acropolis Museum and the breathtaking National Archaeological Museum in central Athens. In the days ahead we have a schedule of further trips and tours to…

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Arts, Greece, Visual Arts

Connecting with the past

Judith White/August 5, 2012March 2, 2013 /1 Comment

There are moments when you suddenly connect with an aspect of history you’d never grasped before. Athens this weekend has given us one such moment after another. The Acropolis is such a familiar image that we think we know it. To see it in reality, with the painstaking restoration of the Parthenon proceeding and the…

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Eurozone, Greece

Exploring Athens

Judith White/August 3, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

We’ve flown from the olive lands of Kalamata to Athens, home to five million of Greece’s 12 million people. We’re staying just off Syntagma Square, where all the capital’s big demonstrations take place. Central Athens is a surprise. It’s full of green spaces – we’re right opposite the National Botanic Gardens – and round the…

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Eurozone, Greece, Media

The Digger gives us a welcome to Athens

Alex Mitchell/August 3, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

What a welcome to Athens. At the airport one of the Oz veterans of journalism, Brian “Digger” Williams, is there to greet us and drives us to our hotel which is a few hundred metres from the Parliament, the Presidential Palace and the venue for all the big political rallies. It is the first time…

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Eurozone, Greece

Farewell Messenia

Judith White/July 31, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

We head for Athens tomorrow (Wednesday) after four weeks in the southern Peloponnese. It has been a superb introduction to Greece for me. We’ve explored the marine caves where a Neolithic civilisation flourished 7,000 years ago. We’ve entered the once opulent palace of Nestor, built more than 3,000 years ago, and the tombs where its…

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Eurozone, Greece

Rule by troika

Alex Mitchell/July 31, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

When no single party won an outright majority at the May 6 general election, Greece held a second election on June 17. The stock, bond and money markets were ecstatic when the right-wing New Democracy topped the poll and immediately formed a three-party coalition with Pasok, the social democratic party, and the Democratic Left party….

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Greece, Media, South America

A nation out of work

Alex Mitchell/July 29, 2012March 2, 2013 /Leave a comment

Unemployment in Greece has reached a new record high in April of 22.5 per cent, up 0.5 from March. The jobless rate is now 6.3 per cent higher than one year ago and climbing.  Greece, in the fifth year of recession, has twice the jobless rate of the average in the 17 countries sharing the…

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Idi Amin: The Man Who Stole Uganda



How an Australian journalist unmasked Africa's most brutal dictator, The hair-raising story of how Alex Mitchell exposed the crimes of newly-installed Ugandan dictator Idi Amin in 1971, with analysis of how Britain and Israel backed the coup. Order your signed copy HERE

Mountbatten: Britain’s Warlord



Reveals the man touted as a hero of the Royal Family to be responsible for colonial crimes and a failed coup attempt in Britain. Order your signed copy HERE

A Coup in Canberra



Alex Mitchell's story of John Gorton, Prime Minister of Australia 1968-1971, ousted by the Liberal Party establishment and powerful forces in London and Washington. Order your signed copy HERE

Murder in Melbourne



The untold story of Aiia Maasarwe. Alex Mitchell’s ground-breaking investigation of the murder of an international student – yours for just $10 a copy, including postage. Signed by the author for you.

The Book that started the conversation



"A great journalist's reflection of the colour and horror of history on the run." Peter Craven

Published by NewSouth Books ISBN 9781742233079

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