Episode 3 Australia with Simon Reeve


Episode 3

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Transcript


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I'm on a journey around Australia.

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A country the size of a continent.

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This is a vast land with extraordinary wildlife.

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A rich, booming country, on the edge of Asia.

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It's not just cricket and kangaroos.

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-Thanks, ladies.

-That's all right.

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If you think you know Australia, think again!

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'On this leg of my journey, I'm travelling from the Gold Coast

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'in the east, down to Sydney, and finally to Melbourne,

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'just in time for Australia's national birthday party.

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'Behind the sun and the surf of its beautiful coastal cities,

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'I'll find a side to Australia that visitors rarely get to see.'

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-Is it respect or fear?

-If people fear us, they've got to fear us for a reason.

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'In Sydney, I meet a billionaire property king.'

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That is a view!

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'I get up close to Australia's iconic wildlife...

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'..and to devastating bushfires.'

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Look at this! A line of flames here!

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I'm beginning another leg of my journey around Australia,

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this time travelling down the east coast towards the cities of Sydney and Melbourne.

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I'm starting here, at a place called Surfers Paradise.

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'This area is the Gold Coast.

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'It's like an Australian Las Vegas

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'and attracts more than 10 million tourists a year

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'with stunning beaches, brash nightclubs and casinos.

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'The weather conditions here are perfect for one of Australia's national obsessions.

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'Surfing arrived here from California.

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'For years, Aussie surfers were rebels and dropouts,

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'but now the sport's gone mainstream.

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'Across the country, surf bums have been joined on the waves

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'by everyone from accountants to vicars.

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'Two million Australians are now regular surfers

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'and it's become a huge, multi-billion pound industry,

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'thanks to surf tourism and surf shops.'

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Anyone spotted that there's a "Danger - No Swimming" sign here?

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-Yeah, you're going right here.

-Here we go.

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'Even with a bit of help, it's not as easy as it looks.'

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Ah, the indignity of it.

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I just fell really hard on my bum.

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I've just had my surfing lesson, just come back to the car,

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and our ticket had expired, parking ticket,

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and we were thinking, "Oh, dear, we might be in a spot of bother",

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and, genuinely, I know this sounds completely unbelievable,

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but look who turns up here to help you if your ticket runs out.

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-Thanks, ladies.

-That's all right.

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We top up expired meters just to help out as best as we can

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and we've been around for 48 years, so welcome to Surfers Paradise.

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That's quite a spiel,

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and you buy people whose tickets have expired a new parking ticket.

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-Yeah!

-That's very kind.

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And it says, "You've just been saved from a parking fine

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"by the famous Surfers Paradise Meter Maids."

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-Thank you very much indeed. Stay safe out there!

-We will.

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-All right, cheers, ladies.

-See ya.

-Thank you!

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'As night falls on the Gold Coast, the action moves from the beach

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'to the city's hundreds of bars, clubs and casinos.

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'Tacky to some, paradise for others, the area is party central

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'for tens of thousands of visitors who arrive here every weekend.

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'But, in recent years, the Gold Coast has developed a reputation

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'for having a sleazier, darker side.

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'At one of the city's central police stations I was allowed out on patrol

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'with a local beat sergeant and police union official, Simon Tutt.'

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-This is your patch tonight, is it?

-Tonight it is, yeah.

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It's just called the CBD, Central Business District, Broad Beach.

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There's about five nightclubs.

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You've got a nightclub here by the look of it

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-with the usual queue outside.

-Called Love, yeah.

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What are the main issues you're dealing with,

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you and your officers are dealing with out here of a night?

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It's drunkenness and, you know,

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people obviously affected by drugs as well.

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They have drugs before they come out...

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and then, of course, they want to fight each other.

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We can see a few hanging around outside.

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The problem with the drug and alcohol-fuelled violence

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is that it's unrelenting and it's every single weekend.

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It's like a zoo.

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'Although Australians have a reputation as big boozers,

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'they actually drink much less than Europeans.

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'But Australians are among the largest users of illegal drugs in the world,

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'fuelling the narcotics trade and creating a huge problem with organised crime.'

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How serious a problem is crime here in the Gold Coast?

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It certainly is the crime capital of Australia.

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It has a high density of organised crime.

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It has a lot of targets who are engaged in organised crime

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and why wouldn't they?

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If you wanted to set up an organised crime operation, there's a ready-made population

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who you may want to have access to in terms of a market

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and that's why it becomes the crime capital.

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It's a fantastic place to come, as long as you're aware

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it has that...seedy underbelly component to it as well.

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'The police believe organised crime here is dominated

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'by so-called outlaw motorcycle clubs or biker gangs.

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'The most famous are the Hells Angels

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'and, here in the Gold Coast, their notorious rivals, the Bandidos.'

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The Gold Coast just has a very high density of outlaw motorcycle gangs.

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The outlaw motorcycle gangs are certainly the most obvious face

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of illegal activity.

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So what's down here?

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This is the Bandidos' clubhouse, up here on the right.

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The Bandidos?

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They're quite a fearsome motorcycle gang, aren't they?

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That looks like a fortress!

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Yeah. You can't just walk in there off the street.

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'In recent years, violence between rival biker gangs

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'has erupted in public.'

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What's the reason for us being here? What happened here?

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There was a shooting in broad daylight in the shopping mall

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in front of thousands of people and an innocent person was shot.

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Crime is no longer just between underworld figures,

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it's actually spilled out into the broader community

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and I think criminals, certainly on the Gold Coast,

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have become far, far more brazen.

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I think people for a time after that felt, "Who could be next?"

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Were they safe going about their daily business, or could they be caught in the crossfire?

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'Police say that tit-for-tat violence

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'and decades-old vendettas between biker gangs

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'has led to hundreds of shootings and scores of killings across the country.

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'Outlaw motorcycle clubs are now also accused of involvement

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'in prostitution, drug production, money laundering and gun running.

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'One estimate suggests that serious organised crime in Australia

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'costs the country around £10 billion per year.'

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Something rather strange has happened.

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One of the biker gangs in this area,

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one of the biggest biker gangs, who never talk to outsiders,

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has agreed to meet us

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and we're now on our way to their clubhouse

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which, I suppose, is like their headquarters really.

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'The Australian authorities have launched a massive crackdown

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'on biker gangs, who they blame for much of the organised crime.

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'The bikers' clubhouse was tucked away on an industrial estate on the edge of town.'

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He's a big bloke!

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'The Finks are one of the largest and among the most feared

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'of all outlaw motorcycle clubs in Australia.'

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-Is that, sort of, security blocking the entrance, then?

-Yeah.

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He said he'd be out in a minute.

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-Who's coming out, Greg or...?

-Yeah.

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-Can we walk over or do you want us to stay here?

-Oh, we'll just wait.

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'Greg Keating is the club's sergeant-at-arms, or enforcer.'

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-Is one of you gentlemen Greg?

-That would be me.

-Hi, Greg.

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-How you doing?

-Simon Reeve. Nice to meet you, mate.

-Nice to meet you.

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-Thanks for agreeing to see us.

-Yeah, no worries.

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-I gather it's not something you do very often.

-No.

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-Harry.

-Harry!

-Pleased to meet you.

-Hello, mate. Simon Reeve. Nice to meet you too.

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-How are you?

-Very well, thank you.

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-Hello, sir. Simon.

-Ferret. How's it going, mate?

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'The Finks had called together some of their local members

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'to put on a show of strength for us.'

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ENGINES ROAR

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The noise, you will not be surprised to know, is unbelievable.

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'Members of outlaw motorcycle clubs say they're enthusiasts

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'brought together by a love of motorbikes

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'and it's unwise to mess with their machines.'

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This sticker on here, is that the best theft deterrent?

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That just means someone in our club owns that bike.

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-It means "don't touch it", doesn't it?

-It means "don't touch it", yeah.

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If you owned a nice car, you wouldn't want people coming down the street, scratching it.

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It's easier just to say you're part of our club, leave it alone.

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Yeah, but if I put on my car that it belongs to me,

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nobody's going to give a monkey's, are they?

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-They're not going to stop themselves taking it because of that, but this is...

-It's about respect.

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We've earned respect and people understand that's ours, leave it alone and you won't have a problem.

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-Is it respect or fear?

-I don't think it's fear.

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-Bit of both?

-Maybe a little bit of fear, but people instil fear in themselves.

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Like, you have no problem with us, you have no need to fear us,

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neither does your camera crew because you've done nothing wrong to us

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and we have no need to fear you because we've done nothing wrong to you.

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So if people fear us, they've got to fear us for a reason.

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'There are thought to be 39 outlaw motorcycle groups in Australia,

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'with around 4,000 patched, or official members.'

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So, gentlemen, tell us about this place.

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This is our gym where we train. Every gym's got to have a stripper pole.

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-It's not a gym without a stripper pole.

-That's right.

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-Which one of you gets the honour?

-On the stripper pole? Not me!

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'As part of the government crackdown, the Finks were the first biker club in the country

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'to be declared a criminal organisation

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'under the kind of laws rarely used in modern democracies.'

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You've got some pretty heavy-duty security.

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You don't leave your front door open at home and sit out in the backyard.

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Yeah, but I don't put a vehicle

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across the entrance to my street though, do I?

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It's 2013, mate.

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'Control orders have been used against members of the Finks

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'to restrict who they can associate with and their freedom of movement, including against Harry.

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'Bikers say they're being made scapegoats

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'and the laws are an infringement of their human rights.'

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I'm virtually under house arrest.

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You don't look like you're under house arrest, Harry.

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Well, I'm controlled, aren't I, Simon? I can't talk to my next-door neighbour.

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-I'm not allowed to talk to my next-door neighbour.

-Why?

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Because he's not a member of my immediate family.

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I can't talk to my next-door neighbour.

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I can't go to a pub, a club or a restaurant.

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It's something you would think that only in China or maybe Burma.

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And you see these things and you think, you know,

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for years, and you've seen all those issues overseas

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and you'd never think that'd happen in Australia.

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'Several bikers have already been arrested for breaking their control orders.

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'Even talking to a TV crew like us could get someone like Harry arrested.'

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Come down to the spa.

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-You've got a Jacuzzi spa in the back here.

-Yeah.

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Every gym should.

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I saw one report that said 45, I think,

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45 of your members at least have got criminal convictions.

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Is that true?

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You need to look at what the criminal conviction is, OK?

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Most of them will be small things as speeding offences.

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They said we had 1,500 convictions.

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That's why we're a criminal organisation.

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But what sort of convictions were they and how were they dealt with?

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And they were only dealt with by way of fines.

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And the interesting part was, when we had a good look at it and the lawyers had a look at it,

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we found most of the offending was done by members before they joined the club

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and the offending dropped once they joined the club.

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Are you trying to say that the club actually reduces crime?

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Absolutely it did. With these particular people it reduced crime.

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It reduced their offending.

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And it reduced their offending because you have a sense of family here and a brotherhood.

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The police say your members have been involved in murder, beatings, robberies

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and that you're a criminal organisation involved in, quote, "serious criminal activity."

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Look, if that's the case,

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we are sure there are adequate laws in place right now

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that can deal with those people.

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There is no need for any legislation to be introduced that takes away

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the rights of everybody in this country.

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I think these ladies have just got into the tank behind us

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as some sort of distraction or diversion, I suspect.

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-No, no, this is how we roll.

-I'm going to stay focussed on our...

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It won't divert us because we're used to it.

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But, look, I hear what you're saying about it's a club of members.

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Can you not see how...intimidating

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and terrifying you guys look from the outside

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to your average Australian citizen

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who's going about paying their taxes?

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I mean, Ferret, look at yourself, mate, you're covered in ink. You look a scary bloke.

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People have been getting tattooed for 5,000 years.

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The Australian public I know don't have that perception. They don't have that fear.

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You said, you know, they're scared of you and they're intimidated.

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Are they intimidated, because I don't know any that are?

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'Bikers are now challenging the draconian new laws in the courts

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'and they've even got some human rights groups on their side.

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'But the police claim they're criminal gangs

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'and the government here shows little sign of backing down.'

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Well, that was one of the more... extraordinary encounters I have had,

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I have to say.

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'The bikers see themselves as rebel outsiders

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'but most Australians have a very different dream.

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'The aspiration for many is a house with a pool, perhaps in one of

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'the huge suburbs that ring the eastern coastal cities.'

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This is a hugely attractive area to live in

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and as people are moving to the coast and building new houses

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there are, of course, consequences for the wildlife,

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including for one Australian icon.

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-Morning. Jon?

-Hi, Simon.

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-Hello. Simon. Very nice to meet you.

-Nice to meet you.

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The guy we're going to catch today, Mekani,

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he's just down in the bush down here, off this property,

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and we're not sure where he is

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so what we might do is just go and track him down, see how we go.

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-You're going to catch a koala?

-Yeah. Yeah. That's the plan.

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Is that a tricky endeavour?

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Ah, look, we've got about 50-50 chance.

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A couple of helpers, so we've got a tree climber and the other field guys

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who are going to help us with the capture of Mekani.

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'Vet Jon Hanger rescues and treats injured koalas.

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'In suburbs like these and across the country,

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'an estimated 4,000 koalas are killed each year by dogs and cars alone.

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'Thousands more are injured.'

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-This direction.

-You already found him?!

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Well, this antenna gives us a vague direction,

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so, sort of, a ball park direction.

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'Jon has fitted a koala that was bitten by a pet dog

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'with a radio collar and it's time for him to give it a check-up.

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-I've just spotted him.

-Have you?

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-Yeah, so if you come with me, I'll...

-Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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-So he's in this grey gum.

-Right.

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-If you follow the right-hand fork and then follow the right-hand fork again...

-There he is, look.

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Yeah, that's him.

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How exciting! It's a koala.

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'Koalas are a symbol of this country loved by millions,

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'but the cuddly creatures are in crisis.'

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Jon, it strikes me that we've got this koala in a tree

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on the edge of somebody's garden

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on the very edge of suburbia.

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The problem for koalas is that humans are advancing

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-into what was their land, I think, isn't it?

-That's exactly right.

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And we know that koalas don't cope well with being so close to human habitation.

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Unfortunately, a lot of good koala habitat, the habitat they prefer, is also the habitat that we prefer.

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'Experts think there were up to 10 million koalas in Australia

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'when Europeans first arrived here.

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'Now just a tiny fraction of that number remain.'

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The koala to Australia is a bit like the panda to China.

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It's an icon of the country.

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And yet even this isn't deemed, it seems,

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worthy enough of providing exclusive areas.

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I think a lot of the population really don't grasp the trouble that the koala's in.

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They don't think the koala will ever go extinct.

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-Could it?

-Yeah, I think it can.

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We see localised extinction happening all over the place now.

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Let's say we've still got 100,000 koalas, 200,000 left.

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The rate of decline is such that we're foolish if we don't think

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that we're facing extinction at some time in the next decade or two.

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-Decade or two? As quickly as that?

-Yeah, yeah.

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'For Mekani to be given his health check,

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'he first had to be persuaded to come down from his tree.'

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The fact that we can't even arrest the decline of such an iconic animal

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just, I think, is a shame for us.

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It's a disgrace that we can't do that.

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We still think that people being able to live wherever they want to live is more important.

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Stop.

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KOALA SCREECHES

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Good boy.

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What a...

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Well done!

0:21:020:21:04

It's a bit undignified for him but it's over fairly quickly.

0:21:040:21:08

'Mekani looked in good shape.

0:21:090:21:12

'Jon decided it was time to remove his radio collar,

0:21:120:21:15

'which required a small dose of anaesthetic.'

0:21:150:21:18

Just relax. Just relax, little fella.

0:21:180:21:21

KOALA SCREECHES

0:21:250:21:27

Yep.

0:21:340:21:36

Aw!

0:21:360:21:37

This is a big moment in the life of this koala, isn't it?

0:21:370:21:42

You're about to cut the tracking collar

0:21:420:21:44

and that means you won't be able to locate him anymore.

0:21:440:21:47

He'll be free without big brother or dad watching him.

0:21:470:21:51

That's right, he will be. He'll be on his own, so to speak.

0:21:510:21:54

But, you know, the community around here is fairly aware of koalas

0:21:540:21:58

so we can feel reasonably comfortable that if someone saw that he was sick

0:21:580:22:02

or injured, that they'd call us and let us know.

0:22:020:22:07

Look at that!

0:22:070:22:09

Perfectly suited for shinning up trees

0:22:090:22:13

if, of course, it's got trees to climb.

0:22:130:22:16

There you go, mate.

0:22:180:22:20

-You ready?

-Good luck.

0:22:220:22:25

What a cutie.

0:22:340:22:35

I think we're going to leave this lad here and creep away.

0:22:360:22:39

'Like other industrialised nations,

0:22:400:22:43

'Australia doesn't have a great record for protecting its wildlife.

0:22:430:22:47

'But surely they need to move heaven and earth to save a national icon.'

0:22:470:22:51

This looks like smoke just here.

0:22:560:22:59

Anywhere else I'd say it was a mist,

0:23:000:23:03

but I think this is definitely smoke and we're here in bushfire season.

0:23:030:23:07

This is the hottest, driest continent

0:23:070:23:10

and fires are a massive problem here.

0:23:100:23:14

Yesterday, as well, was the hottest average day in Australia ever.

0:23:140:23:20

'I was heading south towards Sydney.

0:23:260:23:29

'My route took me towards the Liverpool Plains

0:23:290:23:32

'in the heart of New South Wales.'

0:23:320:23:34

We've left the coast and we're heading inland

0:23:380:23:42

into farming country.

0:23:420:23:44

Goodness, look.

0:23:500:23:52

Five or six fire vehicles there.

0:23:540:23:57

There are huge bushfires in this area at the moment as well.

0:23:580:24:02

Almost everywhere we've been on this part of the journey,

0:24:030:24:06

there's been bushfires.

0:24:060:24:08

'Australia's famous, of course, for having plenty of parched outback,

0:24:100:24:15

'but this is a huge and diverse country with rainforests

0:24:150:24:18

'and snow-capped mountains.

0:24:180:24:20

'And it has enormous cattle ranches and farms

0:24:200:24:23

'that have long been crucial to the economy of the country.

0:24:230:24:26

'The Liverpool Plains region is renowned as Australia's food bowl.'

0:24:260:24:31

I can see somebody waving over there. Tommy?

0:24:310:24:34

OK. Thank you!

0:24:340:24:36

'Tommy and George Clift are in their 80s.

0:24:370:24:40

'Their families have been farming here for seven generations.

0:24:400:24:44

Hey there, George.

0:24:450:24:47

-Simon. Lovely to meet you, sir.

-You too.

0:24:470:24:50

-What a beautiful patch of planet Earth you've got.

-It's unbelievable, isn't it?

0:24:500:24:54

-And you've got a house in here?

-Yeah, the house in the jungle.

0:24:540:24:58

Look at your place! It's beautiful!

0:24:580:25:01

-How much land have you got here?

-We've got about 12,000 acres.

0:25:010:25:05

-12,000 acres?!

-Acres, yeah.

-That is...sort of, a small country!

0:25:050:25:12

How good is this land in terms of farming?

0:25:130:25:16

Is it quality land or do you have to work it hard?

0:25:160:25:20

-I beg your pardon.

-No.

-Likened second to the Nile Valley.

0:25:200:25:24

It's only likened second to the Nile Valley.

0:25:240:25:26

Because you can grow two crops a year here.

0:25:260:25:29

-You're saying it's some of the best farmland in the world?

-I'm not saying it, it's proven.

0:25:290:25:33

I'll take you there and show you, if you like, the crops there.

0:25:330:25:37

'The Liverpool Plains comprise an area of 5,000 square miles

0:25:380:25:42

'with land that's so productive, farms here churn out more than 500,000 tonnes of cereal crops.'

0:25:420:25:47

-See how it holds the water here?

-My goodness, it's sort of damp, isn't it?

0:25:470:25:52

-So, just beneath the surface, it's...

-Just beneath the surface.

0:25:520:25:55

..it's got spongy qualities to it?

0:25:550:25:57

Goodness.

0:26:020:26:04

-That's not easy to get out, is it?

-There's no soil in the world like it.

0:26:040:26:09

-It's as good as that?

-It's as good as that.

0:26:090:26:11

And I'll fight anyone that says it's not.

0:26:110:26:13

These small roots go down probably a metre and a half, two metres

0:26:140:26:20

under the ground, and that's where it gets the moisture coming up

0:26:200:26:24

and brings it up into the... you can feel the moisture in the roots if you feel them.

0:26:240:26:28

So it's not just the soil that's fantastic here for farming,

0:26:280:26:33

it's the fact that you've actually got water under the ground,

0:26:330:26:36

-you've got a huge aquifer underneath you?

-A huge aquifer.

0:26:360:26:40

There's just about as much water as there is in Sydney Harbour - fresh water.

0:26:400:26:44

That's a lot of water.

0:26:440:26:46

How important is this area?

0:26:460:26:48

It's more than important.

0:26:480:26:51

It's critical.

0:26:510:26:53

Here, we're producing huge amounts of food

0:26:530:26:56

for the rest of the world.

0:26:560:26:59

For Australia and the rest of the world.

0:26:590:27:01

There just aren't words that can describe the value of this country.

0:27:010:27:06

'The land here might be valuable, but the big money in Australia

0:27:070:27:11

'is being made by ripping it up to get at the mineral wealth that's underneath.

0:27:110:27:15

'A massive coal seam has been discovered beneath the Liverpool Plains

0:27:150:27:19

'and the land next to the Clifts' farm is now being test drilled by a Chinese mining company.'

0:27:190:27:25

This is the edge of your land here, is it?

0:27:260:27:29

There's one foot in China and one foot in Australia.

0:27:290:27:31

-That's their test holes.

-Just here?

-There, yeah.

0:27:310:27:35

-Test holes for what? What are they drilling for?

-Coal and gas - whatever they can come up with.

0:27:350:27:40

'In Australia, it's the state, not landowners, who own the rights

0:27:410:27:45

'to explore for minerals under the ground.

0:27:450:27:47

'This highly unusual legislation has helped to fuel Australia's extraordinary resources boom,

0:27:470:27:53

'which has seen vast tracts of land torn up for coal, gold and iron ore.

0:27:530:27:58

'Many farmers on the Liverpool Plains fear their land

0:27:580:28:01

'could go the way of the nearby Hunter Valley,

0:28:010:28:04

'which is now being mined by giant corporations.

0:28:040:28:07

'Many farmers here have sold-up and thousands of acres are now being strip-mined.'

0:28:070:28:11

I'm starting to get a sense of the scale of the mining that's going on here.

0:28:140:28:18

Enormous mine underneath us. More mining over here.

0:28:190:28:23

We've got the power stations up ahead that are helping to power the machinery involved in this.

0:28:230:28:28

There's another mine over there. We've got a mine behind us as well.

0:28:280:28:32

The place is riddled with mines!

0:28:340:28:37

It starts to look a little bit like Swiss cheese!

0:28:380:28:41

'Australia's now one of the biggest exporters of coal in the world,

0:28:430:28:46

'mostly to Asia.

0:28:460:28:48

'Coal exports bring in more than £30 billion a year to the country.

0:28:480:28:52

'The huge sums involved make this a get rich quick boom that's hard to resist.

0:28:520:28:57

'But when a mining company tried to start test drilling back on the Liverpool Plains,

0:28:580:29:02

'they didn't reckon on the reception they got from George and Tommy and some of their neighbours.'

0:29:020:29:08

-That's probably Tim there.

-Is that Tim?

-Yeah.

0:29:110:29:15

'Tim Duddy's a central figure in the ongoing campaign

0:29:150:29:18

'to stop corporations from mining this land.'

0:29:180:29:21

-Hello.

-Hello. Tim Duddy.

-Simon Reeve. Lovely to meet you.

0:29:230:29:27

-Welcome to Rossmar.

-Thank you very much indeed.

0:29:270:29:30

So, this, I'm putting the twos and twos together to understand,

0:29:300:29:34

this was the site of the blockade?

0:29:340:29:36

-Yeah, and BHP...

-Mining giant.

0:29:360:29:39

..yeah, were trying to get access to a pass of land

0:29:390:29:42

just up above where we are.

0:29:420:29:44

We got to the stage that they were coming on at some stage.

0:29:440:29:48

We were speaking to their lawyers, they were speaking to us,

0:29:480:29:51

but it was pretty nasty.

0:29:510:29:53

And I was in Sydney one day and my younger brother rang up

0:29:530:29:56

and said, "Oh, they're driving down the road with a load of fences on."

0:29:560:29:59

-And I said, "Well, you'd better go and park the road in."

-It's like an invasion.

-An invasion!

0:29:590:30:04

And he said, "Well, I'm not doing that. I'm not going to jail. I'm not doing this."

0:30:040:30:08

Anyway, I rang Tommy and George and about half an hour later they were parked here,

0:30:080:30:13

and they'd gone and got our grader and parked across one end of the road

0:30:130:30:17

and they'd got George's grader and parked across the bottom end of the road and the rest is history.

0:30:170:30:22

683 days later, we took down the blockade,

0:30:220:30:26

having beaten BHP in the Supreme Court.

0:30:260:30:28

-These are extreme measures, aren't they?

-They are.

0:30:280:30:31

But we're talking about massive sums of money, aren't we?

0:30:310:30:35

There's huge wealth under the ground here.

0:30:350:30:38

Well, there's a minable resource of about 550 million tonnes of coal.

0:30:380:30:42

So you're talking about... you're talking about 130 billion.

0:30:420:30:48

That's nearly £100 billion, just trying to get my head around it,

0:30:490:30:53

-of coal under the ground around us.

-That's exactly right.

0:30:530:30:56

Why won't you just let them in?

0:30:560:30:59

Why won't you let them search for the coal

0:30:590:31:02

that the Australian state seems to need?

0:31:020:31:05

As a country you're making such a huge amount of money

0:31:050:31:08

off your resources boom, why shouldn't it happen here?

0:31:080:31:11

Mining is good in the right place.

0:31:110:31:14

-The Liverpool Plains is not the right place.

-Why?

0:31:140:31:17

This is the jewel in the crown of Australian agriculture

0:31:170:31:21

and if you dig a hole in here for a mine, it will be destroyed forever. There is no turning back.

0:31:210:31:25

'Mining companies have promised they won't have a long-term impact on the most productive farmland.

0:31:290:31:34

'They say they won't destroy Australia's food bowl.

0:31:340:31:37

'But the campaign to keep them away from the Plains continues.'

0:31:370:31:42

Has your campaign, has it generally made you more in touch or brought you more into contact...

0:31:430:31:49

-Heavens, yes.

-..with your neighbours and community?

0:31:490:31:52

Well, there's nothing like wartime to unite people,

0:31:520:31:55

-and that's the truth.

-That's how you think of it?

-Absolutely.

-Battle?

-Absolutely!

0:31:550:32:00

Australia's had a very interesting relationship

0:32:000:32:03

with mining in recent years, I think.

0:32:030:32:07

I don't know how you would characterise it,

0:32:070:32:09

but it's been almost a love affair really.

0:32:090:32:12

It's more like an addiction.

0:32:120:32:15

-And eventually they have an overdose.

-Mmm.

0:32:160:32:20

And that's where we're at.

0:32:200:32:23

At the end of this, you know, you can mine our resources out,

0:32:230:32:27

but what is Australia going to be left with?

0:32:270:32:29

Australia's going to be left with nothing.

0:32:290:32:31

We'll not have a manufacturing industry - we hardly have a manufacturing industry now.

0:32:310:32:35

We will not have an agricultural industry.

0:32:350:32:37

The politicians, and I'm not talking about any particular party,

0:32:370:32:41

the whole damn lot of them ought to sit down one day and wake up because it's going to be too late.

0:32:410:32:46

'On my journey, I've seen how natural resources

0:32:480:32:51

'have made Australia wealthy, and it's avoided the recessions

0:32:510:32:54

'that affected other industrial nations in recent years.

0:32:540:32:58

'But in the long-term, many believe this country's become over-dependent

0:32:580:33:02

'on a resources boom that one day will surely come to an end.

0:33:020:33:06

'The next morning, I drove for five hours.'

0:33:150:33:18

We're back near the coast and I'm heading south

0:33:180:33:21

and my next destination is a place I'm really excited to visit.

0:33:210:33:27

And there it is! Look at that sight!

0:33:280:33:31

'I arrived in Sydney, one of the great world cities.'

0:33:340:33:38

Oh, I can see the tip of the Opera House just over there.

0:33:410:33:45

The city itself is much more imposing than I expected,

0:33:450:33:48

but the bridge is really quite awe-inspiring, actually,

0:33:480:33:53

looming above you.

0:33:530:33:55

One of the things that's most surprised me about Australia during this journey

0:34:190:34:23

is just how closely linked the country is with Asia.

0:34:230:34:27

I think, before coming here, I rather outrageously thought of

0:34:270:34:30

Australia as being a bit of Europe on the other side of the planet.

0:34:300:34:33

When you come here, you realise that economically, politically,

0:34:330:34:36

even militarily, this is a country that's closely connected with

0:34:360:34:40

and partnering with, even competing with,

0:34:400:34:42

the new emerging Asian superpowers.

0:34:420:34:45

But more than that, the identity of Australia is really changing.

0:34:450:34:49

Look at the faces around me now.

0:34:490:34:51

This is a multicultural country where a quarter of the population was born overseas

0:34:510:34:56

and where more than 10% of the population are of Asian origin.

0:34:560:35:00

Australia's changing. In fact, Australia's changed!

0:35:000:35:04

'And the new arrivals don't always want the traditional Aussie dream

0:35:090:35:13

'of a suburban house and a pool.

0:35:130:35:16

'I went to meet the billionaire who's helped to turn Sydney into a city of skyscrapers.'

0:35:160:35:21

Hello. Thank you. Thank you very much.

0:35:210:35:24

-Hello, Simon. Harry.

-Simon Reeve. Lovely to meet you.

0:35:240:35:27

My goodness!

0:35:270:35:29

'Harry Triguboff is one of the richest men in Australia.'

0:35:290:35:33

Yes, it's the tallest apartment in Sydney.

0:35:330:35:37

Now that is a view.

0:35:370:35:39

I hear you're known as High Rise Harry.

0:35:390:35:43

Can you explain? It seems obvious given that we're on the 78th floor, I think,

0:35:430:35:48

but can you explain how you've come to acquire the nickname?

0:35:480:35:52

Well, I think I'm the only one in the world that has built so much residential,

0:35:520:35:57

but has never built any cottages. Never built even one cottage.

0:35:570:36:01

I always wanted to be higher and higher and higher because I think it's better.

0:36:010:36:06

Now, my average development

0:36:060:36:08

is probably 600, 700 apartments.

0:36:080:36:11

600 or 700 apartments?

0:36:110:36:13

I read that you were born in China to Russian parents, I think.

0:36:130:36:18

-You came here when you were very young...

-14.

0:36:180:36:21

-You even worked... At one point you drove a taxi.

-Well, I had a taxi, yeah.

0:36:210:36:25

-Were you a good taxi driver?

-Hopeless.

0:36:250:36:28

Dreaming all the time, dreaming all the time, can't concentrate.

0:36:280:36:32

I mean, I can go from here to there, but not all day.

0:36:320:36:35

What proportion of your properties are selling, I mean, just roughly, to Chinese buyers?

0:36:360:36:41

And are these Chinese buyers from Chinese Australians or Chinese from China?

0:36:410:36:45

Mainland. Mainland. Mainland. Mainland China.

0:36:450:36:48

Of course some Australian Chinese buy too, but it's mainland Chinese.

0:36:480:36:52

I would say probably 70% come from China.

0:36:520:36:55

-70%?

-Yeah.

0:36:550:36:57

Why do the Chinese, particularly, love your apartments so much?

0:36:570:37:03

Because I give them what they are looking for.

0:37:030:37:06

They want to live where there is work.

0:37:060:37:09

He wants to be on transport and he wants to have good schools.

0:37:090:37:12

It's quite simple. The recipe is quite simple.

0:37:120:37:15

What have you built here, as we look out over Sydney?

0:37:150:37:19

-I'll show it to you. Here is Meriton, right?

-Right, yes.

0:37:190:37:23

That is where our head office is, and we have 450 serviced apartments there and some shops.

0:37:230:37:29

-450 apartments in the tower there?

-Yeah.

0:37:290:37:31

You see that one with the white and the black top?

0:37:310:37:34

-Oh, yes.

-There is another block there, also serviced apartments.

0:37:340:37:38

220 apartments there.

0:37:380:37:40

I read somewhere that 3% of people in Sydney

0:37:400:37:45

live in one of your homes.

0:37:450:37:48

Well, if you work out that between...

0:37:480:37:51

I would say 6%. 5% to 6% at any one time.

0:37:520:37:56

-Did you just do all the maths then just at that speed?

-Yes.

0:37:560:37:59

That's why you're one of the richest men in the country.

0:37:590:38:03

-You see that other one...

-It would take me a week and a calculator!

0:38:030:38:06

-Ah, you've no confidence.

-You've built half of Sydney!

-Not half, no, no.

0:38:060:38:10

'Millions of immigrants have come from Asia,

0:38:160:38:19

'particularly from India and China.

0:38:190:38:22

'This is a dramatic shift.

0:38:220:38:24

'Until they were finally ended in the early 1970s,

0:38:240:38:28

'white Australia policies restricted who could come here and the rights of non-whites.'

0:38:280:38:33

'Some studies suggest Australians are now less racist than Europeans and Americans, but tensions remain.

0:38:330:38:40

'Sydney's now home to a sizeable Muslim community.

0:38:420:38:46

'I went off the regular tourist trail

0:38:460:38:49

'to one of the beaches Muslim families traditionally use.'

0:38:490:38:52

-Hello! Amna!

-Yes, how are you?

0:38:550:38:57

Salam alaikum. Very well, thank you. How are you?

0:38:570:38:59

-Salam. I'm good, thank you! Your name?

-Simon. Simon.

0:38:590:39:02

-Hello, hello!

-Hi, Simon.

0:39:020:39:04

Hello, ladies! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello!

0:39:040:39:08

'I was meeting a group of young Muslim women

0:39:080:39:10

'who've started playing a uniquely Australian sport.'

0:39:100:39:14

You're a team of what? Tell us about your team.

0:39:140:39:17

So Lael and I co-founded the Auburn Tigers Women's AFL team.

0:39:170:39:20

And AFL is what?

0:39:200:39:21

AFL's Aussie rules.

0:39:210:39:23

Aussie rules football.

0:39:230:39:24

Yeah, Aussie rules football.

0:39:240:39:25

For those of us who are unfamiliar with Aussie rules football,

0:39:250:39:28

can you describe it to us?

0:39:280:39:30

There's a lot of tackling, a lot of barging, it's...

0:39:300:39:32

Basically, you just go on the foot and run after the ball.

0:39:320:39:35

You just run back and forth, run back and forth.

0:39:350:39:38

And it's basically you get the ball and kick at goal.

0:39:380:39:41

It's a hundred times harder and tougher than rugby.

0:39:410:39:43

-It's a better game.

-It's a better game.

0:39:430:39:45

Why did you think it was the best sport to choose for your team,

0:39:450:39:49

for your friends to play?

0:39:490:39:51

What inspired you to get involved in it

0:39:510:39:53

and set up the team in the first place?

0:39:530:39:54

All my brothers played AFL growing up,

0:39:540:39:57

so that was something that I always followed.

0:39:570:39:59

All your brothers. How many brothers do you have?

0:39:590:40:01

-Nine.

-Nine older brothers!

0:40:010:40:03

Wow! OK, and so you're their princess inevitably?

0:40:040:40:11

I'm their princess but I'm better than them on the field so...

0:40:110:40:13

-Are you now?

-Yeah.

0:40:130:40:16

'The group's engaging with Australian life in a way

0:40:170:40:20

'immigrants are often accused of failing to do.'

0:40:200:40:22

Ready, girls?

0:40:220:40:24

So it begins.

0:40:250:40:27

'And to my untrained eye they seemed to score

0:40:320:40:34

'plenty of points for enthusiasm, at least, at this training session.'

0:40:340:40:38

This is a whole new world, isn't it? You enjoying it?

0:40:380:40:41

It's a whole new world. I remember things like...

0:40:410:40:43

There's still stuff I don't know like, "Go to the fat side."

0:40:430:40:46

I'm like, "What's the fat side?" you know,

0:40:460:40:47

when I was at coaching class, seminars and stuff.

0:40:470:40:51

There's lingo that I still don't get but that's OK, you know?

0:40:510:40:54

Like the full-back and the full-forward

0:40:540:40:57

I still get muddled, but, you know.

0:40:570:40:59

So it being new, they're not familiar with the language

0:40:590:41:02

so we're all learning together.

0:41:020:41:03

Goodness me!

0:41:080:41:09

Good work!

0:41:090:41:10

'Racial tension has long been a problem here.

0:41:120:41:15

'In 2005, these beaches were the scene

0:41:150:41:17

'of some of the worst race riots in Australia's history.'

0:41:170:41:21

What were the consequences of the riots for you?

0:41:230:41:27

This is the beach that my family would come to,

0:41:270:41:29

and when I say my family,

0:41:290:41:30

I'm not talking about my parents and siblings - whole family.

0:41:300:41:34

So it was a huge occasion for us to go to the beach on the weekend.

0:41:340:41:38

At some point, those visits stopped entirely.

0:41:380:41:41

By the time it hit 2005, that was just a no-go,

0:41:410:41:44

-we stopped coming to Cronulla.

-Because of the riots?

0:41:440:41:47

It was never said by my parents but subconsciously, when they saw

0:41:470:41:50

that on TV, it reinforced this migrant thinking,

0:41:500:41:55

that we don't belong in this country,

0:41:550:41:57

we're sort of hubbing here temporarily,

0:41:570:41:59

we're not really wanted, that one day we'll have to migrate back home.

0:41:590:42:02

But what's your view of growing up,

0:42:020:42:05

living now in modern Australia as a person of Lebanese descent

0:42:050:42:11

but also a Muslim who wears the headscarf?

0:42:110:42:14

Do you get abuse? Do you get harassed, hassled or anything?

0:42:140:42:17

It's funny you should say that. I was abused two days ago...

0:42:170:42:20

Not even, I think it was yesterday, actually.

0:42:200:42:23

I went to Lael's house and I was crying.

0:42:230:42:25

I was totally overwhelmed by the fact that some angry Anglo person

0:42:250:42:29

came out of the car and went off their nut at me

0:42:290:42:32

at the service station and I was like, "Wow!"

0:42:320:42:34

What did they say, or do?

0:42:340:42:37

He got out of his car, started yelling, swearing,

0:42:370:42:39

and I was just like, "Whoa!"

0:42:390:42:43

About what? At you or...?

0:42:430:42:45

At me for no reason.

0:42:450:42:47

Did you report them?

0:42:470:42:48

No, I didn't report the guy in the petrol station.

0:42:480:42:50

I think quite often when those experiences happen that women

0:42:500:42:52

don't report them because they feel like there's going to be no outcome.

0:42:520:42:56

Like I know the AFL, at the elite level, are really strict,

0:42:560:42:59

for example, if someone from the crowd will call out a racist comment,

0:42:590:43:03

that that person, like, has to make a public apology.

0:43:030:43:06

They have to go to counselling, like they've got some measures in place.

0:43:060:43:10

But that's in a very specific setting.

0:43:100:43:14

What happens when this stuff is happening out on the streets

0:43:140:43:17

and it's not being dealt with?

0:43:170:43:18

'Australia now wants more skilled immigrants

0:43:180:43:21

'to help economic expansion, and racism's an issue

0:43:210:43:24

'Australians must deal with if the country's going to be

0:43:240:43:27

'a harmonious society that makes the most of its position

0:43:270:43:30

'on the edge of Asia.'

0:43:300:43:33

What's fascinating about that

0:43:330:43:35

was there was no doubt in any of their minds, of course that

0:43:350:43:38

"We're Aussies, we're Australians and we're proud of it!"

0:43:380:43:42

Other people might see them as outsiders

0:43:420:43:44

but they see themselves as being Aussie to the core and,

0:43:440:43:47

my goodness, what amazing young women they are.

0:43:470:43:51

'I set off towards Melbourne, a 500-mile journey that took me

0:43:570:44:01

'across one of Australia's most spectacular mountain ranges.'

0:44:010:44:05

What a magnificent view.

0:44:270:44:29

This is such a beautiful country.

0:44:330:44:36

So these are the Blue Mountains which are part of the great

0:44:400:44:43

dividing range which runs down much of the east of Australia,

0:44:430:44:49

and separates the outback, which is on that side to the west,

0:44:490:44:55

from the coast over my shoulder.

0:44:550:44:59

One of the big misconceptions about Australia is that most people

0:45:010:45:04

here live some sort of rugged, outback life when, in fact,

0:45:040:45:10

most of them live thataway in the big coastal cities.

0:45:100:45:14

They're actually one of the most urbanised people on the planet!

0:45:170:45:21

'Australians are heavy users of energy, powering their homes,

0:45:340:45:37

'mod cons and air-conditioning, and they consume huge amounts

0:45:370:45:42

'of electricity mostly generated by dirty old coal.'

0:45:420:45:45

Australians are among the very worst emitters of carbon in the world

0:45:500:45:57

so they're among the most polluting people on the planet.

0:45:570:46:03

It's very hard really for us still to fully be certain

0:46:030:46:07

of what the consequences of that will be, but I'm heading now

0:46:070:46:11

to an experiment that's being run

0:46:110:46:14

which should give us at least a clue.

0:46:140:46:17

Here we are!

0:46:170:46:18

'I went to visit the woodland site of a unique experiment.'

0:46:180:46:21

Somebody's waving.

0:46:210:46:24

'Professor David Ellsworth is investigating the consequences

0:46:240:46:27

'of increasing levels of carbon dioxide

0:46:270:46:29

'from fossil fuels like coal in the atmosphere.'

0:46:290:46:33

In this research station, there are these whopping towers!

0:46:330:46:38

So, Professor, what exactly are you doing here?

0:46:420:46:45

We're trying to create the atmosphere of the future

0:46:450:46:47

that we expect in about 35 years to be able to understand

0:46:470:46:51

how that affects plants and animals and critters in the ecosystem.

0:46:510:46:55

So you're creating the atmosphere of the future how?

0:46:550:46:58

This area is exposed to a high CO2 atmosphere

0:46:580:47:03

by emitting bits of CO2 out of these perforations in those pipes.

0:47:030:47:09

We don't need to enclose any of the vegetation,

0:47:090:47:11

we can do it in the out-of-doors, and we can do it in these big plots.

0:47:110:47:15

'CO2 or carbon dioxide levels have increased by more than a third

0:47:170:47:21

'since the industrial revolution.

0:47:210:47:23

'Most of that increase has happened since the 1950s

0:47:230:47:26

'and the level's now increasing even faster.'

0:47:260:47:29

Still quite a long way down, but what a sight you get!

0:47:290:47:32

You do get a real sense of the scale of what you're doing here.

0:47:330:47:37

That's right. But you have to do the experiment at a large scale because,

0:47:370:47:41

in fact, climate change is happening at a large scale.

0:47:410:47:44

'Increased levels of carbon dioxide

0:47:470:47:49

'are predicted to dramatically change our global climate,

0:47:490:47:53

'but it'll have different impacts on different plants and animals.'

0:47:530:47:57

Clamp it into the chamber and start measuring.

0:47:570:48:01

What are you checking for?

0:48:010:48:03

I'm checking about what is the rate of photosynthesis in the leaf

0:48:030:48:06

and has it been increased by an increase in carbon dioxide.

0:48:060:48:11

What I see is really quite a high photosynthetic rate.

0:48:110:48:15

Photosynthesis can be stimulated by a rise in CO2.

0:48:150:48:19

Stimulated would suggest to me that you're wondering

0:48:190:48:23

whether photosynthesis actually increases,

0:48:230:48:25

whether there's more growth with increased carbon.

0:48:250:48:27

Well yes, that's what makes some plants winners

0:48:270:48:30

and some plants losers.

0:48:300:48:32

And this is a chance to actually be ahead of the game

0:48:320:48:35

and not be sitting here saying, "Oh, well, we released gigatonnes of CO2,

0:48:350:48:43

"teratonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere,

0:48:430:48:46

"now figure out how we fix it."

0:48:460:48:48

Let's rather understand ahead of time what it's looking like

0:48:480:48:53

and maybe that's going to help us actually do something ahead of time

0:48:530:48:58

that's going to avoid some of the negative consequences

0:48:580:49:02

we don't want out of that.

0:49:020:49:03

'Certain plants might thrive,

0:49:030:49:05

'but scientists expect that the changes in our ecosystem

0:49:050:49:08

'will be catastrophic for much of Australia's biodiversity.'

0:49:080:49:12

Well they look like pods, really, don't they? Alien-looking pods.

0:49:120:49:16

But they are... You have covered these,

0:49:160:49:18

these are strange greenhouses.

0:49:180:49:20

These are covered, and the reason why is to warm an area

0:49:200:49:24

when the air is mixing is actually hard to do

0:49:240:49:27

and by covering, you can use conventional technologies to do it.

0:49:270:49:31

OK, so this one, this is a proper time machine.

0:49:310:49:35

Increased levels of carbon dioxide

0:49:350:49:38

and a plus three degrees on natural temperature here.

0:49:380:49:43

Now that's the prediction for when?

0:49:430:49:45

That's the prediction for about 2060 or 2070, around then.

0:49:450:49:50

Now, everywhere I've been, almost,

0:49:500:49:53

on the journey, there's been bushfires, there's been scares

0:49:530:49:58

where towns have been threatened by fires.

0:49:580:50:01

Bushfires are such a huge issue in Australia.

0:50:010:50:04

Is there any connection between bushfires and our change in climate?

0:50:040:50:08

If plants actually produce more in a CO2-rich atmosphere

0:50:080:50:13

and they also cast off more leaves, then that means more fuel

0:50:130:50:18

essentially that's available for fires.

0:50:180:50:21

And there is a big, big concern about that spectre

0:50:210:50:25

of increased bushfire, increased fuel loads, and we're very worried

0:50:250:50:31

about what to do about that if that's a future that comes to pass.

0:50:310:50:35

'More fuel on the ground poses an enormous bushfire threat

0:50:360:50:40

'to Australia in the future. But scientists also warn

0:50:400:50:43

'that Australia is likely to be one of the first countries

0:50:430:50:46

'that experiences the severest effects of future climate change,

0:50:460:50:50

'including prolonged droughts and extreme weather conditions.

0:50:500:50:54

'But will we heed their warnings?'

0:50:540:50:56

The thought does really strike me that the people we rely on

0:50:560:51:00

to protect us and look after us for the future,

0:51:000:51:02

our politicians, in Australia, as almost everywhere else,

0:51:020:51:06

are elected for short-term periods and they've got no real incentive

0:51:060:51:10

to ask us to do something difficult, like use less energy,

0:51:100:51:15

use less oil or coal, because they want our votes!

0:51:150:51:19

They want to keep promising us the good life!

0:51:190:51:22

They're thinking short-term and we need to be thinking long-term.

0:51:220:51:27

-Thank you very much.

-And you. Bye-bye.

0:51:310:51:34

Look at this.

0:51:450:51:46

A bushfire is burning and not far from here.

0:51:480:51:52

Bushfires have been such a feature of this part of the journey.

0:51:520:51:55

They've been everywhere we've been.

0:51:550:51:58

I really think we need to try and get up close and see one.

0:51:580:52:01

'The bushfire that made the front page of the local paper

0:52:030:52:06

'was being fought from an airbase

0:52:060:52:08

'near the small town of Myrtleford in Victoria.

0:52:080:52:11

'Fire-fighters in helicopters were directing fire crews on the ground.'

0:52:110:52:15

'Larger choppers were being used as water bombers.

0:52:210:52:24

'Brett Newman has been fighting bushfires in this part of the world

0:52:280:52:32

'for more than 30 years.'

0:52:320:52:34

We're at the airbase just out of Myrtleford.

0:52:340:52:37

The fire at the moment is running along this mountain top here,

0:52:370:52:40

putting the Hotham Heights and these villages and towns under threat.

0:52:400:52:44

What area is this fire burning over at the moment today?

0:52:440:52:47

This particular fire was 2,500 hectares.

0:52:470:52:50

That's huge!

0:52:500:52:51

But the fire down here is 67,000 hectares

0:52:510:52:56

and that's 260 square miles.

0:52:560:52:59

That's abso... That's...

0:52:590:53:01

That's about half, something like half the size of London!

0:53:010:53:05

-That's vast!

-It's a big fire.

0:53:050:53:07

There's a constant cycle of helicopters coming in here

0:53:130:53:16

and landing and refuelling.

0:53:160:53:18

It's a little bit like an airfield at war. At war with the fires.

0:53:180:53:23

'Brett had agreed to try and get me closer to the blaze.

0:53:270:53:30

'There are more wildfires in Australia than anywhere else in the world.

0:53:370:53:41

'They're mostly natural events,

0:53:410:53:43

'but often lives and livelihoods are at risk.'

0:53:430:53:46

The smell of smoke is really thick in the air now and beneath us

0:53:510:53:54

looks like it's all burnt through in this area.

0:53:540:53:57

The trees look not wiped out, curiously,

0:53:570:54:00

but the hillside looks really scorched.

0:54:000:54:02

So just ahead of us over here now it's like a volcano is erupting

0:54:030:54:07

this extraordinary plume of smoke.

0:54:070:54:09

And you can actually see the flames there.

0:54:120:54:14

The town is just beyond us there, look.

0:54:180:54:21

It really is advancing through the hillside in a real line of fire.

0:54:250:54:29

'This fire had already claimed one life

0:54:390:54:41

'and destroyed more than 20 homes.'

0:54:410:54:44

Imagine how terrifying that is.

0:54:440:54:46

I wonder if they were there when the fire started heading into their land.

0:54:470:54:51

This is completely taken. Oh, my God, look at this.

0:54:510:54:54

That's horrendous.

0:54:550:54:57

Now you can see the car and the trees burnt out

0:54:570:55:00

but that certainly looks like somebody's home.

0:55:000:55:02

'All that was left of one house was three chimneys.'

0:55:040:55:08

Bloody hell! Look at it.

0:55:080:55:10

Utterly blackened beneath us.

0:55:110:55:13

'Fires have killed scores of people here in recent years

0:55:160:55:19

'and caused billions of pounds worth of damage.'

0:55:190:55:22

'But if the worst fears about climate change are realised,

0:55:260:55:29

'wildfires here will only get worse.'

0:55:290:55:31

'I drove another 200 miles to Melbourne

0:55:510:55:54

'and I arrived just in time for Australia Day.'

0:55:540:55:58

So we're getting close to the end.

0:55:580:56:00

'Australia Day commemorates the arrival of a British military fleet

0:56:030:56:07

'in Australia in 1788 and the declaration of British rule.'

0:56:070:56:10

'Just over two centuries later,

0:56:120:56:14

'Australia is, by some measures, the wealthiest country on the planet.

0:56:140:56:20

'Melbourne's even been described as the best city in the world to live in.'

0:56:200:56:25

When you think that among the 1,500 people who arrived

0:56:260:56:29

on the First Fleet more than 200 years ago there was just

0:56:290:56:32

one experienced fisherman and not a single decent botanist

0:56:320:56:37

or a good gardener...

0:56:370:56:40

they've done all right, haven't they?

0:56:400:56:43

'But like any country, it's had a chequered history.

0:56:480:56:51

'Its treatment of its Aboriginal people has been horrific

0:56:510:56:55

'and many still suffer today.

0:56:550:56:57

'My journey's shown me

0:56:590:57:01

'that Australians now face many challenges.

0:57:010:57:04

'They need to wean themselves off a dependence

0:57:040:57:07

'on just digging up and selling natural resources.

0:57:070:57:11

'They need to harness the talents of their newly diverse population

0:57:110:57:14

'and secure and exploit their position on the edge of Asia.'

0:57:140:57:18

'For a Brit, Australia is a curious mix of the familiar and exotic.

0:57:210:57:26

'On my travels, I've seen another side of a country we think we know.

0:57:260:57:30

'I have seen a dark side to life here,

0:57:330:57:35

'including the destruction of wildlife and the environment

0:57:350:57:39

'and some communities blighted by addiction and crime.

0:57:390:57:43

'But I've also seen that for most Australians this place

0:57:430:57:46

'really does seem to justify its nickname as the lucky country.'

0:57:460:57:50

Perfect timing.

0:57:520:57:54

I'm bowled over by Australia.

0:57:570:58:00

Remember, this place used to be seen as something of a backwater

0:58:000:58:04

on the other side of the planet and now it's ideally placed at the

0:58:040:58:07

edge of perhaps the most dynamic and exciting region of the world, Asia.

0:58:070:58:11

And the country is well placed to prosper for many years to come.

0:58:150:58:20

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