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Man charged after 200km/h pursuit

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 02 Februari 2013 | 22.24

A DRINK driver has been charged with evading police after he was caught travelling at more than 200km/h in western Victoria.

Police pursued the man on the Western Highway at Stawell, 230 kilometres west of Melbourne, after the allegedly stolen car he was driving was detected speeding around 9.30am (AEDT) on Saturday.

Police abandoned the pursuit, but the man was spotted at Waubra two hours later and stopped with police spikes, and arrested.

Glenroy man Toufic Tlais, 30, was charged with negligent driving while pursued by police, dangerous driving, theft of a motor vehicle, theft of petrol, exceeding the speed limit and other traffic offences.

He was remanded in custody to appear in Ballarat Magistrates Court on Monday.


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French gay marriage law clears hurdle

FRANCE'S National Assembly has overwhelmingly approved the first and most important article of a controversial law that will allow gay couples to get married and adopt children.

Deputies voted 249-97 in favour of article one of the draft legislation, which redefines marriage as being an agreement between two people rather than necessarily between a man and a woman.

Although the proposed law still faces at least another week of parliamentary scrutiny before a final vote scheduled for February 12, the ease with which it cleared the first hurdle indicated it is almost certain to emerge unscathed from the debate.

The article approved on Saturday was supported by deputies of the ruling Socialist Party, who enjoy an overall majority in the Assembly, other leftists and Greens as well as at least one member of the UMP, the main centre-right opposition force.

"We are happy and proud to have taken this first step," Justice Minister Christiane Taubira said. "We are going to establish the freedom for everyone t o choose his or her partner for a future together."

UMP deputy Philippe Gosselin said the government was forcing through legislation that France did not want.

"Today it is marriage and adoption. Tomorrow it will be medically assisted conception and surrogate mothers," he said in comments that reflected the strength of feeling among opponents of the government's plans.

Opinion polls suggest a clear majority of French voters support the right of gay couples to wed and a narrower majority favour them being granted the right to adopt as couples (gay men and women can already adopt as individuals if approved by social services).

Massive demonstrations across the country have underlined that those who oppose gay marriage feel very strongly about the issue and President Francois Hollande has been accused of pushing the legislation through without proper consultation.

The Catholic church has been heavily involved in mobilising opposition and protests were scheduled to take place again on Saturday in towns and cities across France.


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Illegal fireworks blamed for road collapse

A TRUCK that exploded and caused an elevated stretch of highway to collapse in central China, killing 10 people, was loaded with holiday fireworks that were illegally produced and transported, authorities say.

Local authorities have shut down the company that made the fireworks, Hongsheng Fireworks Manufacturing Co Ltd, and detained four company officials following Friday's blast, state media reported on Saturday.

It remained unclear what set off the fireworks as they were shipped eastward on a major highway through Henan province. State-run China Central Television said witnesses believed a collision caused by heavy smog might have triggered the blast, which occurred about 90 kilometres west of the ancient city of Luoyang.

The Ministry of Public Security said Hongsheng, based in the neighbouring province of Shaanxi, had illegally produced the explosives, packaged them in disguise and contracted with a trucking company unlicensed to handle hazardous commodities.

It said the factory had failed to check the credentials of the trucking company's personnel.

The state-run China News said the explosives had been declared as general commodities.

Preliminary investigations blamed the explosion for the collapse of the 80-metre stretch of the elevated highway in Mianchi county, sending trucks and sedan cars plummeting 24 metres to the ground, according to a statement by the provincial government of Henan.

Most of those who were killed died from the fall, CCTV said. Eleven people were injured.

Photos by state media and television footage showed hunks of concrete, overturned trucks and crumpled cars in the debris. In one photo, a truck's back wheels were perched at the edge of a shorn-off section of the highway.

"It was horrible. It was horrible," survivor Hou Chunlin murmured from his hospital bed in an interview by CCTV.


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Palestinians evicted from West Bank camp

PALESTINIANS and activists have been forcefully removed from a new camp near a West Bank village, after a third attempt at the novel form of protest against Jewish settlement.

An AFP correspondent said the army used tear gas and violence on Saturday to remove hundreds of people who had set up four temporary huts and three tents near Burin, south of Nablus in the northern West Bank.

The correspondent added that journalists were also forcefully removed from the site. He said the army made arrests, but was not aware of injuries.

A spokesman for the army was unaware of the eviction, but said there was "a violent and illegal riot taking place near Burin. Approximately 150 Palestinians were gathering and hurling rocks at IDF (Israel Defence Forces) soldiers, who are responding with riot dispersal means."

Earlier in the day, residents and activists set up what they called "the neighbourhood ... Al-Manatir", activist Abir Kopty told AFP.

According to Kopty, the name means "the traditional stone huts Palestinians built in their agricultural lands, which were used as shelter for the watchmen of the fields".

"Burin lost a lot of its land to the settlements around, Har Bracha and others, and is subject to settlers' terror and attacks on the people," she said.

She noted that settlers had thrown stones at village residents and activists from afar before the army got involved. The correspondent said that after the eviction, one of the structures was taken away by a group of them.

An Israeli officer had threatened AFP photographer Jaafar Ashtiye as he documented Saturday's events that he would be arrested at his home during the night.

A military spokesman said in response to an AFP call that such remarks were inappropriate, and that he would investigate the allegation.


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Scandal-hit Spain PM denies graft claims

SPAIN'S Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has denied allegations that he received undeclared payments from his ruling party, as he sought to douse a major corruption scandal.

Rajoy vowed on Saturday not to resign despite the publication of documents purportedly showing secret payments to him and other top party officials, branding the damaging reports "harassment".

He promised to publish full details of his income and assets, speaking at an emergency meeting of his conservative Popular Party as angry demonstrators outside called for him to step down.

"I have never received nor distributed undeclared money," he said, adding that he would publish online "statements of income, patrimony and any information necessary" to refute the allegations.

"I commit myself personally and all of my party to maximum transparency."

Rajoy, 57, was speaking out for the first time since being named in the scandal which struck at a tense time as the government imposes tough spending cuts on Spaniards suffering in a recession.

Last year he defied speculation that the country would need a financial bailout only for the political scandal to erupt in the new year.

Leading centre-left newspaper El Pais on Thursday published account ledgers purportedly showing that donations were channelled into secret payments to him and other top party officials.

The newspaper said the alleged fund was made up of donations, mostly from construction companies, adding that such payments would be legal as long as they were fully declared to the taxman.

Rajoy said the ledgers were false.

The allegations fuelled anger among Spaniards suffering in a recession that has thrown millions out of work.

"We must not allow Spaniards, of whom we are demanding sacrifice to think that we do not observe the strictest ethical rigour," Rajoy said.

Protesters say ordinary Spaniards are being made to pay for an economic crisis brought on by the collapse of a construction boom which many blame on corrupt politicians and unscrupulous banks.

As Rajoy spoke, demonstrators yelling "Thieves!" gathered near the party headquarters, kept at some distance by police barriers.

An online petition at change.org calling for Rajoy to resign, launched on Thursday, had gathered nearly 650,000 signatures by Saturday afternoon.


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Iran rial hits all-time dollar low

IRAN'S currency has plummeted to an all-time low, registering a more than 21 per cent drop in a span of two weeks against the US dollar, currency tracking websites and money changers say.

The rial was traded at between 39,000 and 40,000 per US dollar on the open market on Saturday, down from about 33,000 two weeks ago, according to money changers contacted by AFP.

It had briefly dropped in late January to 37,000 per US dollar amid rumours that central bank head Mahmoud Bahmani could be sacked because of his failure to shore up the rial.

The devaluation comes with Iran facing a growing shortage of foreign cash because of international sanctions against its central bank and vital oil sector over its disputed nuclear program.

Uncertainty over stalled negotiations with the UN's atomic watchdog agency and world powers over the nuclear standoff has added to controversy over the rial, according to local media.

The currency was traded at 12,000 in late 2011, prior to the introduction of tough Western sanctions on Iran's oil and banking sectors.

The official US dollar rate in Iran has been fixed for several months at 12,260 rials, but is reserved for official government business. Parallel to the open market, another rate of 24,550 rials is reserved for a few companies importing food or other goods judged essential.

Iran is suffering from heightened geopolitical tensions over its nuclear ambitions and the effects of draconian Western measures curbing access to its reduced oil exports.

The West fears Iran's atomic program is aimed at developing nuclear weapons, but Tehran insists that its activities are peaceful.

In addition to Western sanctions, some analysts and politicians blame the government for what they call mismanagement and failure to feed the market with sufficient foreign currency, stoking the currency plunge and high inflation.

The government, meanwhile, has promised to take measures to support the rial but so far there has been no sign of the pressure on Iran's currency easing.


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ALP vice-president savages NSW Right

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 01 Februari 2013 | 22.24

SENIOR Labor figure Tony Sheldon has launched a scathing attack on one of the party's factions and says the organisation is in a potentially catastrophic situation.

Mr Sheldon, who is the secretary of the Transport Workers Union and Labor's national vice-president, launched the critique in a speech to the Young Labor National Right Conference in Canberra on Friday.

He said the scandal-plagued NSW Right faction was bringing the rest of the party down.

"Like cockroaches, B-grade politicians are able to thrive on the corruption and detritus that lies under the dishwasher," Mr Sheldon said.

Labor had steadily lost its political compass in recent years, he said.

"Our crisis is more than just a crisis of trust brought on by the corrupt behaviour of property scammers and lobbyists," Mr Sheldon said.

"It's a crisis of belief brought on by a lack of moral and political purpose.

"The memory of what we once stood for is starting to fade."

AAP pbc/goc/rs


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Cabinet shuffle expected as Evans resigns

THE Gillard government faces a major cabinet reshuffle following senior federal Labor MP Chris Evans' decision to resign from the ministry.

News of the Senate leader's departure comes just two days after Prime Minister Julia Gillard called the 2013 federal election for September 14.

Senator Evans, the minister for tertiary education, skills, science and research, will formally announce his resignation in Canberra on Saturday, according to media reports on Friday night.

Uncertainty surrounds Senator Evans' future in parliament. The ABC reports he is expected to quit his portfolios immediately and stay on in the Senate for only two more months, although there are three years left to his term.

Senator Evans' WA Senate colleague, Mark Bishop, told AAP the senator's Perth colleagues had been aware for "some time" that the commute to Canberra was taking its toll.

"I think the actual timing is a surprise," he said on Friday night.

"Chris has been commenting to people for some time that he is tired."

He said the resignation could have serious organisational and political "consequences" for Labor in WA.

"Chris had access to everyone who was important in Western Australia ... the government will lose that inside edge," Senator Bishop said.

Appearing on ABC television on Friday night, Labor MP David Bradbury said he was unsure that Senator Evans was stepping down.

"What I would say about Chris is that Chris has been a wonderful member of the team, leading our team in the Senate," he said.

Christopher Pyne, manager of opposition business in the House, said Senator Evans' resignation "spoke volumes" about the state of federal Labor nearly eight months from the election.

"The information that I have is that Chris Evans has resigned not because of ill health, which was my first thought, but because he's just had enough," Mr Pyne said.

"And for the Senate leader and a cabinet minister to decide that he's just had enough speaks volumes for a dysfunctional Labor government."

He said he believed more resignations would follow.

"I don't want to speculate that this might be part of a (Kevin) Rudd push for the leadership, but it seems particularly odd that two days after the prime minister has fired the starter gun for an election campaign, her Senate leader has resigned, Craig Thomson has been charged with 149 offences, and one would have to say that the election campaign has got off to a very rocky start," he said.

News Limited speculated that Immigration Minister Chris Bowen was likely to be moved into the higher education and skills portfolio.

It also suggested Housing Minister Brendan O'Connor may take the immigration portfolio, while Stephen Conroy was believed to be keen to succeed Senator Evans as government leader of the Senate.

AAP understands Victorian senator Kim Carr may also put his hand up for the job.

A spokeswoman for Senator Conroy, who is the government's deputy Senate leader, said she could not confirm he would move to take the reins from Senator Evans.

A spokesman for Mr Bowen said he was unable to comment on the expected resignation or any cabinet reshuffle.

Senator Evans, first elected to the Senate in 1993, supported Ms Gillard in the leadership contest with Mr Rudd in February last year.

Mark Riley of Seven Network tweeted that Senator Evans had informed Ms Gillard of his decision last week.


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French leader Hollande to visit Mali

PRESIDENT Francois Hollande prepared to visit Mali as French-led troops worked to secure the last Islamist stronghold in the north after a lightning offensive against the extremists.

Hollande will visit Mali on Saturday with Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian and Development Minister Pascal Canin, his office said, three weeks after French troops launched a surprise intervention against Islamists in its former colony.

The trip comes as troops are gathered on Friday at the gates of Kidal, a sandy northeastern outpost that is the last rebel stronghold in the poor west African country, poised to secure the town after capturing its airport on Wednesday.

The French-led campaign has claimed a rapid succession of victories in key Islamist strongholds where citizens greeted troops with euphoria.

In the fabled city of Timbuktu, a school reopened on Friday for the first time since a March coup in Bamako which paved the way for the Islamists to seize towns across northern Mali, taking control of an area as large as Texas.

"When the Islamists took control they wanted to re-open the school, but on their terms: a different curriculum, lessons in Arabic, girls separated from boys and forced to wear veils. We refused," said teacher Aichatou Amadou.

But the joy of citizens throwing off the yoke of brutal Islamist rule, where they were denied music and television and threatened with whippings, amputations or execution, has been accompanied by a grim backlash against light-skinned citizens seen as supporters of the al Qaeda-linked radicals.

Rights groups have reported summary executions by both the Malian army and the Islamists.

Human Rights Watch detailed the killing of at least 13 suspected Islamist supporters in the central garrison town of Sevare.

The victims were shot and dumped into wells, said the watchdog, a report corroborated by other rights groups.

These abuses took place as the Islamists seized Konna, north of Sevare, in a push into government-held territory which sparked France's surprise intervention on January 11 amid fears the entire country could become a haven for terrorists.

In Konna, another five people were "disappeared", their relatives and neighbours told Human Rights Watch.

"Malian authorities have turned a blind eye to these very disturbing crimes," said senior West Africa researcher Corinne Dufka, calling for an investigation.


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Turkish guard killed in US embassy blast

A TURKISH security guard has been killed and several people wounded in a suicide bombing at the entrance to the highly-fortified US embassy in Ankara, officials say.

The force of the blast on Friday damaged nearby buildings in the upmarket Cankaya neighbourhood of the capital where many other state institutions and embassies are also located.

"There were two dead in the suicide bombing, a Turkish security guard and the bomber himself," Ankara governor Alaattin Yuksel told reporters, adding that a woman was also among the wounded.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Turkey has witnessed many bloody attacks in the past blamed on Kurdish militants or al-Qaeda linked groups.

The US ambassador, Francis Ricciardone, confirmed the death of the guard and vowed to work with Turkey to fight terror.

"We are very sad of course, we lost one of our Turkish guards at the gate.... The compound is secure, we all feel very safe thanks to your response," he told reporters.

"We will continue to fight terrorism together. From today's event it is clear we both suffer from this terrible terror problem. We are determined ... only more to collaborate together until we defeat this problem."

NTV television reported that a suicide attacker detonated a bomb at the security roadblock near the entrance to the embassy's visa section, where dozens of people wait every day.

"At approximately 13.15 (2215 AEDT) on February 1, there was an explosion at the US embassy. Appropriate measures have been taken by the Turkish National Police who are now investigating the incident," the US embassy said in a statement.

"The US embassy would like to thank the Turkish government, the media, and members of the public for their expressions of solidarity and outrage over the incident."

Police have cordoned off the area around the embassies, and ambulances were seen on standby amid fears the number of casualties could rise.

Television footage showed an injured woman with a blood-stained face being carried into an ambulance on a stretcher.

Predominantly Muslim Turkey is a close US ally and a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation.

The blast comes barely a week after NATO declared that a battery of US-made Patriot missiles went operational on Turkey's border with war-torn Syria on Saturday.

Turkey, led by Prime Minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan, has become a fierce critic of the regime of President Bashar al-Assad since the uprising erupted in March 2011.


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US bunker standoff enters third day

MORE than three days after he allegedly shot dead a school bus driver, grabbed a five-year-old child and slipped into an underground bunker in the rural US, Jimmy Lee Dykes is showing no signs of turning himself over to police.

Hostage negotiators spoke into a narrow ventilation pipe leading into the bunker, trying to talk the 65-year-old, said to hold anti-government views, into freeing the boy.

One local official said on Friday the child had been crying for his parents.

Dykes, described by neighbours as threatening and violent, is accused of pulling the boy at random from the bus on Tuesday and killing the driver who tried to protect the 21 children aboard.

The gunman and the boy were holed up in a small underground room on his property that authorities likened to a tornado shelter, not uncommon in the rural South.

A state legislator said the shelter has electricity, food and TV, and there were signs that the standoff along a dirt road could continue for some time.

James Arrington, police chief of the neighbouring town of Pinckard, said the captor has been sleeping and told negotiators that he has spent long periods in the shelter before.

"He will have to give up sooner or later because (authorities) are not leaving," Arrington said. "It's pretty small, but he's been known to stay in there eight days."

Midland City Mayor Virgil Skipper said he has visited the boy's parents.

"He's crying for his parents," Skipper said. "They are holding up good. They are praying and asking all of us to pray with them."

Politician Steve Clouse said the boy's mother told him her child has Asperger's syndrome, an autism-like disorder, as well as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD. Police have been delivering medication to him through the pipe, he said.

No motive has been discussed by investigators, but the police chief said the FBI had evidence suggesting it could be considered a hate crime. Federal authorities have not released any details about the standoff or the investigation.


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Santander writes off Spanish assets

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 31 Januari 2013 | 22.24

SPANISH bank Santander says its net profit plunged almost 60 per cent in 2012 as it wrote off nearly 19 billion euros ($A24.94 billion) in dodgy loans and property assets.

However, the charges left Santander's balance sheet looking more secure.

Santander is the biggest bank in the Eurozone by market value.

The group said on Thursday it made 12.7 billion euros in provisions for non-performing loans and another 6.1 billion euros for Spanish real estate exposure - 18.8 billion euros in total.

A property market collapse in 2008 left Spain's banks awash with bad loans and destroyed millions of jobs.

The banking sector as a whole is expected to book more than 80 billion euros in new provisions on their 2012 accounts under a Spanish government drive to clean up their books.

The provisions in 2012 left Santander with 73 per cent of its bad loans covered, up from 61 per cent previously. They also allowed the bank to meet new Spanish legislation requiring better coverage of real estate exposure.

The bank said net profit dropped 59 per cent from the level the previous year to 2.2 billion euros ($A2.89 billion) in 2012, after declining by 35 per cent in 2011.

Without the huge charges, Santander said it would have boosted net profit by about 2 per cent to 23.6 billion euros.

"Profits reached a turning point in 2012," chairman Emilio Botin said in a statement.

"In 2013, with the exceptional write-offs behind us, we should see a marked increase in earnings based on the group's recurrent revenues and cost control," he said.

Net interest income in 2012 rose 3.6 per cent to 30.2 billion euros while gross income climbed 2.2 per cent to 43.7 billion euros.

Spain last year won agreement for a rescue loan of up to 100 billion euros from the Eurozone to finance a banking sector clean-up.

Four Spanish banks and a so-called bad bank that has taken over many risky loans have received 39.5 billion euros so far from the European Union credit.

Santander and another bank BBVA are among the few that have not asked for outside aid.

Santander said its doubtful loans rose to 4.54 per cent of total loans in 2012 from 3.89 per cent a year earlier.

In Spain, the bad loan ratio was higher - at 6.74 per cent compared to 5.49 per cent a year earlier - but well below the industry average, the bank emphasised.

Santander said the global spread of its business allowed it to resist the headwinds in Europe.

Latin America provided 50 per cent of its profits - Brazil alone 26 per cent - while Spain accounted for 15 per cent, Britain 13 per cent and the United States 10 per cent.


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Police charge man with west Sydney murder

A 26-YEAR-OLD man has been charged with murdering a 66-year-old woman in Sydney's west.

Police said they were called to a home in Lucas Street, Emu Plains, where they found the woman unconscious and suffering head wounds, about 10am on Thursday.

The woman later died in hospital, police said in a statement.

Police at the hospital arrested the 26-year-old, who they say knew the woman, and charged him with murder.

He was refused bail and will front Parramatta Local Court on Friday.


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US stocks fall on weak earnings reports

FACEBOOK shares have fallen nearly six per cent on opening, leading the markets lower in starting trade also hit by poor earnings from Dow Chemical.

Six minutes into trade on Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 27.41 points, or 0.2 per cent, to 13,883.01.

The broad-based S&P 500 dropped 9.5 points, or 0.63 per cent, to 1,498.34.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 2.05 points, or 0.07 per cent, to 3,140.26.

The drop in shares came as social networking giant Facebook reported a big fall in year-over-year earnings and signalled higher costs as it invests in data centres.

Dow and UPS also came in with weak results, each reporting quarterly losses.

The results followed Wednesday's US economic report that showed the economy contracted by 0.1 per cent in the fourth quarter last year.


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HRW condemns Russian rights crackdown

HUMAN Rights Watch has condemned the Russian authorities under President Vladimir Putin for unleashing the toughest crackdown against civil society since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.

The repressions against critics come after Putin returned to the Kremlin for a third term in May in the face of unprecedented protests against his 13-year rule.

The crackdown caps a decade of "soft" authoritarianism and unleashes a new era where Kremlin critics and rights activists are openly harassed and freedoms further eroded, the New York-based group says.

"The Kremlin in 2012 unleashed the worst political crackdown in Russia's post-Soviet history," the rights watchdog said in an English-language statement released in Moscow accompanying the release of its annual world report on Thursday.

"This (2012) has been the worst year for human rights in Russia in recent memory," the rights group quoted Hugh Williamson, its Europe and Central Asia director, as saying.

"Measures to intimidate critics and restrict Russia's vibrant civil society have reached unprecedented levels."

After returning to the Kremlin for a third term despite unprecedented protests against his 13-year rule, Putin signed off on a raft of laws in what critics saw as a bid to quash dissent.

The new legislation re-criminalised slander, raised fines for misdemeanours at opposition protests and forced non-governmental organisations that receive foreign funding to carry a "foreign agent" tag in a move seen as a throwback to Soviet times.

Human Rights Watch gave a scathing assessment of Putin's predecessor Dmitry Medvedev, calling his much-touted efforts at modernisation "few, timid advances on political freedoms".

The New York-based group also criticised Russia's preparations for the 2014 Olympic Games, saying authorities took away homes from hundreds of families in the resort town of Sochi, which will host the world's premier winter event.


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US weekly jobless claims rise

NEW claims for US unemployment insurance benefits rose last week but were still in line with an improving trend in the jobs market, government figures show.

Initial jobless claims, a sign of the pace of layoffs, rose by 38,000 to 368,000 in the week ending January 26, the Labor Department reported on Thursday.

The increase was well above the 345,000 claims expected by economists.

Claims had declined in the prior two weeks as the jobs market slowly improves.

The four-week moving average, which also had fallen for two straight weeks to its lowest level since March 2008, rose by a mere 250 claims last week to 352,000.

Claims hovered in the 370,000 range for most of 2012.

The latest reading came ahead of Friday's highly anticipated January jobs report but the numbers were not part of the data used to prepare the report.

Analysts expect the US jobless rate ticked down to 7.7 per cent in January from 7.8 per cent in December.


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US consumer spending flat in December

US consumers held tight to their wallets in December, the key holiday shopping season, despite a rise in incomes, according to Commerce Department data.

Household spending edged up 0.2 per cent from November, only half the growth of the prior month and slightly below the consensus estimate of 0.3 per cent.

Consumer spending, the main driver of the US economy, slowed in late 2012 amid the government's looming fiscal cliff of automatic tax hikes and spending cuts set for January 1, which was partly avoided in a last-minute political deal.

Meanwhile, personal incomes rose for the eighth straight month in December, rising a much stronger-than-expected 2.6 per cent from the prior month.

The income increase was boosted by accelerated payments of bonuses and other forms of "irregular" pay in anticipation of changes in individual income tax rates, as well as lump-sum payments of social security benefits, the department said.

In the partial fiscal cliff deal, political leaders allowed Bush-era payroll tax cuts on social security benefits to expire and lifted taxes in other areas.

With inflation weak in a tepid economy, the December price index for consumer spending was essentially flat, while so-called real disposable income - excluding price changes - rose 2.8 per cent.


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US economy shrinks 0.1 per cent

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 30 Januari 2013 | 22.24

THE US economy shrank from October through December for the first time since the recession ended, hurt by the biggest cut in defence spending in 40 years, fewer exports and sluggish growth in company stockpiles.

The Commerce Department says the economy contracted at an annual rate of 0.1 per cent in the fourth quarter. That's a sharp slowdown from the 3.1 per cent growth rate in the July-September quarter.

The surprise contraction could raise fears about the economy's ability to handle tax increases that took effect in January and looming spending cuts.

Still, the weakness may be because of one-time factors. Government spending cuts and slower inventory growth subtracted a total of 2.6 percentage points from growth. Both are volatile. And they offset faster growth in consumer spending, business investment and housing.


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France in 'final phase' of Mali advance

FRANCE is entering the final phase of its military intervention in Mali after a lightning advance that quickly exposed the weakness of Islamist rebels holding the country's north, experts say.

But while the rebels may be on the run, they still pose a threat and much work remains to be done to flush them out of a vast cross-border desert region.

French forces on Wednesday entered Kidal, the last major town in their drive to rout Islamist fighters from northern Mali, days after the French-led capture of Gao and Timbuktu in a three-week offensive.

With the Islamists being driven from all their major strongholds, Paris is now hoping to wind down its intervention and hand the struggle over to African troops.

Experts said the speed of the French advance into Mali's north -- Kidal is nearly 1,500 kilometres northeast of the capital Bamako -- has put paid to concerns that France was facing a potentially long and difficult battle against the rebels.

"Those who had exaggerated the Islamist danger in Mali were severely mistaken," said Eric Denece, director of the French Centre for Intelligence Research, a think tank.

"After a few days of fighting they became aware of their weaknesses and hit the road," he said.

Islamist groups took advantage of the chaos following a military coup in Bamako in March to seize the country's north.

France swept to Mali's aid on January 11 after the Islamists advanced south toward the capital, sparking fears the entire country would fall into their grasp and become a haven for extremist militants like Taliban-era Afghanistan.

Backed by air strikes and helicopter gunship raids, some 2,900 French troops were involved in the intervention, handling the bulk of the fighting alongside Mali's own military.

"It is great tactical success for the French army to reach Kidal less than 20 days after the first air strikes, in an operation with enormous logistical distances and in coordination with the Malian army," Denece said.

Military sources said the move into Kidal was aimed at keeping up momentum after the weekend's successes in the north's other main cities.

"Since the weekend and the reconquest of Gao and Timbuktu along the curve of the Niger river, we had the upper hand and had to keep it," said a senior French officer, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Experts said France's military role was now likely to diminish, though lack of cash and equipment has hampered the deployment of nearly 6,000 west African troops under the African-led force for Mali (AFISMA) that is expected to take over from the French army.

"After having taken the cities, we will now have to hold the ground and dislodge the... armed groups from this huge area, and that will be the role of the African forces," said a former French intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"We are entering the final phase," French defence expert Pascal Le Pautremat said. "Now what is needed is to enter into negotiations with the Tuaregs, who are disposed to working with France and Mali."

Le Pautremat said the Islamists had depots of arms and fuel in the desert and would prove difficult to hunt down, but that comparisons should not be made with Taliban strongholds in the high mountains of Afghanistan.

More important, experts said, is the rebels' ability to move without difficulty across the region's porous borders, making it easier for them to evade pursuers and obtain weapons and fuel.

"The real issue is the need for strong cooperation between different countries in the region -- Mali, Chad, Niger and Algeria -- in the fight against Islamist groups," he said.


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Russia upholds ban on Pussy Riot videos

RUSSIA has moved to ban videos by Pussy Riot punks as extremist after a court rejected a complaint by a freed member of the band, paving the way for the possible blocking of websites.

The judge at the Moscow City Court decided not to examine a complaint challenging a previous ruling by freed band member Yekaterina Samutsevich, the Interfax news agency reported.

That left no further legal challenges to a November ruling by a Moscow district court that found four of the group's videos to be extremist.

It is an offence to distribute or publish anything from the Russian Justice Ministry's blacklist of extremist materials, but it is not yet clear how the ban will be implemented.

Two Pussy Riot members, Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, are serving two-year terms in prison camp for a performance critical of President Vladimir Putin in a Moscow cathedral.

Samutsevich's sentence was suspended because guards grabbed her before she could participate.

The banned videos, published on five different websites, include one showing the women's performance in Moscow's Church of Christ the Saviour. A video of this has been viewed on YouTube almost 2.5 million times.

Google, which owns YouTube, said after the November ruling that it could only decide on whether to block video materials when given copies of court documents listing specific links.

"Pussy Riot's case will go on," Samutsevich said defiantly after the hearing, cited by Russian news agencies.

A documentary film about Pussy Riot won a special jury prize at the Sundance Film Festival this month.


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House prices jump in December quarter

HOUSE prices across every Australian capital city have risen for the first time in nearly three years, with Sydney's housing market still the most expensive in the country.

The Australian Property Monitors (APM) December Quarterly House Price Report shows the national median house price rose 1.9 per cent over the last quarter in 2012 and 2.1 per cent across the year.

The last time all capital cities recorded house price increases was in March 2010.

The cost of units also jumped 1.6 per cent over the quarter and 2.4 per cent annually.

Perth was 2012's standout performer, with its median house price jumping 6.1 per cent over the year to $560,780.

But it was Sydney that broke new ground in the back-end of last year, with median house and unit prices reaching a record $656,415 and $475,314 respectively.

It followed a 3.4 per cent annual house price increase and 5.6 per cent rise for units.

Melbourne housing market showed more restraint, with house prices up just 0.5 per cent over the year despite a 2.4 per cent jump in the last quarter.

Adelaide has again edged out Brisbane as the most affordable mainland capital in Australia, posting a median house price of $432,309 compared to the Queensland capital's $433,302 average in the year to December.

The city of churches also boasts the country's cheapest apartments, after Hobart experienced a 20.2 per cent surge in its unit prices over the 12 months.

However, Hobart remains the overall most affordable capital for homebuyers with a median house price of $322,420.

APM senior economist Dr Andrew Wilson said while local factors still predominate housing markets, record low interest rates have boosted confidence.

A rising sharemarket and improved international outlook was promising for the local market, he added.

"Looking ahead, activity will depend on the direction of local economies as it is no coincidence that the better performing housing markets in 2012 reflected better performing economies," Dr Wilson said.

"The general economic landscape and prospects remain optimistic, which is unequivocal good news for Australia's recovering housing markets."

APM is a national supplier of property price information to banks, real estate agents, property developers, government agencies, media organisations and consumers.


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Boeing Q4 sales strong but earnings not

US aerospace giant Boeing reported a sharp fourth quarter fall in earnings as expected on Wednesday, as tax costs surged from a year earlier but operating earnings gained on strong sales growth.

Meanwhile, the company's chief executive said the company was focused on solving the battery problem that grounded its newest aircraft, the 787 Dreamliner, worldwide.

"Our first order of business for 2013 is to resolve the battery issue on the 787 and return the airplanes safely to service with our customers," said Boeing chairman and CEO Jim McNerney.

Net earnings for the quarter came in at $US978 million ($A939.35 million), compared to $1.39 billion a year earlier, when earnings were buoyed by a favourable one-off tax settlement.

But sales jumped 16.7 per cent to $19.79 billion, and net earnings before tax gained 6.3 per cent to $1.54 billion from the year-earlier quarter.

Earnings per share came in at $1.28 compared to $1.84 a year earlier; "core" earnings per share, after the tax gain of a year earlier is stripped out, were $1.46, well above analysts' forecasts.

For the full year Boeing net earnings came in at $3.9 billion, down from $4.0 billion in 2011. While total revenues grew nearly $13 billion to $81.7 billion, operating and production costs rose faster, keeping net gains flat.

But core earnings per share were $5.88, better than the $5.01 analysts had predicted.

The company said that after delivering more than 600 aircraft last year, it had a record backlog of orders worth $390 billion going into 2013, both for civilian aircraft and in the defence and security sector.

"We remain focused on our ongoing priorities of profitable ramp up in commercial aeroplane production, successful execution of our development programs, and continued growth in core, adjacent and international defence and space markets," said McNerney.

The company still faces the challenge of the 787 grounding after two planes were hit by still-mysterious battery problems, one a fire. That has forced the company to halt deliveries of the aircraft, though production continues at a five-unit a month pace.

Boeing nevertheless forecast revenues in 2013 to grow slightly to $82-85 billion, leaving basic earnings per share in the range of $5.01-5.20. But it said that core earnings per share should improve to $6.10-6.30.


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Egypt opposition urge talks amid violence

EGYPTIAN opposition leaders are calling for urgent talks on the political crisis gripping the country, as a fresh eruption of violence killed two more people in Cairo.

Mohamed ElBaradei, a leading figure in the National Salvation Front, called for the talks just two days after the opposition had rejected Islamist President Mohamed Morsi's call for dialogue.

"We want an immediate meeting between the president, the ministers of defence and interior, the ruling party, the Salafist movement and the National Salvation Front to take urgent measures to end the violence and begin a serious dialogue," ElBaradei said in a tweet.

Former Arab League chief Amr Mussa, another NSF leader, said "the serious current situation" required the acceptance of dialogue "in order to stop the confrontations and the violence."

It was not immediately clear whether this represented a step back by the NSF, which had been demanding the formation of a national salvation government and the amendment of the Islamist-drafted constitution, before agreeing to any talks.

But Khaled Dawoud, spokesman for ElBaradei's Al-Dustur party, said ElBaradei's Twitter statement was a "denial of all the claims by the presidency that we reject dialogue.

"We are looking for a way out of this (crisis) because we're extremely worried."

The latest round of unrest began with protests marking the second anniversary of the Egyptian uprising on Friday, and took a violent turn a day later after a court sentenced 21 residents of Port Said to death over football related violence last year.

Anger on the streets has been directed primarily at Morsi, who is accused of betraying the revolution that brought him to power and of consolidating power in the hands of his Muslim Brotherhood.

The protests have also underscored long-standing tensions between protesters and the police, a force long accused of abuse.

In Cairo, two people were killed near Tahrir Square on Wednesday. Their identities were not immediately known, but medics said they had both been hit by buckshot.

Their deaths bring to four the number of people killed in Cairo and to 54 nationwide since violence erupted late on Thursday, prompting Egypt's defence minister to warn that the crisis could lead to the collapse of the state.

"The continuing conflict between political forces and their differences concerning the management of the country could lead to a collapse of the state and threaten future generations," General Abdel Fattah al-Sissi said on Tuesday.

Most of the deaths have been in Port Said, where clashes erupted on Saturday after a court issued death sentences against 21 supporters of local football club Al-Masry for their role in deadly riots last year.

Meanwhile, the NSF indicated that some of its leaders would meet during the day with representatives of the main Salafist party, Al-Nour, in response to an invitation from the ultra-conservative Islamist group to discuss the "deterioration of the situation."

As the call for talks was made, Morsi was in Berlin for talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel on a visit that had been shortened from two days to just a few hours because of the unrest at home.

The visit, Morsi's first to Germany since he was elected in June, will centre on bilateral cooperation as well as the situation in Egypt, state news agency MENA said.

MENA said he is to meet with business people as well as Merkel.

Hours before Morsi's arrival, Germany's foreign minister warned that German financial aid to Egypt is contingent upon democratic progress.

Morsi took over last year from an interim military administration in charge since the February 2011 overthrow of Hosni Mubarak, who ruled the country for three decades.


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Suicide bomber kills 2 at Somali PM's home

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Januari 2013 | 22.24

A SUICIDE bomber has detonated explosives outside the prime minister's home in Somalia's presidential palace compound, killing two people, an official says.

The man blew himself up on Tuesday morning when he was questioned by soldiers manning a checkpoint in the palace complex known as Villa Somalia, said Mohamed Ali, a police officer at the official residence in Mogadishu, the capital.

Villa Somalia has a large compound with several buildings and checkpoints. The bomber was four more checkpoints away from President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's home, Ali said. The president is said to be out of the country on state business.

The checkpoint where the blast took place is near the home of Prime Minister's Abdi Farah Shirdon which is also in the compound, according to officials.

Shirdon was at home but was not harmed, according to an official from the palace who insisted on anonymity because he is not authorised to speak with the press.

Shirdon later released a statement read by Somalia's information minister saying one soldier was killed in the attack and the attacker is believed to be an operative of the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab insurgent group.

"This inhumane and barbaric attack shows once again the cruel twisted ideology of killing and destruction by the al-Shabab," Shirdon said.

However, a military officer at the palace, Yusuf Abdi, said two soldiers died and three others were wounded in the explosion, backing what Ali had said.

"He killed two people and himself on the spot, his evil attempt has failed," Ali said.

Al-Shabab has opposed President Mohamud's election and government, saying it had been manipulated by western powers.

The president survived an assassination attempt on his second day in office in September when two suicide bombers blew themselves up while trying to gain access to a heavily guarded hotel serving as his temporary residence.


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Two workers missing in Qld flood zone

TWO men are still missing days after they failed to turn up at work, with one of their cars discovered fully submerged in a flooded creek west of Brisbane.

A 25-year-old man was driving a white 1997 Mitsubishi Magna sedan from Gatton to Mulgowie for work around 5am (AEDT) on Sunday.

It was discovered underwater in Sandy Creek off Woodlands Road at Glen Cairn, near Gatton, on Tuesday afternoon, police said.

They are also searching for a 34-year-old man who was travelling from the valley community of Gatton to Mulgowie for work at the same time.

He failed to arrive and has not made contact with colleagues since. The worker was travelling in a silver 1993 Toyota Camry with registration number 425RWU.

Police said the car has not been located.

It's not known if the men were known to each other or were travelling in convoy.

Police said the Mitsubishi Magna was extracted from Sandy Creek late on Monday. SES crews have commenced a search and rescue operation in the area.


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Queen not likely to abdicate any time soon

ONE European queen has announced her retirement. Any chance Europe's most famous queen - Elizabeth II of Britain - might join her?

Not likely, experts say.

The spectacle of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands stepping down in April at age 75 so her 45-year-old son can become king is sparking some speculation in Britain about whether Elizabeth might follow suit so her eldest son, Prince Charles, can start his reign.

Elizabeth is 86. Charles, 64, has been heir to the throne since he was three.

The British press tweaked these concerns Tuesday, with the Daily Mirror featuring a photo of Beatrix with the headline: "Queen Gives Up Her Throne to Son." Then, in smaller type, "Easy, Charles...It's Queen Beatrix of Netherlands."

Others said, "Sorry Charles...it's in Holland, not here!"

But commentators quickly noted that Elizabeth - who seems to be in excellent health - has said in the past that she regards being queen as a "job for life."

At her Diamond Jubilee last summer marking 60 years on the throne, former Prime Minister John Major said the idea that the queen would abdicate was "absolutely absurd." He said she would serve her entire life unless a health crisis made it impossible.

Author Robert Lacey, who has written several books about the British monarchy, said Beatrix's decision would likely firm up Elizabeth's resolve.

"It would reinforce her feeling that the Dutch don't know what monarchy is about, and that she should go on forever," he said. "The crown is a job for life in the British system."

He said the queen's mother, who lived to be 101, had made a "snarky" comment when Beatrix's own mother stepped down as monarch decades ago.

Lacey said the idea of abdicating is particularly unpleasant for Elizabeth because her uncle, King Edward VIII, abdicated in 1936 so he could marry Wallis Simpson, a divorced American woman.

The resulting scandal, remembered as a low point for the monarchy, brought her father, King George VI, to the throne.

No one in British history has been heir apparent as long as the now greying Charles, who is set to become a grandfather when his daughter-in-law, the former Kate Middleton, gives birth this (northern) summer.


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Pfizer profits jump on asset sale gain

THE world's biggest pharmaceutical company, Pfizer, has reported a big jump in fourth-quarter earnings as cost-cutting efforts plus a gain from an asset sale helped offset the loss of exclusivity of a blockbuster cholesterol drug.

Pfizer reported fourth-quarter net income of $US6.3 billion ($A6.08 billion), up from $1.4 billion in the year-earlier period. The results included a $4.8 billion gain from the sale of the Nutrition business to Nestle.

However, Pfizer continued to feel the effects of the loss of exclusivity of its popular Lipitor anti-cholesterol drug. Fourth-quarter revenue fell seven per cent compared with last year's level to $15.1 billion.

Pfizer's adjusted net income, which excludes one-time items such as the Nestle deal, fell seven per cent from the year-earlier period to $3.5 billion.

The pharma giant pointed to a number of promising new drugs that are at various stages of the developmental pipeline. These include the 2013 launches of Xiljanz, which treats rheumatoid arthritis, and Eliquis for the prevention of strokes.

"Overall, I am pleased with our 2012 financial performance, our recent product approvals and our expense reductions," said chief financial officer Frank D'Amelio.

In early 2011, Pfizer undertook a reorganisation of its research activities and eliminated some activities that were seen as ancillary. The company spent less than a year earlier on promotional programs and some corporate functions.

Pfizer also is studying a potential public offering of up to a 19.8 per cent stake in its Zoetis unit, an animal health division.

Pfizer offered 2013 guidance of $56-$58.2 billion in revenue, compared with the 2012 level of $59 billion, and adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.20-$2.30, compared with $1.94 in 2012.

Pfizer shares were up 0.8 per cent in pre-market trading.


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Mozambique military on flood duty

MOZAMBIQUE'S military has been called in to help tackle severe flooding that has killed 48 people and is likely to spread to the country's central and northern regions, officials say.

The armed forces have begun helping with clean-up operations in the devastated southern town of Chokwe, which has borne the brunt of the flooding caused by heavy rains.

"We can confirm the army is helping support the affected people," said Benjamin Chabualo, spokesperson for the Ministry of Defence told AFP.

Soldiers have also been involved in rescue efforts and the navy has ferried people by boat to reach areas isolated by flooding.

According to UN figures around 250,000 people have been affected by the floods and 146,000 people are being housed in temporary shelters.

Water levels have begun to recede in the south of the country, but the situation remains critical, and the centre and north are expected to be hit by fresh rain.

In Chokwe many homes have been completely inundated, and the flood surge has left in its wake piles of rubbish, mud and the detritus of lives destroyed.

"In Chokwe families have begun cleaning their homes and (the national civil protection unit) will help the municipality to clean the city," civil protection spokeswoman Rita Almeida said.

Even as the floods ebb in some places, residents faced a tough slog to get clean food, water, shelter and avoid a legion of risks.

"The rains over southern Mozambique have ceased for the time being, and the floodwaters are slowly receding. However, many have lost everything in the floods," according to a UN situation report.

At least 48 people have died, some electrocuted by severed power lines trailing in the water, some crushed by collapsed buildings and some attacked by crocodiles

At temporary shelters aid agencies are feeding approximately 70,000 people.

While tens of thousands of people have made their way to government camps, many more have not.

"We know there are a great many people affected who did not turn up at these centres," said Rita Almeida, Mozambique's national disaster management institute.

Some may have gone to the houses of family and friends, others, in more remote regions, remained stranded.

Helicopters are airlifting food and medical supplies to isolated areas.

"We are lifting supplies to places where neither boats or vehicles can enter," the Director-General of Mozambique's Disaster Management Institute (INGC) said on national radio.

"We are doing all in our power to get food to people where they need it."


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Ford earns $1.6b in 4Q, warns of Euro loss

FORD has earned better-than-expected profits in 2012 as record results in North America trumped losses in Europe. It will have to do even better at home this year as the losses in Europe mount.

Ford earned $US5.7 billion ($A5.50 billion) for the year, or $1.42 per share. That was down from $300 million, or $1.51 per share, in 2011, as a $1.75 billion loss in Europe took its toll.

But Ford reported a record pretax profit of $8.3 billion in North America, where sales rose and Ford made more money on every vehicle it sold. The company is planning to give out record profit-sharing bonuses of $8,300 to 45,800 workers based on its North American results.

Chief Financial Officer Bob Shanks said Ford expects even higher results for North America this year, as demand for Ford's pickups and its newest products - the Escape small SUV and Fusion sedan - will likely grow. But Shanks said Ford now expects to lose $2 billion in Europe, up from the $1.5 billion loss it predicted a few months ago.

"Europe will hit bottom this year," Shanks said. He said the company is on track with a plan to close plants and introduce new vehicles in the region. Ford's sales fell by 15.5 per cent in Europe last year.

Worldwide, Ford's sales rose 7.5 per cent to 1.5 million in 2012. The company saw some of its biggest gains in Asia, where it's introducing a slew of new products and building seven new plants. Sales in Ford's Asia Pacific and Africa region were up 41 per cent over 2011.

For the fourth quarter, Ford said its pretax results were the best in a decade.

The company earned $1.6 billion in the final three months of 2012 as sales rose in every region outside Europe. Ford's net income fell from $13.6 billion in the same quarter last year, but that figure included a big accounting-related gain. Without that gain, Ford's earnings were up from $1 billion in the fourth quarter of last year.

Ford earned 31 cents per share, up from an adjusted 20 cents per share in the fourth quarter of 2011. That beat analysts' forecast of 25 cents per share, according to FactSet.

Fourth-quarter revenue rose 5 per cent to $36.5 billion, beating analysts' forecast of $33.5 billion.

In North America, Ford's pretax profit more than doubled in the fourth quarter to $1.87 billion.

Sales of cars and trucks in the US totalled $14.5 billion in 2012 - the industry's best performance in five years. Forecasts are for an even better 2013, with the Polk auto research firm forecasting 15.3 million vehicle sales as the economy continues to improve.

Ford lost some US market share in 2012 as its Japanese rivals roared back from earthquake-related losses the prior year. But Ford expects its share to grow in 2013.

Shares fell 23 cents to $13.55 in premarket trading.


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Bolt cutters used to hold up Sydney servos

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 Januari 2013 | 22.24

A 30-YEAR-OLD man has allegedly used bolt cutters to hold up two service stations in Sydney.

He's accused of walking into a service station on the Princes Highway at Arncliffe armed with the bolt cutters about 6.30am (AEDT) on Sunday.

The man threatened the attendant and demanded cash.

When the attendant didn't comply, he allegedly began trying to smash his way through a glass door to gain access before leaving empty handed.

Less than an hour later he allegedly held up a service station on Parramatta Road, Haberfield.

He's accused of threatening the attendant with the bolt cutters and making off with cash.

No one was injured during either incident.

The alleged thief was arrested at Kogarah Police Station on Monday and police subsequently searched a home in Hinchinbrook.

He's been charged with assault with intent to rob armed with offensive weapon, robbery armed with offensive weapon, destroy or damage property and breach of bail.

The man was refused bail and will appear before Kogarah Local Court on Tuesday.


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Assad says Syria army has upper hand

SYRIAN President Bashar al-Assad says his troops have gained the upper hand against rebels in the 22-month conflict and could win in "two weeks" should Turkey stop its support for insurgents, a Lebanese newspaper reports.

"The army has a very large lead on the ground and has achieved significant gains," Assad told "visitors" at his palace in Damascus, Al-Akhbar, a pro-regime Lebanese newspaper reported without identifying who the visitors were.

Assad emphasised that the military had prevented the opposition from taking full control of any of the country's 14 provinces.

The rebels' "playground is limited to some border areas with Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon, and some pockets in the countryside of the capital, which are being dealt with", he said.

"The situation in the capital has improved and strategic areas, especially the airport road, are secure despite insurgent attempts.

"If the Turkish border was closed to tackle the smuggling of arms and militants, this matter would be resolved in only two weeks," Assad said.

Since the Syrian uprising erupted in March 2011 and later turned into a civil war, the regime has accused Ankara of funding and providing a safe haven to rebel fighters.

Assad said "armed groups financed from abroad have been dealt severe blows of late".

"The United States has included the Al-Nusra Front on its list of terrorist organisations, and this move will be followed by the full liquidation of this al-Qaeda branch."

Assad said Russia - which still holds military contracts with Syria and opposes foreign intervention in the conflict that the UN says has killed more than 60,000 people - will not withdraw support.

Moscow "defends itself, not the Syrian regime", he said of his key ally, the newspaper reported.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev acknowledged on Sunday that Assad's chances of political survival were shrinking by the day and said the Syrian leader had made a "grave, perhaps fatal error" in refusing to negotiate with his opposition early on.


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Japan relaxes US beef import restrictions

JAPAN is relaxing restrictions on US beef imports that have been in place due to fears of mad-cow disease.

The Foreign Ministry announced on Monday that Japan and the United States have agreed that imports of beef from cows up to 30 months old will be allowed, up from the current 20-month age limit, effective February 1.

The change matches international standards and applies to beef imports from the US, Canada, France and the Netherlands. It is expected to cover 90 per cent of beef processed in the US.

Japan's Health Ministry had approved the step following public hearings.

Japan banned US beef imports in 2003 after the fatal brain disease was discovered there.

In 2005 Japan allowed imports of beef 20 months or younger.


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Japan PM points to beefed-up military

JAPAN faces a "diplomatic and security crisis", Prime Minister Shinzo Abe says, a day after his defence minister announced plans to strengthen the military amid a bitter dispute with China.

The proposal to raise the defence budget by Y40 billion ($A425 million) or about 0.8 per cent in the year starting from April sparked criticism from Beijing.

The plan also calls for a small increase in personnel for the 228,000-strong military, the first such rise in about 20 years.

On Monday Abe, in his first speech to parliament since taking office last month, spoke of "continuous provocations" faced by his country, "causing us to face a diplomatic and security crisis".

"By taking full measures to develop, manage and safeguard remote islands near our borders, I declare now that, under this cabinet, we will firmly defend the lives and property of Japanese people as well as our territories, territorial waters and territorial airspace," he added.

Tokyo's plans sparked criticism from Beijing amid the sovereignty dispute over an East China Sea island chain.

"Japan's moves in the military and security field will always be a high concern for its Asian neighbours," foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters in Beijing.

"We hope the Japanese side can be committed to peaceful development, respect the concerns of the regional countries, take history as a mirror and do more for regional peace and stability."

Japanese Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera announced the proposed spending rise on Sunday.

He also said the military would add nearly 300 personnel to help defend the disputed islands that Tokyo calls the Senkakus but are known as the Diaoyus in China.

"With this budget, our existing aircraft can become fully activated. We will be able to build a stronger system" to monitor our territory, Onodera said.


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Police arrest Brazil club owner after fire

AUTHORITIES have arrested one of the owners of a Brazilian nightclub where more than 230 partygoers perished in a blaze blamed by survivors on a band's pyrotechnics show.

Two members of a musical group also were arrested, and a warrant was issued for another owner of the club, Kiss, said police official Michele Vimmermann.

"There were three temporary detentions," Vimmermann said.

Vimmermann said those in custody were nightclub owner Elissandro Sphor, as well as the vocalist and another member of the Gurizada Fandangueira band.

The fire erupted during the group's performance, with some survivors saying its lead singer lit a firework that could have caused sparks and set off the inferno.

Allegations also surfaced that the club lacked the necessary emergency exits, that at least one fire extinguisher did not work and, according to firefighters, their safety licence had expired in August.

The club said in a statement, however, that everything was in order.

In comments to the media, a band member also ruled out responsibility.

Word of the arrests came as Brazil observed three days of national mourning in the wake of the tragedy in the southern university town of Santa Maria that mostly claimed the lives of young people.

As friends and family members bid farewell to their loved ones, officials revised the death toll from 233 to 231 and said at least 100 others remained hospitalised, 80 of them in a serious condition.


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Qld cops rising water as storm hits Sydney

THOUSANDS of homes are underwater in Queensland and NSW as ex-tropical cyclone Oswald closes in on Sydney.

The weather front is beating a devastating path down the coast and authorities are ramping up for another day of evacuations while floodwaters have already isolated hundreds of homes.

The crisis has claimed four lives so far, including a three-year-old boy who was hit by a falling tree in Brisbane's north.

Eighteen people have been rescued with the most recent operation taking place overnight at Lismore, where a man was plucked from the roof of his car.

State Emergency Services (SES) Deputy Commissioner Steve Pearce said some areas in northern NSW had been hit with over half a metre of rain, with more than 2000 people isolated by floodwaters.

After hitting the Hunter on Monday evening, the front was expected to hit Sydney around dawn on Tuesday, he said.

"We're expecting really damaging winds of up 100km/h; we're expecting torrential rain of up to 100mm and possibly 200mm in localised areas," Mr Pearce said.

"We're expecting flash flooding, we're expecting trees to be brought down, wires to be brought down by these winds.

"We're expecting a very challenging 24 hours in front of us."

Shortly before 7pm (AEDT) on Monday, about 1500 residents downstream of Grafton were ordered to leave their homes in Ulmarra, Cowper and Brushgrove districts.

Floodwaters have also cut off all roads between NSW and Queensland.

Meanwhile, more than 2000 homes are underwater in the worst-affected city - Bundaberg in central Queensland.

About 3000 people have also been evacuated two years after floods devastated much of the same areas of the state, resulting in 35 deaths.

Army choppers equipped with night vision were used to evacuate stranded residents into the evening.

"The water is everywhere ... it's the worst on record," the city's mayor, Mal Forman, told ABC TV on Monday night.

Brian Cox, from Queensland's Disaster Management service, said the greatest challenge was ever-rising floodwaters.

He said 190 patients would probably be flown out of Bundaberg Hospital on Tuesday morning.


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UN humanitarian chief in Syria for talks

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 27 Januari 2013 | 22.24

THE United Nations humanitarian chief has arrived in Damascus for talks with Syrian officials about the nation's conflict, which has forced millions of people from their homes, destroyed the country's cities and created food and fuel shortages.

Valerie Amos did not make any public remarks upon her arrival in Damascus on Sunday for a two-day visit, but was seen by reporters heading to the offices of UN agencies and government officials.

Living conditions have deteriorated across Syria during the 22-month conflict, which began with political protests but has since evolved into a civil war with scores of rebel groups battling President Bashar al-Assad's forces. Entire towns and neighbourhoods have been damaged in the fighting, and more than two million people are internally displaced, with another 650,000 seeking refuge in neighbouring countries.

Some areas face food shortages, and even areas that have been spared large-scale violence like Damascus lack sufficient quantities of petrol, heating oil and cooking gas.

On Friday, the UN announced it was preparing to send $US10 million ($A9.6 million) in new US aid to help alleviate hunger in northern Syria.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos last week, Amos said world powers had not done enough to lessen Syrian suffering.

"The humanitarian situation in Syria is already catastrophic and it's clearly getting worse," she said. "What we are seeing now are the consequences of the failure of the international community to unite to resolve the crisis."

World powers remain divided on how to solve the crisis. The US and many Arab and European countries have called on Assad to step down, while Russia, China and Iran refuse any pressure from outside that seeks to hasten the regime's fall.

Meanwhile, Syria announced it would drop legal proceedings against any opposition figures who returned to the country to participate in a "national dialogue" called for by Assad during a recent speech.

Syria's Higher Judicial Council announced the decision in a statement carried by the state news agency. The report gave no further details.

Assad proposed the national dialogue as part of his plan to end the country's crisis as laid out in a high-profile speech this month at the Damascus Opera House.

In the same speech, however, he vowed to keep fighting and referred to the opposition as criminals and terrorists - making it unlikely anyone will take their chances on the amnesty offer.


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Severe weather warnings issued for NSW

RESIDENTS along the NSW coast are being warned to prepare for 100km/h winds and flash flooding as ex-tropical cyclone Oswald continues its damaging sweep south from Queensland.

Around 1300 people were isolated by flooding on the Bellinger and Clarence Rivers in northern NSW on Sunday and were expected to remain cut off for two to three days.

SES spokeswoman Jessica Chan told AAP that emergency crews would focus their efforts to the south on Monday as Oswald moved south.

She said conditions were expected to ease in the north after lunchtime on Monday with the weather front heading south towards Sydney.

"We are expecting heavy rainfall and flash flooding."

The Bureau of Meteorology has warned that gusts of 100km/h are forecast for the mid North Coast, the Northern Tablelands, the Hunter and the Sydney metropolitan regions during Monday.

"Beach conditions in these areas will be dangerous and people should stay well away from the surf and surf exposed areas," the BoM said.

Heavy rain which may lead to flash flooding is also forecast to extend to the Hunter overnight and to the metropolitan, Central Tablelands and Illawarra districts by Monday afternoon.

But BoM regional director Barry Hanstrum said the low-pressure system will move rapidly and should pass out to sea in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

The NSW SES is urging holiday makers returning home to be careful to exercise patience, drive to the conditions and never enter floodwaters.


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Eleven dead as bus crashes in Portugal

A BUS has crashed into a ravine near the eastern Portuguese town of Serta, killing 11 people and injuring 32, officials say.

National Civil Protection spokesman Carlos Guerra said the injured were flown and driven to hospitals in nearby cities. One injured person died in the hospital.

Television images showed a large rescue operation mounted on the rain-soaked approach road, including more than 260 firefighters and at least one rescue helicopter.

The Spanish-registered bus was reportedly travelling from the city of Badajoz in Spain to the tourist destination of Santa Maria da Feira.

Civil Protection spokesman Rui Esteves said all the occupants of the bus, including the driver, were Portuguese citizens.

Some of the passengers were trapped inside and images showed firefighters cutting sections of the bus to rescue them.


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Syria 'to end opposition persecutions'

SYRIA'S high judicial council has announced a suspension of prosecutions of opposition members so they can join a national dialogue.

The report comes after Interior Minister Mohammed al-Shaar had earlier vowed to ease the return of Syrian opposition members living in exile so that they too can take part in the dialogue proposed by President Bashar al-Assad on January 6.

"The high judicial council has decided to discontinue all prosecutions against opposition forces and individuals so they may participate in the national dialogue" the official news agency SANA said, without elaborating.

The council stressed that those "opposition forces will be designated by the government or first ministerial action group charged with implementing the preparatory phase of the programme to resolve the Syrian crisis."

In his January 6 speech, Mr Assad proposed a dialogue with opposition figures who were not "slaves of the West" and on condition that "terrorist attacks" came to a halt before any political transition.

The regime has branded activists and armed insurgents alike as terrorists.

Mr Shaar, in comments reported by state media on Saturday, said the directive allowing Syrians living abroad to return was not a blanket amnesty.

"Executive orders will be issued to border crossings to facilitate and guarantee that all political opposition forces may enter the country, maintain residency and leave at will," Shaar was quoted as saying.

"There is a big difference between those who safeguard their nation and those who are complicit in foreign agendas."

The United Nations says that more than 60,000 people have been killed in Syria's uprising, which broke out in March 2011 with peaceful protests and morphed into an armed insurgency after a harsh regime crackdown.


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Britain warns of threat in Somaliland

BRITAIN'S Foreign Office has urged its nationals to leave the self-declared nation of Somaliland, warning of a "specific" threat against Westerners in the northern Somali region.

Britain had similarly warned of a "specific and imminent threat to Westerners" in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi on Thursday and urged its citizens to leave, swiftly followed by Germany, the Netherlands, Australia and France.

The Foreign Office said it already advises against all travel to war-torn Somalia including Somaliland - a rare area of relative stability - but now urged any remaining citizens to pull out.

"We are now aware of a specific threat to Westerners in Somaliland, and urge any British nationals who remain there against our advice to leave immediately," the ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

"As our travel advice continues to make clear, kidnapping for financial or political gain, motivated by criminality or terrorism, remains a threat throughout Somalia."

A Foreign Office spokesman declined to give an estimate of how many British citizens were currently in Somaliland.

"There are quite a lot of people who have dual Somali and British nationality who travel back and forward to the area, as well as a number of NGOs operating in Somaliland," he told AFP.

While anarchic southern Somalia has been riven by years of fighting between multiple militia forces, the former British protectorate of Somaliland has enjoyed relative peace.

It won independence from Britain in 1960 but days later joined with Somalia. In 1991, after years of bitter war with the government in Mogadishu, it declared independence from the rest of the country.


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Landslides leave 16 dead in Indonesia

THE death toll in two separate landslides triggered by torrential rain in western Indonesia has risen to 16, including five geothermal workers, officials say.

The worst landslides happened in Tanjung Sani of Agam district in West Sumatra province, where 20 houses were buried when mud and rocks fell from surrounding hills at dawn on Sunday, killing 11 villagers, said disaster official Ade Edward.

He said six injured villagers were being treated at a hospital, including one in a critical condition.

The bodies of the dead, including three children aged eight and nine, have been evacuated and rescuers using heavy digging equipment are searching for nine people who reportedly were buried under the mud and feared dead.

Hundreds of terrified survivors fled their hillside homes for tents on safer ground, fearing more of the mountainside would collapse under continuing rain, Edward said.

In the neighbouring province of Jambi, days of heavy rains triggered a landslide in a drilling field owned by PT Pertamina Geothermal Energy, a state-run company, late Saturday.

The death toll there rose to five after searchers pulled out the body of another worker from the mud on Sunday, said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho from the National Disaster Mitigation Agency.

Company official Adiatma Sardjito said 60 workers survived Saturday's landslide.

"The workers were having dinner when the landslide suddenly occurred," Sardjito said, adding the disaster left five others hurt.

He said the landslide did not impact their production.

Seasonal downpours cause frequent landslides and flash floods each year in Indonesia, a chain of 17,000 islands where millions of people live in mountainous areas or near fertile flood plains.


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