Wednesday, February 29, 2012

QLD:Morcombe murder case adjourned


AAP General News (Australia)
08-15-2011
QLD:Morcombe murder case adjourned

The man accused of murdering Queensland schoolboy DANIEL MORCOMBE will fight the charges.

The 41-year-old truck driver appeared briefly in Brisbane Magistrates Court this morning,
charged with murder, deprivation of liberty, child stealing, indecent treatment of a child
and interfering with a corpse.

It's been nearly eight years since 13-year-old DANIEL vanished while waiting for a
bus near his Sunshine Coast home.

The hearing was over within minutes, and the case was adjourned until September 26.

Outside court, the man's lawyer TIM MEEHAN said his client will seek bail in the Supreme
Court, and will be defending the charges.

AAP RTV cf/gd/jmt

KEYWORD: MORCOMBE (BRISBANE)

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

SA: Turnbull meets SA premier over water package


AAP General News (Australia)
02-02-2007
SA: Turnbull meets SA premier over water package

Water Minister MALCOLM TURNBULL says he's confident South Australia will change its
stance and support the federal government's 10 billion dollar water rescue package.

Mr TURNBULL has met with MIKE RANN today .. after the SA premier rejected plans for
the Commonwealth to take control of the Murray Darling Basin.

The minister says the Commonwealth's plan will eventually be accepted .. because all
the states will see it's in their best interests.

AAP RTV sl/els/bart

KEYWORD: WATER TURNBULL (ADELAIDE)

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

WA:Murder accused Mansell will apply for bail


AAP General News (Australia)
04-18-2011
WA:Murder accused Mansell will apply for bail

PERTH, April 18 AAP - The man accused of murdering Perth millionaire Craig Puddy and
fleeing to Queensland will apply for bail while he awaits his trial.

Cameron Mansell, 38, will stand trial for murder in the WA Supreme Court on September 6.

In the Supreme Court on Monday, his lawyer Timothy Saayman said Mansell had a bail
application pending and would present it to the court "shortly".

Mansell was expected to apply to have a judge-only trial but is no longer pursuing
that option, Mr Saayman said.

Mansell is charged with murdering his former business partner Mr Puddy.

The 45-year-old millionaire disappeared from his luxury home in Perth's south in May last year.

His body has not been found, but Mansell's burnt-out four-wheel drive vehicle was discovered
in bushland within days of Mr Puddy's disappearance.

Mansell was questioned by police but he left WA, allegedly under an assumed name, after
he was released.

After a two-week manhunt, he was arrested while camping in a north Queensland rainforest
and extradited back to WA to face the murder charge.

AAP anr/nb

KEYWORD: MANSELL

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

Research and Markets Adds Report: Global Telecoms in 2011 - The Global Telecoms Sector Continues to Grow


Wireless News
01-10-2011
Research and Markets Adds Report: Global Telecoms in 2011 - The Global Telecoms Sector Continues to Grow
Type: News

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Global Telecoms in 2011" report to its offerings.

In a release, Research and Markets noted that report highlights include:
Despite the economic downturn, the global telecoms sector continues to grow in terms of mobile subscribers, Internet users, fixed broadband subscribers and wireless broadband.

This report provides a snapshot of the telecoms industry in 2011 with a focus on the sectors listed above. The report is designed to provide current observations and statistics which may assist investors, analysts and industry participants in making investment and business decisions.

Report information:

http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/37fcfa/ global_telecoms_in

((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))

Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a

FED:Campers still affected by Azaria


AAP General News (Australia)
08-20-2010
FED:Campers still affected by Azaria

By Steve Lillebuen

MELBOURNE, Aug 20 AAP - They were effectively accused of conspiracy to murder, labelled
misguided fools and scurrilous liars.

Rubbish has been thrown at their home while both faced years of abusive phone calls
from intrusive strangers.

All this fury was unleashed because Max and Amy Whittaker, now both 81, dared to believe
that a dingo could take a baby in the most publicised case in Australian legal history.

Thirty years on, the Whittakers still have a profound distrust of authority after their
first-hand brush with the Azaria Chamberlain saga prompted years of suspicion and vilification.

"It's been a very long journey," Mr Whittaker says through tears at his southeast Melbourne home.

"It's affected me deeply. Many nights I couldn't sleep."

Despite a divided public, the Whittakers have never stopped believing Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton's
story of a dingo attack in the family tent for a very simple reason: "She never would
have had the opportunity to do it," Mr Whittaker explains flatly.

"And if you believe a person is entirely innocent, then you fight to make sure she
should not be jailed."

The couple had been camping three tents from the Chamberlains the night their nine-week-old
daughter disappeared at an Uluru campsite on August 17, 1980.

The case prompted three inquests, a royal commission and saw the baby's mother wrongfully
jailed for three years.

But as the experience of the Whittakers' may reveal - as they mark the 30th anniversary
this week - they too were affected when speculation ran rampant and the nation became
enthralled with a classic whodunnit.

That night, at 8pm, they had been sitting in their tent listening to an Adelaide radio
station playing Christian hymns in what Mrs Whittaker says is now a moment frozen in time.

"Suddenly, the tent flap opened and in walked this fella," she recalls.

"He said, 'You've got Christian music playing. What does that mean?'"

Mr Whittaker thought Michael Chamberlain was ready to have a go at them for playing
the music too loud before Mrs Whittaker offered an explanation.

"I just said, `We're Christian people' and he said, 'If you're Christian people would
you pray for us? A dingo has just taken our baby. She was nine-weeks old and she's probably
dead by now'," Mrs Whittaker recalled.

She sat there stunned while her husband asked in which direction the dingo had run,
and he and their daughter grabbed coats and torches.

The search for Azaria had begun.

As Mr Whittaker ran off into the darkness, Mr Chamberlain turned and shouted: "I am
a minister of the gospel!"

By the time they reached Alice Springs three days later, gossip had already fuelled
the theory that the child's throat had been slashed by its mother.

"We said, 'What murder? What are you talking about?' We were right there when it happened
and it was a dingo," Mrs Whittaker says.

Even back in Melbourne a fellow churchgoer told them: "Isn't it terrible that they're
blaming the dingo?"

Police had already discounted the dingo theory and begun suspecting the Chamberlains
within 16 hours of the disappearance. It took officers six weeks before they got around
to interviewing all the campers.

The public was thrown off by the seemingly cold and uncaring behaviour of the Chamberlains,
but the Whittakers remember comforting them, seeing them cry and then put on a brave face
when the television cameras arrived.

Azaria's body has never been found.

In 1981, Operation Ochre saw police re-interview every camper simultaneously. The Whittakers
were told it was a murder inquiry and they didn't want to hear anything about dingoes.

The Whittakers say they were often accused of collusion and of a conspiracy to protect
the Chamberlains.

The idea was laughable at best and the Whittakers maintained faith that Lindy Chamberlain
would be found innocent at her trial.

But because they were called as prosecution witnesses, the Whittakers never got to
tell the jury their full story of what happened that night and instead were used to build
a case against the Chamberlains.

They were furious. While the Whittakers can discuss for hours the finer details on
the case, their main point is that the Chamberlains were surrounded by campers at every
moment and never would have had a chance to sneak away, kill a child, dispose of its blood
and hide a body for 30 years. For the Whittakers, the murder theory is ridiculous.

In the early 80s, with a jury finding Lindy guilty and the judge putting her in jail,
the Whittakers began writing letters to newspapers and government officials demanding
a judicial inquiry.

A Northern Territory government spokesman once called them - and other campers - scurrilous
liars.

The most generous comment was that they were misguided fools for their ongoing campaign
with other witnesses.

A newspaper then printed their address. That day rocks and rubbish were thrown at their
house and the angry phone calls began and went on for several months.

Their efforts helped pave the way for a royal commission. In 1986, following the discovery
of Azaria's matinee jacket and Justice Trevor Morling finding the conviction was unsafe,
the charges against Mrs Chamberlain were dropped.

The NT government eventually paid her $1.3 million in compensation for wrongful conviction.

Looking back, the Whittakers hold no grudges over their poor treatment and actually
point to positives to come out of the ordeal.

Mrs Chamberlain-Creighton showed great determination and courage, they say. The Whittakers
have bonded and formed lifelong friendships with fellow campers swept up by the case.

Now their attention turns to changing Azaria's death certificate, which currently lists
the cause of death as unknown.

The NT government this week agreed to investigate wehther the cause of death is still
accurate, considering the information available.

It follows Mrs Chamberlain-Creighton's call to change the cause of death to confirm
a dingo or feral dog was responsible, to officially put the matter to rest.

Mr Whittaker says he's learned it's too late to convince anyone of guilt or innocence
but he believes changing the death certificate will be an act of justice for the long-criticised
Chamberlains.

"I don't expect most people will ever change their minds," he says.

"I couldn't care less about that. But I think for the Chamberlains it's a very important thing."

AAP sbl/pmu/was

KEYWORD: CHAMBERLAIN WHITTAKER (AAP NEWSFEATURE)

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

WA: Man charged over theft of copper from WA war memorial


AAP General News (Australia)
04-13-2010
WA: Man charged over theft of copper from WA war memorial

A 51-year-old man's been charged over the theft of copper flashing from the base of
the Anzac Memorial in Perth.

Police say the arrest follows a tip-off to Crime Stoppers.

It's alleged the 30 metres of copper flashing was removed from under pavers at the
Kings Park memorial a month ago and sold .. but it's since been recovered.

The 51-year-old from Subiaco will appear in the Perth Magistrates Court on April 22.

AAP RTV ldj/jmt

KEYWORD: MEMORIAL (PERTH)

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

Qld: Schoolyard death prompts 'one punch can kill' warning


AAP General News (Australia)
08-30-2009
Qld: Schoolyard death prompts 'one punch can kill' warning

BUNDABERG, Aug 30 AAP - Queensland Premier Anna Bligh has described as "shocking" a
school-yard fight that led to the death of a 15-year-old boy while her police commissioner
again warned the state's young that "one punch can kill".

Jai Morcom died at Gold Coast Hospital on Saturday morning after suffering head injuries
allegedly during a fight at Mullumbimby High School on the NSW north coast on Friday.

Ms Bligh on Sunday offered her sympathies to the boy's parents, describing their son's
death as "tragic and shocking".

"We send our children to school and expect that they'll be safe there," she told reporters
in Bundaberg.

"I hope that this is a one-off extreme incident."

She said violence was intolerable anywhere, but especially at schools.

"I don't think there's ever been a time where there hasn't been school-yard scuffles
but this goes way beyond that," Ms Bligh said.

"This is a shocking incident."

Speaking alongside the premier, Police Commissioner Bob Atkinson said police had not
necessarily noticed rising levels of violence at schools.

Instead, several high-profile cases in recent years had put youth violence in the spotlight,
he said.

Mr Atkinson made special mention of Matthew Stanley, a 15-year-old boy who died when
he was bashed at a party on Brisbane's bayside in 2006.

His death triggered an education campaign with the tag line "One punch can kill".

"I know it may seem at times there's more violence these days than there ever was before
but I'm not actually convinced and sure that that is the case," Mr Atkinson said.

"But, certainly, I think there's a greater awareness today of the tragic consequences
of violence and that message one punch can kill is one that we need to get out there over
and over again, not to resolve arguments through violence."

AAP jmm/cdh

KEYWORD: BOY QLD

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

Fed: Twilight stars come out to Sydney


AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2009
Fed: Twilight stars come out to Sydney

By Alyssa Braithwaite, National Entertainment Writer

SYDNEY, April 21 AAP - Twilight's vampire love story already gets fans hot and bothered.

So two of the movie's sexy stars are sure to get pulses racing when they arrive in
Australia this week.

Kellan Lutz, who plays good vampire Emmett Cullen, and Edi Gathegi, who plays bad vampire
Laurent, are coming to Sydney to celebrate the release of the Twilight DVD, which comes
out on Wednesday.

Lutz and Gathegi will be pressing the flesh and signing autographs in Sydney's CBD
on Friday April 24, before appearing at Twilight-themed proms in Sydney and Melbourne
over the weekend.

Tickets to the proms are sold out, despite a price tag of $250 a pop, or $475 for the
VIP day package.

The movie by director Catherine Hardwicke, based on the best-selling novel by Stephenie
Meyer, has turned a previously unknown cast into global stars.

Being cast as Edward, a high school vampire who also happens to be the best looking
guy in the world, turned British actor Robert Pattinson into a pin-up.

Even Justin Chon who plays school nerd Eric has had more female attention since being
in the hit movie.

"I get some weird requests sometimes," he said.

"The girls always want me to quote lines from the movie, or take a picture of me kissing
their cheek - weird stuff like that.

"I'm like, are you sure you want to take a picture of that?"

It's not just the men who are getting all the attention.

Canadian actress Rachelle Lefevre said she was attracted to the role of bad vampire
Victoria because of her sex appeal.

"It was always Victoria (for me), she's so fierce," Lefevre said.

"She was described as this flame-haired, feline, powerful vampire woman, and it was
just sexy and powerful and cool.

"I just loved everything about her."

Lefevre said a steamy kissing scene she shared with co-star Cam Gigandet, who plays
her partner-in-crime James, was cut from the film.

But it has been rescued from the cutting room floor and features as an extra on the Twilight DVD.

"I had a scene where you actually see Cam and I, we have this vampire make-out session,"

Lefevre said.

"And then I get so wrapped up in the chase and so excited that I slam him into a tree
and kiss him.

"I don't know that it's PG13 though, so maybe that's why it got cut."

AAP acb/tnf

KEYWORD: TWILIGHT

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

NSW: No nerves for eagle's first public flight


AAP General News (Australia)
12-16-2008
NSW: No nerves for eagle's first public flight

SYDNEY, Dec 16 AAP - As Nonami, Taronga Zoo's newest wedge-tailed eagle, soared over
Sydney in her first public flight, a territorial magpie took exception.

Spotting the six-year-old bird on her handler's arm at an oval near the zoo, the feisty
magpie swooped, and swooped again.

When Nonami launched off the arm of her trainer Matt Kettle, the magpie gave chase,
swooping a few more times before finally giving up its attack on one of Australia's largest
birds of prey.

"It went much better than I was anticipating," Mr Kettle said of the eagle's flight,
which had been practised privately for three months.

"I didn't expect to lose her, but I wasn't expected the best behaviour either."

The bird was donated to the zoo earlier this year by the Victorian man who raised her
after she was found as a 12-week-old orphan.

Mr Kettle said the bird had done well just to survive being abandoned.

"Probably 80 per cent won't turn one (years old) in the wild," Mr Kettle said.

Nonami is a competent flyer, despite her turbulent upbringing, he said.

"She was a strong flyer, but she may not have been super fit.

"Flying is not a skill that birds are born with - it's a skill, and lots of birds die
in the process of trying to learn."

Mr Kettle said the wedge-tailed eagle had actually benefitted from land clearing, because
it made hunting simpler.

"The more forests we chop down, the more rabbits we see and rabbits have become the
eagle's main diet," he said.

Nonami will now be taking part in daily shows at Taronga Zoo, he said.

AAP pbc/hn/bwl

KEYWORD: EAGLE (PIX AVAILABLE)

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

Main stories in today's 3AW news


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2008
Main stories in today's 3AW news

MELBOURNE, August 12 AAP - Main stories in today's 3AW news:

- Australia has a good chance of increasing its gold medal count with performances
in the pool today led Libby Trickett and Jess Schipper in the 100m butterfly.

- A man who tried to kill himself by crashing into oncoming cars appeared in the Victorian
Supreme Court today.

- Geelong man with HIV who had unprotected sex given two year suspended sentence.

- Georgia says Russia is continuing to bomb its capital and is starting to occupy the country.

- Fears are growing for the welfare of nine-year-old Yadav Munohur who has been missing
for four days.

- The Australian dollar is equal to 88.75 US cents. At noon the ASX was up 29 points at 5015.

AAP jxt/gfr

KEYWORD: MONITOR 3AW 1200

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

FED: Aust 'hypocritical' for allowing dugong hunts:whaling group


AAP General News (Australia)
04-02-2008
FED: Aust 'hypocritical' for allowing dugong hunts:whaling group

SYDNEY, April 2 AAP - Japanese whalers have attacked the Australian government over
its support for harvesting dugongs by indigenous hunters, further intensifying the spat
between the two countries over whaling.

In a submission to the International Whaling Commission for its meeting in Chile in
June, the Japanese will highlight the killing of dugongs by Aborigines and Torres Strait
Islanders.

The New Zealand-based spokesman for Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research, Glenn Inwood,
said Australia was being hypocritical by supporting the harvesting of dugongs by indigenous
hunters, while rejecting all "lethal use" of whales, The Australian reports today.

"Japan subscribes to the international principle of sustainable utilisation," the spokesman said.

"The Australian government rejects all lethal uses of whales and yet supports sustainable
utilisation of its own national hunting of the Dugongs.

Islander leaders agreed that too many dugongs were being taken for traditional food,
The Australian said.

Environment Minister Peter Garrett said there was no analogy between Japanese whaling
and the killing of dugongs.

The government was actively engaged in programs to protect dugongs, he said.

AAP krc/srp/wf

KEYWORD: WHALING DUGONG

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

What Australian newspapers say on Friday, August 31, 2007


AAP General News (Australia)
08-31-2007
What Australian newspapers say on Friday, August 31, 2007

SYDNEY, Aug 31 AAP - Without asking for them, rugby league great Andrew Johns was given
prodigious gifts at birth, extraordinary talents and instincts that have propelled him
to the highest ranks of the sporting elite, The Daily Telegraph says today in an editorial.

And it should be acknowledged Johns has made the most of them, working hard to develop
his skills, to turn his natural abilities to best advantage. So his success is not all
"God-given".

But, in many ways, his genius was just bestowed. And just as he may have had little
say in that ordination, neither was he asked if he wanted to become "a role model".

Yet there is the reality of the situation, Johns did accept his gifts and all that
has come his way as a result: he's comfortably wealthy, he's hailed as a hero in his home
town. He is held up, in fact as one of our country's greatest sporting heroes.

And whether Johns - or any other elite sportsperson for that matter - likes it or not,
that considerable reward does come with a price tag.

International human rights lawyer Geoffrey Robertson has been quick to recognise the
insidious clampdown on press freedoms that has left Australia in some surprisingly unfavourable
company on the issue of free speech, The Australian says.

As a lawyer, Mr Robertson is inclined to see the judiciary as the best line of defence
to correct the trend. But the newspaper says its experience with the courts has not always
been as encouraging as Mr Robertson would suggest.

While the paper said it understands his call for a charter of rights to allow the judiciary
to measure their interpretations of the law against fundamental principles, including
freedom of expression, it said it believes such an approach opens the way for undue judicial
adventurism as practised in the High Court under chief justice Anthony Mason.

Spring is in the air, the high school formals are under way and NSW's 85,000 year 10
students are sliding into a familiar state of ennui, The Sydney Morning Herald says.

And that's even before they sit the much maligned School Certificate exams next term.

Yes, there's something amiss among the 15 and 16-year-olds who routinely idle away the
final months of year 10 before embarking on the stressful and rigorous two years leading
up to the Higher School Certificate exams.

Part of the problem is simply age. Many teachers would agree that mid-teens can be
difficult to engage, no matter what the education system throws at them. Others blame
the largely redundant School Certificate.

About three-quarters of year 10 students stay on for the HSC anyway, which now accommodates
a range of TAFE subjects suited to trades and technical careers, not just the academic
path of the past. That leaves year 10 students with too little to strive for and too much
time on their hands.

Yesterday's High Court ruling, which partly removed a federal government ban from voting
for anyone serving a jail term re-establishes a fundamental democratic right, The Age
says.

The High Court supported earlier legislation that banned anyone serving three years
or more from voting, but allowing less serious offenders was an important step, the editorial
says.

Until yesterday Australia was one of a handful of countries that bans all prisoners
from voting, it says.

Three years ago, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Britain was in breach
of prisoners' human rights, effectively forcing the government to begin the process of
lifting a ban brought in just after transportation to the colonies was abolished.

Although the reasons for the High Court's decision will not be made available for some
time, it was obviously crucial for the judgement to be given before the federal election.

The court has, however, already indicated a main legal point: that the Senate and House
of Representatives must be directly chosen by the people.

This fact is perhaps something the Howard government has chosen to bend to its convenience.

Its Electoral Integrity Act denied not only felons the right to vote, but made it harder
for others by closing off the electoral roll on the day election writs are issued.

It is estimated this will disenfranchise as many as 160,000 people, including new voters
and those who have fallen off the rolls, it said.

This, the government has said, is to protect the integrity of the vote. How? By ensuring
fewer people can vote?

The local sharemarket sneezed this week but did not catch cold, The Australian Financial
Review says.

This confirmed that Australia's equities market is suffering from mild anxiety rather
than any grave ill. The S&P/ASX200 Index has wobbled lower in recent months but still
trades at levels considered a record as recently as April and remains up eight per cent
this calendar year and 28 per cent since the start of 2006.

Things may be bad in credit markets, but there is good reason to remain cautiously
optimistic about the medium-term prospects of equities. The key to successful long term
investing is time in the market - not timing in the market. Companies such as BHP Billiton
and Woolworths are reporting bumper profits and making upbeat forecasts, while Australia
is benefiting more than virtually any other country from the China boom.

Last week the local market chalked up its largest five-day gain in 32 years.

Of course, the local market is unlikely to resume the upwards trajectory that propelled
it from less than 5000 points in September last year to more than 6400 points in the last
week of July, the paper says.

That was too good to be sustainable.

Former Victorian premier Steve Bracks must front an upper house inquiry into gaming
licences, the Herald Sun says.

Mr Bracks has consistently denied he canvassed gaming licences in a meeting with Tattersall's
executives in 2003, but those denials were contradicted during the inquiry this week,
the editorial said.

Mr Bracks has been invited to attend the inquiry but is yet to respond, it said.

Under parliamentary rules, he may reject the invitation but in that course may risk
getting a subpoena to appear.

But involving esoteric rules will do little to meet community expectations that serious
allegations be tested and truth found, the editorial said.

After all, gaming licences are a licence to print money; the 27,500 poker machines
owned by the Tatt's and Tabcorp duopoly saw Victorians lose $2.5 billion in 2006.

Mr Bracks has shown himself to be an honourable man and a worthy state leader.

He needs to front the inquiry and respond to the evidence that directly contradicts his version.

AAP cmc

KEYWORD: EDITORIALS

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

NSW: Sophie Delezio book to be released next Tuesday


AAP General News (Australia)
04-17-2007
NSW: Sophie Delezio book to be released next Tuesday

The remarkable story of dual car crash survivor and burns victim SOPHIE DELEZIO has
been told in a new book to be released today.

The Sydney six-year-old endured burns to 85 per cent of her body in December 2003 after
a car smashed through a day-care centre in Sydney's north and ignited a fire.

Two years later SOPHIE was hit by a car while crossing a Sydney road and again sustained
near-fatal injuries.

SOPHIE'S JOURNEY .. by SALLY COLLINGS .. explores the fragility of her life and the
support she received from family .. friends and strangers during her difficult recovery.

AAP RTV krc/was/wz/crh

KEYWORD: DELEZIO (SYDNEY)

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

Vic: 16 houses confirmed destroyed in Victorian infernos


AAP General News (Australia)
12-15-2006
Vic: 16 houses confirmed destroyed in Victorian infernos

Sixteen houses have been confirmed destroyed in the fires in Victoria's east last night.

The largest loss was at Mt Ligar near Cowwarr Weir in Gippsland .. where seven houses
were destroyed by a fire which was deliberately lit earlier in the day.

Four houses were razed at the A1 Mine Settlement and five at nearby Gaffney's Creek
.. in the state's north-east.

The Department of Sustainability and Environment says last night's devastation brings
the total number of property losses .. since the fires began almost two weeks ago .. to
21.

And a 48-year-old man has died near Heyfield .. when he fell from the back of a moving
trailer and was run over by a truck travelling behind him.

He was battling a blaze believed to have been deliberately lit earlier .. and police
are hunting two men seen in the area at the time.

The bushfire was lit near Coopers Creek in Gippsland yesterday morning and spread rapidly
through bush.

The Country Fire Authority's GRAHAM FOUNTAIN says it's a cowardly act to light a bushfire
which impacts on people's lives and property.

He's told the Nine Network yesterday was the worst day since the bushfires began.

Mr FOUNTAIN says firefighters will take advantage of today's milder conditions .. and
there's a window of opportunity until early next week .. with milder weather conditions
across the fire areas.

AAP RTV ce/cp/wf

KEYWORD: BUSHFIRES VIC (MELBOURNE)

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

Fed: Beazley and Howard agree, petrol excise will not be cut


AAP General News (Australia)
08-06-2006
Fed: Beazley and Howard agree, petrol excise will not be cut

Both Prime Minister JOHN HOWARD and Opposition Leader KIM BEAZLEY have categorically
ruled out cutting excise on petrol.

Mr HOWARD has told Network Ten his government would have to cut excise by as much as
ten cents to make any real dent in the petrol price .. costing them two and a half to
three billion dollars.

And Mr BEAZLEY says cutting excise would be irresponsible.

He's signalled he'll be using the sky rocketing petrol prices to attack the government
as parliament resumes this week.

AAP RTV pv/cp

KEYWORD: PETROL (CANBERRA)

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