2001 in Australia

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following lists events that happened during 2001 in Australia.

2001 in Australia
Governor-General
Sir William Deane, then Peter Hollingworth
Prime ministerJohn Howard
Population19,413,240
ElectionsWA, QLD, NT, ACT, Federal

2001
in
Australia

Decades:
See also:

Incumbents

John Howard

State and Territory Leaders

Governors and Administrators

Events

January

  • 1 January – A ceremony at Uluru (Ayers Rock) and a parade in Sydney kick off a year of celebrations to mark the centenary of federation.
  • 8 January – Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock explains on Iranian television the hazards of illegal migration to Australia.
  • 17 January – Employment Minister Tony Abbott advocates Work for the Dole for all persons unemployed for more than six months.
  • 30 January – Queensland Premier Peter Beattie demands that Prime Minister John Howard halt the Federal Parliamentary inquiry investigating electoral rorts.

February

March

  • 1 March – West Australian Premier Geoff Gallop ends all old growth logging in the state.
  • 2 March – Victorian Premier Steve Bracks pleads for Transurban to drop its $36 million compensation claim against the State.
  • 16 March – HIH Insurance goes into provisional liquidation, but claims it can cover all household and third party policies.
  • 17 March – Labor candidate Leonie Short wins the Ryan by-election in Queensland, defeating Liberal candidate, Bob Tucker.

April

May

  • 7 May – Queensland Premier Peter Beattie orders a dingo cull on Fraser Island after 9-year-old Clinton Gage is mauled to death by a dingo on 30 April.
  • 21 May – The Federal Government announces a commission into the HIH insurance disaster with $500 million allocated to victims.
  • 24 May – Former HIH Insurance director, Rodney Adler fights an attempt to freeze his assets.

June

July

Australian Prime Minister John Howard (center) poses for a photograph with U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (right) and U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, inside the Australian Prime Minister's offices at the Parliament House, Canberra, Australia, on 30 July 2001. Two U.S. Secretaries are in Australia to attend Australia-U.S. Ministerial (AUSMIN) talks and conduct meetings with high-level government military and civilian officials.
  • 10 July – West Australian Premier Geoff Gallop announces that State Government-AMA talks will be halted until doctors end their industrial action.
  • 14 July – Liberal candidate Chris Pearce wins the 2001 Aston by-election in Victoria.
  • 20 July – Australian citizen
    Department of Immigration
    .

August

  • 8 August – Prime Minister John Howard says he will block any attempts of a heroin trial in the Australian Capital Territory. However, the ACT Government pushes ahead with the drug referendum.
  • 14 August – The Australian Catholic University announces that its new General Staff Enterprise Bargaining Agreement includes a provision for one year's paid maternity leave, 12 weeks on full pay and a further 40 weeks on 60% pay.
  • 15 August – Long-time South Australian MP and Party Whip, Murray DeLaine, quits Labor and announces that he is running as an independent at the next state election.
  • 18 August – For the first time since self-government was granted to the Northern Territory in 1978, the Country Liberal Party is voted out of office and replaced by the ALP
  • 24 August – The Tampa affair begins when the MV Tampa tries to help a boatload of refugees, mainly from Afghanistan. The crisis is resolved when New Zealand agrees to take some of the refugees and countries such as Nauru and Papua New Guinea agree to take the rest. This was known as the Pacific Solution.
  • 30 August – Prime Minister John Howard urges Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri to accept asylum seekers currently on board the MV Tampa.

September

  • 10 September – Prime Minister John Howard starts his United States tour in Washington, D.C., shortly before the September 11 attacks happen.
  • 12 September – Ansett Australia, one of the oldest airlines in the world and the second-largest in Australia goes under administration with KordaMentha due to major financial struggles. Despite this administrators assure the public that flights will continue as normal.
  • 14 September- Just two days after going into administration, Ansett Australia ceases operations resulting in a redundancy of 15,000 staff and tens of thousands of stranded passengers. This occurs despite former assurance by the administrators that no such thing would happen.
  • 24 September – Prime Minister
    Ansett Airlines
    planes back in the air as soon as possible following the company's collapse.
  • 26 September – Prime Minister John Howard dedicates the Magna Carta monument near Old Parliament house as part of a Centenary of Federation project.
  • 27 September – The Federal Government passes legislation with amendments to the Commonwealth Migration Act (1958) aimed at implementing the Government's Pacific Solution. By redefining the area of Australian territory that could be landed upon and then legitimately used for claims of asylum (the migration zone), and by removing any intercepted people to third countries for processing, the aim was to deter future asylum seekers from making the dangerous journey by boat, once they knew that their trip would probably not end with a legitimate claim for asylum in Australia.

October

November

December

Arts and literature

Film

  • 4 October – The Australian film Lantana debuts.

Television

Sport

Births

Deaths

Sir Donald Bradman

See also

References

  1. – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Coroner to deliver Eastland Air findings". The Sydney Morning Herald. 7 August 2007. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  3. ^ "More riots at Australian detention camp". CNN. 18 December 2001. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  4. ^ "Ed Oxenbould biography". Tribute. Retrieved 17 July 2020.

External links