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Vic farmers on alert for activists, bikies

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 01 Agustus 2013 | 13.39

WHAT do animal activists and bikies have in common?

Both groups are on a Victoria Police watch list.

Police say animal rights groups and bikie gangs have been increasing their activities across rural communities.

Activists have been releasing animals and causing vandalism on several farms while bikie gangs are behind a surge in gun and machinery thefts.

"That's something that does worry us," says Victoria Police Deputy Commissioner Graham Ashton.

The two crime trends have emerged as falling livestock prices helped drive a 54 per cent drop in the number of reported sheep and cattle thefts across the state so far this year.

Police set up a team of agricultural officers, who have monitored farm-related crime, intercepted trucks and raided properties.

In one recent raid, police found more than $1 million in stolen property linked to bikie gangs.

"This is all happening in rural areas," Mr Ashton said.

On the rise in activism, Mr Ashton said police support the right to protest, but not when it involves breaking into farms.

"We've got to make sure with this type of activism that a healthy demonstration doesn't become criminal activity," he said.

Farmers have been asked to be on alert, keep their fences in good condition and call police whenever something is stolen.


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Afghan blast exhibit for war memorial

IT must have been a heck of a big bang.

Testament to that is the blast-damaged locker from an Australian Army Bushmaster vehicle, blown up when it rode over an insurgent improvised explosive device (IED) in Afghanistan in November 2012.

The locker was handed to the Australian War Memorial on Thursday to go on display in the new "Afghanistan: The Australian Story" exhibition which opens next week.

Memorial director Brendan Nelson says this special item will enhance the visitor experience at what will be a powerful and moving exhibition.

The Bushmaster, a large armoured troop transport, is the iconic Australian implement of this conflict. The IED remains the signature weapon, claiming the lives of 16 of the 40 Australians killed in Afghanistan.

In the incident in November 2012, three Australians received minor wounds.

But the vehicle, manufactured in Bendigo by defence company Thales and only delivered in August 2012, needed to return to Australia for repairs. It had just 500km on the clock.

Many Bushmasters have been blown up by insurgent IEDs, some completely destroyed, but no soldier has ever been killed in one.


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SA vows to keep Italian consulate open

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 31 Juli 2013 | 13.39

SOUTH Australian Premier Jay Weatherill has vowed to keep Adelaide's Italian Consulate open, despite a decision by the Italian government to close the office next year.

Mr Weatherill said the state government had lobbied hard to win the consulate "stays of execution" in recent years and would not give up the fight.

He has written to the Italian prime minister and the Italian ambassador in Canberra, urging them to overturn the cost-cutting measure.

"We're going to continue to campaign and we're going to win," the premier told about 50 members of South Australia's strong Italian community outside the consulate on Wednesday.

"This couldn't be a more important issue for the local Italian community.

"We'll be on their side fighting every inch of the way."

The consulate is located in Adelaide's northeastern suburbs and has seven staff, three of whom are appointed from Rome.

They will be posted to other offices when the consulate closes as scheduled at the end of February, while the future of the four local staff members remains unclear.

One of those, Danilo Benvenuto, said the consulate in Adelaide had been operating for more than 40 years and would be a big loss to the Italian community.

"Especially the older generation, they are attached to the consulate," he said.

"Not having that support will be quite devastating to them."

Local Labor MP Grace Portolesi said it was impractical for elderly Italian residents in Adelaide to deal with consulate officials in Melbourne.

"It will cause very practical hardships for local communities, not to mention the very symbolic presence that the consulate offers," Ms Portolesi said.

Mr Weatherill said he understood the Italian government was under severe financial pressures and had taken the decision to close the consulate "with a heavy heart".

But he said he didn't think Italian officials understood the level of feeling in the local community or appreciated the distances between Adelaide and Melbourne.


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GPs fail to warn drinking mums, prof says

GPS have been too concerned about offending people to warn women of the dangers of drinking while pregnant, leaving their unborn children at risk of birth defects, a professor of pediatrics says.

Dr Elizabeth Elliott, professor of paediatrics and child health at the University of Sydney and a paediatrician at Westmead's Children's Hospital, works with the Fitzroy Valley community in Western Australia and deals with children who have foetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) because their mothers drank while pregnant.

She says the next generation of Aboriginal children faces great health risks due to significant socio-economic disadvantage compounded by parental alcohol abuse.

"Children are harmed by their parents using alcohol. They're unsupervised, they have accidents, they may be subject to sexual or physical abuse and they suffer the consequences of their parents being drunk and in jail," Dr Elliott told AAP.

She said Aboriginal mothers often didn't know their drinking was having such a severe impact on their babies, due mainly to a lack of educational programs tackling the issue.

"They've got no concept that alcohol is toxic, crosses the placenta and can damage the developing brain and result in lifelong problems for their child and when people realise that they do feel guilty," Dr Elliott said.

She said health professionals aren't particularly well-versed in FASD and so don't ask about alcohol use during pregnancy.

"They're worried about upsetting people," she said.

Dr Elliott said half of pregnancies nation-wide are unplanned, so educators need to target young girls early about contraception and the danger of drinking while pregnant.

Surveys of Australian women suggest that anywhere between 20 to 80 per cent drink something during their pregnancy, while other studies show that about the same proportion of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal women drink during pregnancy, she said.

"But the patterns of drinking are different," Dr Elliott said.

Although only half of women drink during pregnancy, the women who do drink drink at very high levels and babies are being born with facial deformities and mental and emotional disabilities.

"We know in remote Aboriginal communities there's a high risk of FASD ... there are a lot of vulnerable children," Dr Elliott said.

She stressed that the problem was not only an indigenous one but simply more visible in remote communities.

There have been increasing cases of babies in cities presenting with FASD.

Dr Elliott said the government needed to restrict alcohol sales.

"Our hospitals are full of people with alcohol-related cancer, brain disease, liver disease, let alone the secondary effects to children and others," she said.

"But everyone, regardless of what their health issues are, wants the best for their children."

This creates an opportunity to help them influence the development, well-being and long-term outcomes for their child, she said.


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States lose $41bn by holding out on Gonski

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 30 Juli 2013 | 13.39

THE federal government believes Victoria, Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory stand to lose a combined $41 billion if they don't join the new school funding model.

Talks are continuing with Victoria to address the state's further concerns with the deal.

The Labor government says that with the higher per-student funding, increased student numbers and guaranteed indexation, there will be a collective $61 billion boost to schools over the next six years.

This includes the more than $15 billion needed to lift those schools which are currently below the schooling resource standard.

So far only NSW, the ACT, South Australia and Tasmania have signed up to the Commonwealth plan based on the Gonski panel's recommendations.

The other states will miss out on more than $41 billion over the six years if they don't join, the government says.

Federal Education Minister Bill Shorten says a meeting with Victorian Premier Denis Napthine on Tuesday was positive.

Comment has been sought from Dr Napthine.

If federal Labor can get the Victorian government on board it will be a big win because it will have a majority of states signed up.

Getting a second coalition government on side could also mitigate attacks from Opposition Leader Tony Abbott and the federal coalition, who want to scrap the new funding model.


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CSG report handed down by chief scientist

NSW's chief scientist has handed down her initial report into coal seam gas extraction. Source: AAP

COAL seam gas extraction poses health and environmental challenges, NSW's chief scientist has found.

But Professor Mary O'Kane says many of the concerns about the industry could be offset by establishing "a world class regime".

The professor has been reviewing all CSG activity in NSW since February, when Premier Barry O'Farrell caved in to community and political pressure by announcing a ban on all activity within 2km of residential areas.

He also tasked Prof O'Kane with investigating the risks posed by CSG, including its effect on groundwater and drinking water.

Releasing an initial report on Tuesday, Prof O'Kane said there were wide-ranging community concerns about CSG and the industry faced "significant challenges" going forward.

She noted there was a lack of publicly-available factual information, and recommended the state government take steps to build public trust in its ability to oversee a safe CSG industry.

"The challenges faced by government and industry are considerable," Prof O'Kane said.

"A commitment from all parties will be required to improve the existing situation and build trust with the community."

Prof O'Kane suggested that the government establish a world class extraction regime and insist on industry best practice at all stages of extraction.

She also recommended high-level monitoring and stringent compliance inspections, with hefty penalties for licence breaches, including possible licence revocation.

There should also be a central, whole-of-environment data repository and all industry personnel - including subcontractors - must be subject to mandatory training and certification requirements.

"The issue of CSG is a very tough one and requires a commitment from government to sound policy implementation based on highly developed data," Prof O'Kane said.

She said her review would continue well into next year, with further work on landholders' legal rights, insurance, and analysing in depth the methods for CSG risk and assessment.


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Market posts small gain

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 Juli 2013 | 13.39

THE Australian share market has edged higher, boosted by further gains in banking stocks.

At the close on Monday, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was up 4.3 points, or 0.09 per cent, at 5,046.3, while the broader All Ordinaries index was up 4.1 points, or 0.08 per cent, at 5,027.9.

On the ASX 24, the September share price index futures contract was two points lower at 5,006, with 15,725 contracts traded.


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NZ dollar steady ahead of US drivers

THE New Zealand dollar was little changed in local trading as investors await a slew of US economic data and the Federal Reserve's latest update on monetary policy.

The kiwi traded at 80.78 US cents at 5pm in Wellington from 80.75 cents at 8am and 80.84 cents on Friday in New York. The trade-weighted index was 75.93 from 76.02 last week.

Federal Open Market Committee members will review US monetary policy in a two-day meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday, as they weigh up the recovery of the world's biggest economy and whether to start unwinding their stimulus.

Chairman Ben Bernanke has previously said the bank may start slowing its pace of monthly asset purchases if things continue to improve.

That means US employment figures, second-quarter growth and a manufacturing survey this week will be keenly watched by the market.

"We expect the US data will be a bit stronger than what the market does, and overall that should support the US dollar," said Peter Dragicevich, currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.

"The kiwi should drift a little lower this week."

A BusinessDesk survey of 10 traders and strategists predicts the local currency may trade between 78.60 US cents and 82.30 cents this week. Seven expect the New Zealand dollar to rise and three are picking a fall.

The NZ currency traded at 60.83 euro cents from 60.87 cents last week. It fell to 79.02 yen from 79.45 yen and traded at 87.27 Australian cents from 87.22 cents.


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US drone kills six Qaeda suspects in Yemen

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 28 Juli 2013 | 13.39

AN apparent US drone strike has killed six suspected al-Qaeda militants, a Yemeni military source says.

The six suspects were travelling in a two-vehicle convoy in Mahfad in the southern province of Abyan, much of which was held by the jihadists before an army counter-offensive last year, the source said on Sunday, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"A night drone strike targeted two cars of Al-Qaeda militants in Wadi Dhiqa in Mahfad, killing the six people inside them," the official said.

In a major offensive in summer 2012, the Yemeni army drove al-Qaeda militants out of most towns in Abyan, including Zinjibar and Jaar which they had held for a year.

But the jihadists retain a presence in the nearby mountains of Mahfad.

Although weakened, al-Qaeda militants still carry out hit-and-run attacks against members of the security forces.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) took advantage of the weakness of Yemen's central government during an uprising in 2011 against now-ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh to seize large swathes of territory across the south.

The United States has stepped up its support for Yemen's battle against AQAP, which it regards as the most active and deadliest branch of the worldwide al-Qaeda network.

US drones strikes in Yemen nearly tripled in 2012 compared to 2011, from 18 to 53, according to the New America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank.

Several AQAP leaders have been killed by US drones, most recently the network's deputy leader Saeed al-Shehri whose death was confirmed by the jihadists on July 17.


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Vic govt looks for roadworthy test savings

ROADWORTHY requirements will be changed as the Victorian government seeks to squeeze savings from the system.

People who sell cars less than five years old may not have to present a roadworthy certificate under proposed changes aimed at saving up to $73 million.

VicRoads will examine three possible options for streamlining the roadworthy system.

Treasurer Michael O'Brien said despite different testing regimes state-to-state there was little evidence of significant difference between defect-related crash rates state to state.

"We can better target the test and find savings for all vehicle owners, without impacting on road safety," Mr O'Brien said on Sunday.

Victorians currently pay about $150 for their roadworthy certificate, more than four times their NSW neighbours who pay $35, according to the state government.

In Queensland, a roadworthy certificate costs about $67.

VicRoads will take recommendations on the options for four weeks.

One option would remove the requirement for vehicles less than three years of age to present a roadworthiness certificate on transfer of ownership.

A second option would include the first option and a shorter safety test to reduce cost.

A third option would make the period for which a roadworthy certificate was not required for a transfer of ownership five years.

The proposal would not extend to taxis, hire cars or buses, which would still be required to have annual roadworthy tests, Mr O'Brien said.

"Buyers or sellers of newer cars will still be able to choose to have a broader safety inspection done if they wish," Mr O'Brien said.

VicRoads processes about 730,000 roadworthy certificates annually.


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