среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.
FED:Reporter Les Kennedy has died =5
AAP General News (Australia)
08-10-2011
FED:Reporter Les Kennedy has died =5
His mother, Merle Kennedy, said her son was surrounded by his family on Wednesday morning.
"We were all with him and we had some music playing for him and he was comfortable,"
Mrs Kennedy told AAP.
"He was a gentle person, a nice person.
"He had a very quick decline since we arrived (from Darwin) on Sunday."
Kennedy was born in Darwin, where he spent his early childhood before the family moved to Sydney.
Growing up, Mrs Kennedy said her son and his twin brother were protective of her mum
and their three sisters because their serviceman father was often away.
"We have wonderful memories of our son," she said.
Mrs Kennedy said she did not know that her son was so well loved and admired in the
Sydney media industry.
"We would like to express our deepest thanks to his many friends within the journalism
area. He has many, I didn't know that," she said.
His family will hold a service for him in Darwin.
Kennedy had four children.
AAP lxs/klm/jnb
KEYWORD: KENNEDY 5 SYDNEY
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Secrets and lies surround the mystery of Tegan Lane
AAP General News (Australia)
02-17-2006
NSW: Secrets and lies surround the mystery of Tegan Lane
By Kim Arlington
SYDNEY, Feb 16 AAP - Tegan Lane is probably dead, but seven years of inquiries into
the Sydney baby's disappearance have produced more questions than answers.
NSW Coroner John Abernethy this week ruled that the child had been dead for almost
a decade, although there was insufficient evidence to establish where, or how, she died
- or to charge anyone over her death.
If the girl's mother, Keli Lane, holds any more clues to the mystery of what happened
to her daughter, she's not letting on.
But inscrutability seems to be one of Ms Lane's defining characteristics - after all,
she managed to hide from her family, friends and partners the fact she gave birth to three
children, including Tegan.
Ms Lane had three babies between 1995 and 1999, keeping the pregnancies and births
secret from all those around her.
The first and third babies were adopted out but Tegan vanished on September 14, 1996,
two days after Ms Lane gave birth to her at Auburn Hospital in Sydney's west.
Ms Lane, now 30, chose not to give evidence at the inquest into Tegan's suspected death,
which concluded with Mr Abernethy saying he was "comfortably satisfied" she had died around
1996.
No human remains that could belong to Tegan have been found and the coroner said it
was still possible she would be found alive and well.
"In the meantime, I am disturbed at the possibility that Tegan may have met with foul
play," Mr Abernethy said.
When she attended a wedding at Manly two hours after she and Tegan were discharged
from hospital, there was no sign of the child.
Ms Lane said she gave the newborn to the girl's natural father, a man with whom she'd
had an affair named Andrew Norris.
He, his mother and his de facto girlfriend collected the child outside the hospital,
she told police.
However, Mr Abernethy said he was "completely unable to accept" Ms Lane's final account
of what happened to Tegan, and referred the case to the homicide detectives for possible
re-investigation.
Called to the witness box at Westmead Coroner's Court on Monday, Ms Lane exercised
her legal right to silence.
Her barrister, Peter Hamill SC told the court he had "great concerns" her evidence
would be used against her in future proceedings.
While acknowledging her right not to answer questions, Mr Abernethy said without Ms
Lane's evidence "this court is unable to make a meaningful assessment as to whether (her)
inherently unlikely version of events may be true".
Tegan's disappearance went unnoticed for three years, until the adoption process for
Ms Lane's third child uncovered paperwork relating to Tegan's birth.
Questioned by social workers, Ms Lane initially denied the pregnancy, then said Tegan
was living with a couple from Perth who befriended her just before the birth.
Police were notified in 1999, but the investigation was slow to gather momentum and
Ms Lane was not interviewed until early 2001.
She continued to offer what Mr Abernethy described as a litany of "untruths and half-truths"
before telling police she handed Tegan over to Andrew Norris.
Delivering his findings, Mr Abernethy asked why, if Ms Lane was giving Tegan to her
natural father, did she keep telling lies?
In police interviews, Ms Lane gave "evasive" answers to sensitive questions and "appears
to realise just how incredible her story is", he said.
The inquest heard there was nothing to corroborate Ms Lane's account, with a nationwide
search turning up no trace of a man matching Norris's description.
Several of Ms Lane's relatives and close friends testified to knowing nothing about
an Andrew Norris - or, until police investigations began, her first three pregnancies.
Her boyfriend from 1994 to 1998, footballer Duncan Gillies, said it was a "hell of
a shock" to discover Ms Lane twice fell pregnant and gave birth without his knowledge
during their relationship.
Mr Gillies said that in retrospect, he could see how Ms Lane managed to hide the pregnancies
- her weight often fluctuated and she was reluctant to let him embrace her during sex
- but at the time he "wasn't skulking around in the dark to see if the woman I loved was
having babies out the back door".
Police searched all Australian schools and trawled through more than 86,000 NSW birth
records hoping to find Tegan, without success.
If the girl was registered under fraudulent details or - as her family believes - the
child's father gave Ms Lane a false name, Tegan might never be found.
Coronial advocate Rebbecca Becroft said there were three scenarios - that Tegan was
given to her natural father, to an unknown person, or met with foul play.
Ms Lane, a former Australian water polo representative, has vehemently denied to police
that she or anyone else killed Tegan.
Mr Hamill acknowledged Ms Lane had spun an "an extraordinary web of deceit" but said
she did not fit the case studies of "desperate mothers" who denied their pregnancies and
killed their babies.
She had merely relinquished her babies to someone in a better position to care for
them - in Tegan's case, the natural father.
When he adjourned the inquest last June for further police inquiries, Mr Abernethy
said it "wouldn't be a bad idea" for Ms Lane to have a psychiatric report produced on
her behalf, but it is understood no assessment took place.
Mr Hamill attributed her behaviour to shame, embarrassment and humiliation at giving
her babies up for adoption and "being an inadequate mother to the children she gave away".
She was embarrassed about her sexual conduct and failure to use contraception effectively,
and worried she would lose her family and friends if her secrets were discovered.
Her emotion and confusion during the police interviews "is entirely consistent with
a young woman whose deepest secrets are in the process of unravelling and being disclosed
to the closest people in her life", Mr Hamill said.
In 2001, Ms Lane had another child, who lives with her and her now husband.
The man, whose name is suppressed for legal reasons, was one of several witnesses to
testify about her good character and caring nature, saying she was "a fantastic wife,
a wonderful mother and I love her dearly".
"There's no way in the world she would ever do anything to harm a child," he said.
The sentiment was echoed by Ms Lane's father, retired policeman Robert Lane, who sat
by her side throughout proceedings.
In evidence, he said his daughter confided that abortion was never an option, telling
him: "I couldn't hurt a baby."
Her family's loyalty and praise prompted tears from Ms Lane, who otherwise betrayed
few emotions during the inquest - even when told by the coroner that her daughter was
most likely dead and her story implausible.
Despite the publicity surrounding the case, nobody has ever come forward with the child.
Homicide detectives will review the case, but for now mystery still surrounds the fate
of a child who will celebrate her 10th birthday this year - if she is still alive.
AAP ka/was/bwl
KEYWORD: LANE (AAP BACKGROUNDER-FILE PIX) RPTNG
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
VIC:Man dies in Melbourne crash
AAP General News (Australia)
04-14-2011
VIC:Man dies in Melbourne crash
MELBOURNE, April 14 AAP - Ambulance officers have found a car bent in a v-shape at
the scene of a fatal crash in Melbourne.
A male passenger aged in his 20s died but the car's 23-year-old male driver survived
the impact of hitting a tree on Springvale Road, Glen Waverley, about 2.15am (AEST) on
Thursday.
Paramedic Han Wei Lee said the driver escaped with cuts and bruises.
"The car was bent in a v-shape and had rolled onto the passenger side," Mr Lee said.
"The driver had twisted metal all around him and it took about 45 minutes to free him.
"Surprisingly the man only had some bruising and swelling to the face and it doesn't
look like he had any other serious injuries."
He was taken to The Alfred hospital in a stable condition.
The fatality takes the state's road toll to 84, compared to 83 for the same time last year.
AAP mok/gfr/pc
KEYWORD: TOLL VIC
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
FED:Over 100 PNG protesters airlifted home
AAP General News (Australia)
12-25-2010
FED:Over 100 PNG protesters airlifted home
Eds: Clarifies number on Boxing Day flight in 5th par
SYDNEY, Dec 25 AAP - Three more planeloads of Papua New Guineans, protesting for Australian
citizenship, have been sent home on Christmas Day with a final flight expected to return
the remaining 22 on Boxing Day.
The start of the airlift back to Daru began on Friday with 27 Papua New Guineans on
board out of the 119 who were detained on Wednesday and Thursday night on Horn Island
off the tip of Queensland's Cape York Peninsula.
The three flights that left on Saturday carried 109 Papua New Guineans.
The Papua New Guineans had set off from Daru Island near the Torres Strait in 12 dinghies
on a 150km journey to the Australian mainland on Wednesday morning and were intercepted
in Australian waters.
Another boat was intercepted on Christmas Eve carrying a dozen people on board as it
tried to reach Australian shores. There will be 22 leaving on a plane for Daru on Sunday
including this boatload.
The group known as Papua Australia Plaintiff United Affiliates (PAPUA) want Australia
to recognise that Papuans were not given a choice to remain Australians when PNG gained
independence in 1975.
Papua covers the southern half of the PNG mainland and the group claim they are still
Australian citizens because there has never been a referendum to legally sever ties with
Australia.
All of the protesters were compliant to the operation that is expected to cost up to
half a million dollars.
Immigration and Serco staff had to be flown from Canberra, Brisbane and Cairns, five
security staff had to be on board the flights, in addition to medical staff and pilots
needed for the operation.
"It was a futile trip for them, their boats were seized and they've now been confiscated
under the Migration Act as a result of this unlawful entry," said Department of Immigration
spokesman Sandi Logan.
"If they believe they have a claim - and this is a long standing issue - there is a
process through the Australian High Commission in Port Moresby where they can lodge an
application ... submit their documentation.
"It will be processed and if they are eligible, they will be granted; if they are not
eligible then they will be told, but they need to lodge an application to test that,"
he said.
AAP dmg/sn/apm
KEYWORD: BOAT PNG (REISSUING)
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
QLD:Qld celebrates grandparents' efforts
AAP General News (Australia)
08-17-2010
QLD:Qld celebrates grandparents' efforts
Queensland will hold its first Grandparents' Day on November 7 to honour the state's
nannas and grandpas.
Premier ANNA BLIGH has announced the inaugural event .. which will be held on the first
Sunday of November each year .. as a way of thanking grandparents for their sacrifices
and love.
AAP RTV jmm/tnf/crh
KEYWORD: GRANDPARENTS (BRISBANE)
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Call goes out for rosemary donations ahead of Anzac Day
AAP General News (Australia)
04-08-2010
NSW: Call goes out for rosemary donations ahead of Anzac Day
SYDNEY, April 8 AAP - A call has gone out for donations of rosemary to make thousands
of sprigs to be worn on Anzac Day to remember the fallen.
The Sydney branch of Legacy, which supports the widows and dependents of Australian
Defence Force personnel who have died, wants as much of the herb as it can get.
Rosemary represents rememberance and tens of thousands of sprigs are needed for Anzac
Day on April 25.
Legacy on Thursday said rosemary could be donated to its Sydney offices between April 21 and 23.
AAP klm/dep
KEYWORD: ANZAC ROSEMARY
2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
QLD: Treasurer defends $1M statewide tour
AAP General News (Australia)
08-26-2009
QLD: Treasurer defends $1M statewide tour
BRISBANE, Aug 26 AAP - The Queensland government has defended using $1 million in taxpayers'
money to fund a political tour across the state to promote the government's building campaign.
Premier Anna Bligh and Treasurer Andrew Fraser will spend day two of the Building for
Jobs tour in Cairns on Wednesday to promote the government's $18 billion public works
program.
Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek said the $1 million spent on the tour should
be spent elsewhere.
"They're spending a million dollars in taxpayer money when we're so badly in debt to
promote the government and what they're doing," he told ABC Radio on Wednesday.
He said the money for the tour should be put up by the Labor party instead.
Mr Fraser hit back at the criticism, saying the four-day tour was important.
"This is about providing people with information about how to get the opportunity that
comes from the jobs-generating capital works program we're doing," Mr Fraser told ABC
Radio on Wednesday.
"We can't afford as an economy to have people not starting their apprenticeships."
Ms Bligh and Mr Fraser are expected to make a major tourism announcement while in Cairns.
On Tuesday, the pair announced a scheme to fast-track 2,000 apprenticeships in the
construction, engineering and utilities sectors.
The made the announcement in Brisbane, before visiting the Gold Coast.
Ms Bligh is also defending the sale of $15 billion in public assets on the tour in
the wake of criticism by the opposition and unions.
AAP jmm/srp/maur
KEYWORD: BLIGH
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Boat blast cause won't be known for "some time" - Evans=3
AAP General News (Australia)
04-17-2009
Fed: Boat blast cause won't be known for "some time" - Evans=3
Senator EVANS says people often have no understanding of a countries' internal immigration
policies when they flee persecution and seek asylum.
He says there's likely to be more arrivals .. because of the troubled situation in countries
like Afghanistan .. Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
He says the federal government's working with other nations to address people smuggling.
AAP RTV sld/tm
KEYWORD: BOAT EVANS 3 CANBERRA (REOPENS)
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
FED: Fresh calls to delay action on climate change
AAP General News (Australia)
12-11-2008
FED: Fresh calls to delay action on climate change
By Cathy Alexander
CANBERRA, Dec 11 AAP - The federal opposition and business groups are ratcheting up
their campaign to delay action on climate change because of the economic crisis.
The government plans to start emissions trading in 2010, and on Monday will release
the details of the scheme, and the 2020 target for greenhouse gas emissions.
As job losses mount because of the deteriorating world economy, opposition emissions
trading spokesman Andrew Robb has again called for emissions trading to be delayed until
2012.
"If the government is not mugged by reality, certainly the rest of Australia is," Mr Robb said.
He said he had met with 51 companies recently and there was a "sense of fear" about
the economic crisis. The last thing they needed was to grapple with emissions trading,
Mr Robb said.
Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull said the design of the emissions trading scheme
should be delayed until the outcome of UN climate negotiations late next year.
Industry heavyweight Heather Ridout also called for action on climate change to be softened.
The chief executive of the Australian Industry Group called on the government to consider
delaying emissions trading, and said Australia should aim for a zero cut to emissions
by 2020.
The government is expected to announce a target range somewhere between a five per
cent cut in emissions, and a 25 per cent cut.
"Even in the best of times it was going to be difficult. In the worst of times it is
going to be very difficult indeed," Ms Ridout said.
But Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said he had always expected criticism for taking action
on climate change.
"We'll be attacked on the hard right by various businesses for going too far," he said.
"You're going to have people out there like the Liberal Party on the far right saying
don't do anything at all."
Mr Rudd defended the need to act on global warming.
"Our job is to get the balance right, because if we do not act on climate change long-term,
then let me tell you it will come and deliver a huge economic burden to Australia if we
fail to act, quite apart from the environmental consequences."
Meanwhile, Independent senator Nick Xenophon - whose vote could be crucial in passing
the emissions scheme through the Senate - has thrown the cat amongst the pigeons.
He wants a totally different scheme to the government's "cap and trade" plan, which
effectively levies a carbon tax on all enterprises with emissions over a certain level.
"I think that this model is pretty cumbersome and clumsy," Senator Xenophon told Sky News.
He wants a scheme that hits companies with high energy-intensity, but rewards companies
with low energy-intensity.
Senator Xenophon did not object to starting a scheme in 2010, or cutting emissions
by 25 per cent by 2020.
AAP ca/kms/tnf/bwl
KEYWORD: CLIMATE WRAP
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Tough housing market sees kids fly back to the nest
AAP General News (Australia)
08-08-2008
Fed: Tough housing market sees kids fly back to the nest
There's more bad news for parents hoping to have their home free of their Generation
Y kids .. with news one in ten young people who live out of home are thinking of moving
back in.
Research by ING Direct on current housing pressures has found young people are responding
to high rents and interest rates by moving back in with their parents.
The research has found almost half of Australian families plan to make changes to their
living arrangements in response to a tough housing market.
Many plan to pay off their mortgage more quickly .. or draw down from their mortgage
.. while eight per cent of families plan to sell their home.
AAP RTV ca/tm/psm/
KEYWORD: HOUSING YOUNG (CANBERRA)
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Tas: Cold case unit to investigate major unsolved Tassie crimes
AAP General News (Australia)
02-14-2008
Tas: Cold case unit to investigate major unsolved Tassie crimes
Tasmania Police will establish a cold case unit.
Commissioner of Police RICHARD MCCREADIE says unsolved murders and missing person cases
where foul play is suspected will be the main focus.
Mr MCCREADIE says police regularly review cold cases and reinvestigate where appropriate
.. but the new unit will provide a more focussed approach.
AAP RTV ce/gfr/af/bart
KEYWORD: COLD (MELBOURNE)
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Main stories in today's 1200 ABC news
AAP General News (Australia)
08-27-2007
Main stories in today's 1200 ABC news
SYDNEY, Aug 27 AAP - Main stories in today's 1200 ABC news:
- Two of Australia's most prominent trainers, Bart Cummings and Gai Waterhouse, have
been caught up in the horse flu outbreak.
- The outbreak of equine flu in Queensland has worsened, with 20 horses showing symptoms.
- Shares in Australian betting companies have fallen after weekend racing was disrupted
by the outbreak.
- A former sailor who developed an anxiety disorder after witnessing the HMAS Voyager
and HMAS Melbourne collide in 1964 has been awarded compensation.
- Australia has signed a new agreement with Indonesia aimed at cracking down on human
trafficking.
- Australian runner Sally McLellan is safely through to the semi-finals of the 100
metres hurdles at the World Athletics Championships in Osaka.
AAP sg/was
KEYWORD: MONITOR 1200 ABC
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Patients awarded $150 million over doctor malpractice
AAP General News (Australia)
04-12-2007
Fed: Patients awarded $150 million over doctor malpractice
More than 150 million dollars has been paid last year to Australian patients and their
families .. who sued their doctors for malpractice after injury or death.
The ACCC's released a report into medical indemnity insurance .. that found about 25
hundred claims were made against doctors in 2005-06.
That's about 10 claims for every 100 thousand services performed under Medicare.
The average pay out was about 60 thousand dollars.
Overall .. the cost of claims has increased from 99 million dollars in 1997-98 .. to
151 million dollars last year.
However .. the highest pay out was 169 million dollars in 2000-01.
AAP RTV jb/sb/wz/bart
KEYWORD: INDEMNITY (CANBERRA)
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed:Alcohol abuse costs businesses over $400m
AAP General News (Australia)
12-11-2006
Fed:Alcohol abuse costs businesses over $400m
CANBERRA, Dec 11 AAP - Alcohol consumption in the workplace goes far beyond a couple
of beers at the office Christmas party and has become a major problem for business, costing
more than $400 million per year.
The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI), Australia's largest business
organisation, has called for a collective effort by individuals, industry, unions, health
professionals and regulators on combating the problem of drug and alcohol usage in the
workplace.
This follows research by the National Centre for Education and Training on Addiction
at Flinders University that found that 2.5 million workdays were directly lost to alcohol
consumption in 2001, and indirectly 7.5 million days were lost.
The direct impacts on the economy amounted to $437 million per year, and $1.2 billion indirectly.
"Until now, the problem of excessive alcohol consumption on our roads has been well
known, but the problem in the workplace has not been widely understood," said ACCI chief
executive Peter Hendy.
However, he says these findings are not a surprise and confirm anecdotal concerns of
employers that alcohol and drug usage is a significant and growing challenge for managers
and the community.
"For employers, this is both a workplace safety and productivity matter. For the community,
it is a health matter."
Mr Hendy says there is no one solution, but it does start with individual responsibility.
"Employers have a right to expect employees to present for work in a state that is
safe and productive, and to clamp down on misuse of sick leave. Employers should make
workplace policy clear, and remove safety risks where foreseeable and practical."
A recent ACCI survey of 549 union and non-union agreements shows that only 25 per cent
specifically address the drug and alcohol issue, but did adopt a variety of approaches.
These included provision for leave to attend rehabilitation, the implementation of
employee assistance programs, and disciplinary, counselling and testing protocols.
They also included zero tolerance policies in industries where employee or public safety
is at risk, such as building, mining, aviation and transport.
Mr Hendy said employers needed new management tools to deal with the problem.
"Employers are lay people and not health professionals, and often have little or no
past exposure to alcohol or drug misuse or addiction," Mr Hendy said.
AAP cb/sb/imc/nf
KEYWORD: ALCOHOL
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Vic: Campbell to reconsider Bald Hills wind farm =2
AAP General News (Australia)
08-04-2006
Vic: Campbell to reconsider Bald Hills wind farm =2
Victorian Planning Minister Rob Hulls immediately seized on the court orders as vindication
of long-running state government accusations that Senator Campbell's decision was based
on politics not science.
"This is confirmation that minister Campbell's original decision was purely political,"
Mr Hulls told ABC Radio.
"I've continually said that he scuttled this $220 million wind farm for purely political
purposes.
"He was a lame duck before this. As result of this decision he's a dead duck as minister."
MORE nl/ce/grc/bwl
KEYWORD: PARROT 2 MELBOURNE
) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Australia will remain English speaking in 50 years:Vanstone
AAP General News (Australia)
02-14-2006
Fed: Australia will remain English speaking in 50 years:Vanstone
CANBERRA, Feb 14 AAP - Australia will remain a predominantly English speaking, multicultural
country, over the next 50 years, says Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone.
Senator Vanstone was responding to comments made by a Liberal Party colleague warning
an abortion pill could help Australia become a Muslim nation.
Backbencher Danna Vale yesterday backed an amendment for parliament to oversee the
health minister's power of approval over the controversial abortion-inducing pill RU486.
Mrs Vale said that Australia already was "aborting ourselves almost out of existence
by 100,000 abortions every year" and that the move to lift what was, in effect, a ban
on RU486 would accelerate this trend.
"I've actually read in The Daily Telegraph where a certain imam from the Lakemba mosque
actually said that Australia's going to be a Muslim nation in fifty years' time," Mrs
Vale told reporters.
"I didn't believe him at the time, but you know when you actually look at the birth
rates and when you look at the fact that we are aborting ourselves almost out of existence
by 100,000 abortions every year and that's on a guesstimate.
"You multiply that by fifty years - that's five million potential Australians we won't
have here."
But Senator Vanstone said today that on current immigration figures Australia would
retain the same racial and religious make up over the next 50 years.
"In the next 50 years Australia will remain what it is today, a predominantly English
speaking, multicultural and diverse country," she told reporters at Parliament House today.
"It's no surprise that most of our migrants come from New Zealand and the United Kingdom.
"That's a historical factor. People tend to go to countries to join family and friends
that are already there."
She said she had not had a one on one discussion with Mrs Vale over the issue because
she had a right to her opinion.
"No, it's a free country you can say what you want," she said.
But Senator Vanstone said she was surprised at that opinion because it was wrong.
"I was a bit surprised because I know that the proposition is incorrect for starters," she said.
She said her own decision to vote for the private members bill in the Senate was not
a personal attack on Health Minister Tony Abbott.
"I don't want to strip Mr Abbott of the power that he has at the moment to veto an
application for RU486 to be used, not Mr Abbott, I want the minister not to have those
powers.
"We've had the abortion debate in Australia, it's done ... ."
The Therapeutic Goods Administration should have power over access to RU486 because
it had the medical expertise, Senator Vanstone said.
"I believe this is a medical decision, it's a scientific decision and it belongs with
those people," she said.
AAP klw/sb/jm/bwl
KEYWORD: ABORTION VANSTONE LEAD
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.
U.K. finance industry on alert for simulated emergency to test readiness
AP Worldstream
11-28-2005
Dateline: LONDON
Britain's finance industry was on high alert Monday for a mock catastrophe that will test its readiness to face a major incident such as a terrorist attack or a natural disaster.
Scores of banking companies, brokerages and investment firms were waiting across the country for details of the simulated emergency _ organized by the Bank of England, financial watchdog the Financial Services Authority and the government's Treasury department _ to hit their information systems.
The scenario for the exercise, which is being held 4 1/2 months after the July 7 suicide bomb attacks on London's transport network killed 56 people, is being kept a secret to make it as realistic as possible.
Last year's test, which was the first of what is now expected to be an annual event, simulated explosions in the City, the busy financial district in the center of London.
This year's exercise, which is being run with support from London's Metropolitan Police and other emergency services, will also involve firms in the Scottish capital Edinburgh and the northern city of Leeds.
Rob McIvor, a spokesman for the Financial Services Authority, said the exercise is aimed at preventing the shutdown of Britain's financial markets in the event of a large-scale incident.
"It's a virtual exercise so it's all desk bound," McIvor said. "It could be a natural disaster, or something that hits the infrastructure or transport system such as an airplane crash, or a terrorist attack, or an epidemic."
"Throughout the exercise, we will constantly be fed new information with updates from people producing fake wire service and broadcast reports to confuse us," McIvor added.
Participants will also use a secure Internet chatroom that was created for global finance institutions to exchange information following the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the United States.
The chatroom, which can only be accessed by the authorities and the business continuity teams in financial firms, was used following the July London bombings, McIvor said.
Those attacks shut down London's transport system and briefly closed the London Metals Exchange. However, the impact on the London Stock Exchange was limited with the benchmark FTSE 100 index quickly recovering ground after an initial drop.
Monday's simulation was scheduled to begin after 2 p.m. local time (1400 GMT). The Financial Services Authority said it would release some details of the exercise later Monday.
Copyright 2005, AP News All Rights Reserved
U.S. Hostage Pleads for Life in Iraq Video
AP Online
01-26-2005
Dateline: BAGHDAD, Iraq
In this image taken from insurgents video released on Tuesday Jan. 25, 2005 a man who identifies himself as American Roy Hallums pleads for Arab rulers to intercede to spare his life. Hallums, 56, was seized Nov. 1 along with Robert Tarongoy of the Philippines during an armed assault on their compound in Baghdad's Mansour district in Iraq. ( AP Photo/APTN)
An American kidnapped in November pleaded for his life in a video aired Tuesday, and at least a dozen Iraqis died in Baghdad as political violence continued to plague the country five days before Sunday's crucial elections for a new National Assembly.
On a day the U.S. military announced that six American soldiers died, Iraqi police engaged in fierce shootouts with insurgents, including gunmen who were handing out leaflets warning Iraqis not to vote or risk seeing their families' blood "wash the streets of Baghdad."
In the hostage video, a bearded Roy Hallums, 56, speaking with a rifle pointed at his head, said he had been taken by a "resistance group" because "I have worked with American forces." He appealed to Arab leaders, including Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, to save his life.
Hallums was seized by gunmen Nov. 1 along with Robert Tarongoy of the Philippines at their compound in Baghdad's Mansour district. The two worked for a Saudi company that does catering for the Iraqi army. The Filipino was not shown in the video and it was not known when the video was made.
"I am please asking for help because my life is in danger because it's been proved I worked for American forces," Hallums said.
In Westminster, Calif., his daughter, Carrie Cooper, 29, said she last saw him at a family reunion last June.
"My heart's broken to see my dad with a gun to his head. ... He's fearless and he wanted to help the people there and rebuild Iraq," she told KNBC-TV.
Hallums' former wife, Susan Hallums, urged President Bush to help the captive and urged the kidnappers to let him go.
"Please release him. He's never hurt anybody in his life. He's only done good things. He's a wonderful father and grandfather, and he's kind and I know that you can see that he's kind," she said at her home in Corona, Calif.
The U.S. military announced that a Bradley armored vehicle rolled into a canal northeast of Baghdad during a combat patrol Monday night, killing five American soldiers and injuring two from the Army's 1st Infantry Division. The accident, which was under investigation, occurred near the town of Khan Bani Saad during a sandstorm, it said.
A sixth U.S. soldier died Monday of wounds from a roadside bomb that blasted an American patrol in Baghdad, the military said.
At least 1,378 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
There has been speculation that the new Iraqi government might ask the Americans to set a timetable for foreign troops to leave. But Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said Tuesday it was too soon to do that, saying Iraq must first build up its security forces to confront the insurgents.
U.S. commanders are devising a plan for as many as 10,000 soldiers and Marines to accompany Iraqi units as advisers and trainers, defense officials in Washington said. That would be a substantial increase from the few thousand now doing such work.
Tuesday was the last day for Iraqis living outside the country to register for the weekend vote, and international organizers said less than 25 percent of those eligible had done so. The biggest turnout was among Iraqis living in Iran _ more than 53,000.
Iraqi authorities blamed the low turnout on several factors, including the long distances that many had to travel in countries like the United States and Australia.
But Majeed al-Gaood, a member of National Front of the Iraqi Intellectuals, a Sunni Arab opposition group, said many chose not to register because of the country's continuing instability and the presence of U.S. troops.
"How can we expect Iraqis to take part in the elections while their country is under the control of foreign forces?" he said.
Meanwhile, an Internet posting in the name of one insurgent group, the Islamic Army of Iraq, ordered followers to "escalate their operations to the maximum" to stop "the infidel elections."
Its origin could not be authenticated, but Islamic militants have used the site to claim responsibility for attacks and to condemn Iraq's interim government and U.S.-led forces in Iraq.
Late Tuesday, people in Fallujah reported hearing bursts of heavy automatic weapons fire. The city was an insurgent stronghold until a U.S. offensive in November, but the assault did not clear out all the gunmen and others are believed to have slipped back with residents in recent weeks.
Several firefights erupted earlier in Baghdad's eastern Rashad neighborhood. In one, police fired at insurgents handing out leaflets warning people not to vote.
The leaflets, which did not bear the name of any insurgent group, said rebels would attack voters and polling stations with bombs, mortar fire and rockets.
"We promise to wash the streets of Baghdad with the blood of voters," the papers warned.
About the same time, in another part of the district, insurgents shot at police checking a report of a possible car bomb. A bomb also blew off the gate of a neighborhood school and gunmen shot at responding Iraqi and U.S. forces.
Altogether, three policemen were killed and nine wounded in those clashes, an official at Kindi Hospital said. Two insurgents died and a shopkeeper was killed in the crossfire.
Elsewhere, gunmen killed two Iraqi soldiers patrolling the western outskirts of the capital, witnesses said. Gunmen killed a man who worked for a district council in west Baghdad, while other attackers killed the son of an Iraqi translator working with U.S. troops, police said.
In another incident, a senior judge, Qais Hashim Shameri, and his driver died when assailants sprayed their car with gunfire. The Ansar al-Sunnah Army, one of Iraq's most active insurgent groups, claimed responsibility in a Web posting, calling the judge "one of the heads of infidelity and apostasy of the new Iraqi government."
Copyright 2005, AP News All Rights Reserved
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Computer firm to axe 275.
COMPUTER games firm Gameplay is to close its eight UK shops and axe 275 jobs across Europe as part of a restructuring plan announced today.
Gameplay, which specialises in providing games for computer users to download from the internet, said the cost-cutting exercise would enable it to reach profitability sooner.
As well as the closure of the eight shops selling boxed games, 54 jobs will be lost at the company's headquarters in London.
Call centre and distribution operations in Leeds will also be amalgamated.
Fleet Named NASE Official Bank in the Northeast; Fleet Selected By NASE To Provide Financial Services For Small Business.
Business Editors
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 4, 2000
FleetBoston Financial has been named the official bank in the Northeast by the National Association for the Self-Employed (NASE). This alliance gives the NASE endorsement to Fleet Bank products designed to meet the financial services needs of the self-employed and small businesses in the Northeast.
"I'm excited about our new affiliation with Fleet," said Bennie L. Thayer, President and CEO of the NASE. "Fleet is the premier bank in the Northeast, and its commitment to small business is extraordinary. The NASE recommends Fleet Bank with confidence to our members and to all small businesses in the Northeast."
The alliance will allow Fleet to work with NASE members to fulfill the unique financial needs of small businesses. Services that will be offered to NASE members include:
-- money to finance growth and acquisitions; -- tools to manage cash flow; -- services to reduce operating costs; -- investments to grow wealth for entrepreneurs and employees; and, -- techniques to manage risk. Primary product offerings include: -- Comprehensive deposit and investment products -- High-rate premium money market account -- Customized loan products for all-stage -- Business Credit Express (instant decisioned -- SBAExpress credit product -- OfficeLink, for online banking -- AMFax, for daily account reconciliation -- Merchant card processing -- Storefronts@fleet, for Internet merchandising -- Cash management -- Fleet Business Leasing -- Professional Employer Organization -- Retirement planning -- Property and Casualty Insurance
The alliance was announced to NASE membership during the two-day NASE Regional Seminar held recently in Waltham, MA, from April 27 through April 28.
The NASE has over 30,000 members in the Northeast, and more than 200,000 members nationwide. The NASE, a 501(c)(6) non-profit business association, was founded in 1981 and is the nation's largest association of entrepreneurs. Eighty percent of the NASE members are small business owners with five or fewer employees.
More information on the NASE can be found at their web site www.nase.org.
"We're committed to the needs of small business," said Norman J. DeLuca, Managing Director of Small Business Services at Fleet. "Our alliance with the NASE allows us to help small businesses prosper, by providing them with the tools and financial services they need in today's demanding entrepreneurial environment."
Fleet currently serves over 450,000 small business customers throughout its 7-state franchise, from New Jersey to Maine. Fleet has $9 billion in small business deposits, $4 billion in total small business loan commitments, and it is the eleventh largest small business lender nationwide. It is the largest SBA lender in the Northeast, and the fourth largest in the nation. At more than 400 branch locations, Fleet has also created special Business Solutions Centers, staffed by professionals trained and dedicated to small business customers. Fleet's Small Business web site is www.fleet/smallbusiness.com.
FleetBoston Financial is the eighth-largest financial holding company in the United States. An $187 billion diversified financial services company, it offers a comprehensive array of innovative financial solutions to 20 million customers in more than 20 countries and territories. Among the company's key lines of business are: retail banking, with over 1,250 branches in the Northeast; commercial banking, including capital markets/investment banking and commercial finance; investment services, including discount brokerage; and full-service banking through more than 250 offices in Latin America. FleetBoston Financial is headquartered in Boston and listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE:FBF).
Founded in 1981 the NASE, a 501(c)(6) non-profit organization, is the nation's largest organization for entrepreneurs, and represents over 200,000 of the smallest of small businesses and the self-employed nationwide. Seventy-eight percent of its members are business owners with five or fewer employees and one-third have no employees at all. For more information contact the NASE at 1023 15th Street, NW, Washington, D.C., 20005, call (202) 466-2100, e-mail jdmcdowell@nasehq.org. or visit http://www.nase.org.




















