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Milne slams png asylum deal: 'It's a joke'

In June last year, the Immigration Minister, Peter Dutton, released a video of an asylum seeker who asked his boatman to call them by name and not to touch his mobile phone but the man complied and threatened to burn down the boatman's apartment and destroy all the property.

The video was widely circulated in the community.

In a lengthy interview with Lateline on Wednesday, Mr Pallas said his son is facing deportation due to what he describes as "trouble with immigration".

"We've got no support from the authorities. The asylum seeker and their lawyer are not involved with this. They are in a safe haven in Australia... it's just no way for us to live," Mr Pallas said.

The mother-of-two said he is worried she is being targeted by police for her immigration status.

"I'm worried because he has been to a number of places where there has been police violence and I don't know what will happen here when we get to Australia."

"This is an issue of fairness and justice for these people... they want to prove their asylum claim and that's fair and that's correct," she said.

Mr Pallas, who works as a police officer with the federal police in Townsville, has faced the death threat before.

"It wasn't in relation to a criminal investigation, it was because he's a police officer who works with kids," Mr Pallas said.

"So he's been put in fear, he hasn't done anything so I feel that there is enough evidence that he would just like to put us under.

"I don't feel that our lives are threatened, my son is doing great; we're not going through a very difficult period right now."

Topics: asylum-seekers, community-and-society, federal-government, police, community-and-society, townsville-4810

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Beatles guru steps down from position, according to an industry source.

David Bowie has stepped down from his position as chief executive of the music industry trade association The Academy of the Recording Industry and Music, which represents all the major record labels and distributors of recordings.

He said he had been making an effort over the past year to end his engagement in politics and "look after people and their needs".


"It's been a pleasure to be working on behalf of millions of people in music for 50 years," he said. "It feels very important to me to support people, and this campaign has put some distance between myself and the wider music industry.

"I've come full circle to find I like people, and I love people," he said. "I'm pleased that the music industry, and music fans, have come together to stand up to bullies. That's good."

There have been calls for him to resign, with musicians including David Bowie, Paul McCartney, George Michael and the Rolling Stones having also said they would not do or accept endorsement.

The musician – who was born in Liverpool and rose to fame with the albums Purple Rain and Ummah – has been a vocal critic of the government's new welfare reforms in the wake of the global financial crisis.

A new website, The Bowie Archive, is launching shortly, in which a selection of recordings, music videos and photos will be up for the public to browse for 10 days.

Buckingham Palace, which owns the Tate Art Gallery and Prince Charles's collection, has confirmed that the star will be on a "frequent-flyers" programme over the coming months as part of the Queen's 50th birthday celebrations.

John Peel's new portrait – by the artist Barry Oate – was on display yesterday in the exhibition of his work at the Tate, but the Guardian understands that it will be removed from Thursday.

The BBC's music critic Mark Lowen: "I have not seen these clips myself, but they are of something special. The album cover, in particular the first three tracks, is a great touch."

David Tennant told the Radio Times: "That's the real thing, the first three tracks. I was playing this one, I remember, at our wedding. I was wearing a very lovely and very revealing outfit and I had my head wrapped in one of those leather wingtip glasses, and I was playing this, playing that for the whole audience, the music coming over those beautiful, lovely, lush, high, low vocals. And there are some great effects on those vocals.

"David Bowie's voice, though, I think is just extraordinary. It is the perfect combination of his singing and his music; really, o