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I suppose I was querying why staff employed by UK division get benefit of Aussie bank holiday?
I suppose that you were querying that and it surprises me also. However, "international" companies may set their own policies and give Public Holidays to their own employees at their discretion.
I am sure that the company concerned (and all Australians and New Zealanders) are "sorry for the inconvenience" - as Douglas Adams wrote in "The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy", being God's last message to the universe!
It may be of some interest for you to know that for Australians and New Zealanders, 25 April (ANZAC Day) is possibly the most significant day of the year, being a time of reflection on the sacrifices in war that these two countries have made to what was in 1915 the British Empire - and since then in other wars, which still continue.
In this that day outranks our National Days of 26 January (AUS) and 2 February (NZ).- and the Queen's Birthday holiday on the 2nd Monday in June! In addition, we also commemorate the sacrifices in war on 11 November, although this is NOT a Public Holiday.
As on other ANZAC Days I have today watched on TV various "Dawn Services" in New Zealand, Australia, Gallipoli (Turkey) and Villers-Bretonneux (France) as the dawn progressed across the planet.
Turkey is most notable in that this country where Australia and New Zealand (together with Britain) were the aggressors in 1915 now welcomes us and commemorates the sacrifices made on both sides.
Next year on 25 April those in Villers-Bretonneux will commemorate the 100th anniversary of one of the most decisive victories of WWI, by Australians against German soldiers which (possibly) marked a "turning of the tide" in that war. (It certainly prevented the capture of Armiens.)
If you ever visit Villers-Bretonneux, you will find at the school there above every blackboard the inscription "
N'oublions jamais l'Australie" (Let us never forget Australia).
The major intersecting streets of that town are now named Rue Victoria and Rue de Melbourne - partly because of the financial assistance which was given by school children in Victoria to that town after WWI.
After bush-fires ravaged Victoria in February 2009, the children of Villers-Bretonneux made a not insignificant contribution to the Victorian bush-fire relief fund.