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Saturday, November 28, 2009

Hockey still in my corner: Turnbull

Posted 8 hours 38 minutes ago
Updated 6 hours 31 minutes ago

Malcolm Turnbull says he has the "full support" of Joe Hockey as pressure mounts on the high-profile frontbencher to announce whether he will contest the Liberal leadership.

It is understood Mr Hockey is close to making a decision as a group of Liberal MPs works on securing the numbers to oust Mr Turnbull as leader and stifle passage of the Government's emissions trading scheme.

Mr Hockey has previously said he would not challenge Mr Turnbull and has backed his leader's stance on climate change.

He has even sought advice from former prime minister John Howard over what direction he should take.

But Mr Turnbull this morning lashed out at his critics, in particular Tony Abbott, whom he will likely face in a leadership ballot on Tuesday, and Senate leader Nick Minchin.

"They are destroying the Liberal Party," Mr Turnbull told Channel Nine. "There is a recklessness and a wilfulness in these men, which is going to destroy the Liberal Party."

Mr Turnbull says he is confident of retaining the leadership despite many Liberals touting Mr Hockey as a unifying candidate who could bring together the warring conservatives and moderates.

"If Joe was the cuddly, friendly face of the Liberal Party but spouting Nick Minchin's lines, that would destroy him and destroy the party," Mr Turnbull said.

"He knows that. He's got too much character to be suckered into that.

"I will win on Tuesday. I am unbowed.

"Joe Hockey has told me as recently as last night that I have his complete support.

"I am not interested in becoming a mouthpiece or a patsy or a tool for people whose views are completely wrong and are contrary to the best interests of our nation, our planet and indeed the Liberal Party.

"If this issue is not resolved, the climate change war that Nick Minchin and his wreckers have started will continue to destroy the Liberal Party until such time as we are destroyed by Kevin Rudd in an election."

While Mr Turnbull is confident of defeating Mr Abbott in a leadership vote, one of his supporters concedes a contest against Mr Hockey would be a different story.

A poll of 400 voters published in the Sunday Telegraph has Mr Turnbull and Mr Hockey equally preferred by all voters on 29 points, with Mr Abbott trailing on 22.

Among Coalition voters, Mr Hockey has a clear lead with 39 per cent support, with Mr Abbott and Mr Turnbull on 26 and 25 respectively.

Meanwhile, Acting Prime Minister Julia Gillard has rejected the argument from some Liberals that Mr Hockey could be leader if he reversed his support for an ETS.

"No one could present themselves to the Australian people as a serious person if that was the argument they were going to run," Ms Gillard todl the ABC's Insiders program.

"Mr Hockey's made his decision. He's made his decision alongside Malcolm Turnbull and the others in the Liberal party, and that decision is for the carbon pollution reduction scheme as amended by the amendments that [Ian] Macfarlane sought."

'He didn't listen'

Former Howard government minister Kevin Andrews has also not ruled out being a candidate in a new leadership ballot.

Mr Andrews, who put his name forward in a party vote last week, has told Channel Ten that Liberal senators will meet tomorrow morning to decide their tactics.

He says he hopes they stall the emissions trading scheme vote until after the leadership challenge.

"We should delay it, and if that means talking it out, that means talking it out... whatever we need to do represent the overwhelming view of people who are talking to us and who have been polled," he said.

Tasmanian Senator Stephen Parry says Mr Turnbull's refusal to delay the vote on the emissions trading scheme will cost him the leadership.

Senator Parry predicts the next Liberal leader will delay the scheme until after the Copenhagen climate conference.

"Malcolm had the potential to be a great leader of our party and Malcolm didn't listen to the party room, and I'm very sad about that," he said.

"But the reality is that we need a leader who will listen to the majority of the party room and take those views and model our policy position on the views of the party room."

Senator Eric Abetz, who quit Mr Turnbull's frontbench in protest at his support for the amended ETS, has told Sky news that whoever wins on Tuesday will have to agree to delaying the scheme.

"I believe that any leader of the Liberal Party, whether it remains as Malcolm Turnbull or any body else, will need to see the will of the party room and accede to it and agree to deferring this issue until after Copenhagen," he said.

Tags: government-and-politics, political-parties, liberal-party, nationals, emissions-trading, australia




Turnbull unleashes tirade on Liberal rebels

Posted 4 hours 15 minutes ago
Updated 2 hours 59 minutes ago

Federal Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull has attacked his Liberal opponents as wreckers who are destroying the party.

There is a strong feeling within the Opposition that the embattled Mr Turnbull cannot hold onto the leadership when his party votes in a spill on Tuesday.

This morning on Channel Nine he launched an attack on his critics, singling out Nick Minchin and Tony Abbott, calling their strategies "catastrophic" for the party.

"They will not give up until they have bullied and intimidated the majority into agreeing with their position," he said.

"These men are leading us into an electoral catastrophe."

Mr Abbott, Sophie Mirabella, Tony Smith and Senators Minchin and Eric Abetz all quit their portfolios last week, claiming they could not vote for the Government's emissions trading legislation.

Mr Abbott says he is challenging Mr Turnbull for the leadership to turn around the Coalition's backing for the amended emissions scheme.

"The end game is to change the policy. Now [to do that] it looks like that means changing the leader," he said.

"I regret that but if that's what it takes that's what I want to try to do."

So far Mr Turnbull's only leadership opponent is Mr Abbott, but Joe Hockey is under enormous pressure, with many in the party believing he would easily win the contest.

Mr Hockey has not yet said if he will run, but has been under strong pressure to contest the leadership with Queenslander Peter Dutton as his deputy.

It is looking more likely that will happen, with Mr Dutton meeting with Mr Hockey at his Sydney home today.

Turnbull opponents say whoever leads the party should argue to delay the emissions trading scheme.

But Mr Turnbull has said Mr Hockey could not agree to that.

"If Joe was the cuddly, friendly face of the Liberal Party but spouting Nick Minchin's lines, that would destroy him and destroy the party," he told Channel Nine.

"He knows that. He's got too much character to be suckered into that. I will win on Tuesday. I am unbowed.

"Joe Hockey has told me as recently as last night that I have his complete support," he added.

"I am not interested in becoming a mouthpiece or a patsy or a tool for people whose views are completely wrong and are contrary to the best interests of our nation, our planet and indeed the Liberal Party.

"If this issue is not resolved, the climate change war that Nick Minchin and his wreckers have started will continue to destroy the Liberal Party until such time as we are destroyed by Kevin Rudd in an election."

It is understood Mr Hockey is close to making a decision as a group of Liberal MPs works on securing the numbers to oust Mr Turnbull.

Mr Hockey previously said he would not challenge Mr Turnbull and has backed his leader's stance on climate change.

He has even sought advice from former prime minister John Howard over what direction he should take.

Tags: government-and-politics, federal-government, political-parties, liberal-party, emissions-trading, australia

Space shuttle Atlantis lands back on Earth

Atlantis lands back on Earth

Space shuttle Atlantis crew deliver a statement after landing at the Kennedy Space Centre. (Reuters: Scott Audette)

The shuttle Atlantis has landed back on Earth, capping a mission to the International Space Station and bringing NASA's small fleet of winged spaceships closer to looming retirement.

Atlantis and its crew of seven astronauts touched down at 9:44am (1444 GMT) at the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida, under mostly sunny skies.

During their 11-day mission, the fliers delivered and equipped the space station with nearly 13,608 kilograms of critical spare parts intended to ensure safe and scientifically productive operations well after the final shuttle flight, scheduled for late September 2010.

The bulky spare gyroscopes, thermal control system components, oxygen tank and robot arm hardware hauled aboard Atlantis to the orbital outpost exceeded the carrying capacity available on the short line-up of rocket launchers capable of reaching the station.

While the shuttle was parked at the station, the Atlantis astronauts hustled through three spacewalks and took on extra tasks.

They teamed with five US, Russian and European astronauts aboard the station to establish power, cooling and airway connections ahead of Tranquility's arrival and set up new external communications systems to ease future maintenance of the outpost.

"Welcome back to Earth, everybody," Mission Control radioed Atlantis commander Charlie Hobaugh and his crew as the spacecraft rolled to a stop on the coastal runway.

Astronaut Randy Bresnik, who travelled to space for the first time, closely monitored his wife, Rebecca, who went into labor and gave birth to a daughter, Abigail Mae, during a day-long break between his two spacewalks.

"It's the most amazing three days of my life," the Marine Corps aviator said. "I look forward to getting home and seeing her for the first time in person."

Set to retire

With the assembly of the space station nearly complete, just a handful of shuttle missions remain. Endeavour's February flight will deliver Tranquility, the final habitable module of the station's US segment.

Under current US planning, NASA will phase out activities aboard the station by 2016 to free up funding for a shuttle successor that can transport astronauts back to the moon and the orbital outpost.

But US President Barack Obama's administration is reviewing options developed by a White House advisory panel that include extending station activities until 2020, an outcome supported by many in Congress and favoured by NASA's international partners.

Other options under review would scrap NASA's plans to establish a base on the moon and take aim at an asteroid and other destinations humans have yet to explore.

Although NASA achieved five successful shuttle missions in 2009, the most in a year since the Columbia disaster of 2003 that claimed the lives of seven astronauts, the winged ships seem unlikely to receive a reprieve beyond early 2011.

NASA has already instructed its contractors to halt the production of fuel tanks and solid rocket boosters and made other moves that have triggered hundreds of layoffs.

"We have only so many missions to go," Mike Leinbach, NASA's shuttle launch director, told reporters shortly after Atlantis lifted off on November 16.

Nicole Stott, who returned to Earth aboard Atlantis after three months aboard the station, is the last American scheduled to make the round trip journey aboard a shuttle.

After the February mission, the final four shuttle flights will carry more supplies and scientific research gear to finish out a dozen years of construction and outfitting of the outpost that has grown larger than an American football field.

- AFP

Tags: human-interest, science-and-technology, astronomy, spacecraft , united-states

Rudd plays careful hand at CHOGM

By Hayden Cooper at CHOGM - analysis

Posted 5 hours 18 minutes ago
Updated 4 hours 8 minutes ago

Slideshow: Photo 1 of 2

Keeping a high profile: Kevin Rudd meets British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at CHOGM

Keeping a high profile: Kevin Rudd meets British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at CHOGM (Reuters: Carlos Barria )

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's appearance at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) is an exercise in double-purpose diplomacy.

First, he wants to keep a high profile among his Commonwealth colleagues, meeting all the big players of this 53-nation group: Britain's Gordon Brown, India's Manmohan Singh, South Africa's Jacob Zuma and Canada's Stephen Harper.

He also sat down with United Nations secretary-general Ban Ki-Moon and Denmark's Prime Minister Lars Rasmussen.

The Commonwealth leaders have resolved to throw their full weight behind world climate talks due to begin in just over a week's time in Copenhagen.

In an agreement unveiled by Mr Rudd, they also agreed to uphold the adoption of clean energy, a carbon-credit trading scheme and push for wealthier countries to pay developing nations to help them with the costs of new environmentally friendly policies.

But it does concede that a full legally binding outcome may have to wait until 2010.

When the climate change declaration was issued, Mr Rudd lapped up the public praise of the Danish leader, who described him as "a very good friend".

The frenzy of meetings reflects Mr Rudd's desire to mix it in the big time and position himself and Australia as a serious thinker on matters like climate change.

But the second purpose is to say as little as possible if the cameras are rolling.

Mr Rudd wants the Liberal Party's public disintegration to remain the only political issue in the news back in Australia, so he is careful to limit his media appearances to issues on which he believes he is on safe ground.

In contrast, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has been prolific in his media appearances, giving both interviews and press conferences during the summit.

Much of the new momentum for a climate deal stemmed from a joint overture by Mr Brown and French President Nicholas Sarkozy.

The two European leaders proposed to compensate developing countries for the economic disadvantages they would face in cutting carbon emissions.

For the first time, India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said he was willing to commit his country to ambitious global carbon emission cuts, provided others shared the burden.

But media access in Trinidad is a difficult question all round.

The point of high farce was reached at one press conference when a question about Afghanistan to Mr Rudd and Ban Ki-Moon was refused, because it is apparently not a CHOGM issue.

That is despite the war dominating talks on day two on the summit sidelines, where Mr Brown called for ally countries to commit another 5,000 troops in line with the expected US troop surge announcement this week.

Security beefed up

As expected for any such international conference, security is tight. Trinidad and Tobago police, although friendly, are out in force.

The same can be said for the military, their weapons sending a menacing threat to troublemakers.

Numerous security checkpoints in the blazing Caribbean heat and humidity make moving around difficult at best.

Port of Spain is a peculiar place. It is a gateway to the idyllic island retreats of the Caribbean, but itself falls short of that description.

It is an industrial centre propped up by the local oil and gas industry.

Venture away from the summit venue and you find a city in need of a spruce-up.

Travelling media have been warned by Australian officials about high levels of serious crime in Trinidad's capital. Armed robbery, daylight attacks, and carjackings are common.

Experience this weekend has proven that walking the streets with a microphone in hand attracts unwanted attention, from the interested to the angry.

CHOGM itself is cordoned off behind layers of fences and road closures. Delegates and media covering the event have found themselves trudging through the heat to board a cruise ship for their nightly accommodation.

And on the odd occasion, travelling cameramen have found themselves treated with a level of suspicion.

One Australian cameraman was herded away from Mr Rudd's handshake with his Danish counterpart, and accused by the security guard of "spoiling" the moment.

Cynics might wonder what all this talking will actually achieve. The high point was the climate change consensus reached among Commonwealth leaders.

It will add some momentum to the Copenhagen talks, but it is limited in ambition, containing no targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

Still going strong

The only other major change this weekend may be the decision to admit Rwanda as a new member in a group that has been dwindling in recent years.

Despite the hyperbole employed by the 51 leaders, the claims of Commonwealth irrelevance will not subside anytime soon.

Especially when the next summit will be hosted by Mr Rudd himself, after Australia won the right to host the next meeting in 2011.

Behind the scenes, Mr Rudd has led a push to stop Sri Lanka from hosting the next summit.

Many leaders are concerned about Sri Lanka's human rights record in the war against Tamil separatists and feared it would lead to a boycott of the next meeting.

The ABC has been told that Mr Rudd has held at least three bilateral meetings with Sri Lanka's President and Prime Minister in Trinidad, in order to convince them to abandon their hosting plans.

Tags: environment, climate-change, government-and-politics, federal-government, world-politics, trinidad-and-tobago

Northbridge Link plans revealed

Northbridge link sketch

The Northbridge Link project.

The State Government has revealed its final plans for the Northbridge Link.

The government will sink the rail line and bus station, and redevelop the 13.5 hectare site, to include a town square 25 per cent bigger than Melbourne's Federation Square.

It will match the Federal Government's contribution of nearly $250 million towards the project.

The Planning Minister John Day says the development will make the area much more vibrant.

"It's going to completely revitalise Perth, provide a lot more activity, a lot more amenity and a lot more opportunities for residents of Perth and Western Australia and visitors to Western Australia for entertainment activities, for restaurants, cafes and a whole range of other activities," he said.

The project will also include terraced gardens, dedicated cycle paths and a landmark building.

The Premier Colin Barnett says the town square will be the key element in connecting Perth and Northbridge for the first time in 100 years.

The project will eventually create more than 1650 dwellings for more than 3000 people and provide office space for more than 13,000 workers.

Forward works to sink the rail line will begin early next year.

Tags: arts-and-entertainment, urban-development-and-planning, government-and-politics, wa, northbridge-6003

Stolen Generations donate Namatjira painting

A group of Stolen Generations women who grew up together in the Cootamundra Girls Home have donated an Albert Namatjira painting to the National Museum.

Namatjira visited the home in 1956 and painted the landscape for the girls but the state claimed the artwork when the home was closed.

The women successfully fought to take back the painting and have now given it to the museum to look after.

Nada Shareef was taken from her mother as a baby and sent to the Cootamundra Girls Home.

She remembers the day Namatjira came for a visit.

"He had the softest eyes and he had tears in his eyes to see all the girls there, because we're all taken from our families," she said.

"I think he was really hurt and upset about that.

"I just felt real good with him standing there, the first tribal man we've ever seen, and he was real gentle with the girls.

"And that painting, oh it's just beautiful."

Tags: arts-and-entertainment, visual-art, painting, libraries-museums-and-galleries, community-and-society, indigenous, indigenous-culture, stolen-generations, australia, act, canberra-2600, nsw, cootamundra-2590

Reluctant star Yunupingu ready to come home

Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu "doesn't like being the centre of attention."

Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu "doesn't like being the centre of attention." (AAP: Skinnyfish Music: Helen Page, file photo)

On his first tour of Europe but fast becoming the talk of the town, upcoming world music sensation Australian Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu, the blind Aboriginal with the voice of an angel, "just wants to go home".

"He hates travelling," said his friend, manager, producer and spokesman from Melbourne, Michael Hohnen.

"He's happy and content sitting with his family on his island, eating stingray, singing songs, telling stories, just being social.

"Ever since we left Australia he just wants to go home," he said.

Though Yunupingu may hate showbiz, he pulled off something of a coup by performing a duo in Paris a few days ago with none other than Sting, which airs on television and the internet on December 16.

And his first album, just released in Europe after being a hit in Australia, has sold more than 250,000 copies - a more than respectable figure for the world music genre.

But Mr Hohnen says sales could soar if the media-shy star finally agreed to meet the press and talk on TV.

"During the actual gigs he's in his element as a musician and as a singer," said Mr Hohnen, who met the 38-year-old singer-songwriter more than a decade ago on his Elcho Island home off the coast of remote Arnhem Land, where Yunupingu plays in a group called Saltwater Band.

"But he doesn't like being the centre of attention. It's taken me a long time to convince him he can be centre-stage."

The reluctant star never gives interviews, singing about ancestry, country, spirits and land - mostly in the Yolngu dialect of the Gumatj clan - while Mr Hohnen deals with the press and the practicalities.

"He doesn't see the point of interviews," Mr Hohnen said. "And he doesn't see himself as a spokesman for his people."

Unlike other young people who leave family and country behind to find themselves on reaching adulthood, Aboriginal people know who they are and where they come from at birth, says Mr Hohnen, who plays double bass with Yunupingu.

"They all grew up together in houses full of people and they do everything together," Mr Hohnen said. "He takes all his songs to his uncles and all of the family see all of his songs as 'my' song."

"I wanted to do something for Aboriginal people and help them form a band," he added. "I said they should record and take their music elsewhere."

Though the number with Sting worked out well, the rehearsal was dire, Mr Hohnen said, because Yunupingu couldn't tune in to the love story in Every Breath You Take that was alien to Indigenous music.

From an ode to orange-footed scrub fowl or python ancestors to songs about sunsets and storm clouds and grief, Yunupingu cuts to the quick with a voice Britain's Independent hailed as "timeless, nostalgic and haunting".

The Times described it as being "as sumptuously soothing as a log fire on a freezing night".

Yunupingu speaks some English and Mr Hohnen speaks some Aboriginal dialects, but says "we don't talk that much".

During his time on the island with the family, Mr Hohnen said, he began to feel that Yunupingu's special voice was lost in the band.

"He was one of a couple of singers and didn't understand. I'd hear his voice in my head. But emotionally I convinced him. I always believed he was international standard."

What next for Yunupingu? "One step at a time, we need to check," said his mate.

- AFP

Tags: arts-and-entertainment, music, human-interest, people, australia, nt

Robbie rapt as Wallabies get it done

Well-deserved win: Deans and Rocky Elsom (l) celebrate in the sheds.

Well-deserved win: Deans and Rocky Elsom (l) celebrate in the sheds. (Getty Images: David Rogers)

Australia coach Robbie Deans said his side had "got what they deserved" after ending its grand slam tour with a crushing 33-12 win over Wales at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on Sunday morning (AEDT).

Victory saw the Wallabies wrap up 2009 in fine style, running in four tries - from centre Digby Ioane, lock James Horwill, flanker David Pocock and replacement hooker Tatafu Polota-Nau - to Wales's none.

Australia arrived in Europe hoping to emulate the 1984 Wallabies by completing a grand slam of wins over England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

But those dreams were dashed by a 20-20 draw with Six Nations champions Ireland and then came last week's astonishing 9-8 loss to Scotland - its first defeat by the Scots in 27 years.

In both those matches Australia had more than enough chances to win the game but against Wales it took them.

"I'm hugely pleased for these boys," Deans, Australia's first foreign coach, said.

"They got what they deserved," the New Zealander, whose position was being questioned after a run of just two wins in 11 Tests prior to this match, added.

"They forced things to come, they didn't wait for them to come like last week. It was a pretty special effort.

"We're stoked for this group they've taken this step. The boys got it done today."

And he insisted his joy at this victory was in no way tempered by thoughts of what might have been against Ireland and Scotland.

"There's no point trying to connect the dots between games, you play Test rugby on the day," he said.

"Progress has been made, maybe it's not always evident on the scoreboard. Maybe they [Wales] underestimated us and thought we were there for the taking."

Australia captain Rocky Elsom praised his largely youthful side's defence.

"It has given us an enormous lift in every game we had," he said.

"It has been tough for us but things happen for a reason. The reason we didn't win these two matches [against Ireland and Scotland] was because we didn't nail them even though we had enough dominance to bring them home.

"But here we felt like we had the ascendancy in attack and defence all game."

Deans's clear delight was matched only by the dejection of his compatriot Warren Gatland, the Wales coach.

The former Ireland and Wasps boss said this had been the "most disappointing performance" in nearly two years of coaching Wales.

"It's the most disappointing performance since I've been in charge of Wales," he said.

"We played against a team who were a little more desperate than we were."

Wales had tried to present itself as favourite to win this match but ended it by being booed off the field by its own supporters.

It all emphasised how in this November series the Welsh were beaten in both their matches against Tri-Nations opposition, after starting the month with a 19-12 loss to New Zealand.

And this defeat was made worse by injuries to wings Shane Williams (hamstring) and Leigh Halfpenny (dead leg) as well as hooker Matthew Rees (groin).

Wales defence coach Shaun Edwards had no qualms in saying Wales had been outclassed by Australia.

"Their defence was magnificent. All three tries came from turnovers. Some of our tackling the in first half was very disappointing."

The former Great Britain rugby league international added: "That's the modern game, the aerial game and the breakdown - and that's where we came second-best."

- AFP

Bomb to blame for deadly train crash

By Moscow correspondent Scott Bevan and wires

Posted 11 hours 29 minutes ago
Updated 10 hours 58 minutes ago

Russian express train derails

Criminal case: No one has so far publicly claimed responsibility for the suspected attack. (Reuters: Denis Sinyakov)

Russian investigators say two bombs went off at the scene of a train derailment that killed at least 26 people and injured about 100 others.

The head of Russia's federal security service, Alexander Bortnikov, says preliminary findings indicate a bomb caused the derailment of the Nevsky Express as it travelled between Moscow and Saint Petersburg.

Mr Bortnikov says the device was the equivalent of seven kilograms of TNT and created a one-metre-wide crater under the rails, one of which was twisted.

As rescue teams searched for passengers trapped in the overturned carriages, a second bomb went off, but no one was injured, officials said.

The 14-carriage train had been carrying 682 passengers and 29 crew.

Detectives said they had found fragments of what they believed was a bomb and opened a criminal case on charges of terrorism.

The force of the initial blast jolted at least two carriages off the rails near the village of Uglovka, about 350 kilometres north of Moscow.

Some witnesses said they heard a loud bang. An elderly woman who lives in a nearby log cabin said: "I thought it was an earthquake - the ground shook."

Hundreds of rescue workers toiled through the night to search for survivors, cutting through the tangled steel of at least three train carriages that lay battered beside the rails.

Russia's emergency ministry said at least 26 people had been confirmed dead with another 18 missing, though one rescue official earlier put the death toll as high as 39. The ministry said 96 people had been injured.

Since a spate of suicide bombings and attacks in Moscow in 2004, analysts say suspected terrorism incidents have traditionally triggered probes into any link to separatists in Chechnya, where Moscow has fought two wars in the past 15 years.

No one has publicly claimed responsibility for the latest train disaster.

The attack, Russia's worst outside the turbulent North Caucasus since the 2004 bombings, has stoked fears of a surge in attacks in Russia's historic heartland by Islamist rebels.

An explosion in August 2007 derailed a similar Nevsky Express train on the same route, injuring 30 people.

The latest railway disaster is the deadliest since December 2003 when a bomb blast tore through a passenger train in the North Caucasus, killing 47 people.

- ABC/Reuters

Tags: disasters-and-accidents, accidents, rail-accidents, terrorism, russian-federation

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Find out what separates great couples from ones with so-so relationships. It doesn't take 'hours of hard work'

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Friday, November 27, 2009

ZONG

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Sindh CM rules out curbs on media


Sindh Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah said that the media will not be restricted by the government. -Reuters File Photo

KARACHI: Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah said on Thursday there was no move to impose restrictions on the media because the government was not averse to criticism. However, he added, criticism should be healthy.

He said the Constitution did indeed guarantee freedom of the press but the media personnel should remain within certain limits.

The chief minister, who was speaking at the inauguration ceremony of a PPP media centre, said that notice had been taken of the electricity failure during the address of President Asif Ali Zardari during a rally held on Wednesday to commemorate the 43rd founding day of Pakistan People’s Party.

He said an inquiry team had been formed that would comprise the DCO and CPO. The team had been asked to submit a report within a week.

He lauded the security arrangements made by police and rangers for the rally. He claimed that the rally was attended by one million people.

He said the party’s CEC held its meeting every three months and took decisions in accordance with the principles of democracy.

The chief minister said the government had taken a soft loan of $300 million from the Asian Development Bank for development

schemes being launched in seven cities.

He said the government was spending Rs10 billion on the development of Karachi this year while last year Rs6 billion was spent. He said Karachi would never be ignored.

Shah said everyone had political rights and the government would like to take democratic dispensation forward. Those who were opposing the government should come out with their suggestions for solving the problems of people, he added.

The chief minister said false cases were instituted against Asif Ali Zardari in 1996-97. The Cotecna case was important whose judgment was repealed by the Supreme Court and two judges had to resign, he added.


Tags: qaim ali shah,sindh chief minister,media restrictions

Top militant Abdullah Shah Mehsud held


Tehrik-i-Taliban chief Hakeemullah Mehsud demonstrates his skills in the presence of his fighters.-File photo

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has paid out the equivalent of nearly $120,000 over the arrest of a leader of Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the military said on Thursday.

It is the first time Pakistan has announced the payment of a reward since it offered $5 million for information leading to the capture, dead or alive, of Hakimullah Mehsud and his lieutenants.

‘Security forces have arrested wanted terrorist Abdullah Shah Mehsud’ in the town of Tank, said the military in a statement. ‘He had a head money of Rs10 million,’ the military said in a statement.

‘The head money has been paid to the informer.’

Abdullah Shah Mehsud was number 17 on a list of wanted militants released on Nov two that carried rewards of between Rs10 and 50 million for the leadership of Taliban.—AFP

Our Miramshah Correspondent adds: Army planes on Thursday dropped pamphlets in Mirali to publicise details about the reward for information leading to the arrest of TTP chief Hakimullah Mehsud and his 17 fellow terrorists.

The pamphlets carried three telephone numbers, asking people to give information regarding the wanted militants. It also said that identity of informers would remain confidential.

Residents reported having seen copies of the pamphlet in Pashto. But the pamphlets are being circulated at a time when most of the militants have already left the area.

Sources said that the top leadership of TTP had fled South Waziristan well before the start of military operation and might have taken shelter in North Waziristan.


Tags: taliban,ttp,war on terror,al qaeda

Muslims urged to shun terrorism


The Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah Al Sheikh urged Muslims to tackle the issue of terrorism in his Haj sermon. -File Photo

JEDDAH: Saudi Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah Al Sheikh asked the Ummah on Thursday not to compromise on the issue of terrorism and urged Muslims to unite against suicide attacks.

‘There is no place for terrorism in Islam…Muslim intellectuals should address this menace and should take measures to root out this menace, eradicate misunderstandings about Islam and its teachings,’ the grand mufti declared in his Haj sermon at Masjid-i-Nimra in Arafat where over two million Muslims from across the world had gathered for waqoof, the main pillar of Haj.

He said that hostile forces were hatching conspiracies against Islam and Muslims across the world, and doubts were being created in the minds of Muslim youths through modern communication tools.

He urged the Ummah to unite to face the challenges of the contemporary world.

He said it was because of the non-Islamic economic principles that world’s largest companies were going bankrupt and the world was looking for refuge. The only refuge, he said, was Islam.

He urged the media not to broadcast programmes that were against moral principles. The sermon also called upon Muslims to focus on education and learning.

According to some reports, a large contingent among the Iranian pilgrims held a peaceful protest in their camp at Arafat, ignoring Saudi government’s warnings against political activities.

They chanted slogans for Muslim unity and against the enemies of the faith. ‘Death to America, death to Israel,’ they chanted inside a huge tent. The Saudi security forces did not intervene.


Tags: Hajj sermon,Saudi Grand Mufti,terrorism

Coalition shaken as minister breathes fire against MQM


The Sindh home minister has once again dug out the incident which resulted in the killing of around 50 people in one of Karachi’s worst political violence on May 12, 2007. - File photo

KARACHI: The PPP-Muttahida coalition got a jolt on Thursday after Sindh Home Minister Dr Zulfiqar Mirza accused the MQM of getting 3,500 criminal cases against its members wrapped up through a ‘cyclostyled order produced by the prosecutor-general of the provincial government’.

Dr Mirza, speaking at the inauguration ceremony of a PPP media centre, appealed to Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry to reopen and investigate all cases wrapped up under the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO).

A spokesman for MQM played down the flare-up, saying the remarks were the minister’s personal opinion, and not the stance of People’s Party.

The minister said the record of the cases was enough to ‘open the eyes of the media and the nation’.
He said he would present within a week the record of all cases which had been suppressed by hoodwinking the Sindh government and the judiciary.

He made a dig at MQM leader Farooq Sattar for his assertion that his party was not involved in corruption, wondering whether Dr Sattar was sent to prison for ‘distributing charity’.

He also accused MQM of obstructing the entry of the chief justice at the behest of then president Pervez Musharraf.

Dr Mirza said reconciliation was based on the principle of forget and forgive, but ‘our colleagues are instruments of the establishment and if it is a war, we also know how to fight a war. We fought a war for 12 years and power was not given to us in charity.’

Talking to a TV channel later, Muttahida Qaumi Movement coordination committee member Salim Shehzad said: ‘People conspiring to destabilise the government want to spawn rifts between us. We are allies of the government and want it to complete its tenure.

‘We will not play into anyone’s hands. Nor will we be part of any conspiracy. We did criticise the government, but did not level allegations nor will we do it now.’

He said the minister’s statement might be his personal opinion, and not the policy of the Pakistan People’s Party. If it was PPP’s policy then President Asif Ali Zardari should express it, he said.

Salim Shehzad said the cases had been abolished through a tribunal under the ordinance and if Dr Mirza deemed it a fraud, then the entire NRO would be a fraud.

Shehzad said that if the home minister wanted to reopen the criminal cases, he should go ahead and do so. ‘The MQM is ready to face them.’

If the Supreme Court or high court ordered reopening of the cases, the MQM would welcome the decision, he said. However, he asserted that in addition to the criminal cases, all other cases should also be reopened.

‘No threat could frighten us in past nor will it happen in future,’ he said.

The MQM leader said the cases against the MQM had been filed during PPP’s rule and all of them were criminal, and not related to corruption.

In reply to a question about bitterness with the PPP, he said MQM’s stance on the NRO might be the reason.

He said the country was facing crises and the circumstances necessitated forbearance.

'If we go wrong somewhere, we will apologise. If they are wrong then they should set their direction right,' he said.

The MQM leader said some members of the coordination committee would meet PPP leaders soon for patching up differences.

Shehzad said a member of the committee had come up a poem that spoke about December as the moment of truth for the government.

The composition had ruffled feathers, he added, but clarified that it was the individual’s personal opinion, and not the party’s stance.

APP adds: Dr Mirza said: ‘Our friends want to destabilise democracy by becoming a tool of the establishment.’

He said a criminal would always be a criminal no matter whether he was in ‘dhoti, sherwani or Sindhi topi’.

‘If someone wants our accountability, we too know how to hold others accountable,’ he said.


Tags: karachi,MQM,zulfiqar mirza,sindh,home minister

Live Streaming: Australia v West Indies

Posted November 26, 2009 10:13:00
Updated November 27, 2009 10:01:00

A day in the field...how quickly can Chris Gayle and the Windies end Australia's innings?

A day in the field...how quickly can Chris Gayle and the Windies end Australia's innings? (AAP: Dave Hunt)

Listen to Grandstand's live streaming of day two of the first Test between Australia and West Indies at the Gabba.

Australia will resume its innings on 5 for 322, with all-rounder Marcus North on 42 and wicketkeeper Brad Haddin on 9.

You can access the commentary stream by clicking on the following media player links:

Windows

Real

You can also keep up-to-date with the action from the Gabba by visiting our scorecard and game log, as well as our webcam of the commentary box.

Waterlow arrested over killings

By Sarah Gerathy and Sean Rubinsztein-Dunlop

Posted 3 hours 33 minutes ago
Updated 35 minutes ago

Slideshow: Photo 1 of 2

Chloe and Nick Waterlow

Chloe Waterlow and her father Nick Waterlow were found stabbed to death. (ABC)

The Sydney woman who tipped police off about the whereabouts of Anthony Waterlow, arrested today over the killings of his art curator father and sister, says the 42-year-old seemed like a "normal, everyday shopper".

Waterlow was spotted at a service station this morning in Colo Heights, on Sydney's north-western outskirts, 18 days after his 67-year-old father, Nick, and 37-year-old sister, Chloe, were stabbed to death in Randwick, in the city's east.

The service station owner, Sue Mahlenhoff, phoned police after a customer recognised the schizophrenic man, who was in the same clothes he was wearing on the day of the killings.

"He was very nice, very polite, a bit cagey when I was serving him," the 54-year-old said. "But other than that, he was very polite and very well-spoken... just like a normal, everyday shopper."

Homicide Squad acting head Dennis Bray says detectives confronted Waterlow this afternoon in nearby bushland, where they believe he had been sleeping rough.

"After a short pursuit, he stopped, produced a knife, with which he threatened self-harm," he said.

Acting Superintendent Bray says after negotiations, Waterlow put the knife down and surrendered to police.

He was arrested and is being questioned at Windsor Police Station.

Police had been concerned about Waterlow's welfare but he was spotted withdrawing cash just streets away from the scene of the killings earlier this week.

Ms Mahlenhoff says she was surprised but not scared when she recognised the 42-year-old from a photo in the newspaper.

"You think to yourself, 'It can't be him, he's too far away'," she said.

"I feel relieved and I feel a little bit guilty, not because of him but just how everybody's saying to me, 'You framed him,' but the other gentleman was here with me as well."

Funerals for Nick and Chloe Waterlow were held last week.

Mr Waterlow was the director of the Ivan Dougherty Gallery and a key figure in the Sydney Biennale. His death has sent shockwaves through the Australian arts community.

The Muslim Hajj: a pilgrimage worth risking life for

By Nic MacBean

Posted 6 hours 23 minutes ago
Updated 5 hours 36 minutes ago

Slideshow: Photo 1 of 3

Muslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba inside the Grand Mosque in Mecca after morning prayers.

Muslim pilgrims circle the Kaaba inside the Grand Mosque in Mecca after morning prayers. (Reuters: Caren Firouz)

In a place like that where it's very sacred for Muslims it would be a good place to die nevertheless.

– Omar Saghir

It may be a gruelling and at-times dangerous journey for Muslim pilgrims, but Brisbane man Omar Saghir says the Hajj last year was the most amazing experience of his life.

Millions of Muslim pilgrims have already risked floods and swine flu this year on the annual journey to the Muslim holy cities of Mecca and Medina.

But the 28-year-old wants to make the pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia again as soon as he can save up the money.

"The experience for me, because I'm Australian-born and I've never really been outside of Australia, it was a very, very, very intriguing experience," Mr Saghir said.

"It was very diverse and it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience because I haven't seen anything like it."

Followers of Islam are required by their faith to try and make the pilgrimage once in their lifetime.

According to the Muslim faith the prophet Abraham performed a series of rituals in Mecca thousands of years ago, and on a modern-day Hajj pilgrims follow in those footsteps.

Over seven days the rituals include completing circuits of a building called the Kaaba in the centre of the Grand Mosque, throws stones in a ritual stoning of the devil, and drinking from the sacred Zamzam well.

This year around 3 million people are converging on Saudi Arabia, and they have already battled widespread floods in Jeddah, the city where most pilgrims arrive by plane.

And due to the huge numbers of pilgrims most Muslim travel agents routinely warn their clients to prepare themselves for frustration, mental anguish, annoyance and anger.

But difficulties such as these are trivial for the majority of pilgrims, who are determined to fulfil lifetime ambitions.

For Omar Saghir last year it was more a spur-of-the-moment decision than a case of a lifetime ambition fulfilled, although he says the trip inspired him beyond what he had expected.

Mr Saghir, 28, had just seen a business venture on the Gold Coast fall over and he and his business partner decided to put their capital towards a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

"There were 12 days until the Australian delegation went overseas to Hajj, so we ended up making the quick decisions to go to Hajj and used our business money as Hajj money," he said.

"You see people from all walks of life and it's very extraordinary because you'll see that there is no difference between the white man and the black man, the red man and the yellow man, the rich man and the poor man.

"People are all humble together. You couldn't see the difference if this man owned a million dollars or if he owned nothing. You'll see people from all walks of life."

He says he would like to be able to make the trip once every two years, and is determined to complete the pilgrimage at least once every five years.

Three years ago 362 people were crushed to death during the ceremonial stoning of the devil, the worst Hajj tragedy in 16 years.

Authorities have improved facilities to ease the flow of pilgrims, particularly around the area of the stoning of the devil, but the sheer number of visitors stretches authorities to the limit.

Mr Saghir says he recognises the dangers but the risks are worth taking. If the worst was to happen he says he would be willing to die on a pilgrimage.

"At some points you do feel things get very tough, but I wouldn't say it's to the extent that you think you're going to die or at a very large health risk," he said.

"[But] In a place like that where it's very sacred for Muslims it would be a good place to die nevertheless."

Melbourne travel agent Hamidah Rahman, who has helped organise hundreds of people's pilgrimages in recent years, has a similar view of the Hajj.

"You always believe God is there and whatever happens is meant to happen, but precautions have been taken by the Saudi government anyway," she said.

"Accidents sometimes happen but last year I went and nothing happened, two years ago my sister went and nothing happened."

Dangers aside, there is no doubt the pilgrimage still exerts a powerful pull on millions of Muslims all over the world.

"Being up close with the sacred mosque of Mecca or the Kabaa, that is unbelievable," Mr Saghir says.

"I'm used to seeing it on TV or seeing pictures or hearing about it, actually being there amongst the millions and getting up close, that really touches your heart."

Australian state of Victoria bans jump racing

By Phil Mercer
BBC News, Sydney

 Steeplechasing will only be held in South Australia from 2010
Changes were made recently but deaths continued this season

Steeplechase and hurdle racing in the Australian state of Victoria will be abolished in 2010, prompted by the deaths of 20 horses in two years.

The decision follows a comprehensive review of the sport and has been welcomed by animal welfare groups.

However, members of the racing industry have reacted with anger, calling it "unbelievable" and "appalling".

Racing's governing body in Victoria had conceded that the sport was in decline because of mounting safety concerns.

Furious response

Animal rights campaigners have described racing over hurdles and fences as not only shameful and barbaric but "morally wrong".

An official review of the industry last year recommended a raft of new safety measures, all of which were adopted by authorities in Victoria.

Despite the changes, the fatalities have continued, with eight horses dying in races this season.

The deaths prompted an urgent investigation, which has resulted in the banning of the sport.

It has drawn a furious response from some owners, trainers and jockeys.

Steeplechase events in Victoria will go on for another year in an attempt to soften the impact of their abolition on those involved.

Neighbouring South Australia, the only other state in the country that allows jump racing, has said its programme will continue and hopes to attract trainers and horses from Victoria.

However, officials in South Australia are not celebrating and have expressed deep concerns about the long-term viability of their steeplechasing industry.

Australia carbon emissions law hit by opposition revolt



Kevin Rudd (file image)
Kevin Rudd's deal with the Liberals is in doubt

The Australian government's plans to enact a law for an emissions trading scheme have been thrown into chaos.

A revolt within the opposition Liberal Party could overturn an agreement reached earlier in the week with the Liberal leader, Malcolm Turnbull.

He agreed to pass the measure through the upper house of parliament where the government does not have a majority.

But opposition climate change sceptics have vowed to scupper the legislation and have challenged his leadership.

Election prospect

With parliament about to take its long Christmas and summer break, the government of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd had wanted to enact the legislation creating an emissions trading scheme by the end of this week.

It was keen to enshrine the scheme in law before the Copenhagen climate change conference.

Earlier in the week, the government reached a deal with Mr Turnbull that would have met that deadline.

But this prompted a revolt among climate change sceptics in the Liberal Party that has now placed the legislation in jeopardy.

There have been mass resignations from the opposition front bench, and the party is in open and angry rebellion.

One leading climate change sceptic and senior party figure, Tony Abbott, says he will challenge Mr Turnbull for the leadership on Monday.

Malcolm Turnbull has argued that the party would consign itself to political oblivion if it refused to advance policies aimed at tackling climate change.

But that argument has not carried any weight with a strong rump in his party who reject the scientific case that man is contributing to global warming.

If the measure fails to pass the Senate, the government would have a trigger to call an election - an election they would be expected to win by a very big margin.