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Not a given

by
October 2004, no. 265

A Certain Maritime Incident: The sinking of SIEV X by Tony Kevin

Scribe, $32.95pb, 319pp

Not a given

by
October 2004, no. 265

It is fair to say that ‘truth in government’ has become Australia’s most critical political issue, as it goes to the heart of ministerial responsibility and public accountability, which in turn make possible representative government. In recent years, a number of constituent issues have arisen under the ‘truth in government’ heading, including the Australian government’s cover-up of unfolding events in East Timor in 1999, the ‘children overboard’ affair and Iraq’s alleged ‘weapons of mass destruction’. Alongside these issues is the sinking of the asylum-seeker boat SIEV X, in which 353 people drowned. Yet of these issues, the SIEV X affair is perhaps the least well understood, in large part due to government dissembling and lying. So far as information on SIEV X has come to public attention at all, it has had to be extracted, slowly and painfully, from a government most reluctant to let any part of it go.

A Certain Maritime Incident: The sinking of SIEV X

A Certain Maritime Incident: The sinking of SIEV X

by Tony Kevin

Scribe, $32.95pb, 319pp

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