Letter to Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Australia

Dear Prime Minister Morrison, 

Your comments following my appeal to you on 60 Minutes were disappointing. 
You trivialized and laughed about the suffering of an Australian and his family. You followed it with smutty, unnecessary comments about a woman voicing her political opinion.
We all deserve better from our leaders, especially in the current environment. 
Following the show, 60 Minutes canvassed the views of Australians online. People responded in their thousands, overwhelmingly – 92% of more than 7000 – in favour of bringing Julian home. 
Rather than making lewd suggestions about me, perhaps you should instead think about what you are going to say to millions of Australians when one of their own is marched in an orange jumpsuit to Guantanamo Bay – for publishing the truth. You can prevent this.
Julian Assange will soon face his Seventh Christmas isolated from family and friends, after 8 years of detention without charge. For six years he has been refused any access to fresh air, sunshine, exercise, or proper medical or dental care.
In February 2016, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) stated that his detention was unlawful.
For the past seven months Mr. Assange has been denied the right to receive visitors, use internet or telecommunications.

This Australian is not getting a fair go; his human rights are being openly violated.
I am hopeful Australia now has a leader with strength and conviction enough to bring him home.
Australia and the world are watching how you treat your citizen, your publisher, in dire need of help from his own government.

With hope,

Pamela Anderson

Letter to The Honorable Scott John Morrison MP - Prime Minister of Australia

Dear Prime Minister,

Congratulations on your appointment as Prime Minister! Australia is one of my favorite places to visit. I read your maiden speech and was glad to see that we share the same strong principles of justice and compassion. Today, I'm writing to ask that you put your compassion into action by ending the live-animal export industry.

Because of live export, millions of animals endure grueling journeys on cramped, sweltering hot ships every year. Over the weeks-long voyages, many die from dehydration, starvation, or disease, while others are trampled to death or suffocate in their own waste. Those who survive the trip face yet more suffering, as weak animal-protection laws in the Middle East allow them to be subjected to abuse and methods of slaughter that would be illegal in Australia.

By banning live export, you would be honoring your role as a representative of the people. Seventy-five percent of the Australian public opposes this barbaric trade, and a petition signed by 238,000 people calling for an end to the practice was recently sent to your parliament. The live-export trade has declined by two-thirds over the last five years. Yet a livestock export license has just been issued to a subsidiary of a company linked to the Emanuel Exports disaster (in which more than 2,400 sheep died in transit last year), sparking outrage from the public yet again. With your expertise in economics and tourism, surely you can see that this industry is on shaky ground and is a stain on Australia's global reputation.

You now have the power to make the compassionate and logical move that your predecessor did not. The people of Australia believe that live export must end, and I fully support them.

Please ban this cruel industry.

Yours faithfully,

Pamela Anderson