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Tear gas fired at teenager's funeral

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 16 Februari 2013 | 22.24

CLASHES broke out overnight at the funeral of a teenager killed in demonstrations to mark the second anniversary of Bahrain's Shiite-led uprising.

The security forces blocked access to the funeral of Hussein al-Jaziri in the Shiite-populated village of Daih near the capital Manama, firing tear gas and stun grenades to disperse dozens of people trying to push their way through.

Jaziri died on Thursday after being shot in the stomach by security forces, according to Al-Wefaq, Bahrain's main Shiite opposition bloc, during Shiite-led protests against the kingdom's Sunni rulers, in which a policeman also died.

Earlier, the authorities said four people were arrested after an overnight attack on security forces that wounded four policemen.

The attack took place during unrest that began on Friday when protesters blocked a highway linking a string of Shiite villages with the capital.

The interior ministry said in a statement that it had "arrested four terrorists possessing weapons with which they had fired on security forces in Karzakan," a Shiite village southwest of Manama.

A police officer and three policemen were taken to hospital after being wounded "by buckshot fired by a terrorist group," police chief Tarek al-Hassan said in statement.

The security forces "had to respond to the attack to defend themselves," Mr Hassan added, without giving further details of the attack or the police response.

Bahrain has seen two years of political upheaval linked to opposition demands for a real constitutional monarchy, with the unrest claiming at least 80 lives, according to international rights groups.

Thursday's violence, in which Jazira and police officer Mohamed Atef were killed, began with demonstrations to coincide with the actual anniversary of the start of the uprising on February 14, 2011.

Clashes raged sporadically in Shiite villages through the night and into the early hours of Friday.

The latest unrest comes amid a fresh round of a national dialogue between opposition groups and the government.


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'We won't devalue currency' - G20

G20 finance ministers moved to calm fears of looming "economic warfare" on the currency markets.

The jitters - similar to previous disputes with China -- have been set off by Japan's plan of monetary easing to boost inflation and activity by reducing the value of the yen under new Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

"We will refrain from competitive devaluation. We will not target our exchange rates for competitive purposes," said the communique after the G20 finance meeting meeting in Moscow under Russia's presidency.

It echoed a similar recent statement by the G7 richest nations which like the G20 statement was also approved by Japan, whose monetary policy has been vehemently criticised by the West in recent weeks.

The statement made clear that forex rates should be set by markets, and not intervening governments.

It affirmed the G20's commitment to move "more rapidly toward more market-determined exchange rate systems and exchange rate flexibility to reflect underlying fundamentals."

Striving to give the impression of a united front among the world's top 20 economies, the G20 ministers vowed to "work more closely with one another so we can grow together.

British Finance Minister George Osborne had earlier warned of the dangers of slugging out "economic warfare" as countries tried to outdo eachother with successive devaluations.

"Currencies should not be used as a tool of competitive devaluation. The world should not make the mistake that it has made in the past of using currencies as the tools of economic warfare," the British chancellor of the exchequer said.

European capitals fear that devaluations of currencies like the yen would make their own exports less competitive and harm extremely fragile economic recoveries at home.

For the first time in several international meetings, the concerns over currencies have overshadowed the economic troubles of the debt-ridden euro zone which leaders hope is heading to a gentle recovery.

All the G20 states are to a greater or lesser extent faced with the same dilemma - how to boost fragile growth rates without overextending budget deficits or alienating international partners.

The final communique - as expected - stopped short of giving precise budget deficit targets which many governments would have found too tough to stomach.

But it said that "credible medium-term fiscal consolidation plans will be put in place" and implemented taking into account the economic conditions and fiscal possibilities.

Earlier, Britain, France and Germany also launched a new drive to help national budgets by making big business pay full taxes and not minimise payments through schemes such as offshore companies.

The G20 ministers agreed to take measures to combat corporate tax avoidance in coordination with the Organisation for Cooperation and Economic Development (OECD) which is preparing an action plan on measures to be taken in a coordinated move by national governments.

"We are determined to develop measures to address base erosion and profit shifting, take the necessary collective action and look forward to the comprehensive action plan the OECD will present to us in July," the final statement said.

Profit shifting is the practice of shifting profits from the company's home country to pay less tax under another jurisdiction.


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Big swing against NT govt in by-election

THE Northern Territory government says it has heard the message, after a big swing against it in the by-election for the seat of Wanguri.

Australian Labor Party (ALP) candidate Nicole Manison secured her place in the NT parliament after capturing 69.7 per cent of the two-party vote, late counting showed.

The result was about a six per cent swing towards the ALP from the last election, making the seat now the safest ALP electorate in the NT.

The ALP had called on voters to send a message to the Country Liberal Party (CLP) that rules the NT, and the government said it had heard it.

"This government acknowledges the message contained in the result tonight," NT Chief Minister Terry Mills said.

"We will continue to work with, and engage the community in this period of change."

Commentators had thought it would be tough for the CLP to win Wanguri, which Labor has held since 1989, particularly after recent 30 per cent electricity price hikes and government cutbacks.

The CLP had said the price rises were needed to alleviate the debt held by the public-owned Power and Water Corporation.

But Ms Manison said the result was Territorians sending Mr Mills a message he couldn't ignore.

"People are unhappy with his broken promises and unfair price hikes," she said.

The by-election was sparked by the resignation of former chief minister Paul Henderson.

Counting will continue on Sunday with about 89 per cent of the vote counted so far.


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Pistorius is 'numb with shock and grief'

OSCAR Pistorius' uncle says the Olympic athlete is "numb with shock, as well as grief" over the shooting death of his girlfriend.

Arnold Pistorius spoke with The Associated Press and two South African journalists about his nephew's arrest for the killing of Reeva Steenkamp.

Pistorius remains held at a Pretoria police station over the slaying.

Prosecutors say they will pursue a charge of premeditated murder against him.

Arnold Pistorius said the family "strongly refutes" any murder charge against him, though he did not elaborate on what sparked the shooting on Valentine's Day.

Arnold Pistorius said: "They had plans together and Oscar was happier in his private life than he had been for a long time."


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G20 must pursue jobs and growth: Swan

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 15 Februari 2013 | 22.24

TREASURER Wayne Swan says Australia will continue to pursue an economic and jobs growth agenda when it takes over the chair of the Group of 20 nations next year.

Mr Swan is attending a G20 Finance Ministers meeting in Russia this weekend where he will also push for the closure of loopholes used by multinational companies to reduce tax.

The treasurer believes the global recovery is now at a critical point, after slumping in the years after the global financial crisis, and is cautiously optimistic about the prospects for 2013.

"It's been a better start to the year than we thought it might be, but it will take the combined efforts of all G20 nations to continue our momentum," Mr Swan will tell his international counterparts in Moscow on Saturday (AEDT time).

The overriding priority must be to support growth and jobs to cement a sustained recovery.

"The fact there are still nearly 200 million people without jobs around the (developed) world is a blight on our global society," he will say.

He welcomed the commitment by this year's G20 chair, Russia, to focus on jobs and growth, and reinforced Australia's commitment to the same agenda in 2014.

But G20 governments also need to pursue responsible medium-term budget frameworks.

"A strong budget is critical to supporting the investments needed to boost growth, along with structural reforms to create a more dynamic and resilient economy," Mr Swan will say.

Ms Swan also notes a renewed global push to tackle climate change among countries, such as the US where President Barack Obama has called on the US congress to pursue a market-based solution.

Mr Swan will also raise the need for the G20 to address the "unscrupulous behaviour" of multinational companies avoiding tax payments.

"This hurts us all," he will say.

"Across the world, a small number of profitable multinational companies are exploiting differences in global taxation regimes to effectively pay no tax."


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Burger King's earnings $US48.6m in Q4

BURGER King's fourth-quarter net income nearly doubled in part because of lower expenses and strengthening results in the US and Canada.

For the three months ended December 31, the hamburger chain earned $US48.6 million ($A47.18 million). That compares with $US25 million a year earlier.

Revenue fell 30 per cent to $US404.5 million from $US580.6 million. Analysts forecast revenue of $US375.3 million.

Burger King Worldwide Inc. has more than 12,900 locations in 86 countries and territories.


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Show with Pistorius' girlfriend to go on

A CELEBRITY reality show featuring the murdered girlfriend of Oscar Pistorius will still be broadcast on South African television despite her death, the producers say.

The pre-recorded show filmed in an exotic location in Jamaica features the blonde model Reeva Steenkamp and several local personalities competing for one million rand ($A110,183) prizemoney.

Producers of Tropika Island of Treasure said they had decided not to shelve the show, which will premiere on Saturday, two days after she was shot dead at Pistorius's home on Valentine's Day.

"As we grieve today with Reeva's family and friends and struggle to make sense of this shocking tragedy, it has taken much deliberation to come to the decision to continue screening Tropika Island of Treasure 5 as planned," executive producer Samantha Moon said in a statement on Friday.

"This week's episode will be dedicated to Reeva's memory."

A weeping Pistorius appeared in a Pretoria court on Friday charged with murder over the killing of his 29-year-old girlfriend.


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BMW recalls more than 30,000 SUVs

BMW is recalling more than 30,000 SUVs to fix an oil leak that can knock out the power-assisted braking.

The German automaker says the recall covers X5 SUVs in the US from the 2007 through 2010 model years. The vehicles were made between September 12, 2006, and March 18, 2010. They have eight-cylinder engines.

The company says a small amount of oil can leak from a brake hose and cause the power-assisted braking to fail. Brakes would still work, but the problem could increase stopping distances and cause a crash.

BMW says it has no reports of crashes or injuries. The problem was discovered when warranty claims increased.

The company will replace a brake vacuum line hose for free. The recall is expected to start this month.


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Danish police find cocaine on N Sea coast

DANISH police say "a considerable amount" of cocaine has washed ashore along the Scandinavian country's North Sea coast.

Police spokesman Hans Roost says German police have made similar findings, adding the drugs could have been washed ashore by currents from a great distance and likely were not intended for the Danish market.

Roost said on Friday the drugs were packed in bags and boxes but would not comment on local media reports that up to 100kg washed up in Denmark alone.

Roost says the street price for one kilogram of cocaine in southwestern Denmark is up to 400,000 kroner ($A69,896), depending on purity.


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Swan to urge G20 to close tax loopholes

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 14 Februari 2013 | 22.24

FEDERAL Treasurer Wayne Swan is urging the Group of 20 major economies to close tax loopholes that allow profitable multinational companies to exploit differences in taxation regimes to avoid tax.

The Australian government this week introduced amendments to crack down on tax avoidance by global businesses that use complex arrangements and contrived corporate structures to avoid paying their fair share of tax.

Mr Swan, who left Australia on Thursday to attend the G20 finance ministers meeting in Moscow this weekend, said he would be looking for increased co-operation among nations to close those tax loopholes.

"In doing so, these companies leave all the heavy lifting to the businesses and individuals who do the right thing," he said a statement.

"This is not only unfair, but gives those unscrupulous companies a pricing advantage in the market place."

It's a global problem that requires global co-operation, and the G20 - which is responsible for 85 per cent of the world economy - is well placed to take action.

Otherwise, Mr Swan said while there would be some cause for cautious optimism at the meeting, the global recovery was not yet self-sustaining and stronger growth was needed to address the unacceptably high unemployment in many countries.

"Despite our economic strengths, global economic forces continue to impact our economy, with revenues far from recovering from the worst bout of economic turmoil since the Great Depression," he said.

Mr Swan will speak about the issue at a meeting of finance ministers and Russian president Vladimir Putin.

He intends to have separate meetings with Indonesian finance minister Agus Martowardojo and Japanese deputy prime minister and finance minister Taro Aso.

Australia is playing an enhanced role in guiding the G20's work in the lead-up to its G20 presidency in 2014.


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Newspaper sales fall in December quarter

DIGITAL sales of Australia's three big broadsheets have grown by double digit percentages, in a further sign of the shift away from printed newspapers.

The Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) said in its latest report that Monday-to-Saturday sales of national, metropolitan and regional newspapers fell 6.9 per cent in the three months to December 3, compared with the prior corresponding period.

The December quarter result was a little worse than the 5.9 per cent decline in the three months to September 30.

However, figures from Australia's two major publishers - Fairfax Media and News Ltd - showed average daily sales of Monday to Friday digital editions of The Australian, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age rose by 13.4 per cent, compared with the previous quarter.

Moreover, sales of Saturday digital editions for the three mastheads were up 19 per cent.

It was the second consecutive quarter the two publishers have reported digital sales.

The Newspaper Works chief executive Tony Hale said the data showed consumers were willing to pay for quality journalism across publishing platforms.

"The growth of digital subscriptions is now starting to offset the decline in print circulations, as illustrated by the one per cent increase in total sales of the mastheads which are reporting their digital figures," he said in a statement.

"Given that the newspaper industry has only just begun reporting digital sales, these latest ABC numbers are very encouraging."

The Newspaper Works, a non-profit body set up to promote the industry, said reporting of print and digital sales would be compulsory for all publishers from the July to September audit period in 2013.

In a separate statement, Fairfax said there have been more than one million downloads of its SMH and Age tablet apps since they were launched 19 months ago.

The two apps had more 150,000 daily unique browsers, Fairfax said.


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16-year-old 'stole car, hit cop'

AN unlicensed teenager is accused of stealing a sedan before hitting a police officer on the NSW central coast.

Police say the 16-year-old reversed a stolen red Hyundai into an officer after he and a passenger were stopped for questioning on Cape Street, West Gosford before midnight on Tuesday.

The open driver door struck the officer and scraped along the side of his patrol car.

The Hyundai, which was allegedly stolen from Ourimbah earlier in the night, was later found abandoned on a fire trail off Donnison Street at Gosford.

The policeman was unhurt.

Police arrested a 16-year-old boy over the incident on Thursday evening.

The boy has been charged with take and drive conveyance, drive manner dangerous and never licensed driver.

He is due to appear in Woy Woy Children's Court on April 5.


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Health group calls for booze law review

A PUBLIC health group says time is running out for the NSW government to get its review of alcohol laws under way.

The NSW and ACT Alcohol Policy Alliance (NAAPA), which represents 30 health, community, law enforcement, emergency services and research groups, on Friday said a five-year statutory review of the Liquor Act 2007 needed to be conducted and tabled in parliament by the end of the year.

Spokesman Michael Thorn, chief executive of the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education, said the review needed to start immediately or the consultation process would suffer.

"If there's going to be a proper and thorough review of the legislation then government needs to set up the processes around that now," he told AAP.

"Otherwise, there will be no time for debate."

NAAPA wants to see the liquor licensing laws revised to give communities more say in restricting the granting of new licences, and would allow them to voice fears about alcohol-related violence, antisocial behaviour or poor health outcomes.

"(Ideally) licensees would need to show that the licence that they seek won't result in any additional harms in the community," he said.

Mr Thorn said the group was likely to call for measures including "risk-based licensing", which would force prospective alcohol suppliers to pay more for their licences if, for instance, they wanted to have longer trading hours.

His comments came hours after Ralph Kelly opened up publicly for the first time about the death of his 18-year-old son while he enjoyed a night out at Sydney party spot Kings Cross.

Thomas Kelly was punched in the head during a Saturday night out with his girlfriend and friends and his family made the "agonising decision" to shut down his life support system two days later.

Mr Kelly told a group of schoolchildren on Thursday that alcohol-related violence ruined lives.

"The hole in our hearts and lives - I can't begin to explain to you," he told them.


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UK abattoir has deal with Grand National

THE owner of an abattoir embroiled in the horsemeat scandal has a deal to dispose of horses fatally injured in the Grand National race, the racecourse says.

Peter Boddy, whose slaughterhouse was raided by the Food Standards Agency on Tuesday, removes the carcasses of some horses that have been put down during the meeting, Aintree Racecourse in Liverpool said.

The racecourse said it was "confident" that no "unfit meat" had ever entered the food chain.

It is alleged that Boddy's plant in West Yorkshire supplied horse carcasses to a food processing plant in Wales where operations have also been suspended.

They are the first suppliers in Britain suspected of passing off horsemeat as beef.

A spokesman for Aintree said the racing industry took every possible measure to ensure that horses put down after they are injured in races cannot enter the food chain.

"Aintree Racecourse follow these guidelines to the letter and can confirm that Peter Boddy ... is contracted by Aintree to remove carcasses if required.

Aintree added: "By the time these carcasses are returned to the disposal organisation's premises they are totally unsuitable for consumption.

"They are fully signed off as unsuitable.

"Indeed it is illegal for horses humanely put down by injection on the racecourse to enter the food chain.

"We are as confident as we possibly can be that no unfit meat ever reaches the human food chain."

During last year's Grand National race, joint favourite Synchronised and According to Pete were both put down following falls, and four horses died at the meeting in 2011.


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Rebels shoot down two warplanes in Syria

SYRIAN rebels have shot down two military warplanes over the northwestern province of Idlib, says a monitoring group.

Both jets were hit with fire from heavy machine guns while the air force was carrying out a series of raids in the area, much of which is under the control of the rebels, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The warplanes were shot down in separate strikes, several hours apart on Thursday, near the rebel-held town of Maaret al-Numan.

An Islamist rebel group, Ahfad al-Rasul (Grandchildren of the Prophet), claimed in an amateur video posted online to have brought down one of them, a Russian Sukhoi fighter jet, using anti-aircraft weaponry.


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Swiss outraged over plan to cut red planes

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 13 Februari 2013 | 22.24

MANY Swiss are outraged after hearing that the country's beloved aerobatic red planes with their characteristic white crosses, the Patrouille Suisse, will be cut from the Swiss air force by 2016.

"We will no longer have planes simply for folklore," President Ueli Maurer told a parliamentary security policy commission meeting on Tuesday, according to the Basler Zeitung daily.

The commission had been discussing Switzerland's pending purchase of 22 JAS 39 Gripen fighter jets from Sweden when a member reportedly asked about the future of the Patrouille Suisse, which has been a fixture in Swiss skies since 1964.

The Swiss president, who is also the country's defence minister and a member of the populist right Swiss People's Party, told the gathering that as of 2016 the cherished aerobatic team would cease to exist.

The revelation sparked outrage in Switzerland, with politicians leading the way.

"Maurer is underestimating the symbolic importance of the Patrouille Suisse," Martin Landolt, the head of the Conservative Democratic Party of Switzerland told the 20Minuten.ch website.

The head of the Christian Democratic Party, Christoph Darbellay agreed, describing the decision as "a provocation."

A former pilot with the aerobatic team, also quoted by 20Minuten.ch, denounced the move, stressing that the Patrouille Suisse had never had an accident since its creation in 1964.

"The Patrouille is the best business card Switzerland has," pilot John Huessy said, insisting: "It is unacceptable to say that what they do is about folklore."


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Thomson Reuters swings to profit,

THE financial news and information firm Thomson Reuters has reported its profit for the fourth quarter was $US372 million ($A362.91 million), and said its rebound was on target.

The results followed a loss in the same period a year earlier of $2.6 billion, due to a large writedown on its financial services business.

Thomson Reuters, which is incorporated in Canada and has its headquarters in New York, said its full-year 2012 profit rose to $2.1 billion from $1.4 billion the prior year.

The adjusted profit per share amounted to 60 cents a share in the past quarter, slightly better than expected on Wall Street.

Revenues grew five per cent to $3.4 billion over the quarter and were down four per cent for the year at $13.3 billion.

"2012 was a watershed year for us," said chief executive James Smith.

Smith said 2012 "will best be known as the year we turned the tide in our financial & risk business. I said last year that our journey would entail a multi-quarter turnaround; we are halfway through that process."

Thomson Reuters was created in 2008 with Canadian media giant Thomson Corp's takeover of British-based Reuters. It operates a number of financial and legal information services as well as the Reuters news agency.


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Deere 1Q net income jumps 22 per cent

FARM and construction equipment maker Deere & Co says its first-quarter net income leaped 22 per cent on growing sales of farm machinery at higher prices.

The Moline, Illinois, company's earnings soundly beat Wall Street expectations.

In the quarter ending January 31, Deere said it earned $US649.7 million ($A633.82 million), or $1.65 per share, compared with $532.9 million, or $1.30 per share, a year earlier. Revenue rose almost 10 per cent to $7.42 billion.

Analysts surveyed by FactSet expected earnings of $1.39 per share on revenue of $6.73 billion.

Deere is executing its marketing plans, expanding its global presence and keeping a tight grip on costs, Chairman and CEO Samuel Allen said in a statement.

The company predicted that sales would rise about four per cent in the second quarter and six per cent for the full year. It expects 2013 net income of about $3.3 billion, slightly more than its earlier forecasts and the predictions of analysts.

But Allen cautioned that although Deere sees strong future results on growing need for food, shelter and infrastructure, "the near-term outlook is being tempered by uncertainties over fiscal, economic and trade issues that are undermining business confidence and restraining growth."

After rising initially as high as $98.71 in premarket dealings, Deere shares turned lower and were down seven cents to $93.90 in trading about 15 minutes before Wednesday's opening bell.

Deere is the world's largest maker of agricultural equipment, like the bright green tractors and combines that roll on farm fields during planting and harvest seasons. Its fortunes rise and fall with those of farmers. The company said farm business should be good this year, predicting that agriculture and turf equipment sales would rise by about six per cent, with a five per cent increase over last year's strong numbers in the US and Canada.


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Benedict will lose power of infallibility

POPE Benedict XVI will lose his infallibility - his supreme authority in Church matters - as soon he steps down on February 28, the Vatican says as it struggles to explain a virtually unprecedented situation.

"These powers go with the office, so they will pass to the next pope.... Whoever renounces no longer has the assistance of the Holy Spirit to guide the Universal Church," Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said at a briefing.

The issue is complex for many Catholics who believe the election of a pope is divinely inspired and are accustomed to popes remaining in office until death.

Benedict will be the first pope to resign in more than 700 years and only the second to do so voluntarily in the Catholic Church's 2000-year history.

Though papal infallibility was only set in stone in 1870, the idea had long been part of Church history and debate, and the notion of the Bishop of Rome as a preserver of apostolic truth was first mooted in the sixth century.

The special power has been used only once by a pope - in 1950 when Pius XII established the Assumption of Mary as Church dogma - and is limited to "ex cathedra" statements of doctrine or faith that apply to the whole Church.

While Benedict will have to drop his claim to being right all the time, the Vatican said that as ex-pope he will enjoy a pension of sorts when he retires as planned to a monastery with flower beds and a vegetable garden inside the Vatican walls.

"We will ensure he can live a dignified existence," Lombardi said.


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First German horsemeat case suspected

GERMAN officials have announced the first suspected case of horsemeat mislabelled as beef having been delivered to the country amid a widening scandal in Europe.

Germany was alerted via a European quick warning system late on Tuesday of suspicions that mislabelled processed lasagne was, or could have been, brought into the country, a consumer protection ministry spokeswoman said.

It was delivered to at least one trader in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), where authorities are checking whether the product has been withdrawn from the market, she said.

"It also has to be checked whether in the products there actually is or was undeclared horsemeat," she told a regular government news conference.

Officials in NRW state said an examination of documents had indicated that products had been delivered via a distributor in Luxembourg "which are suspected of horsemeat labelling breaches".

They said in a written statement that they believed deliveries had taken place between November and January.

However as a precautionary measure, the German supermarket chain Kaiser's Tengelmann has taken its own branded frozen lasagne off the shelves.

European Union farm ministers are due to hold crisis talks in Brussels later to agree a response after France became the second EU nation following Britain to find horsemeat posing as beef in frozen food.


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Societe Generale reports profits plunge

FRENCH bank Societe Generale reported on Wednesday that net profit in 2012 plunged by two thirds owing to exceptional charges but said it had met all its strategic targets.

The bank reported a net profit last year of 774 million euros ($A1.02 billion), a fall of 67.5 per cent from the figure in 2011.

The price of shares in the bank was showing a fall of 3.67 per cent in early afternoon trading. The overall market as measured by the CAC 40 index was showing a gain of 0.20 per cent.

The results had been hit by exceptional charges of 2.6 billion euros, the bank said in a statement.

But the results, excluding these charges, showed a profit of 3.4 billion euros, similar to the figure of 3.5 billion euros in 2011.

The bank said that it had achieved its strategic targets including the sale of its Greek unit Geniki and US investment business TCW.

It would now put in place the second stage of its strategic plan to 2015, focusing on three activities, including retail banking in France.

This should underpin the potential for growth and profitability, it said.

The board proposed to pay a dividend of 0.45 euros per share. Last year it did not pay a dividend for the first time since it was privatised in 1987, in an effort to strengthen shareholders' funds.

The bank stood by its target to achieve a ratio of core capital to loans made of 9.0-9.5 per cent, under rules laid down by the so-called Basel III standard which takes full effect at the end of 2018.

In the fourth quarter, the bank made a net loss of 476 million euros, which was more than twice the figure expected by analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires. They had expected a loss of about 206 million euros.

The statement said that the bank had made a provision of 300 million euros in the last quarter of the year in respect of unspecified litigation.

Net banking income, a key measure of the margin between taking money in and lending it out, fell by 9.9 per cent to 23.1 billion euros.

AFP


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Syntheo slows NBN build in WA, SA, NT

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 12 Februari 2013 | 22.24

ONE of the construction partners for the $37.4 billion national broadband network (NBN) is significantly behind with its cable rollout in Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory, a parliamentary hearing has heard.

NBN Co boss Mike Quigley told a Senate estimates hearing on Tuesday that it has lowered the forecast for the number of premises passed in its rollout to June 2013 due to problems with construction partner Syntheo.

Syntheo is a joint-venture between Lend Lease and Service Stream.

It is the contractor to rollout the high speed broadband fibre optic cable in Western Australia, Northern Territory and South Australia.

"We are working closely with Syntheo to try to recover the original forecast," Mr Quigley said in Canberra on Tuesday.

Opposition backbencher Simon Birmingham asked Mr Quigley if there were any fibre connections in the rollout areas under Syntheo's control in Western Australia, South Australia and the NT.

"No, these are under all contract with Syntheo," Mr Quigley replied.

NBN Co had lowered its forecast of nearly 300,000 existing premises to be passed by optic fibre cable this June to 286,000.

There were 52,014 premises passed at the end of 2012.

Mr Quigley said 17 per cent of the June 2013 target, 48,620, was under the control of Syntheo.

The government owned enterprise could apply penalties to any contractor that failed to meet its target, Mr Quigley said.

Syntheo has contracts with NBN Co worth up to $315 million due for renewal this year, with further upgrades of up to an extra $510 million if the agreements were extended for another two years.

Those contracts were under renegotiation, Mr Quigley said.

Communication minister Stephen Conroy said the fibre rollout remained on target.

NBN Co is charged to rollout optic fibre cable to 93 per cent of homes, businesses and schools by June 2021, with the rest to be provided by fixed wireless and satellite technologies.


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Trust in government bucks global trend

THE federal government will face a voting public in September that no longer thinks it is trustworthy.

A new survey has found Australia is bucking a global trend of people increasingly trusting both their country's government and business leaders.

The Edelman Trust Barometer for 2013 found trust improved across the four institutions of government, business, non-governmental organisations and the media in all 26 countries it monitors annually, apart from Australia - where they all fell.

Edelman, a public relations firm, believes the results in terms of government were due to broken promises, a much publicised leadership ballot and continued speculation about a slowing economy in 2012, leading to a crisis of leadership.

The poll of 1000 Australians, in the global survey of 31,000 respondents, found the credibility of government leaders had dropped four percentage points over the past year to just 30 per cent.

Furthermore, only 32 per cent trust government leaders to tell the truth, down from 38 per cent last year, with over half (52 per cent) blaming poor performance and incompetence as the primary reason for trusting government less over the past year.

Australian business also fared badly, with 46 per cent not trusting corporate leaders to tell the truth and only 32 per cent believing a chief executive of a company is a credible source of information.

"Australian business and government currently has a leadership vacuum that engagement, integrity and purpose should fill," Edelman Australia chief executive Michelle Hutton said, releasing the report on Wednesday.

"Re-engaging an otherwise ambivalent public has to start with genuine open dialogue."

The overall Edelman Trust Index for Australia declined to 39 points in 2013 from 40 points in 2012.

In comparison, its index for the UK rose to 43 points from 35 points, in the US it increased to 45 points from 40 points and in Japan it was up to 35 points from 32 points.


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Uni students still worried over fee spend

UNIVERSITY students say there are still problems in the way institutions decide how to spend amenities fees.

But there are some positive stories, with more than half of student associations surveyed reporting they received more funding than in previous years due to the new student services and amenities fee (SSAF).

The National Union of Students (NUS) says its survey of how the fee was implemented in 2012, released on Wednesday, showed a patchwork of funding arrangements and processes.

The new fee, which students can defer in a HECS-style arrangement, was introduced by Labor as a measure to reverse voluntary student unionism.

"There are some very problematic kinks in the implementation of the SSAF legislation that need to be ironed out," NUS president Jade Tyrrell said.

But the union was pleased the federal government intended to conduct its own review of guidelines associated with the fee.

Three-quarters of student organisations told the union their university's consultation with elected student representatives on how to spend the fees was either good or outstanding.

But three in five of the groups wouldn't recommend their university's consultation process as best practice.

The NUS said the uncertainty of funding was a concern, with eight out of 21 student organisations yet to sign any funding agreement with their university.

Another eight had signed interim agreements, while five had come to multi-year arrangements.

"We want to ensure students' money is going back to students and is being used to improve campus life and services at the behest of students, not the university," Ms Tyrrell said.


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Super telescope costs inflate

THE estimated cost of the first construction phase of the world's largest radio telescope has jumped to 400 million euros ($A525.28 million), the project's director general says.

The increase of 50 million euros takes six years of accumulated inflation into account, and the figure could escalate further once additional costs of splitting the project between Africa and Australia are factored in.

The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will be the world's largest and most sensitive radio telescope, with thousands of receptors spread over an area of a square kilometre.

Once completed, the project will allow astronomers to study distant galaxeies in their quest to answer some fundamental questions about our universe - how it began, why it is expanding and whether it contains life beyond our planet.

The SKA will be able to detect a radio signal from a planet 50 light years away.

"What we are undergoing over the coming months is a review of how much Phase 1 will cost," Philip Diamond told AFP by phone from the English city of Manchester, where the SKA scheme is headquartered.

"What we are working towards is... presenting to the board at their July board meeting our informed estimates of the cost of the first phase of the SKA," he said.

"The board will then look at that, decide if they like it, and this will be part of the process then of going out to raise money from governments for the construction."

The project's original cost estimate, 1.5 billion euros in total for phases one and two, was made in 2007, and "we decided we should update the numbers to 2013 euros", said Diamond.

Members of the SKA decided last May to split the project between South Africa and Australia, which had both been bidding to be the host.

The decision has additional cost implications, which Diamond declined to specify but said was "not a significant increase".

Construction of Phase 1, which has yet to be approved, should start by 2016.

So far, about 110 million euros had been allocated to the project for the design phase currently under way, said Diamond, reporting on a board meeting held at the end of January.

"The Phase 1 money will come from the (partner) governments once we submit the proposals for design."

There are 10 full members - Australia, Britain, Canada, China, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Africa and Sweden.

India is an associate member aspiring to full status.


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Iraq to sign prisoner swap deal with UK

BAGHDAD says it has authorised the justice minister to sign a prisoner swap deal with Britain that could see a British security guard convicted of murder in Iraq head home to serve the rest of his life sentence.

Justice Minister Hassan al-Shammari and British officials have been discussing the deal, which would allow the transfer of convicts between the two countries, since at least January.

A key beneficiary would be Danny Fitzsimons, who became the first Western contractor to be convicted of a crime by an Iraqi court when he was sentenced to life in prison in February 2011 for killing a Briton and an Australian in Baghdad's heavily-fortified Green Zone in August 2009.

An Iraqi cabinet statement on Tuesday said ministers had given Shammari "the power to negotiate and sign a draft agreement for transferring convicted prisoners between Iraq and Britain".

It did not say when such an agreement would be signed, or give any details about its provisions.

Fitzsimons, a former British soldier who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, had insisted throughout his trial that he had acted in self-defence during an alcohol-fuelled brawl.

He told the court in west Baghdad that fellow Briton Paul McGuigan and Australian Darren Hoare had burst into his room and pinned him down before pointing an M4 rifle at his face, prompting him to use his pistol to kill them. He also wounded an Iraqi guard before being detained.

Foreign security contractors had not been subject to Iraqi law until the beginning of 2009, when a security agreement between the United States and Iraq lifted their immunity.


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Indonesia passes anti-terror funding bill

INDONESIA'S parliament has passed an anti-terrorism bill that allows authorities to freeze bank accounts and confiscate assets with suspected links to militant activity.

"This is an important key piece of legislation in (Indonesia's) efforts to combat terrorism," deputy speaker Priyo Budi Santoso said in a plenary session of the 550-seat house.

The new law will also allow the government to request foreign nations to freeze accounts showing suspicious transactions that could be linked to terrorism.

The bill will take effect after being signed by the president.

Indonesia was rocked by a series of deadly terror attacks targeted at Westerners during the last decade.

Most - including the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people - were blamed on the al-Qaeda-linked group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI).

A crackdown on terrorism has weakened JI and key militant groups, and only low-impact attacks have been carried out in recent years by networks targeting law enforcement officers.


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Pope was considering quitting for months

Written By Unknown on Senin, 11 Februari 2013 | 22.24

THE Pope's brother, Georg Ratzinger, says the pontiff had been advised by his doctor not to take any more transatlantic trips and had been considering stepping down for months.

Pope Benedict XVI announced on Monday that he would resign on February 28.

Talking from his home in Regensburg to the news agency dpa, Georg Ratzinger said his brother was having increasing difficulty walking and that his resignation was part of a "natural process".

"His age is weighing on him," the 89-year-old said of his 85-year-old brother. "At this age my brother wants more rest."

Georg Ratzinger did not answer his telephone for calls seeking further comment.


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Pope Benedict is diehard traditionalist

POPE Benedict XVI, who has announced his intention to resign this month, will be remembered as a staunch defender of Catholic orthodoxy, a diehard traditionalist and a lightning rod for controversy.

The German intellectual succeeded the long-reigning and popular John Paul II in April 2005 aged 78 after serving nearly a quarter-century as the church's doctrinal enforcer, earning himself the nickname, God's Rottweiler.

The 85-year-old, who blamed his age for preventing him from continuing at the head of the papacy, will be the first Pope to do so in centuries.

"I have had to recognise my incapacity to adequately fulfill the ministry entrusted to me," the head of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics said as he would step down on February 28.

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger's hardline approach, his nationality and his age were all seen as handicaps to his becoming Pope, and Benedict had famously said in a 2010 interview that he would resign if he felt he could no longer carry out his papal duties.

As head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and then as Pope, he rejected the ordination of women and marriage for priests. He opposed homosexuality and communism and was never afraid of upsetting political sensibilities.

In 1984, he said "communist regimes which came to power in the name of the liberation are one of the disgraces of our times."

Ratzinger has also attacked rock music, calling it "the expression of basic passions".

As Pope, Benedict championed Christianity's European roots and showed his conservatism by repeatedly stressing family values and fiercely opposing abortion, euthanasia and gay marriage.

He also reintroduced the long-discarded Latin mass under certain conditions.

Above all, Benedict will be remembered for a disastrous public relations record that got him into hot water with Muslims, Jews, gays, native Indians, Poles, AIDS activists and even scientists.

Memories are still fresh of the fury the German Pope unleashed in the Muslim world with a speech in September 2006 in which he appeared to endorse the view of an obscure 14th-century Byzantine emperor that Islam is inherently violent.

The academic lecture sparked violent protests in several countries as well as attacks on Christian targets.

In 2009, the Pope struggled to mollify Jews after he invited a breakaway ultra-conservative faction back into the fold of the Catholic church by lifting the excommunication of four bishops, including one who insists that no one died in Nazi gas chambers.

Just weeks later Benedict added AIDS activists to the list of groups he has angered.

On a trip to Africa, the region hardest hit by the AIDS pandemic, he said that condom use could be aggravating the crisis.

Born on April 16, 1927, in Marktl am Inn, in the predominantly Catholic southern German region of Bavaria, he was the son of a policeman.

Ratzinger gravitated gradually towards the priesthood, entering a seminary in 1939, the same year he was required to join the Hitler Youth movement.

He was ordained priest at the same time as his older brother Georg in 1951, and began teaching theology at Freising College in 1958.

Ratzinger went on from there to teach at several other German universities, notably in Bonn, Meunster and Regensburg.

The brilliant scholar caught the eye of Cologne Archbishop Joseph Frings, a cardinal who brought him to Rome to work as an adviser to the Second Vatican Council, hammering out modernisation reforms from 1962 to 1965.

Pope Paul VI named Ratzinger archbishop of Munich in 1977 and made him a cardinal the same year.

The four-year stint in Munich was his only real pastoral experience before he became Pope.

It was during the 1978 conclave of cardinals to elect a successor to Paul VI that Ratzinger got to know Karol Wojtyla, the future John Paul II.

Three years later he agreed to head the Vatican's doctrinal congregation.

One of his first moves was to spearhead opposition to liberation theology, the movement with Marxist overtones that swept Latin America in the 1970s.

It focuses on Christ as the liberator of the oppressed and emphasises the Christian mission of bringing justice to the poor and oppressed, particularly through political activism.

A quiet, almost shy person, Benedict never succeeded in generating the fervour enjoyed by John Paul II.

Instead, he shunned rock star status, once describing himself as "just the vicar" at the Catholic church's periodic World Youth Days.

The Polish Pope was greeted with enthusiasm bordering on hysteria at these events, and he did little to dampen down the adulation, to the consternation of some in the church hierarchy.

The intellectual Benedict, an accomplished pianist, was a prolific writer.

Apart from three encyclicals, or instructions to the Roman Catholic flock, he wrote around 40 other works including a best-seller, Jesus of Nazareth, that contested political interpretations of Christ's role.


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Victim's group welcomes Pope's resignation

AN Australian victim's group has welcomed Pope Benedict XVI's decision to resign, saying he has done little "to stop the reign of terror of child rapist priests".

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) Australia said victims hope he is replaced with a more co-operative pontiff.

"Victims welcome the resignation of a church official with immense power who has done so little to stop the reign of terror of child rapist priests and other religious," Nicky Davis of SNAP Australia said in a statement.

"In the eyes of many victims, Joseph Ratzinger has personally done much to add to the huge number of victims and exponentially increase the suffering of those already harmed.

"Simply replacing this pope with another official in the same mould will not deliver the radical change that is needed to stop these horrific crimes and their cover-up."

Ms Davis said with Australia's royal commission about to start it is important that Catholic officials replace the Pope with someone who will co-operate with legal requests for documents.

"It is high time the head of the Catholic Church ceases to hide child sex crimes behind a facade of diplomatic immunity dependent upon specious claims to be a sovereign state, not a religious institution."


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Vic hospitals miss out on $12m funding

VICTORIA'S hospital emergency departments have been deprived of $12 million of federal government funding this month because the Baillieu government allegedly forgot to submit the required paperwork, Fairfax says.

Casey Hospital said on Monday that it could be forced to shut its emergency department at night because of the budget cuts.

Fairfax says federal Health Minister Tanya Plibersek wrote to her Victorian counterpart, David Davis, on Friday accusing him of providing insufficient data on Victorian hospitals' elective surgery and emergency department activity in 2011-12.

Such data is required under the national funding deal.

She said the indicative data the Victorian government did provide was not adequate enough for it to receive $12 million in emergency department funding to help them meet the federal government's four-hour treatment target.

However, a Victorian government spokeswoman said the Commonwealth had been provided with detailed information on every patient treated in Victorian hospitals, "consistent with our agreements to do so".


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Pope says will resign on Feb 28: Vatican

POPE Benedict XVI says he will resign on February 28 because his age prevents him from carrying out his duties, an unprecedented move in the modern history of the Catholic church.

The decision sets the stage for a conclave to elect a new Pope before the end of March.

The 85-year-old Pope announced his decision in Latin during a meeting of Vatican cardinals on Monday morning.

He emphasised that carrying out the duties of being Pope - the leader of more than a billion Catholics worldwide - requires "both strength of mind and body".

"After having repeatedly examined my conscience before God, I have come to the certainty that my strengths due to an advanced age are no longer suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry," he told the cardinals.

"I am well aware that this ministry, due to its essential spiritual nature, must be carried out not only by words and deeds but no less with prayer and suffering.

"However, in today's world, subject to so many rapid changes and shaken by questions of deep relevance for the life of faith, in order to govern the bark of St Peter and proclaim the Gospel, both strength of mind and body are necessary - strengths which in the last few months, has deteriorated in me to the extent that I have had to recognise my incapacity to adequately fulfil the ministry entrusted to me."

The last pope to resign was Pope Gregory XII, who stepped down in 1415 in a deal to end the Great Western Schism among competing papal claimants.

Father Brian Lucas, the general secretary of the Australian Bishops Conference, said Australian Catholics would be surprised to find the Pope is resigning, but will be supportive of his decision.

"I was in Rome with the president and vice president of the Bishops Conference three weeks ago and it was evident that the Pope was frail," Fr Lucas said.

"While he is certainly mentally very alert, the physical demands of the role and the travel and all that is required in the modern world has led him to reflect and pray and take this very courageous and serious decision."

Tim Fischer, Australia's first ambassador to the Holy See, said the resignation was not unexpected.

"In 2010, in the middle of my posting, the Pope said 'yes' he could resign and in certain circumstances it would be his duty to reign," Mr Fischer told AAP.

"Pope Benedict XVI tried to steer the huge ship of state of the Holy See to a better place and his seven-year papacy will be greatly respected in history."

Prime Minister Julia Gillard said Benedict's resignation marks a historic moment, which many Australian Catholics would greet with great emotion.

"On his election, Joseph Ratzinger said he wished to be 'a simple humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord' and in his resignation that humility has been amply demonstrated," she said in a statement.

There are several papal contenders in the wings, but no obvious front-runner - the same situation when Benedict was elected pontiff in 2005 after the death of Pope John Paul II.

When Benedict was elected pope at age 78 - already the oldest pope elected in nearly 300 years - he had already been planning to retire as the Vatican's chief orthodoxy watchdog to spend his final years writing in the "peace and quiet" of his native Bavaria.

Contenders to be his successor include Cardinal Angelo Scola, archbishop of Milan, Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, the archbishop of Vienna, and Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the Canadian head of the Vatican's office for bishops.

Longshots include Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York. Although Dolan is popular and backs the Pope's conservative line, the general thinking is that the Catholic church doesn't need a pope from a "superpower."

All cardinals under age 80 are allowed to vote in the conclave, the secret meeting held in the Sistine Chapel, where cardinals cast ballots to elect a new pope. As per tradition, the ballots are burned after each voting round; black smoke that snakes out of the chimney means no pope has been chosen, while white smoke means a pope has been elected.

Popes are allowed to resign; church law specifies only that the resignation be "freely made and properly manifested".

Benedict himself raised the possibility of resigning if he were simply too old or sick to continue on in 2010, when he was interviewed for the book Light of the World.

"If a pope clearly realises that he is no longer physically, psychologically and spiritually capable of handling the duties of his office, then he has a right, and under some circumstances, also an obligation to resign," Benedict said.

The former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger had an intimate view as Pope John Paul II, with whom he had worked closely for nearly a quarter-century, suffered through the debilitating end of his papacy.


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Dell looks to calm buyout concern

DELL is trying to reassure shareholders about its proposed $US24.4 billion ($A23.8 billion) acquisition by a group led by its founder, saying it considered a number of strategic options before agreeing to the deal.

Dell Inc laid out the advantages of the transaction in a regulatory filing on Monday, three days after a major shareholder ridiculed the buyout as a rotten deal that undervalues the business.

On Friday, Southeastern Asset Management Inc sent a letter to Dell's board of directors. Southeastern CEO Mason Hawkins threatened to lead a shareholder mutiny unless Dell came up with an alternative acquisition offer.

Hawkins vowed to wield Southeastern's 8.5 per cent stake to thwart the deal that's on the table. Only Michael Dell, the computer company's founder and CEO, owns more stock with a roughly 14 per cent stake.

Round Rock, Texas-based Dell said in its filing that it determined with independent advisers that the cash bid by a group led by Michael Dell was in the best interests of stockholders.

Dell also said the deal allows time for alternate bids so that shareholders will be able to see if there are superior options available.

Southeastern and other stockholders will be paid $US13.65 per share to leave the company in the control of Michael Dell, who founded the business in his University of Texas dorm room in 1984.

Michael Dell is contributing about $US4.5 billion in stock and cash to help pay for the deal. The rest of the money would be supplied by the investment firm, Silver Lake, loans from Microsoft Corp and a litany of banks. The loans will burden Dell with debts that could leave the company with less money to invest in innovation and acquisitions.

Dell said on Monday the deal "shifts the risks facing the business to the buyer group".

The proposed $US24.4 billion purchase price is 80 per cent below Dell's top market value of more than $US150 billion at the peak of the dot-com boom 13 years ago.

The $US13.65 per share offer is 25 per cent above where Dell's stock stood last month, before word of the buyout negotiations leaked out.

Dell's stock has plunged during the past year as PC sales have slumped amid the technological upheaval caused by the growing popularity of smartphones and tablet computers.


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Three Korean doctors slain in Nigeria

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 10 Februari 2013 | 22.24

THREE South Korean doctors have been killed in a knife attack in northeastern Nigeria, police say.

Men armed with knives slit the throats of the three Korean doctors in a pre-dawn attack in the town of Potiskum, police said, in the latest such killings in recent months.

"Further investigations have shown that the victims were Korean nationals and not Chinese as earlier stated. They were doctors from South Korea," Yobe State police commissioner Sanusi Rufa'i told AFP.

A senior military officer in the state also said they were from South Korea.

In Seoul, the foreign ministry said it was checking the reports, but noted that few Koreans live in the town.

"The chance that the slain would be Koreans is not high," a foreign ministry official told Yonhap news agency. "But we are checking further related situations via diverse channels."


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Aussie parents stressed over cash: report

AUSTRALIANS are struggling to put money aside, while households are feeling less comfortable after having spent their carbon tax compensation allowances, a survey has found.

Single parents and couples with children are suffering the most anxiety as the majority of Australians struggle to accumulate monthly savings, the ME Bank household financial comfort report found.

The study of 1500 households in December 2012 found financial comfort levels had declined over six months, scoring their welfare at 5.29 out of 10.

"Current comfort levels are similar to those reported when they feel occasional stress or worry," the report said.

In May last year, 1.6 million families were given allowances of up to $110 per child ahead of the carbon tax starting.

This led to households feeling more comfortable in June 2012.

But by December, those Family Tax Benefit A and B payments had been spent, making households with children feel less secure, the report said.

"This downshift in comfort for households with children may reflect a return to normal levels after a temporary positive effect of increased government payments that came through in the June quarter 2012," it said.

Australians are also struggling to save, with 52 per cent of surveyed households having no cash left over at the end of a typical month.

A quarter of survey respondents said they could not maintain their lifestyle for a month if they lost their job or could not raise $3000 in the case of an unexpected emergency.

Still, 63 per cent of people in the report are managing to meet monthly expenses, despite poorer households worrying about living costs.

Retirees had the highest level of household financial comfort while single parents had the lowest.


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Over 100 slain in South Sudan cattle raid

MORE than 100 people including women and children have been killed in a cattle raid by heavily-armed rebels in South Sudan's troubled Jonglei state, the governor says.

The people of Walgak in Akobo County were migrating north to the wetlands with cattle on Friday "and were being escorted by an army platoon when they came under attack by a huge force using automatic weapons", Jonglei governor Kuol Manyang said on Sunday.

He said 103 people were killed, including 14 soldiers from the platoon, while the rest were civilians, mostly women and children.

Deputy military spokesman Kella Kueth confirmed the incident and said some 500 people were still missing.

He was not however able to confirm the military casualties.

Manyang said the raiders were a mixture of civilians and armed rebels and were all ethnic Murle from Pibor County in Jonglei.

Six months after South Sudan declared independence from Sudan, its eastern Jonglei state was engulfed in ethnic violence when thousands of youths from the Lou Nuer tribe marched on Pibor vowing to wipe out the Murle.

The UN says more than 600 people were killed in that attack and about 300 more in smaller reprisal attacks. Local estimates were much higher, running into the thousands.


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Chinese 'ping pong diplomacy' figure dies

ZHUANG Zedong, a key figure in 1971's groundbreaking "ping pong diplomacy" between China and the United States, has died, China's official Xinhua News Agency reports.

Zhuang was 72 and had struggled with cancer since 2008.

A three-time world champion in table tennis, Zhuang won new fame by presenting a gift to American player Glenn Cowan, who had inadvertently boarded a bus carrying the Chinese team at the World Championships in Nagoya, Japan, in 1971.

Zhuang and Cowan were photographed together, creating an international sensation at a time when China and the US were bitter Cold War rivals.

Under orders from Chinese leader Mao Zedong, the 15-member American team was then invited to China at the end of the Nagoya championships for an ice-breaking visit.

Ten months later, President Richard Nixon made a surprise visit to China, leading to the establishment of diplomatic ties in 1979.

Zhuang became a favourite of Mao's wife, Jiang Qing, a member of the notorious Gang of Four, which held sway over China's cultural scene during the radical 1966-76 Cultural Revolution.

Jiang appointed Zhuang to a number of political posts in the sports ministry.

Zhuang came under investigation after the Gang was deposed and Jiang imprisoned following Mao's death in 1976, and subsequently spent years coaching the provincial team in the northern province of Shanxi.

He returned to Beijing in 1985 and coached young players for several years.

Zhuang was married twice and had one daughter.


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Britain rules out 'panic' EU meat ban

BRITAIN'S food minister has ruled out imposing a ban on importing meat from EU countries due to the horsemeat scandal unless there is a threat to human health.

Owen Paterson dismissed the idea of slapping an immediate ban on such imports but warned he would not hesitate to do so if public health was at risk.

Eating horse is considered taboo in Britain and tests have found some frozen ready meals produced in mainland Europe and labelled as processed beef actually contained up to 100 per cent horsemeat, triggering a Europe-wide scandal.

Asked by Sky News television on Sunday about imposing a ban, he said: "Arbitrary measures like that are not actually going to help. Firstly we are bound by the rules of the European market.

"Should this move from an issue of labelling and fraud and there is evidence of material which represents a serious threat to human health, I won't hesitate to take action.

"But at the moment we do not have evidence that these materials are a threat to human health; they are a case of mislabelling.

"That is not the basis for a panic measure stopping all imports, which would be in breach of the rules of the market."

Paterson said he feared there could be a "criminal conspiracy" afoot to hoodwink consumers by passing off horsemeat as beef.

The head of the British parliament's food affairs scrutiny panel earlier called for a ban on EU meat imports.

Anne McIntosh, chair of the House of Commons' Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, urged consumers to buy British beef to reassure themselves that it is not contaminated with equine flesh.

"I believe there should be a moratorium on the movement of all meat until such time as we can trace the source of the contamination and until we can establish whether there has been fraud either of the meat or of the labelling," she said.

"None of our meat, none of our slaughter houses, are implicated and we should be buying as local as possible and we should be buying fresh meat from the butcher, farm shop and supermarket," she said.

Meanwhile Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said he was "very confident" that hospitals were making sure they were not providing horsemeat dressed up as beef to patients.

"All hospitals have a responsibility to make sure that the food they're serving is safe," he told BBC television.

"We don't believe at the moment that there are public safety issues," he said.


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Mali troops, rebels battle in Gao

A GUN battle between Malian soldiers and suspected Islamist rebels has erupted in the streets of Gao, the largest city in northern Mali, which has been rocked by suicide bombings each of the past two days.

The two groups were trading gunfire in the centre of the city, near the central police station, an AFP correspondent said.

French-led forces reclaimed Gao on January 26 from al-Qaeda-linked rebels who had seized control of northern Mali for 10 months in the wake of a military coup.

The street battle comes after a suicide bomber blew himself up late Saturday at an army checkpoint at the entrance to the city, following a similar attack on the same spot the day before.

The two suicide blasts were the first such attacks in Mali.

The Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO), one of the Islamist groups that had occupied the north before being pushed out by the French intervention launched on January 11, claimed the first attack, and had threatened earlier Saturday that there would be more.

"We are dedicating ourselves to carrying out more attacks against France and its allies. We ask the local population to stay far away from military zones and avoid explosions," spokesman Abou Walid Sahraoui said.

The two suicide bombers were the only fatalities in the attacks.

One soldier was slightly wounded in Friday's bombing.

No one else was wounded in Saturday's attack, a soldier at the checkpoint said.


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