Designer uses underage girls on runway
Fashion designer Marc Jacobs has flouted industry guidelines by allowing two 14-year-old models to walk the runway at New York Fashion Week. The Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) of which Diane von Furstenburg is president recommends against using girls under the age of 16. But they are just as the name says, guidelines. Jacobs was unapologetic: “I do the show the way I think it should be, and not the way somebody tells me it should be,” Mr. Jacobs told the New York Times. “If their parents are willing to let them do a show, I don’t see any reason that it should be me who tells them that they can’t.”
Australian man sues Twitter for defamation
The Australian man wrongly named by writer Marieke Hardy as her ‘hate-blogger’ is now suing Twitter as the publisher of information that defamed him. Ms Hardy has already reached a private settlement with the man, believed to be worth $15,000, and published an apology on her blog. The original tweet read: “I name and shame my ‘anonymous’ internet bully. Liberating business! Join me.” It was followed by a link to her blog. The man’s lawyer, Stuart Gibson, said: “Twitter are a publisher, and at law anyone involved in the publication can be sued,” Mr Gibson said. ”We’re suing for the retweets and the original tweet – and many of the retweets and comments are far worse.” There was some debate about whether the man, Joshua Meggitt, could sue Twitter which is based in the United States under Australian defamation law but precedent does exist after a 2002 case where a businessman successfully sued an American company for publishing defamatory material from the States but which, by being accessed from Australia, was deemed to have been published here also.
Aslyum seekers have red carpet rolled out? Not quite.
There’s been a battle of rhetoric today as different sides of politics – and the media – claimed asylum seekers had the red carpet rolled out for them when they were released from detention. The reports centred on the fact that asylum seekers housed in the community were given basic household amenities to help them get by while their claims were processed. Mr Abbott said of the situation: “The message is going out loud and clear to the people smugglers and their clients and potential customers: the red carpet is being rolled out, there is a welcome mat waiting for you here in Australia.” The goods included fridges, prams and baby packs for those with children, a television and so on. But human rights lawyer Father Frank Brennan today told AAP: “If you are going to have people who are not allowed to work, then if you are going to maintain social harmony, you have to ensure they have something to live on and you have to ensure they have some humane accommodation. I am one who congratulates government on saying well in these political circumstances at the moment, where there’s no prospect of any offshore processing, it’s far more desirable and far cheaper to have people housed in the community and on the basic settling-in-type payment.”