Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Firebrand who renamed Bombay dies

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 17 November 2012 | 22.24

BAL Thackeray, who has died aged 86, was a firebrand Indian politician whose right-wing Hindu party renamed Bombay and became synonymous with deadly ethnic violence.

His death on Saturday leaves the western state of Maharashtra and its capital - now known as Mumbai - without one of its most controversial figures, who more than once expressed his admiration for the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.

Born on January 23, 1926 to a social activist father who played a key role in the movement to establish the Marathi-speaking state of Maharashtra, "The Tiger", as he was known, began life as a political cartoonist.

But he later became more involved in calling for greater rights for local Marathi-speaking people and protecting their culture and language from migrant workers.

Renaming Bombay as Mumbai in 1995, after a local deity, and city landmarks was seen as an attempt to rid the city of its British colonial past and emphasise its Marathi roots.

Thackeray had founded the Shiv Sena or Shiva's Army in 1966 in honour of the legendary 17th-century Marathi figure whose battles established a Hindu kingdom in a land then run by Muslims.

The party's ideology to protect and promote local "sons of the soil" evolved into a high-profile campaign against south Indian clerks and restaurateurs, Gujaratis, Muslims, north Indians and Bangladeshis who had come to the area for work.

A tightly-controlled network of Shiv Sena cells across the city often followed up threats and intimidation with violence.

Among the Sena's targets were shops selling Valentine's Day cards, cinemas showing a film with a lesbian theme, and Pakistani sportsmen and entertainers.

In 2010, activists forced some Mumbai cinemas to close in protest at "unpatriotic" comments by Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan lamenting the absence of Pakistani cricketers from that year's Indian Premier League.

Most significantly, Thackeray stoked the fires of tension after Hindu militants destroyed a mosque in 1992 said to have been built on the site of a Hindu temple in the northern town of Ayodhya.

As reprisal attacks spread throughout India, he called on Hindus to "teach (Muslims) a lesson".

A subsequent judicial inquiry later pointed the finger at Thackeray, accusing him of directly inciting anti-Muslim violence that left more than 1000 people dead in India's financial and entertainment capital.

Thackeray was never brought to book by the authorities.

In 1994, the Shiv Sena came to power in Maharashtra in a coalition with the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), buoyed by anti-Muslim sentiment and a wave of bomb blasts blamed on Islamist extremists.

One of its first acts was to rename the city in a move that was widely criticised at the time, though Mumbai has since become its globally accepted title.

Thackeray was never a legislator - indeed he once said he hated politics - but his hand was seen in many of the state government's decisions.

Some saw the measure of his power and influence in his invitation to Michael Jackson to play a concert in the city in 1996 - and donate the profits to a Shiv Sena youth charity.

The late US singer is said to have autographed a toilet he used in Thackeray's bungalow.

The party lost power at state level in 1999, but has retained a presence ever since, with a BJP-Shiv Sena coalition in February winning a fourth consecutive term over Mumbai's civic body, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation.

The ageing Thackeray's pronouncements continued to be watched with both interest and fear as power passed to his son Uddhav and his nephew Raj set up a new, rival party.

His fiery speeches - in later years through the Marathi-language newspaper Saamna (Confrontation) - ridiculed revered Indian political figures and showed "The Tiger" still had teeth.

He appeared by videolink to his followers in October during a Hindu festival, looking frail and describing his weakened state in what sounded like a farewell speech.

"People should keep their loyalty intact (towards Shiv Sena).... You took care of me, now take care of Uddhav and Aditya," he said, referring to his son and grandson.

Behind every pronouncement stood Thackeray's regionalist agenda or desire to protect traditional Indian values, but it stood increasingly at odds with India's fast-growing economy that was embracing globalisation.

He may have found support among those whose jobs were threatened, but for many the communalism he espoused looked out of touch with modern India.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Albania buries exiled king's remains

ALBANIA'S top leaders and thousands of people have paid their last respect to the country's only post-independence monarch, King Ahmet Zog I, half a century after he died and was buried in exile.

The nation's television stations on Saturday broadcast live the burial ceremony in the capital, a day after Zog's remains were returned from France.

He was buried in the family's mausoleum, alongside his Hungarian wife, Queen Geraldina, his son Leka I and his wife, Susan.

Zog proclaimed himself Albania's monarch in 1928 and ruled until 1939 when he fled Albania after it was occupied by fascist Italy. Albania's post-World War II communist regime abolished the monarchy in 1946.

Albania remains a parliamentary republic after the fall of communism in 1990.

The royal family returned to Albania in 2002, leading a quiet life though never relinquishing the claim to the throne.

Prime Minister Sali Berisha said that Albanians honour Zog "for his historic contribution in building up this country".

Berisha was joined at the ceremony by President Bujar Nishani and Kosovo's President Ahtifete Jahjaga. The ceremony was ignored by the country's opposition parties.

Nishani said Zog "is one of the most important figures of the Albanian history".

After Albania's communist regime fell in 1990, Zog's son, Leka I Zog, made two disastrous attempts to return home - first in 1993 when Berisha's government then threw him out and in 1997, when he was charged with leading an armed uprising after failing to convince Albanians to vote for monarchy in a referendum.

Since then, the family has been given back some of its old royal properties and granted diplomatic passports. Zog's grandson, Leka II Zog, has since served as an adviser to several Albanian governments.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

New Syrian envoy to France named

FRENCH President Francois Hollande and the new Syrian opposition leader have announced plans to install an ambassador to represent Syria in France.

The surprise move came after talks at France's presidential palace between Hollande and Moaz al-Khatib, head of the newly formed Syrian opposition coalition. France recognised the coalition days after it was formed on Sunday - and is so far the only Western country to do so.

Hollande also confirmed that French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, who was at Saturday's talk, will raise the issue of lifting the EU arms embargo against Syria at a meeting on Monday in Brussels among European Union foreign ministers.

Fabius has suggested supplying defensive weapons so Syrian rebels can protect themselves from attacks by the Syrian regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

More than 36,000 people have been killed since the Syrian uprising against Assad began in March 2011 and the new coalition is pressing for the means to defend Syrian civilians.

Since May 2011, the EU has imposed a ban on the export of weapons and equipment to Syria that could be used for "internal repression".

France has taken the lead in efforts to oust Assad's regime, and Hollande reiterated on Saturday that the Syrian National Coalition for Opposition and Revolutionary Forces is for France the sole representative of the Syrian people and a future provisional government.

Fabius will also press EU partners to recognise the coalition, Holllande said.

"We have no hidden agenda," al-Khatib said in a bid to reassure other nations.

Hollande said al-Khatib, a preacher-turned-activist, reassured him that the coalition he leads seeks unity of the Syrian people and France's aim in moving quickly is to "assure its legitimacy and credibility".

The United States and other EU nations have said they prefer to wait and see whether the coalition truly represents the variety of people that make up Syria.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mali's north tense after Tuareg offensive

AL-QAEDA-LINKED fighters have gathered reinforcements in the tense Gao region of northeastern Mali and are waiting to see if the Tuareg rebels that launched a failed offensive a day earlier would regroup for a fresh assault.

The desert area of Gao has been a focus of Islamist and Tuareg activity since the once-allied fighters seized the region, along with much of Mali's arid north, following a coup and military collapse in Bamako March.

Though the dusty town of Gao and its surroundings were initially under the control of Tuaregs, who are fighting to establish an independent state, the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) ousted them at the end of June.

On Friday, Tuaregs with the Azawad National Liberation Movement (MNLA) attacked the Islamist fighters but suffered a heavy defeat that saw about a dozen of their men killed, regional security sources said.

To prepare for a possible new offensive, Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), which is linked to MUJAO, sent about 300 reinforcements from Timbuktu, about 300 kilometres west of Gao, witnesses told AFP.

By Saturday morning an uneasy calm had settled over the region as locals waited to see if the MNLA would again try their luck, witnesses said.

According to Moussa Salem, an MNLA fighter, "our goal remains to retake Azawad from the hands of AQIM and its allies. We can fall back, but it's only to be able to better push forwards after."

Azawad is the Tuareg name for all of northern Mali.

MUJAO spokesman Walid Abu Sahraoui said his group would continue to pursue the MNLA across the entire region.

"We are in control of the situation," he said.

Since their defeat at the hands of the radical Islamists on June 27, the more secular Tuaregs have no longer controlled any town in this massive desert region that spans two-thirds of Mali's territory.

In the regions under their control, Islamist groups have implemented sharia law and carried out brutal punishments of transgressors, including the stoning to death of an unmarried couple and the amputations of hands and feet of accused thieves.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

49 children killed in Egypt bus tragedy

AT least 49 nursery school children have been killed when a train smashed into their bus in central Egypt after a railway signal operator fell asleep, officials say, prompting protests and resignations.

Transport Minister Rashad al-Metini stepped down after the tragedy, which also killed the bus driver and his assistant, saying he "accepts responsibility".

President Mohamed Morsi accepted the Egyptian Railway Authority head's resignation.

"There are now 49 deaths and 18 injuries," with almost all of the casualties children, Assiut provincial governor Yehya Keshk told state television.

"There is a team of 45 doctors looking after the injured children."

The bus taking about 60 children aged between four and six on a school trip organised by their nursery was struck on a railway crossing in Manfalut, 356 kilometres south of Cairo, police said.

The worker manning the level crossing - which had been left open - was asleep when the bus tried to cross the tracks, Keshk said. "He has been arrested, of course."

Parents of the children were staging angry demonstrations near the scene of the horrific accident, demanding the death penalty for those responsible, police said.

A state television correspondent described the scene as "terrifying" with the blood-splattered bodies of children on the ground, before they were taken to nearby Manfalut hospital.

In a brief television address, Morsi offered his condolences to the families and said those responsible would be referred to the public prosecutor.

"On my and the Egyptian people's behalf, I offer my sincerest condolences to the families," the president said. "I am referring all those responsible to the public prosecution."

Earlier, Morsi ordered the prime minister, the defence and health ministers, and the Assiut governor "to offer all assistance to the families of the victims", the official news agency MENA said.

Prime Minister Hisham Qandil and his interior minister headed to Assiut, MENA said.

Activist groups have called for the resignation of Qandil's cabinet.

"This accident proves the failure of Qandil's government and strengthens the demands for the resignation of a government that has failed, over several months, to produce anything to improve the suffering of Egyptians," the April 6 movement said.

Keshk has ordered the "formation of a fact-finding committee" to probe Saturday's accident, but in similar tragedies in the past, such panels have done little to shed light on the details and less still to bring about accountability.

In a separate road accident, 12 people were killed and three injured when a truck smashed into a minibus near the Egyptian capital on Saturday.

Officials said a speeding truck driving on the wrong side of the road crashed into a minibus carrying 15 passengers. The truck driver was arrested at the scene in the 6th October area, as rescue services worked to extract the bodies, police said.

Egyptians have long complained that the government has failed to deal with the country's chronic transport problems, with roads as poorly maintained as train lines.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

ASEAN urges China 'hotline' over sea row

SOUTHEAST Asian nations will propose opening a "hotline" with China aimed at defusing tensions over the South China Sea, ASEAN's chief says.

Surin Pitsuwan, secretary-general of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, said after a meeting of the bloc's foreign ministers on Saturday that they had agreed to back the plan first mooted by Indonesia.

"This of course will be brought up to our Chinese friends," Surin told reporters ahead of a gathering of leaders from the region that begins in Cambodia on Sunday.

"We can call it a red line, we can give it a sense of urgency that if there is anything developing that we all will be phoned ... trying to consult, trying to coordinate, trying to contain any possible spillover of any ... incident, accident, miscalculation, misunderstanding," he added.

ASEAN members Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei, as well as Taiwan, have claims to parts of the sea, home of some of the world's most important shipping lanes and believed to be rich in fossil fuels.

China insists it has sovereign rights to virtually all of the sea, and the Philippines and Vietnam have expressed concerns that their giant Asian neighbour has become increasingly aggressive this year in staking its claim.

Philippine and Chinese vessels engaged in a standoff at a remote shoal in the sea in April, escalating the dispute between their countries dramatically.

The proposal comes as ASEAN and China struggle to make progress on a code of conduct (COC) to ease tensions in the sea that was first envisaged a decade ago.

"What Indonesia is now looking for while we are working on the COC is a commitment on the part of ASEAN and China to open a hotline of communication," Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa told reporters in Phnom Penh.

"So that if there were to be an incident in the future ... we can commit to have communication and have dialogue if there were to be disputes."

ASEAN leaders will hold their annual summit in Phnom Penh on Sunday. This will be followed by a two-day East Asia Summit involving Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, US President Barack Obama, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard and the leaders of five other countries.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

France bars entry to 'end of world' refuge

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 16 November 2012 | 22.24

FRANCE has dashed the hopes of those who had planned to take refuge in one of the few places on Earth some believe will be spared when the world ends on December 21.

Local officials banned access to the Pic de Bugarach, a mountain in the southwest where rumour has it the hilltop will open on the last day and aliens will emerge with spaceships to save nearby humans.

Eric Freysselinard, the state's top representative in the area, said he was blocking access to the mountain for public safety reasons to avoid a rush of New Age fanatics, sightseers and media crews.

Believers say the world will end on December 21, 2012, the end date of the ancient Mayan calendar, and they see Bugarach as one of a few sacred mountains sheltered from the cataclysm.

Freysselinard said the 100 police and firefighters he plans to deploy will also control approaches to the tiny village of the same name at the foot of the mountain, and if too many people turn up, they will block access there too.

"We are expecting a few visionaries, a few people who believe in this end of the world, but in extremely limited numbers," he said in the nearby city of Carcassonne.

"We are expecting greater numbers of people who are just curious, but in numbers we cannot determine. Above all, we are expecting lots of journalists," he said.

Films, documentaries and websites have promoted the idea that the ancient Mayan calendar predicts that doomsday is on December 21.

The culture ministry in Guatemala - where half the population are of Mayan descent - is hosting a massive event in the capital just in case the world actually does end, while tour groups are promoting doomsday-themed getaways.

But the country's Maya alliance Oxlaljuj Ajpop accuses the government and tour groups of perpetuating the myth that their calendar foresees the imminent end of the world for monetary gain.

It issued a statement last month saying that the new Maya time cycle simply "means there will be big changes on the personal, family and community level, so that there is harmony and balance between mankind and nature".


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Taxpayers funding Vic soccer club: report

TAXPAYERS will pay $4.5 million to a Victorian Premier League club over the next 15 years as part of a relocation deal to benefit Collingwood Football Club, according to reports.

The deal costs taxpayers up to $300,000 a year and is paid as compensation to South Melbourne FC for giving up its exclusive lease at the Bob Jane Stadium in South Melbourne, the Herald Sun reports.

Former sports minister James Merlino signed off on the deal in 2009 when the then Brumby government wanted Athletics Victoria to shift to the stadium, according to the newspaper.

Collingwood then moved into Athletics Victoria's old base, Olympic Park.

The Herald Sun uncovered details of the payments during a Victorian County Court case which will determine whether South Melbourne FC must repay a group of supporters who loaned the club money in 2004.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

iPhone 5, Galaxy S3 added to patent battle

A CALIFORNIA judge has granted motions to add Apple's iPhone 5 and Samsung's Galaxy S3 with the Jelly Bean operating system to a patent infringement suit between the mobile giants.

San Jose judge Paul Grewal granted the motions filed by the two companies, which are embroiled in patent lawsuits in 10 nations and have accused each other of stealing design and technology.

Samsung - the world's top mobile and smartphone maker - was ordered by a US jury in August to pay Apple $US1.05 billion ($A1.02 billion) in damages for illegally copying iPhone and iPad features for its flagship Galaxy S smartphones.

It has appealed the ruling.

Since then, two separate rulings by courts in Japan and the Netherlands have dismissed Apple's claims of patent infringement.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Aussie scientists cure inherited disease

SCIENTISTS say they are closer to helping people with hereditary diseases after restoring almost normal heart function to members of a family who suffer from a dangerous cardiac disease.

Medical researchers cured the family of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a disease that causes heart rhythm disorders, using technology to identify mutated genes which they targeted with drugs.

The research, led by a team from Sydney's Victor Chang Cardiac Institute and St Vincent's Hospital, has been published in The Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The researchers began by screening the 42 members of the family who had a history of DCM.

They were then given drugs which genetic sequencing led researchers to believe would target and "specifically reverse the consequences of the gene defect", Victor Chang Cardiac Institute Professor Jamie Vandenberg said.

Drugs can slow the progress of DCM, but when it inevitably reaches what researchers call "end stage" the only option for sufferers is a heart transplant, Prof Vandenberg said.

Thanks to new research and the decreasing costs and difficulties of gene sequencing, it is now possible to identify mutated genes and prescribe medication that targets the cause of hereditary diseases.

In the case of inherited DCM, it's as close to a cure as is yet available, Prof Vandenberg says.

"Some of these patients went from having a life expectancy of six to 12 months to now having almost normal heart function again," he told AAP.

"If you do understand what the underlying gene defect is, there's a possibility that you can identify a specific drug that will work and will work very effectively.

About 1 in 2000 Australians are affected by DCM, which accounts for about 10 per cent of heart failures.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Girl missing, feared taken by croc in NT

IT is feared that a young girl has been taken by a crocodile, after she went missing while swimming in a waterhole in the Northern Territory.

The girl, believed to be aged between seven and 11, was swimming with a group of people in a local waterhole on Friday afternoon about 95km west of the remote community of Maningrida when an adult of the group spotted a crocodile.

"Everyone made their way out of the billabong, but the girl went missing," Senior Sergeant Geoff Bahnert told AAP.

The community quickly launched a search for the girl, but when they were unable to find her, called police around 6.30pm (CST).

Sergeant Bahnert said neither the child nor the crocodile had been seen since.

"It is probable that the child has been taken by a crocodile," he said.

According to Sergeant Bahnert, the community has never seen crocodiles in the area before, which is why they had thought it was safe to go swimming.

Police and fisheries staff were searching with a spotlight overnight in the hopes of spotting either the girl or the crocodile, while wildlife rangers were expected to be on the site at first light to help with the search.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Petraeus testifies for Congress on Libya

FORMER CIA Director David Petraeus has been sneaked into the Capitol, away from photographers and television cameras, to face lawmakers' questions for the first time about the deadly attack on the US Consulate in Libya - just a week after he resigned over an extramarital affair.

The retired four-star army general, formerly one of the country's most respected military leaders, entered through a network of underground hallways leading to a secure room. CIA directors typically walk through the building's front door.

Petraeus is under investigation by the CIA for possible wrongdoing in his extramarital affair, though that's not the subject of Friday's closed-door hearings. The September 11 attack in Benghazi, which killed the US ambassador and three other Americans, created a political firestorm, with Republicans claiming that the White House misled the public on what led to the violence.

Petraeus was appearing first before the House Intelligence Committee on Friday and then its Senate counterpart and was expected to provide more details about the US response.

Petraeus has acknowledged an affair with a woman later identified as his biographer, the married Paula Broadwell.

The FBI began investigating the matter last (northern) summer, but didn't notify the White House or congress until after the November 6 election.

In the course of investigating the Petraeus affair, the FBI uncovered suggestive emails between Afghanistan war chief General John Allen and Florida socialite Jill Kelley, both of them married. President Barack Obama has put Allen's promotion nomination on hold.

Leading administration officials, meanwhile, met privately with lawmakers for a third straight day to explain how the Petraeus investigation was handled and explore its national security implications.

Congressman Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, the committee's top Democrat, said after the hearing he was satisfied that the FBI had behaved properly in not notifying the White House or legislators about the inquiry sooner, in keeping with rules set up to prevent interference in criminal investigations.

The CIA on Thursday opened an exploratory investigation into Petraeus's conduct. The inquiry "doesn't presuppose any particular outcome", said CIA spokesman Preston Golson.

Petraeus, in his first media interview since he resigned, told CNN that he had never given classified information to Broadwell. The general's biographer also has said she didn't receive such material from Petraeus.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Parents slam Irish abortion laws

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 15 November 2012 | 22.24

THE parents of an Indian woman who suffered a miscarriage and died after being refused an abortion in an Irish hospital have slammed the country's abortion laws.

Savita Halappanavar was 17 weeks pregnant when she miscarried and died last month.

Ireland's government confirmed on Wednesday she suffered blood poisoning and died after being denied an abortion, reigniting the debate over legalising abortion in the predominantly Catholic country.

"In an attempt to save a 4-month-old fetus they killed my 30-year-old daughter. How is that fair you tell me?" A. Mahadevi, Halappanavar's mother, told several Indian television stations on Thursday.

"How many more cases will there be? The rules should be changed as per the requirement of Hindus. We are Hindus, not Christians," she said.

Savita Halappanavar's father, Andanappa Yalagi, said the combination of medical negligence and Irish abortion laws led to his daughter's death.

The spokesman for India's Ministry of External Affairs, Syed Akbaruddin, said in a Twitter post the Indian Embassy in Dublin was "following the matter".

Halappanavar's husband, Praveen, said doctors at University Hospital Galway in western Ireland determined that his wife was miscarrying within hours of her hospitalisation for severe pain on October 21.

He said over the next three days, doctors refused their requests for an abortion to combat her searing pain and fading health.

It was only after the fetus died that its remains were surgically removed.

Within hours, Savita was placed under sedation in intensive care with blood poisoning, her husband said.

By October 27, her heart, kidneys and liver had stopped working, and she was pronounced dead the next day.

Three separate investigations are looking into the cause of Halappanavar's death.

Ireland's constitution officially bans abortion but a 1992 Supreme Court ruling said the procedure should be legalised for situations when the woman's life is at risk from continuing the pregnancy.

Five governments since have refused to pass a law resolving the confusion, leaving Irish hospitals reluctant to terminate pregnancies except in the most obviously life-threatening circumstances.

An estimated 4000 Irish women travel next door to England every year, where abortion has been legal on demand since 1967. But that option is difficult, if not impossible, if the woman's health is failing.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

US jobless claims soar after Superstorm

US weekly jobless claims jumped by 78,000 in one week in the wake of Superstorm Sandy, which both interrupted reporting and forced people out of work in the northeast, Labor Department data shows.

New claims for unemployment insurance, a signal of the pace of layoffs, rose to 439,000 in the week to November 10 from the previous week's figure of 361,000.

"Several states have experienced large increases of initial claims as a result of Hurricane Sandy," a Labor Department official said on Thursday of the sharp rise.

Sandy blasted the northeastern coast of the US at the end of October and beginning of November, shutting down major cities, leaving millions without power for days, and wrecking homes and businesses in many communities.

The weekly figure was far above the 360,000-380,000 range for claims of the past year and pulled the four-week moving average higher, to 383,850.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Christchurch's Victoria Square to reopen

A WALK through Christchurch's Victoria Square will be possible for the first time since the February 2011 earthquake when the red zone is reduced on Friday.

The Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority says pedestrians will be able to access the restored area, which was extensively damaged in the quake, between 7am and 9pm daily, although access by vehicles is restricted.

Two pathways will be opened and it's likely more will be opened this month.

Construction work will continue, but areas will be cordoned off for public safety.

"While returning to Victoria Square may be tempered by a sense of loss we can all take heart at the collective determination to reopen and revive the central city," Christchurch City Council city environment group general manager Jane Parfitt said.

Work has not started near the amphitheatre as decisions are pending on the Town Hall and other projects.

The Floral Clock and Cook and Queen Victoria statues are being assessed as part of a Statues and Memorial project.

The 6.3-magnitude quake struck west of Lyttelton on February 22, 2011 killing 185 people and causing widespread destruction and extensively damaging Christchurch's central city infrastructure.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

McDonald's axes US boss after sales dip

MCDONALD'S is replacing its head of US operations after the world's biggest burger chain reported its first monthly sales decline in nearly a decade.

The company, based in Oak Brook, Illinois, says its global chief restaurant officer, Jeff Stratton, will succeed Jan Fields as president of McDonald's USA effective December 1.

Ms Fields, 57, is leaving after more than 35 years with the company. She was behind many major menu innovations, including the expansion of the specialty drinks menu.

After years of outperforming its rivals, McDonald's has struggled recently amid intensifying competition at home and a persistently weak economy abroad. In October, the company reported its first monthly sales decline since 2003.

McDonald's has more than 34,000 locations around the world, with about 14,000 in the US.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Only nine nations own Twitter handles

ONLY nine out of 193 UN member states own Twitter accounts bearing their country name, and only three of those accounts have been officially verified by the micro-blogging site, according to a new report.

In "Twiplomacy", a study looking at country branding on Twitter, communications firm Burson-Marsteller said it had found that most country name accounts were held by private individuals and that three out of five were either dormant, inactive, suspended or protected, meaning they can only be seen by accepted viewers.

"Few governments and tourism organisations have understood the power of country branding and marketing on Twitter," Matthias Luefkens, who heads Burson-Marsteller's digital practice unit, said in a statement.

Only the @GreatBritain, @Israel and @SouthAfrica handles were verified by Twitter as official accounts run by the countries' governments or tourism boards, Luefkens told AFP.

Britain's account was a successful part of the "Britain is Great" campaign launched in March this year, while Israel's account, run by the foreign ministry, was the country's official Twitter channel and counted more than 66,000 followers, according to the study.

Sweden's Twitter account @Sweden, with 65,000 followers, is meanwhile run jointly by the government-linked Swedish Institute and the country's official tourism board, but has, according to Luefkens, likely not been verified by Twitter due to its "democratic" format, allowing a new citizen to host the feed each week and tweet about anything that comes to mind.

The Twitter accounts of Antigua Barbuda, Barbados, Lithuania, the Maldives and Spain are also run by their respective tourism organisations to promote tourism in the countries, the study showed.

It is meanwhile not possible to tell who runs the world's most followed country handle, @Indonesia, which is basically a feed for news about the country and counts 193,349 followers, Luefkens said.

Many country-name accounts were held by private individuals, with the protected @Egypt account profile for instance stating it was run out of the California Bay area and that "I am not Egypt the country. Okay? I am. not. Egypt. the. country."

The person who owns @Canada has meanwhile repeatedly offered to give the handle to the Canadian government, if it gets in touch, Luefkens said, pointing out that it is against Twitter rules to sell a handle.

He said he was not surprised that more governments did not have control of their country handles, pointing out that "it is only just dawning on them that this is a powerful vehicle for communication."

"I think it will change quickly and governments will become more active" in trying to gain control of Twitter accounts bearing their countries' name, he said.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

US shares open higher, Walmart sheds 4%

US stocks have edged higher after a sharp fall the previous day, with Walmart's disappointing revenues in its third quarter report sending its shares down more than four per cent.

In the first five minutes of Thursday trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 6.84 points (0.05 per cent) to 12,577.79.

The broad-market S&P 500 added 1.86 (0.14 per cent) to 1,357.35, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite rose 1.24 (0.04 per cent) at 2,848.05.

Walmart's shares fell 4.1 per cent to $68.39 on quarterly earnings that showed a nine per cent rise in net income to $3,63 billion but revenue at stores climbed only 1.5 per cent, below expectations.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Microsoft releases IE 10 browser

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 14 November 2012 | 22.24

THE latest version of Microsoft's Web browser is now available to the vast audience connecting to the Internet on personal computers running on the Windows 7 operating system.

The redesigned browser, Internet Explorer 10, made its debut last month when Microsoft released Windows 8, which makes dramatic changes to an operating system that has been powering PCs for decades.

Internet Explorer 10 initially is being introduced Tuesday to Windows 7 users in a "preview," or test, mode. The new browser isn't compatible with XP, Vista and any other older Windows version.

Although Microsoft is staking its future on Windows 8, far more PCs rely on Windows 7. Microsoft Corp. says more than 670 million licenses for Windows 7 have been sold since its release in 2009. Windows 8 is unlikely to approach that level of usage until at least 2014, based on analyst forecasts.

Desktops, laptops and tablet computers running on Windows 8 are sold with Internet Explorer 10 already installed. Those with older Windows versions will have to download and install the new browser separately.

Although Internet Explorer 10 is supposed to process Web pages more quickly and smoothly than its predecessors, it may have limited appeal to Windows 7 users.

That's because Microsoft primarily designed Internet Explorer 10 for tablet computers and other devices, including a new breed of PCs that have touch-screen displays. Relatively few Windows 7 PCs can be controlled with fingers on a display screen.

Microsoft is hoping many website developers will download and install Internet Explorer 10 on their Windows 7 machines and see the browser's potential for making online services more compelling and dynamic. If that happens, more websites may include features that take advantage of Internet Explorer 10's full capabilities on the bevy of Windows 8 machines expected to be sold during the next year, said Ryan Gavin, Microsoft's general manager for the browser.

Internet Explorer 10's main purpose is to make viewing websites as enjoyable and convenient as using applications tailor-made for specific mobile devices.

For instance, when reading an article on a news site, users of Internet Explorer 10 can just swipe across the screen to continue reading the next page instead of having to scroll down to click on a link, as most browsers require. Microsoft also says games such as "Contre Jour" played on Internet Explorer 10 will work as well, or even better, than those packaged in applications.

Realising that goal is crucial to Microsoft as it tries to make a bigger splash in the smartphone and tablet markets. It probably will take years before mobile devices running on Windows 8 boast as many applications as their competitors, giving Microsoft an added incentive to build a superior Web browser. The mobile operating systems designed by Apple Inc. and Google Inc. each boast more than 700,000 applications.

Microsoft also hopes Internet Explorer 10 can reverse recent trends in the Web browser market. By some estimates, Google's Chrome browser has supplanted Internet Explorer as the world's most popular browser. Other research firms still assert that Internet Explorer remains the most widely used, although all measures show it has been losing market share to Chrome, Mozilla's Firefox and Apple's Safari.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

CSG study raises questions: green groups

A NEW study into methane levels around coal seam gas mining in Queensland shows the industry in a "whole new light", suggesting it's not as clean as it claims, environmental campaigners say.

In an attempt to measure the effects of CSG mining on air and water, Dr Isaac Santos and Dr Damien Maher from the Southern Cross University travelled to Tara in southern Queensland and the Richmond River catchment in Northern NSW.

While there they took snapshots of the level of methane in the atmosphere and creeks in order to determine the amount of emissions.

Lock the Gate Alliance president Drew Hutton said the findings - presented at a lecture in Lismore on Wednesday night - recorded methane levels in CSG areas as high as 6.89 parts per million.

This, he said, compared to other non-CSG areas that recorded levels around two parts per million.

"This throws the industry into a whole new light," Mr Hutton told AAP.

Mr Hutton said the fugitive methane emissions escaped through cracks in the soil, pipelines or wellheads after an aquifer was depressurised to release gas in the coal seam.

"The federal government currently works on the assumption that fugitive methane emissions from coal seam gas are 0.12 per cent of all gas produced," he said.

However, he said, if methane levels are "many times higher" - as the study suggests - than the industry could face higher penalties under the carbon tax.

Nature Conservation Council of NSW CEO Pepe Clarke said the study raised questions as to whether the industry was a cleaner alternative to coal.

"If fugitive emissions of methane from CSG gas fields occur on the same scale as was detected around Tara Estate, this industry is potentially much more dangerous in terms of its contribution to climate change than traditional fossil fuels," he said.

However, Rick Wilkinson from The Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association (APPEA) said the research was incomplete and "lacks the basics of scientific rigour".

"What is presented as research is in reality a funding submission," he said in a statement.

"The research is notable through omission rather than content and seems squarely aimed at natural gas production rather than all sources of actual and potential greenhouse gas emissions."

Mr Hutton said the study was preliminary and more were needed.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Clashes erupt in European protests

RIOT police and anti-austerity protesters have clashed in Spain and Italy as anger boils over on a Europe-wide day of strikes and mass demonstrations.

General strikes in Spain and Portugal paralysed swathes of industry and hit road, rail and air transport on Wednesday, as people vented their frustration at state cut-backs.

Seething workers staged industrial walkouts in Italy, the eurozone's number three economy, and in Greece, fighting to avert default even after enacting an austerity squeeze of 13.5 billion euros ($A16.37 billion).

Against a background of peaceful industrial action and protests across Europe, however, police charged with batons in Spain and running street battles erupted in Italy.

In Madrid, riot police fired rubber bullets into the air and struck protesters with batons in the centra Plaza de Cibeles square, an AFP journalist at the scene said.

The clashes erupted when a police cordon blocked demonstrators from joining a rally in the square.

Earlier, police swung batons and pushed away hundreds of young protesters to prevent them blocking the nearby Gran Via avenue in the Spanish capital.

Crowds of protesters chanted "Abuse of power" and "More education, fewer police".

Police arrested 82 protesters across the country and 34 people were wounded, including 18 police, the government said.

In Italy, media said some 20 activists beat a riot police officer with a stick and baseball bats in Turin, while five officers were hurt during running street battles in central Milan.

"Europe is waking up today - from Rome to Madrid to Athens," said Mario Nobile, a 23-year-old university student in Rome.

"The 'PIGS' are rebelling!" he said, using a derogatory acronym for the most troubled eurozone economies of Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain.

In Rome, the protest was peaceful except for a small group of students who threw stones and tried to break through police lines outside Prime Minister Mario Monti's offices.

Spanish unions said participation in the strike was massive, surpassing 85 per cent in some industrial sectors but the government said the impact was more modest with electricity usage down 15.8 per cent from normal.

Spain's Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said the strike was "not the right path" to reduce uncertainty and insisted that austerity was the only way out of the crisis.

In Portugal, the general strike brought Lisbon's metro service to a halt while ferries across the River Tagus and trains across the country ran skeleton services.

Both Spain and Portugal have legislation guaranteeing minimum services in essential industries.

But in Spain, Iberia, Iberia Express, Air Nostrum, Vueling, Air Europa and easyJet cut more than 600 flights including some 250 international routes. Ryanair said no flights had been scrapped yet.

Portugal's TAP said it was grounding more than 170 flights, most of them international.

Greece's unions are focused on the national crisis, rather than the European-wide action, and their protest was limited to a three-hour work stoppage and a rally in Athens.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

US retail sales dip in October

A DROP in car sales pushed US retail sales lower in October after a strong gain in September, government data shows.

Retail sales fell 0.3 per cent, the Commerce Department reported on Wednesday, slightly more than analysts expected.

It upwardly revised September's reading from an initial estimate of 1.1 per cent to 1.3 per cent, the largest increase since March 2010.

Superstorm Sandy, which wreaked havoc on the East Coast in late October, had both positive and negative effects on sales, the department said.

"Some firms reported a drop in sales due to permanent or temporary store closures and stores having reduced business due to damage, fewer customer and/or lack of employees," it said.

"On the other hand, some firms reported sales increases due to significant sales of supplies for the affected areas and evacuees purchasing retail and food services in different geographic locales."

Excluding car sales, which dropped 1.5 per cent, retail and food services sales were unchanged from the prior month.

On a 12-month basis, retail sales were up 3.8 per cent in October.

The retail sales data, which are not adjusted for price changes, are a key indicator of consumer spending that accounts for about 70 per cent of economic activity.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cisco results boost US stocks at open

ANALYST-BEATING quarterly results from Cisco Systems have given US stocks a solid opening boost, following two listless sessions.

Five minutes into Wednesday trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 34.81 points (0.27 per cent) at 12,790.99.

The broad-market S&P 500 added 4.21 (0.31 per cent) at 1,378.74, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite gained 14.60 (0.51 per cent) at 2,898.49.

Dow component Cisco jumped 7.8 per cent to $18.16 after its 48 cents earnings per share for its fiscal first quarter beat analyst expectations by two cents.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Hamas commander killed in air strike

SENIOR Hamas military commander Ahmed al-Jaabari was killed in an Israeli air strike on a car in Gaza City overnight.

"The martyr is Ahmed al-Jaabari and his bodyguard was injured," Ayman Sahabani, a doctor at Shifa hospital in Gaza City, told AFP. A Hamas security source also confirmed Jaabari's death, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Israel's Shin Bet domestic intelligence agency and the military also confirmed the operation.

"During a joint operation of the General Security Service (Shin Bet) and the IDF (army) today, Ahmed Jaabari, the senior commander of the military wing of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, was targeted," a statement from the Shin Bet said.

"In the past hour, the IDF targeted Ahmed Jaabari, the head of Hamas's military wing, in the Gaza Strip," the military added in a statement, saying Jaabari "was a senior Hamas operative... directly responsible for executing terror attacks."

"The purpose of this operation was to severely impair the command and control chain of the Hamas leadership, as well as its terrorist infrastructure."

Military spokeswoman Avital Leibovich said the strike was the start of an operation targeting armed groups in Gaza following multiple rocket attacks on southern Israel.

"The IDF started an operation against terror organisations in Gaza due to the ongoing attacks against Israeli civilians," she said on her Twitter account.

The killing of Jaabari sparked furious protests in Gaza City, with hundreds of members of Hamas and its armed wing, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, chanting for revenge inside Shifa hospital.

Outside, armed men fired weapons into the air, and mosques throughout the city called prayers to mourn the commander's death.

Palestinian security sources and medics confirmed a total of four air strikes across Gaza during the late afternoon -- two in Gaza City, one of which killed Jaabari, one in northern Gaza, and a fourth in the southern city of Khan Yunis.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Xmas shopping by smart phones set to boom

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 13 November 2012 | 22.24

ABOUT 40 per cent of Australians are expected to use their smart phones and tablets to shop over Christmas - more than double last year's figure.

Google Australia research has found that there is a 20 per cent increase in shopping related searches year on year and that 40 per cent of all shopping searches now come from smart phones or tablets.

"What we see is we're getting a growth of 20 per cent, year on year, for shopping related searches and mobile devices searches have more than doubled in the last 12 months," Google Australia leader for local and retail Ross McDonald said.

Mr McDonald said with the recent release of the iPhone5 and an increasing number of Australians buying iPads he expected the number of mobile searches to increase more rapidly this Christmas.

"We reckon there will be close to a million new devices turned on between now and Christmas when you think about the iPad launch and the new iPhone launch," he said.

"That means there will be more and more Australians using them to make decisions on what they're going to buy for Christmas.

"The last three years the highest number of searches we've had on mobiles have been in the week before Christmas and we estimate that in the week before Christmas this year we will get 50 per cent of our queries through mobile devices."

Mr McDonald said even people who were buying in store still did their research online and used their smart phones and devices to find relevant stores.

"On a big screen people do their product research, then they use a mobile to work out where they're going to go, when the store is open and what offers they have," he said.

He said while some retailers, especially smaller ones, may not be interested in selling online they should still have a mobile friendly website to advertise because that was where most shoppers looked for information about stores and products.

"What we measure is bounce rate and what we see is bounce rates are very, very high if the website is not optimised for a mobile screen," he said.

"If it's not accessible for a mobile, people will very quickly bounce off it and go and look up something else."


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Missing young people baffle COAG council

A GROUP of young Australians who are neither earning nor learning has the COAG Reform Council baffled.

The council's latest reports into skills and education found the proportion of 18 to 24 year-olds fully engaged in employment, education or training has dropped to 72.5 per cent in 2011.

Most of this was down to a fall in full-time employment.

But the council also found that nationally, there was no significant increase in the rates of young people who finished Year 12 or equivalent between 2008 and 2011.

The results were surprising given the genuine focus by all governments on education and training, council deputy chairman Greg Craven told reporters in Canberra.

"If young Australians are not earning or learning, that begs the question - what are they doing?" Professor Craven said.

"We need to focus very, very carefully on making sure that all Australians are equipped to participate and benefit from both the society and the economy."

It was not a disaster that the council was unable to track this group, but they did want to find out what the young people were doing and whether their needs were being met, Prof Craven said.

The reports also showed disadvantaged groups were still fighting disproportionately to overcome barriers to further education.

People from the most disadvantaged areas were the least likely to be studying for further qualifications, with only 55.1 per cent seeking higher skills compared to 76.5 per cent of those in the least disadvantaged regions.

Almost two in five indigenous people held post-school qualifications, compared with almost three in five non-indigenous people.

"That progress that we are making among disadvantaged groups is not fast and it is a worry that there are particular groups that are not benefiting in the same level as other Australians," Prof Craven said.

The report on skills also found the reduction in the number of people without any kind of higher-level qualification was happening too slowly to meet COAG's 2020 target.

The proportion of working Australians without at least a Certificate III dropped between 2008 and 2011, but the trend rate indicated there would still be one-third of Australians without such a qualification in 2020 - 10 points higher than the target level.

Prof Craven said the council was "very, very hopeful" a new national agreement signed in April would improve this result.

He said it was especially important people got more skills with the economy in transition and employers needing a pool of skilled workers to be able to take advantage of new opportunities.

"Against the background of the Asian century white paper that demand is only going to continue to grow so that it's absolutely imperative that we see the rates of skilled Australians rise to meet the challenge."

One highlight in the report was that Australia is well on track to meet COAG's target to double diploma and advanced diploma completions by 2020.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Obama puts Allen NATO nomination on hold

PRESIDENT Barack Obama has delayed General John Allen's nomination as NATO's supreme commander pending a probe into his email correspondence with a woman at the centre of a sex scandal.

"At the request of the secretary of defense, the president has put on hold his nomination of Gen Allen as SACEUR pending the investigation of Gen Allen's conduct by the Department of Defense IG (inspector general)," National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said on Tuesday.

A US defense official said FBI investigators had uncovered a trove of 20,000 to 30,000 pages of correspondence - mostly emails - between Allen and Jill Kelley, a key figure in the scandal that brought down CIA chief David Petraeus.

"The allegations involve inappropriate communications" between Allen, the top US commander in Afghanistan, and Kelley, the official told reporters travelling with US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

Panetta said in a statement his department was informed by the FBI on Sunday about the case and that he had referred it to the Pentagon's inspector general for investigation.

Allen, the top US commander in Afghanistan, had been tapped to take over as the Supreme Allied Commander Europe before the latest cascade of revelations.

"The President remains focused on fully supporting our extraordinary troops and coalition partners in Afghanistan, who Gen Allen continues to lead as he has so ably done for over a year," Vietor said.

Meanwhile, Obama called on the Senate to act quickly to confirm Marine Corps General Joseph Dunford as the next commander of the NATO-led force in Afghanistan, Vietor said.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Up to three feared missing in western NSW

A SEARCH for up to three people feared missing in a national park in western NSW is set to resume at first light, with police warning they may be very difficult to find.

Police said a woman called Triple Zero about 12pm (AEDT) on Tuesday, saying she was lost around one hour's drive from Broken Hill.

But the call dropped out before full details could be provided.

Using GPS co-ordinates traced from the call, emergency crews began searching for her throughout Tuesday afternoon inside the Mutawintja National Park - about 150km northeast of Broken Hill.

Rescue crews discovered a car after flying over the region around 8pm. However, the missing people could not be located.

The search was suspended a short time later due to poor light.

Broken Hill's acting police sergeant, Russell Smith, said they have spoken with the family of the female caller and understand one or two people were travelling with her.

"We believe that they are essentially tourists to the region," he told AAP.

He said police would meet early on Wednesday morning before both a ground and air search resumes at first light.

"We don't know what condition they are in, we don't know what provisions they have.

"We need to find them."

Describing the national park as "rugged desert-type terrain" with limited access to water, Sergeant Smith said their exact location could be "very difficult to find".

"It is a very large area to find people in," he said.

"It can be very hot during the daytime and very cold during the night."

But he said additional resources were being sent from Sydney overnight.

"Now that we have an idea of where we are going we will go back there first thing."


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Italy's inflation slows in October

ITALY'S inflation slowed in October to a rate of 2.6 per cent from 3.2 per cent in September, official data from Italy's statistics agency shows, confirming previous estimates.

The slowdown was due partly to seasonal effects for various goods and services sectors and partly to external factors including an increase of value-added tax by one percentage point in October, Istat said on Tuesday.

The inflation rate calculated according to European Union measurements was 2.8 per cent in October at an annualised rate compared to 3.4 per cent in September and 0.3 per cent over the month.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

NYC's Christmas tree survived Sandy

THE Christmas tree that will dominate New York's Rockefeller Center survived the winds of Superstorm Sandy that left a path of destruction in a New Jersey town and even its donor without electricity for weeks.

Joe Balku, 76, learned that the 24-metre Norway spruce had been chosen for the honour four weeks ago. Sandy hit two weeks later.

Mr Balku watched the tree, which weighs 9 tonnes and is 15m in diameter, as it swayed in the backyard.

"I kept going outside during the night. I lost two trees, an oak and an evergreen, but the big tree was tied up for its protection," Mr Balku said.

His electricity went out, but on the morning after the storm, the tree was still standing and his home did not sustain any damage.

The tree was about 7m tall when Mr Balku purchased the home in 1973.

Mr Balku had two generators running to power his home in the rural community about an hour from Manhattan. He didn't have cable TV or internet service.

Electricity was restored on Saturday.

The tree will be loaded on a 35m-long flatbed truck and erected at Rockefeller Centre tomorrow. Workers will then string 45,000 lights on the branches.

"It's a thrill of a lifetime to have the chance to donate the tree to Rockefeller Centre and for millions of people to see it all over the world," he said.

The 80th Christmas tree lighting will take place on November 28.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Israel army in direct hit on Syria source

Written By Unknown on Senin, 12 November 2012 | 22.24

ISRAELI troops have fired tank shells into Syria in retaliation for a mortar round that struck near an army post in the Golan Heights, scoring "direct hits" on the source of the fire, the army says.

"A short while ago, a mortar shell hit an open area in the vicinity of an IDF (army) post in the central Golan Heights, as part of the internal conflict inside Syria, causing no damage or injuries," it said on Monday.

"In response, IDF soldiers fired tank shells towards the source of the fire, confirming direct hits."

Israeli military sources said: "Syrian mobile artillery was directly hit," without elaborating further.

The army warned that any further fire from Syria towards the Israeli-occupied sector of the strategic plateau would be answered with "severity".

"Fire emanating from Syria into Israel will not be tolerated and shall be responded to with severity," a statement said, indicating that Israel had filed a complaint with UN observers monitoring the ceasefire line.

Israeli troops fired a warning shot across the UN-monitored ceasefire line on Sunday in the first such shooting on the Golan since the 1973 Middle East war.

Sunday's mortar round, which hit an Israeli position, drew a warning from Defence Minister Ehud Barak that Israel would take "tougher" action in response to any new fire from Syria.

United Nations secretary-general Ban Ki-moon's spokesman Martin Nesirky said after Sunday's fire the UN chief was "deeply concerned by the potential for escalation".

"He calls for the utmost restraint" and urges both sides to uphold the 1974 accord that set up the ceasefire line and surrounding demilitarised zone.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Final IBAC bills in Vic parliament

A GOVERNMENT-APPOINTED Victorian inspector will be able to sit in on witness examinations and be privy to material uncovered in investigations by the ombudsman and the state's new anti-corruption commission.

The final pieces of legislation in the state government's new integrity regime will be introduced into parliament on Tuesday.

The draft laws will replace the Office of Police Integrity with the Independent Broad-based Anti-Corruption Commission (IBAC).

Although its permanent head is yet to be announced, the IBAC can start investigations as soon as the legislation passes parliament, which is expected to happen before the end of the year - about 18 months late.

Ron Bonighton is acting commissioner until the end of December.

The IBAC will be responsible for investigating serious corrupt conduct across the state's public service, covering some 250,000 workers including MPs, ministerial staffers and local councillors.

It will also investigate alleged misconduct by Victoria Police sworn and unsworn officers.

There will also be major changes relating to the role of Ombudsman George Brouwer, who will be answerable to a parliamentary committee for the first time.

He, along with the IBAC, will also be monitored by the Victorian Inspectorate, to be led by an inspector who is yet to be announced. The inspector's role will be to ensure the use of covert and coercive powers is lawful and fair.

The Victorian Inspectorate will be able to observe any witness questioning by the ombudsman and the IBAC and have access to material seized during investigations.

The ombudsman will lose the power to make decisions about which complaints can receive whistleblower protections. That power will be transferred to the IBAC.

The minister responsible for the establishment of an anti-corruption commission, Andrew McIntosh, said the government had taken the time to get its integrity regime right to fix a "patchwork system" that had failed Victoria.

"These are the most significant integrity reforms in the history of this state," he said.

"The bills introduced today cap off these reforms."

The IBAC will have the power to bug phones and conduct other surveillance once federal Attorney-General Nicola Roxon rubber stamps federal telecommunication interception legislation.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Artificial pancreas hope for diabetes

AUSTRALIAN researchers believe they are one step closer to developing an artificial pancreas for people with diabetes.

A Sydney-based diabetes expert and a Queensland artificial intelligence specialist have tested the prototype of a software program that could replicate the role of a human pancreas.

If a clinical trial works as well as the prototype, it could be a breakthrough for the lives of those with type 1 diabetes who have to inject insulin daily, they say.

Jenny Gunton from Sydney's Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Nigel Greenwood of the University of Queensland say the device would work by measuring a patient's blood glucose levels and delivering the dose of insulin required - as a normally-functioning pancreas does.

"The ultimate aim for a 'mechanical cure' for type 1 diabetes would be to have a closed loop system - where you have an insulin pump which knows how much insulin to give at the right time," said Associate Professor Gunton.

"So you have glucose monitoring and insulin administration in the same machine, with very smart pump software keeping people's blood glucose normal."

In the project, funded by the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, two virtual patients had data supplied from real people with diabetes. Their medical data, including blood glucose levels, was then simulated.

The software developed by Dr Greenwood, called Neuromathix, calculated suggested insulin dosages for the patients and their blood glucose was analysed over 55 simulated days.

The researchers found that target blood glucose levels were achieved over 90 per cent of the time - compared to the average person with diabetes who hits the target 60 per cent of the time.

"What we have just done couldn't have been done 10 years ago. We are dealing with a profoundly complex model involving many unknowns," said Dr Greenwood.

He hopes the software will reach the market in 2016 after a clinical study and trial.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gaddafi's ex-PM faces Libyan judges

MUAMMAR Gaddafi's last prime minister has become the highest ranking former regime official to go before Libyan judges, in a brief but sullen court appearance.

Dressed in a traditional white robe and brown vest, Al-Baghdadi al-Mahmoudi sat in stony silence within a caged section of the Tripoli criminal court, where figures of the toppled Gaddafi regime are facing justice.

The judge did not read out the charges on Monday but Taha Baara, the spokesman for the prosecutor general, said Mahmoudi "is accused of committing prejudicial acts against the security of the state and financial crimes".

Two other defendants being tried along with Mahmoudi were not brought to court, triggering protests from the defence team, which also requested more time to study the case.

"It is a big file. I need more time in order to get myself ready for the defence," lawyer Ali Dabba told AFP.

The session lasted about 10 minutes before the trial was adjourned until December 10 at the request of both the defence and the prosecution.

Mahmoudi fled to neighbouring Tunisia in September last year shortly after rebels seized Tripoli and effectively put an end to more than four decades of iron-fisted Gaddafi rule.

He was extradited to Libya to face justice on June 24, despite warnings from rights groups that he could face the death penalty.

Along with Saif al-Islam, the toppled dictator's most high-profile son, Mahmoudi is one of the few remaining keepers of the many state secrets under Gaddafi, who was killed on October 20 last year.

Saif, arrested inside Libya a year ago, is awaiting to hear where he will stand trial for alleged crimes against humanity.

The authorities in Tripoli want him to stand in the dock inside Libya, but the International Criminal Court wants him to face justice in The Hague.

Judges in The Hague heard arguments last month by a lawyer for Libya and representatives of the ICC to decide where Saif, 40, and Gaddafi's former spymaster Abdullah Senoussi, 63, should be tried.

Saif has been in custody in the western Libyan hill town of Zintan since his arrest last November, while Senoussi was extradited from Mauritania on September 5.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Toyota tests cars that communicate

TOYOTA Motor Cop. is testing car safety systems that allow vehicles to communicate with each other and with the roads they are on in a just completed facility in Japan the size of three baseball stadiums.

The cars at the Intelligent Transport System site receive information from sensors and transmitters installed on the streets to minimise the risk of accidents in situations such as missing a red traffic light, cars advancing from blind spots and pedestrians crossing the street. The system also tests cars that transmit such information to each other.

In a test drive for reporters Monday, the presence of a pedestrian triggered a beeping sound in the car and a picture of a person popped up on a screen in front of the driver. A picture of an arrow popped up to indicate an approaching car at an intersection. An electronic female voice said, "It's a red light," if the driver was about to ignore a red light.

The 3.5 hectare test site looks much like the artificial roads at driving schools, except bigger, and is in a corner of the Japanese automaker's technology center near Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture, central Japan.

Toyota officials said the smart-car technology it is developing will be tested on some Japanese roads starting in 2014. Similar tests are planned for the US, although details were not decided. Such technology is expected to be effective because half of car accidents happen at intersections, according to Toyota.

Managing Officer Moritaka Yoshida said Toyota sees preventing collisions, watching out for pedestrians and helping the driving of the elderly as key to ensuring safety in the cars of the future.

"We offer the world's top-level technology," he told reporters.

All automakers are working on pre-crash safety technology to add value to their cars, especially for developed markets such as the US, Europe and Japan. But the strongest sales growth is coming from emerging markets which are eventually expected to show more interest in safety technology.

Toyota's Japanese rival Nissan Motor Co. recently showed cars that were smart enough to stop on their own, park themselves and swerve away from pedestrians who suddenly jumped into the vehicle's path.

Toyota also showed a new feature that helps the driver brake harder to prevent bumping into the vehicle in front. Toyota officials said drivers often fail to push hard on their brakes in such situations because they get into a panic.

Toyota said the technology will be available "soon," without giving a date, and hinted it will be offered for Lexus luxury models. Luxury models already offer similar safety features such as automatic braking. Technology involving precise sensors remains expensive, sometimes costing as much as a cheaper Toyota car.

Toyota has also developed sonar sensors that help drivers avoid crashing in parking lots. One system even knows when the driver pushes on the gas pedal by mistake instead of the brakes, and will stop automatically.

Rear-end collisions make up 34 per cent of car accidents in Japan, comprising the biggest category, followed by head-on collisions at 27 per cent.

Cars that stop and go on their own, avoiding accidents, are not pure science fiction, experts say.

Alberto Broggi, professor at the University of Parma and an expert on intelligent transportation systems, said the idea of the accident-free cars is "very hot," and probably within reach on some roads within several years.

"I'm sure we will arrive to such a technology even if I don't know when exactly," he said.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Two charged over NSW child sex assaults

A CATHOLIC brother and a former Catholic teacher have been charged in NSW over alleged assaults on children dating back to the 1980s.

Sex Crimes Squad detectives investigating allegations of abuse on an eight-year-old girl in 1985 and two 13-year-old boys in 1987 made the arrests on Monday evening and later charged the pair.

Police allege some of the incidents took place at a Catholic college and a Catholic primary school in Sydney's west.

The Catholic brother, whose charges relate to the two boys, has been refused bail and will appear at Wyong Local Court on Tuesday.

The 59-year-old was arrested at a property at The Entrance on the Central Coast.

He was charged with committing an indecent act on a child under 16 and under authority, along with five counts of indecent assault on a child under 16 and under authority.

The former teacher, a 58-year-old man arrested at a Blacktown property, was charged with offences relating to a 13-year-old boy and an eight-year-old girl.

The charges are sexual assault on a child under 16, indecent assault on a child under 16, committing an indecent act on a child under 16 and indecent assault on a child under 16 and under authority.

He has been granted strict conditional bail and will appear at Blacktown Local Court on December 13.

Police said their inquiries are continuing.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Syria opposition inks hard-won unity deal

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 11 November 2012 | 22.24

SYRIAN opposition groups meeting in Qatar have inked a hard-won unity deal and agreed to form a national coalition to fight against President Bashar al-Assad, delegates say.

"We signed a 12-point agreement to establish a coalition," said leading dissident Riad Seif, who drew up the US-backed reform proposals on which Sunday's agreement was based.

Another prominent opposition figure, Haitham al-Maleh, said a formal signing ceremony would held at 1700 GMT (0400 AEDT on Monday).

The deal came after the Syrian National Council, which had formerly been seen as the main representative of the opposition, heeded Arab and Western pressure to agree to a new structure embracing groups that had been unwilling to join its ranks.

Former prime minister Riad Hijab, who fled to neighbouring Jordan in August in the highest-ranking defection from Assad's government, hailed the agreement as "an advanced step towards toppling the regime".

Another delegate, Ziyad Abu Hamdan, said agreement had also been reached on unifying the multiple military councils in command of rebel fighters inside Syria.

He said the talks were now focused on the makeup of a planned government in waiting.

Details of the deal have yet to be released but Maleh said it was "no different" to the original proposals put forward by Seif, one of the leaders of the so-called Damascus Spring protest movement of a decade ago and now touted in Washington as a potential new opposition chief.

Seif's proposals envisaged the formation of a transitional government, a military council to oversee rebel groups on the ground and a judiciary to operate in rebel-held areas.

The 10-member transitional government would be elected by a new 60-member umbrella group to be drawn from civilian activists and rebel fighters inside Syria, as well as by the exiles who have dominated the Syrian National Council.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Afghan peace council chief visits Pakistan

PAKISTAN says the head of the Afghan council for peace talks with the Taliban will visit Islamabad to discuss reconciliation efforts.

Pakistan's Foreign Office said on Sunday that Salahuddin Rabbani will lead the three days of talks starting on Monday with Pakistani political and military leaders.

Kabul set up the Afghanistan High Peace Council in 2010 to negotiate an end to the decade-long war.

NATO troops plan to withdraw from Afghanistan in 2014.

Rabbani was named the council chief after his predecessor, his father Burhanuddin Rabbani, was assassinated in September 2011.

Many of the Taliban's leaders fled to Pakistan after the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan, and Islamabad is viewed as a key player in any negotiated end to the conflict.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Boat reported missing off NSW coast

A SEARCH is to resume at first light on Monday for a boat feared to have sunk off Wollongong.

Police were called to Wollongong Harbour at 6pm (AEDT) on Sunday after witnesses reported seeing a small boat that appeared to be sinking and two people in difficulty in the water.

They launched a search, some 500 to 600 metres off the lighthouse.

Despite the best efforts of surf lifesaving club volunteers, marine rescue teams, water police and two helicopters, there has been no sign of the boat or its occupants.

The foreshore has also been searched, with officers checking boat ramps for vehicles and trailers.

The search was postponed at 9.30pm and is to start again on Monday morning following a briefing.

Police would like to hear from witnesses, including the woman who originally saw the boat and told others what she had seen.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Inquiry to see list of pedophile priests

A VICTIMS group on Monday will present to the Victorian government inquiry into sex abuse by priests a list of 18 convicted pedophile priests who were moved from parish to parish or further away, where they continued offending.

Helen Last of In Good Faith, a consultant for the Melbourne Victims Collective, will present the evidence to the state inquiry into how the churches handled sex abuse by priests, Fairfax says.

It comprises men who have been convicted in criminal courts or found by the Catholic Church's own investigation to have had credible complaints made against them.

Ms Last said the church has known through its Pastoral Appointments Board and its bishops that there have been problems with the conduct of all these priests previously reported to them.

She said the placements gave these priests access to primary and secondary schools, hospitals, orphanages and other care institutions.

The 18 include some of the most notorious pedophiles, such as Gerald Ridsdale, Edward Dowlan, Michael Glennon and the socialite priest Vincent Kiss, as well as many who barely caught public attention.

Ms last said the 18 priests were selected to see how many times they were moved by the church.

She said the problem of clergy abuse was so prevalent that the collective believed a dedicated police unit should be set up to work with victims of clergy.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

BBC trust head calls for radical overhaul

THE head of the BBC's governing body says the broadcaster needs a radical overhaul following the resignation of its chief executive in the wake of a scandal over a botched report on child sex-abuse allegations.

Chris Patten vowed on Sunday to restore confidence and trust in the BBC, which is reeling from the resignation of George Entwistle and the scandals prompting his ouster.

Entwistle resigned on Saturday night amid a storm of controversy after a news program wrongly implicated a British politician in a child sex-abuse scandal.

The blunder had deepened a crisis sparked by revelations the broadcaster decided not to air similar allegations against one of its own stars, DJ and presenter Jimmy Savile who died last year aged 84 and may have abused as many as 300 victims over a 40-year period.

Patten told the BBC on Sunday he will not resign, saying he must ensure the publicly-funded broadcaster "has a grip" and gets back on track.

"My job is to make sure that ... we restore confidence and trust in the BBC," he said, and called for a "thorough, radical structural overhaul".

The scandal comes at a sensitive time for Britain's media establishment, struggling to recover from an ongoing phone-hacking scandal which brought down the nation's best-selling Sunday newspaper, led to the arrests of dozens of journalists and prompted a judge-led inquiry into journalistic ethics and the ties between politics and the news media.

Kevin Marsh, a former senior editor of the BBC, said the resignation does little to re-establish public trust in the BBC, which is funded mainly by a tax on UK households that have televisions.

"The BBC asks the British public to pay its bills every year, and the only way it can do that is if the British public trusts the way it is spending its money," he said.

Entwistle took over as head of the BBC two months ago from Mark Thompson, who will become chief executive of The New York Times Co. this month.

The broadcaster was emerging from a difficult period marked by budget cuts, job losses and mounting calls to justify its 3.5 billion pound ($A5.40 billion) budget.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More

Order implicated in abuse scandal

A PSYCHOLOGIST who met dozens of child abuse victims claims three quarters of the Brothers from the St John of God order were suspected to be involved in the scandal.

Michelle Mulvihill has also told Fairfax that Catholic Archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell helped in negotiations for a loan for the order that was later used to pay victims.

The Sydney-based psychologist was employed by the order for nine years, from 1998, to sit in on meetings between victims and representatives from the order. She left the job because of fears suspected pedophiles had too much power in the order.

Fairfax also reported that according to Dr Mulvihill, the order hid documents and did not properly supervise suspected pedophile Brothers.

She said of the 40 to 50 Brothers in the order at the time she was there, around 75 per cent had been subject to allegations.

Dr Mulvihill said the order included Brothers who had carried out "the worst examples of child abuse I have ever heard of", Fairfax reported.

There have been calls for a royal commission into sexual abuse by religious groups.

NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell has already announced a special commission to investigate allegations of child sex abuse by Catholic Church clergy in the Hunter region.


22.24 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger