Tuesday, 1 March 2005

YOU CALL THIS A LIFE, The Australian, 1 March, 2005.

YOU CALL THIS A LIFE: [1 All-round Country Edition]

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[Dylan Raywood] and [Matt Robertson] were members of a local gang known as the Kelly Boys or the MFBs -- the Macquarie Fields Boys. Members claimed yesterday they had been targeted by police for many months. One young man, who does not want to be named, says Robertson was fresh from jail and "had been flogged by the coppers that many times". "The police have been making threats to take these boys off the street one way or another," he tells The Australian. "The cops weren't going to stop until there was a death."
In addition to the tears and violence, claim and counter-claim, that have marred the aftermath of the deaths, locals have spoken of their disbelief that two "good boys" -- and one boy "with a future" - - has died. Friends say 17-year-old Raywood didn't smoke, didn't drink and had the talent to play rugby league for Australia. He and Robertson, 19, had lined up work loading equipment at the Royal Easter Show. For Raywood, it would have been his first job.
The Glenquarie estate was established by the NSW Department of Housing about 30 years ago. Campbelltown mayor Brenton Banfield says that back then it was a place of hope and opportunity. Today it is home to about 4500 residents and entrenched disadvantage. "Over the years people with get-up-and-go got up and left," Banfield says. "But the most disadvantaged stayed. And as the years have gone on it has only got worse."

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