The Aussies fighting for a Bali memorial site
The Briefing11 Okt 2020

The Aussies fighting for a Bali memorial site

Eighteen years ago today 202 people including 88 Australians were killed in a terror attack in the tourist district of Bali. A powerful car bomb, hidden inside a white Mitsubishi van, was detonated by a suicide bomber right outside the Sari Club, a renowned open-air thatch-roof bar in the Kuta district.

The blast site itself has lain dormant for almost 20 years, and the question of what to do with it is at the centre of a bitter dispute. A group of Aussies are pushing for a permanent memorial in the form of a peace park or museum, instead of plans by landowners to redevelop the site into a five storey commercial complex of restaurants and bars.

Carmen Jaques is one of those Australians. She’s also a researcher from Edith Cowan University who’s looking into the impacts of terrorism on communities. We’re also joined by Australian man Damien Murnane Australians who was in Bali that night.

In today's news headlines:

  • President Trump says he is “immune” to Covid-19
  • Big names want trolls locked up
  • Search for Esperance shark attack victim called off
  • High Court bid to end Melbourne’s lockdown

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Episoder(2340)

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22 Apr 202019min

Annika Smethurst's High Court Case

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