среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

Qld: North Qld residents warned cyclone could re-form


AAP General News (Australia)
02-02-2009
Qld: North Qld residents warned cyclone could re-form

North Queensland residents are being warned a low pressure system that caused minimal
damage when it crossed the coast overnight .. could re-form as a cyclone.

Ellie's been downgraded to a tropical low after crossing the Queensland coast near
Cairns .. but heavy rain in the already drenched region is causing flooding.

The town of Ingham is cut off by road and the weather bureau has flood warnings in
place .. chiefly for the Herbert River and other coastal rivers between Townsville and
Bowen.

Four people in two vehicles had to be rescued by fire officers early this morning ..

after taking their chances and driving into water at Helens Hill at Ingham.





Premier ANNA BLIGH says she's relieved what looked like a pretty dangerous potential
cyclone has crossed the coast with very limited damage and no loss of life.

Emergency Services Minister NEIL ROBERTS says authorities are poised to evacuate residents
from some communities in the Gulf of Carpentaria if necessary.

AAP RTV gd/pjo/jmt

KEYWORD: ELLIE (TOWNSVILLE)

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

E.U. panel to propose tightening of data protection laws


KEVIN J O'BRIEN
International Herald Tribune
05-16-2011
E.U. panel to propose tightening of data protection laws
Byline: KEVIN J O'BRIEN
Type: News

The European Commission's advisory group will ask governments to treat the geographic location of cellphone users as personal data, deserving of the highest level of privacy protection.

The European Commission's advisory panel on data protection plans this week to urge governments in the European Union to treat the geographic location of cellphone users as personal data, deserving of the highest level of privacy protection.
The Article 29 Working Party, a panel of 27 national regulators, plans to adopt the opinion on Friday, according an E.U. official who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak for the panel.

The panel, whose opinions are not binding, is adopting the statement in a so-called "written procedure" without holding a formal meeting. The current chairman of the group is the Dutch data protection chief, Jacob Kohnstamm.

The statement is unlikely to have an immediate influence on the collection of cellphone location data by smartphone makers like Apple, which is being investigated by several European countries for its practices.

Technology companies in the past have ignored the panel's recommendations, including the length of time that search engines can retain data about users' computers.

The controversy surrounding the geographic location of cellphone users came to the fore in April when researchers in the United States disclosed that Apple, the maker of the iPhone, appeared to be collecting information in a file on its phones. Apple, in a statement, attributed the data collection to a software glitch and said it never tracks users' locations.

Google, the maker of the Android smartphone operating system, said it collects geographic data for a limited time but renders it anonymous before sending it to its servers for processing. Android users also must give prior consent before Google can track their locations.

In the wake of the disclosure by Apple, five E.U. countries -- Germany, France, Britain, Ireland and Italy -- said they would investigate whether Apple broke national laws.

The geographic location of cellphone users is becoming a lucrative bit of information as computing goes mobile and wireless advertisers increasingly target cellphone users with geographically relevant ads for restaurants and other attractions.

Europe's existing body of data protection law was written in the early days of the mobile era and was last revised in 1995.

The European justice commissioner, Viviane Reding, is working to modernize data protection laws to address the privacy challenges raised by the mobile Internet, including the handling of data by social networks like Facebook, the treatment of personal data by offshore cloud computing centers and the geographic data of mobile phone users.

In a May 3 speech in Brussels, Ms. Reding criticized Apple for collecting location data on iPhone users. Mrs. Reding said she would push for more restrictive laws to ensure privacy was maintained in the Internet age.

Keywords: Privacy (Des)

Copyright International Herald Tribune May 16, 2011

VIC:Violent crime rising in Vic


AAP General News (Australia)
08-30-2011
VIC:Violent crime rising in Vic

By Kellee Nolan

MELBOURNE, Aug 30 AAP - Victoria's rape, sex offence, robbery, armed robbery and assault
rates are all up on last year, new police crime statistics show.

But most of the rise in violent crimes is accounted for by family-related incidents.

The Victoria Police Crime Statistics 2010/2011 released on Tuesday show the number
of rapes to be up 9.3 per cent, the number of other sex offences up 5.8 per cent, robberies
up 8 per cent, armed robberies up 10.6 per cent and assaults up 5.3 per cent.

The only type of violent crime to decrease is homicide, which fell 26 per cent.

The figures show the total number of violent crimes had increased 5.6 per cent.

But police say most of this increase was accounted for by family-related crimes, which
made up one quarter of all violent crime, increasing 26 per cent over the last year, compared
to a 0.1 per cent increase in non-family related violent crimes.

Police said there had been a steady rise in the reporting of family incidents since
the introduction of a new police investigation code in 2004 and family violence protection
laws in 2008.

This had led to increased reporting and rates of family incidents such as assaults and abduction.

Acting Chief Commissioner Ken Lay said the rise in family crime was "worrying" and
that 30 per cent of all assaults happened in the home, making it the most common place
for assaults to occur.

"I think if you ask most people where you're likely to get assaulted, you'd probably
say a railway station or the street, but the truth is, particularly if you're a woman
or a child, you're more than likely to get assaulted in the home," he told ABC Radio.

The police crime figures show the number of home burglaries and drug offences each
rose less than one per cent and property damage decreased 8 per cent.

Mr Lay said police suspected offenders were shifting their focus from home burglaries
to theft on the street.

"So traditionally we saw lots of TVs and videos and the like being stolen, well ...

they're a lot cheaper than they once were, so people are now starting to actually rob
people of mobile phones and iPhones and the like," he said.

"So we suspect there's actually a little shift from the traditional burglaries to actually
the crimes against the person and that's why we're seeing the increase in that area."

Theft of motor vehicles fell 4.6 per cent and theft from motor vehicles fell 1.7 per cent.

However, theft of number plates rose almost 12 per cent.

Overall the number of crimes fell 2.4 per cent and over the last 10 years, the number
fell 18.9 per cent, which as a percentage of the population, equates to a drop of almost
30 per cent in the overall crime rate in the last 10 years.

AAP kn/gfr/dep

KEYWORD: CRIME VIC

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

The Internet: A little magic -- and loss


VIRGINIA HEFFERNAN
International Herald Tribune
02-21-2011
The Internet: A little magic -- and loss
Byline: VIRGINIA HEFFERNAN
Section: The Medium
Type: News

At some point during these past two decades, the Internet left behind its status as a techie experiment. Instead, it quickened into magic.

It has been more than 20 years since Tim Berners-Lee first proposed the World Wide Web as a shared system of hypertext that would give almost anyone access to the resources of the Internet. Nearly two billion people now surf the Web. They join up around the world from cellphones, fancy tablets, slender laptops and bulky desktops.
The Internet is a huge and spontaneous civilization whose population is greater than China's. It is one of the strangest phenomena mankind has ever seen, and yet it is now difficult to even imagine ordinary life without it. At some point during these past two decades, the Internet left behind its status as a techie experiment, or merely an unprecedentedly vast collaboration between humans and machines. Instead, it quickened into magic. It is worth remembering the Arthur C. Clarke quotation from "Profiles of the Future": "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."

By this definition, the Internet is magic. It turns experiences from the material world that used to be ridiculously complicated -- involving licking stamps, say, or winding clocks -- into frictionless, flashing and fantastic abstractions. As Lawrence Lessig puts it, "The digital world has more in common with the world of ideas than with the world of things."

But the digital world also brings dysphoria -- a low-level but constant heartbreak that is one of its most controversial side effects. The magic of the Internet -- the recession of the material world in favor of a world of ideas -- is not working for everyone. In essence, we are missing something very worthwhile and identity- forming from our predigital lives. Is it a handwritten letter? Is it an analog phone call? Is it a quality of celluloid film, a multivolume encyclopedia or a leatherbound datebook? Is it a way of thinking or being or even falling in love?

During the process of converting analog audio to digital, something is lost. MP3 compression, in particular, squeezes out certain sounds believed to be superfluous to the ear. That transformation is called "lossy compression." Something we can't quite put our finger on is lost. Comparable lossiness informs digital film, digital images, digital social life.

And that profound conviction that the Web has taken something from us is an idea that is as old as the Web itself. You can find plenty of this sentiment in alarmist best sellers and in articles and reports about attention spans, as well as the superiority of vinyl to MP3s and paper books to e-books. Today, especially as people modulate their Web use by turning to applications (which keep the Web at a distance), Web users feel more confident in voicing their unhappiness than in the past.

Many who remember life before the Web have tried to placate the more anxious of us by arguing that the Internet is just old hat, a translation or merely a retread of other existing institutions, and nothing more. EBay is a bigger, more eclectic Sotheby's. Amazon is a virtual Barnes & Noble. Craigslist is just like the classifieds in the old New York Herald Tribune. Lately there has been a strenuous and sophistic effort to show that the new social media -- Facebook, especially, but there are certainly others -- are just outsize reworkings of earlier forms of social organization, like the elite clubs of the Ivy League that have enjoyed a mystique since the 1960s.

But whether we admit it or not, the Internet and its artifacts are not just like their cultural precedents. They are not even a rough translation -- or a strong misreading -- of those precedents. The Internet has a logic, a tempo, an idiom, a color scheme, a politics and an emotional sensibility all its own. Tentatively, avidly or kicking and screaming, nearly two billion of us have come to take up residence on the Internet, and we have adjusted to its idiosyncratic ways.

This transformation of everyday life includes moments of magic, and an unavoidable experience of profound loss. Any discussion of the Internet that merely catalogs its wonders and does not acknowledge these two central themes is propaganda, and it no longer does it justice.

Copyright International Herald Tribune Feb 21, 2011

FED:AAP Backgrounders and Analyses


AAP General News (Australia)
12-03-2010
FED:AAP Backgrounders and Analyses
AAP BACKGROUNDERS AND ANALYSES
For further information please contact Newseds on (02) 93228610/11.

CANBERRA - Julia Gillard would do well to take a leaf out of John Howard's book. (Newscope
Federal, AAP News Analysis, by Paul Osborne, Senior Political Writer, 763 words, on file).

CANBERRA - Well that was disappointing. After all the chest-beating, the back-slapping
from global institutions, and supposedly being the envy of the world, we only managed
to squeeze out 0.2 per cent of economic growth in the first three months of 2010/11 financial
year. (Economy, AAP Backgrounder, By Colin Brinsden, Economics Correspondent, 856 words,
on file).

CANBERRA - Five months before his death, renowned Australian microbiologist Frank Fenner
envisaged the extinction of the human race within 100 years. (Climate, AAP Backgrounder,
by Stephen Johnson, 677 words, on file).

CANBERRA - Sex, lies and Wikileaks. (WikiLeaks, AAP Backgrounder, By Peter Veness, National
Security Writer, about 1000 words, to come next week).

CANBERRA - It's a debate that rears its head in Australia periodically - whether or not
to go down the path of nuclear energy. (Nuclear, AAP Backgrounder, By Andrea Hayward,
556 words, sent on Dec 1)

SYDNEY - Police will not give up the search for six-year-old Sydney girl Kiesha Abrahams,
the officer in charge of the investigation says. (Kiesha, AAP Newsfeature, by Isabel Hayes,
751 words, on file)

MELBOURNE - It was the biggest upset in Victorian politics since Jeff Kennett was unceremoniously
bundled out of office in 1999 on the back of a conservative revolt in the bush. (Newscope
Vic, AAP News Analysis, by Catherine Best, about 1,295 words, on file)

BRISBANE - Indigenous artist Vernon Ah Kee won't say how he obtained footage shot by police
as they sheltered from rioting Palm Islanders. (Doomadgee Artist, AAP Newsfeature, By
Tracey Ferrier, 915 words, sent on Nov 30).

PORT MORESBY - Australian aid to Papua New Guinea is going back to the future with health
patrols to isolated villages retracing steps made more than 60 years ago when Australia
brought the New World to locals. (PNG Aid, AAP Newsfeature, By Ilya Gridneff, AAP Papua
New Guinea Correspondent, 746 words, sent on Dec 2)

SPORT
* Feature pieces on WC 2022 bid to come Friday.

ROUTINERS
* The Week (includes * Milestones * Quotes * Oddities)
* Checkup column

AAP bwl/de

KEYWORD: NEWS REVIEW UPDATE

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Rudd 'deeply sorry' for home insulation deaths


AAP General News (Australia)
04-27-2010
Fed: Rudd 'deeply sorry' for home insulation deaths

SYDNEY, April 27 AAP - Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says he is deeply sorry about the
deaths of installers working on the federal government's home insulation program.

"Any family who has lost a member of its family through accidents of this nature, any
human being must feel regret and sorrow for what's occurred," he said.

Mr Rudd's comments come after he was accused on Tuesday of being a "creep" for not
apologising to the parents of a man who died.

The prime minister earlier met with Brisbane couple Kevin and Christine Fuller, whose
26-year-old son Matthew was the first installer to die while working on a job performed
under the scheme.

The Fullers told Monday's ABC Four Corners program that Mr Rudd had not offered them
any sympathy for their loss.

Speaking in Sydney on Tuesday, Mr Rudd apologised on behalf of the government.

"Certainly, when it comes to the Fuller family, I am deeply sorry for what has occurred,"

he told reporters.

"The government and ministers and myself are deeply sorry for the loss of life that
has occurred, and that goes to the loss in the Fuller family and the other families as
well.

"Nothing, no action actually brings those loved ones back."

Opposition environment spokesman Greg Hunt on Tuesday said it was disgraceful, weak
and hollow that Mr Rudd did not express sorrow to the Fullers.

"I have said the prime minister of Australia is a creep ... because he was with people
who had suffered a tragedy. That tragedy was intimately associated with a program which
was designed and botched by the government and the prime minister, and he couldn't look
them in the eyes," he told ABC television.

AAP bzs/klm/jl

KEYWORD: INSULATION RUDD

2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Joyce will have to pull his head in - Abbott


AAP General News (Australia)
12-14-2009
Fed: Joyce will have to pull his head in - Abbott

Federal opposition leader TONY ABBOTT says maverick finance spokesman BARNABY JOYCE
must learn to work with the team.

Mr ABBOTT has told Macquarie Radio Senator JOYCE will always be an authentic and an
original politician .. but has got the message loud and clear he's now part of a team
.. which means no running off on tangents of his own.

Last week Mr ABBOTT used the first meeting of his shadow ministry to remind his frontbench
of the need for discipline.

AAP RTV bc/wjf/sw

KEYWORD: JOYCE ABBOTT (SYDNEY)

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Rudd prioritises poor at Pacific Islands Forum


AAP General News (Australia)
08-05-2009
Fed: Rudd prioritises poor at Pacific Islands Forum

CANBERRA, Aug 5 AAP - Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has told a meeting of Pacific Island
leaders that improving the lives of the region's 2.7 million poor should be top of their
agenda.

Mr Rudd was speaking at the official opening the 40th annual Pacific Islands Forum
in Cairns on Wednesday, which has drawn together delegates from 15 neighbouring nations.

MORE bsb/rl/bwl

KEYWORD: FORUM RUDD

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Vic: Taskforce set up to investigate arsonists, ID victims


AAP General News (Australia)
02-10-2009
Vic: Taskforce set up to investigate arsonists, ID victims

By Michelle Draper and Edwina Scott

MELBOURNE, Feb 10 AAP - Any arsonists found responsible for deadly fires that killed
at least 21 people in Gippsland should be forced to pull charred bodies from cars, devastated
residents say.

Police say they're closing in on a suspect believed to have lit fires in the Gippsland
area in the days before Saturday's firestorm ripped through the Victorian region.

They expect to release a photofit image of the suspect in coming days.

Meanwhile, a police taskforce has been formed to look at every fire site and determine
if they were deliberately lit. Taskforce Phoenix will also investigate all fire-related
deaths and prepare briefs for the coroner.

The rage over so many deaths remained palpable on Tuesday, given that police consider
the Gippsland fires suspicious.

"I reckon they (any arsonists caught) should be going up there taking bodies out of
cars," said Daryl Paine, whose house in the small central Gippsland community of Callignee
was destroyed.

At least 12 of the township's 500-odd residents were killed by the 40,000 hectare Churchill fire.

"Material things are nothing, but people have died up there," Mr Paine said.

The overall death toll from Victoria's bushfires reached 173 on Tuesday. Many of the
victims perished in their cars as they tried to flee.

Di Matthews, whose daughter lost her Callignee home, called for life prison terms for
arsonists, who've been branded mass murderers by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

"There's got to be really harsh penalties. I don't know how they're going to go trying
to find them," Ms Matthews said.

"If they find them they should be severely punished, they've caused so much heartache
to so many people, definitely life in jail."

Roland Roylance successfully defended his Callignee North home and labelled arsonists "idiots".

"What can you say, there's idiots out there, always have been, always will be," he said.

Crime Department Assistant Commissioner Dannye (Dannye) Moloney will command the newly
formed Taskforce Phoenix, with 25 detectives and 100 staff.

Its work is expected to take six to 12 months to complete, and major areas of investigation
will include the fires at Bendigo, Kilmore and Wandong, Churchill in Gippsland, Marysville
and Beechworth.

Mr Moloney was involved in similar investigations after the 1983 Ash Wednesday bushfires.

He told reporters that two separate arson investigations were operating in the Churchill area.

"Approximately five to seven days beforehand (before Saturday's Gippsland inferno)
there were a number of other fires up in that area," he said.

"There are suspicious fires out there. The Churchill fires, as far as we can conclude
at this stage, must be considered as suspicious and that is being investigated as we speak."

He said "there may be some photofits" available soon relating to a person believed
to be involved in the fires that sprang up in the days before the devastating weekend
fire.

He urged communities to be patient and allow authorities to complete their tasks thoroughly.

"At the end of the day we hope to identify all of the victims, establish how they died,
and produce inquest briefs on every individual deceased for the coroner to determine cause
of death and other issues," he said.

He said the task ahead was made more difficult by the fact that some victims had died
in the homes of neighbours and friends to which they'd fled.

"We have houses there with unknown people within them. We've now got to identify and
track their movement," he said.

"Similarly, we have people that left their homes, drove, got trapped, left their vehicles,
pedestrians who got picked up by other motorists trying to escape this tragedy and were
killed in cars in the passenger seats.

"We must pin this all together to give the coroner the ability to actually work out
how these people came to be trapped in the fires and were killed."

Mr Moloney called on anyone with information relating to arson to contact Crime Stoppers.

AAP ees/gfr/pmu/tnf/jlw

KEYWORD: BUSHFIRES VIC ARSON 2ND WRAP

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Syn: Japanese swimmer fails to surface at synchronised event


AAP General News (Australia)
08-23-2008
Syn: Japanese swimmer fails to surface at synchronised event

A Japanese synchronised swimmer has had to be helped from the Olympic pool in Beijing
.. after failing to surface at the end of the team's free routine.

The female swimmer started sinking at the completion of the four-minute routine ..

and a teammate had to dive under the water and pull her to the top.

Concerned team officials helped the swimmer to the edge of the pool .. and she was
carried away on a stretcher.

AAP RTV tb/jmt

KEYWORD: OLY08 SYN SINK (BEIJING)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Shortlisted author inspired by Howard years


AAP General News (Australia)
04-17-2008
Fed: Shortlisted author inspired by Howard years

By Katherine Field, National Entertainment Writer

SYDNEY, April 17 AAP - Two-time Miles Franklin award winner Rodney Hall is again up
for Australia's most prestigious book prize - this time for a book inspired by the "loss
of compassion" during the Howard government years.

Hall was today named as one of five shortlisted authors for the Australian book prize
for his novel Love without Hope.

The novel was nominated alongside fellow two-time winner Alex Miller's book Landscape
of Farewell, Sorry by Gail Jones, Steven Carroll's The Time We Have Taken, and David Brooks'
work The Fern Tattoo for this year's Miles Franklin Literary Award.

Hall's novel is about an elderly woman who is wrongly put in an insane asylum and keeps
her sanity by using her imagination.

And while the story is set in the 1980s, Hall said he was inspired by Australian society
under former prime minister John Howard.

"It was written during the Howard era when, I think, we had lost compassion in society,"

Hall said.

"I was really shocked by the Tampa thing, that we could turn people away, drowning,"

he said, referring to the controversy over more than 400 refugees picked up by a Norwegian
container vessel, MV Tampa, in 2001.

"And that lodged itself as a thematic thing. I wanted to look at where we'd got to
where we can let the helpless remain helpless.

"And that kind of locked into an idea of a person who is helpless."

While writing the book, Hall visited a former mental institution in Goulburn, NSW,
which had rooms set up from the last time it was used for that purpose - as late as 1983.

"You'd think it was the 19th century, you couldn't believe it," Hall said.

Hall won the Miles Franklin award, which recognises literary contributions to Australian
cultural life, in 1982 and 1994.

This year, some 59 books were submitted for the award.

Announcing the shortlist in Sydney today, Judge Morag Fraser said this year's initial
selection was the strongest ever.

"It is rare to have this depth and quality across the board of the five," Professor Fraser said.

She said all the short-listed books shared a common thread - dealing with themes of
time and identity in Australia - and joked that they should be compulsory "preparatory
homework" for the upcoming 2020 Summit.

Of the five short-listed authors, Brooks is the only first-time nominee.

The award has been running since 1957, and past winners include Thea Astley, Tim Winton
and Elizabeth Jolley.

The winner will be announced at a gala dinner at the NSW State Library on June 19.

AAP kaf/srp/cdh

KEYWORD: MILES NIGHTLEAD (PIX AVAILABLE)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Soc: Mariners get scorers back for clash with Reds


AAP General News (Australia)
12-13-2007
Soc: Mariners get scorers back for clash with Reds

A-League leaders Central Coast are promising their strongest line up of the campaign
when they come up against third-placed Adelaide United tomorrow in the match of the round.

JOHN HUTCHINSON, SASHO PETROVSKI and TOM PONDELJAK - the men behind half of the club's
goals this season - are back in the squad after missing last week's 2-1 loss away to Queensland
Roar.

HUTCHINSON and PETROVSKI were out through suspension while PONDELJAK has been out with
a groin strain for the past two matches.

AAP RTV kaj/nh

KEYWORD: SOCCER AL MARINERS (SYDNEY)

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Mentally-ill men costing the nation $10b


AAP General News (Australia)
04-30-2007
Fed: Mentally-ill men costing the nation $10b

Depression and anxiety cost the Australian economy almost 10 billion dollars a year
in lost productivity .. and men are mostly responsible for running up the bill.

A new landmark study of 90 thousand workers at 60 of the nation's biggest firms ..

shows one in 20 employees are at very high risk of a mental health disorder.

While women are a little more vulnerable than men .. mentally unwell males cost companies
more money because they're more likely to take sickies and work inefficiently.







The report .. which has been released at a national psychiatry conference on the Gold
Coast .. finds each unwell man costs an average of about eight and a half thousand dollars
a year .. while a woman costs nearer two thousand 300 dollars.

Lead researcher Dr MICHAEL HILTON .. says women are just as likely to have problems
but they're able to manage it better.

He says this is probably because they're less likely to identify themselves solely
by their jobs .. and more likely to talk about their problems.

AAP RTV tam/af/bart

KEYWORD: DEPRESSION (SYDNEY)

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: End to landclear of world significance, says Beattie


AAP General News (Australia)
12-31-2006
Qld: End to landclear of world significance, says Beattie

(Changes keyword from Year Qld)



BRISBANE, Dec 31 AAP - Queensland Premier Beattie has hailed the state's end to broadscale
clearing of native vegetation as one of world significance.

The ban, which comes into force tomorrow, ends a two year phasing-out period of the practice.

"Tomorrow is a very significant day for the environment," Mr Beattie told reporters today.

"We will record in Queensland an environmental achievement of world significance and
at midnight tonight, broadscale clearing of native vegetation will cease in this state.

Mr Beattie said the end to broadscale clearing would cut greenhouse gas emissions by
an estimated 20 million tonnes a year.

"This is the only reason Australia has gone anywhere near meeting the Kyoto (protocol) targets."

Mr Beattie acknowledged some farmers would still need to clear vegetation for management
purposes such as controlling weeds and building fences.

But those who were affected by the end to broadscale clearing could apply for assistance
grants of up to $100,000, or if badly enough affected, could apply for grants to exit
broadscale farming altogether.

Applications for funding closed on February 21 and by December 15, the government had
received 549 applications totalling $54.8 million and bought three properties.

A key environmental group welcomed the end to large-scale land clearing.

Wilderness Society spokesman Dr Barry Traill praised the state government for the move.

"This is the biggest single environmental gain in Australian history," Dr Traill said
in a statement.

"Until controls were put in place, Queensland was one of the worst hotspots for environmental
destruction on Earth."

Land clearing in Queensland killed millions of native animals each year and was the
main cause of salinity, as well as being a major source of greenhouse gas pollution, created
when bulldozed trees were burnt or rotted, releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere,
he said.

But said there was still considerable work to be done and illegal rates of clearing
remained high.

"The Queensland Government must do more to ensure the laws are enforced fairly," Dr Traill said.

Mr Beattie could also not resist taking a swipe today at the federal government, saying
it had not contributed any funding to Queensland's phase-out of broadscale clearing but
was pushing for nuclear power.

On Friday, Prime Minister John Howard released the final report of the government's
Uranium Mining Processing and Nuclear Energy Task Force, saying nuclear energy could help
stem the rise in electricity prices as the nation attempts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

"I say to the prime minister 'this came without one cent from the Commonwealth and
if he keeps pursuing nuclear power at the expense of clean coal technology, Australians
won't reward you at the ballot box for it."

AAP rad/jlw

KEYWORD: BROADSCALE

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: Woman crew member hurt as catamaran docks


AAP General News (Australia)
08-22-2006
Qld: Woman crew member hurt as catamaran docks

BRISBANE, Aug 22 AAP - A 20-year-old female crew member from a passenger catamaran
injured her shoulder and thigh when she was crushed between the vessel and a wharf pylon
on Moreton Island, off Brisbane.

The accident happened when the Tangalooma Flyer was docking at the island about 3.30pm
(AEST) today, a RACQ Careflight Helicopter spokeswoman said.

None of the other crew or passengers were injured.

Paramedics stabilised the woman before she was airlifted to hospital in Brisbane.

AAP rad/evt/de

KEYWORD: TANGALOOMA

) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Vic: Police stop car with driver and eight passengers


AAP General News (Australia)
04-16-2006
Vic: Police stop car with driver and eight passengers

Police have pulled over a car with nine people inside .. including two in the boot.

A spokesman says they spotted two people climbing into the boot of the sedan on Middleborough
Road in Box Hill shortly before 1 am (AEDT) today.

Police stopped the 20-year-old probationary driver .. and found another six passengers
in the body of the car .. as well as the pair in the boot.

The two men in the boot were fined 141 dollars each.

AAP RTV jb/rt

KEYWORD: BOOT (MELBOURNE)

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.

Ford And Navistar Team Up To Build Trucks In Mexico.

MEXICO CITY, Aug 8, 2001

Ford Motor Company (NYSE:F) and Navistar International (NYSE:NAV) announced the creation of a joint venture to build commercial trucks with petroleum engines in NAV's Mexican plant in Escobedo, reported Mexico City daily la Reforma. The new company will be called Blue Diamond Truck Company LLC, although Ford and NAV will market their trucks independently under their own names. Ford, the second largest car manufacturer in the world, and NAV, an international leader in the manufacturing of trucks and buses, will each own 50 percent of the company and contribute an equal number of board members. Financial details of the project were not released.

URL: www.securities.com

Copyright 2001 Internet Securities, Inc., all rights reserved. A Euromoney Institutional Investor Company.

  SUBJECT CODE:     Inda 

News Provided by COMTEX (http://www.comtexnews.com)