Bruce Haigh
Bruce Haigh is a retired Australian diplomat who from 1972-94 worked in a number of countries including, from time to time, Indonesia.
From 1995-2000 he worked on the Refugee Review Tribunal.
Articles by Bruce Haigh on newmatilda.com:
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The World Bank has hired Peter Costello as an "international anti-corruption expert". Of all the people in the world, Bruce Haigh asks, why him?
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How and why did the Federal public service become complicit in the Howard government's agenda, asks Bruce Haigh
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The AFP has the staff and budget of a major Federal Government Department. It should have a dedicated Minister to oversee its activities, argues Bruce Haigh
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Why didn’t the Immigration Minister want us to know that he was going to Indonesia to discuss people smuggling, asks Bruce Haigh
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Bruce Haigh imagines a dystopian Australia post-climate change
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30 November, 2007: The great loser in Pakistan's latest political upheaval is the United States, writes Bruce Haigh
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8 October, 2007: What has goaded the urbane and diplomatic Richard Woolcott into a most uncharacteristic and undiplomatic critique of the Howard Government? Bruce Haigh goes to Canberra to find out
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Thirty years after the death of Black resistance leader Steve Biko, former diplomat Bruce Haigh reflects on his posting in South Africa during Apartheid, and condemns the country's own inaction today in Zimbabwe and on AIDS
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Bruce Haigh writes that recent hints and shifts in Government position indicate that Howard is planning to pull Australian troops out of Iraq
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Bruce Haigh writes that it was no surprise to see a document linking Dr Mohamed Haneef to al-Qaeda enter the public domain last week


