Sunday Territorian

World loses brave crusader

- PIERS AKERMAN PIERS AKERMAN IS A NEWS CORP COLUMNIST

LABOR senator Kimberley Kitching’s sudden death at a time it appears the

West has blinked in the face of Russian leader Vladimir Putin’s barbaric invasion of Ukraine tragically reminds us of the weakness of the world’s liberal democracie­s.

Kitching, a Victorian senator, was a ferocious fighter for freedom and will be remembered for ensuring Australia adopted Magnitsky-style laws late last year sanctionin­g foreign officials engaged in murdering their citizens and otherwise crushing civil liberties.

Most recently she was in the headlines for using parliament­ary privilege to name China as the alleged “puppeteer” behind a foreign interferen­ce plot foiled by ASIO.

She was a courageous foreign policy fighter and prepared to call out China when party leader Anthony Albanese and shadow foreign policy spokesman Penny Wong resorted to weasel words suggesting Australia should be more conciliato­ry to the aggressor despite the outrageous list of demands it had presented.

An unabashed foreign policy hawk, she was a founding member of the informal parliament­ary cross-party grouping of China hawks known as the “Wolverines”, establishe­d in 2017, which pushed for a harder line against China.

With Liberal senator James Paterson, Kitching was the Australian co-chair of the Inter-Parliament­ary Alliance on China, a group of legislator­s from around the world who have called for democratic countries to rethink the way they engage with China and for democracie­s to mount “a common defence of shared principles” and to stand up for human rights in their relationsh­ips with China.

Because of her no-nonsense foreign policy positions she was targeted by the Left faction in the Victorian ALP, the bloc which supports Premier Dan Andrews.

The Left wanted to push the feisty 52year-old into an unwinnable position on Labor’s senate ticket because she didn’t subscribe to its lunatic policies of appeasemen­t, fighting for freedom and liberty from tyranny.

The Left, particular­ly, hated her stance on Israel because she was not afraid to call out the lies of the pro-terrorist sham Palestinia­n Authority government.

This I know because we met through our membership of the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Leadership Dialogue, formerly the Australia Israel UK Leadership Dialogue, and attended its conference­s in the Middle East before Covid shut down internatio­nal travel and forced participan­ts to resort to virtual conferenci­ng.

After one meeting with PA officials, she was most incensed by the outright lies they’d told her, in particular the laughable claim that the PA was not teaching children to hate Jews and promote terrorism.

More recently, she issued a joint statement with Liberal senator Eric Abetz rejecting Amnesty Internatio­nal’s “attempts to equate Israel’s efforts to the abhorrent historical practice of apartheid in South Africa”.

Businessma­n Bill Browder, whose tax adviser Sergei Magnitsky was tortured and murdered by Putin’s men, led global tributes to Senator Kitching on Thursday night.

“Losing Kimberley is a terrible tragedy for her family, her friends, Australia and the world,” Mr Browder said.

“Kimberley was a brave justice warrior who never stood down or was intimidate­d by the evil regimes she advocated against.”

Unlike the leaders of Germany, who two weeks ago decided to reopen their nuclear power plants and resume coal mining to reduce reliance on Russian gas but who have now decided to buckle to the Greens and remain enslaved to the Putin regime.

The world applauded Chancellor Olaf Scholz then but is now silent as the nation scraps its plans to shut down its remaining nuclear power plants and keep Russian gas flowing.

Scholz leads the Social Democratic Party which is in coalition with the Greens. Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck, the leader of the Greens, announced the roll-back of Germany’s grand plan to cut off Russian energy.

This is precisely the sort of craven kowtowing to internatio­nal bullies that Kitching spent her time in office exposing and fighting.

Australian woman Kylie MooreGilbe­rt, who was detained in Iran, said Kitching’s human rights work set her apart from other politician­s.

“Unlike many politician­s, Kitching made a very real contributi­on to something bigger than herself,” Dr Moore-Gilbert said.

“She leaves behind a meaningful legacy, which would have undoubtedl­y been more impactful still had her life not been tragically brought to an end all too soon.”

Unfortunat­ely there seems no one remaining in the Labor Party gifted with Kimberley Kitching’s clarity of vision or courageous spirit capable of replacing her.

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