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Written By Unknown on Jumat, 13 September 2013 | 16.41

Murder charges over missing man

Murder charges over missing man

UPDATE: Police investigating the disappearance of 26-year-old Michael Klaassen have charged a man with his murder.

Early peak-hour rush into weekend

Early peak-hour rush into weekend

MOTORISTS looking for a quick run home from work should have left already, with the normal Friday rush starting earlier than usual this week.

Palmer's lead shrinking, shrinking...

Palmer's lead shrinking, shrinking...

UPDATE: CLIVE Palmer's lead in Fairfax shrinks as the nail-biting count continues on the Sunshine Coast.

Beattie blasts Bligh on failed water policies

Beattie blasts Bligh on failed water policies

UPDATE: Peter Beattie slams Anna Bligh, claiming her government made a "tragic error of judgment" in the creation of the water grid. COMMENTS 200+

UQ 'downplayed' nepotism scandal

UQ 'downplayed' nepotism scandal

A CMC report into a nepotism scandal at the University of Queensland has slammed the institution. See the findings.


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Sydney tunnel in administration

SYDNEY'S troubled Cross City Tunnel is expected to be placed into receivership for the second time in seven years as the owners struggle to finance the infrastructure.

CrossCity Motorway, which is owned by Leighton Contractors, the Royal Bank of Scotland and EISER Infrastructure Partners, placed the project into voluntary administration on Friday.

The board made the decision after the NSW Office of State Revenue (OSR) decided to appeal a recent Supreme Court decision which found that $64 million in stamp duty was not payable on the 2007 acquisition.

CrossCity Motorway chairman Ed Sandrejko said the business was generating cash but the legal action had had a significant impact as it came during the refinancing process.

"Having won our case in court we anticipated it would still be possible to proceed to refinance," he said.

"The OSR appeal means that this is no longer feasible."

Mr Sandrejko said CrossCity Motorway bought the concession from the original owners in September 2007 through receivers.

The Cross City Tunnel was placed in receivership in 2006, just a year after it opened, with inflated traffic figures blamed for the failure.

CrossCity Motorway said a government decision to alter traffic arrangements in contravention of the contractual arrangements had affected the balance sheet since the group acquired the asset.

David Merryweather and Gregory Hall of PricewaterhouseCoopers have been appointed voluntary administrators.

The motorway will remain open to motorists during administration.


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High Court footage to go online

Canberra's High Court has announced plans to post recordings of cases online. Source: AAP

REAL-LIFE legal dramas will soon be available for download after Australia's most powerful court announced plans to post recordings of cases online.

In an Australian first, Canberra's High Court aims to make the judicial process more publicly accessible by sharing audio and visual recordings of cases from October.

Matters heard in closed court for legal reasons will not be published on its website.

As the process is established, recordings will be made available within days of each hearing, allowing for the vetting of information subject to non-publication orders.

"This delay is likely to be reduced as court experience grows," a court statement read.

Footage will be available by visiting the court's national website at www.hcourt.gov.au.


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Abbott under fire over Bracks axe

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 10 September 2013 | 16.42

Labor has accused the Abbott government of pettiness over revoking a job offer to Steve Bracks. Source: AAP

THE new federal coalition government has revoked a job given to former Labor premier Steve Bracks, sparking claims of pettiness and partisanship just three days after the election.

Prime Minister-elect Tony Abbott again met with senior advisers in Canberra on Tuesday to work on his frontbench line-up and receive departmental briefings, ahead of his swearing in next week.

But the day was dominated by the decision to revoke the appointment by the previous Labor government in May of Mr Bracks as Australia's consul-general in New York.

Mr Bracks, a former Victorian premier and businessman, was due to start in the post this week.

"This decision is both petty and vindictive," outgoing senior Labor minister Tanya Plibersek said.

"The first act of an Abbott government is to play party politics in international affairs."

When Labor won government in 2007 it allowed former Liberal minister Amanda Vanstone to complete her consular posting to Italy.

Labor also appointed former Liberal leader Brendan Nelson as ambassador to the European Union and NATO, and former deputy prime minister and Nationals MP Tim Fischer as ambassador to the Vatican.

Liberal Senator George Brandis, who's likely to be the next attorney-general, said Labor didn't consult with the coalition about Mr Bracks' appointment.

"Mr Bracks' credentials for the New York post - a former state premier - were not obvious to us," he said.

The government wasn't under any obligation to consult on the appointment because it wasn't in caretaker mode in May when it was announced.

Meanwhile, the Labor caucus will meet in Canberra on Friday to discuss who will replace Kevin Rudd as parliamentary leader.

No MP has publicly put up their hand, but former ministers Bill Shorten and Anthony Albanese are considered the frontrunners.

The Right faction has endorsed Mr Shorten and the Left is encouraging Mr Albanese.

Under changes to ALP rules, the parliamentary leader is chosen by a ballot weighted 50 per cent caucus members and 50 per cent grassroots members of the party.

So if there are two nominations on Friday, the new ballot process will more than likely go ahead over several weeks and Mr Albanese could have the popular edge among members.

But if there's only one nominee, he or she is expected to be endorsed on the day.

There's a "phenomenal groundswell of grassroots support" for Mr Albanese, a Labor Left source told AAP.

One of the new leader's first tasks will be to confirm whether or not Labor would in opposition reject attempts by Mr Abbott to scrap the old government's carbon pricing regime.

Mr Abbott again on Tuesday warned Labor and the Senate, where the Australian Greens now hold the balance of power, not to stand in the way of his election "mandate" to ditch the carbon tax.

"I would certainly expect the new parliament to respect the mandate that the new government has won," he told Seven Network.

From July 1 next year the Senate crossbench could have as many as 18 members, forcing Mr Abbott to negotiate with such parties as Palmer United Party and the Australian Motoring Enthusiast Party.

Caucus on Friday will also discuss Labor's election campaign as some continue to call for Mr Rudd to leave parliament altogether.

As counting continued after Saturday's election, the coalition was ahead in 89 seats to Labor's 56.


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Four guilty of Indian bus gang rape

Four men have been found guilty of the rape and murder of a woman on a New Delhi bus in December. Source: AAP

AN Indian court has convicted four men of the gang rape and murder of a physiotherapy student on board a moving bus in a crime that sickened the nation.

Judge Yogesh Khanna said the men, who could now face the death penalty, were guilty of murdering a "helpless victim" as he announced that sentencing arguments will be held on Wednesday.

"I convict all of the accused," Khanna said on Tuesday.

"They have been found guilty of gang rape, unnatural offences, destruction of evidence ... and for committing the murder of the helpless victim."

The four - Mukesh Singh, Akshay Thakur, Pawan Gupta and Vinay Sharma - had all pleaded not guilty to the charges, which included murder, gang rape and theft.

The victim's parents, who wept in court as the verdict was announced, have led the calls for them to be hanged, saying that they could only have closure once the four were executed.

Their 23-year-old daughter, who cannot be named for legal reasons, died of her injuries on December 29 in a Singapore hospital.

Amid emotional scenes outside the courtroom, the lawyer of Mukesh Singh said that his client would launch an immediate appeal.

"My client was simply driving the bus. He confessed fairly that he was driving the bus but he did not know what went on inside," V.K. Anand told reporters.

"We will appeal this verdict in the High Court in a month's time. But we will see what happens tomorrow after arguments and the quantum of punishment."

Mukesh Singh's mother fell to Anand's feet and broke down in tears outside the courtroom. The lawyer and her husband both tried to pick her up.

A.P. Singh, the lawyer for Akshay Thakur and Vinay Sharma, said both his clients would also appeal.

"We will now go to the High Court with our appeal ... This is a political conviction," he told a scrum of reporters.

Any subsequent appeal by the defendants is likely to take years in India's notoriously slow legal system.

A juvenile has already been sentenced to three years in a correctional facility, while a fifth adult defendant, bus driver Ram Singh, was found hanging in his prison cell in March while awaiting trial.

"We will not accept anything below the death penalty," the victim's father told AFP from his home in southwestern Delhi in an interview last week.

"If all four are sentenced to death, I can't imagine anything being better than that... We will get closure."

During the trial, the prosecution produced DNA evidence, the victim's dying testimony and statements from a male companion who was beaten up during the attack.

The victim and her companion had spent the evening watching a movie at a mall in south Delhi when they were picked up by one of the many private buses plying the streets.

But rather than take them home, the group subjected the pair to a horrifying 45-minute ordeal that ended with both of them thrown out of the bus, virtually unconscious and naked.

In an interview ahead of the verdict, the 28-year-old companion told AFP the assault was beyond a nightmare.

"I never imagined that one human being could treat another so badly," he said.

The student's family were bitterly disappointed with the three-year sentence handed down last month on the youngest defendant, the maximum allowed by law as he was only 17 at the time of the attack.

India has the death sentence for the "rarest of rare crimes", but does not often carry out executions.

The attack sparked weeks of sometimes violent street protests across India with seething public anger about sex crimes against women.

It also led to tougher laws for sex offenders, including the death penalty for rapists whose victims die or are left in a vegetative state.

The gang rape of a photographer last month near an upmarket area of Mumbai rekindled public disgust at India's sex crime problem.


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Bushfires rage across northwest Sydney

Bench calling for struggling Genia?

Will Genia

COULD the unthinkable be about to happen? Could Will Genia be warming the pine against Argentina in Perth this weekend?

Doomsday: Hole thing just gets bigger

Doomsday: Hole thing just gets bigger

REMEMBER all those 2012 doomsday bunkers? The world goes on, but there's no end to a fad that has survived every looming apocalypse for more than half a century.

Inside China's ghost cities

Inside China's ghost cities

SKYSCRAPERS. Shopping centres. Freeways. And hardly a soul in sight. These are the eerie megacities in China that remain virtually uninhabited.

Man gives wife 55,000 dresses

Man gives wife 55,000 dresses

WHAT'S the measure of love? For this man, it's the 55,000 dresses he bought for his wife over 56 years of marriage, so she never had to wear the same dress out dancing twice.

Handling cash with kid gloves

savings

TEACHING children how to handle money with so much technology around is tricky, but there are still basic principles it's worth spending time on.


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Coalition ahead in 86 seats: AEC

Written By Unknown on Senin, 09 September 2013 | 16.42

BILLIONAIRE Clive Palmer is on track to enter federal parliament.

The latest round of vote counting shows the Liberal-National coalition ahead in 87 seats.

Labor is ahead in 57 seats, with the Greens' Adam Bandt holding Melbourne, Bob Katter retaining his seat of Kennedy, and independent Andrew Wilkie returning in Denison.

The Australian Electoral Commission on Monday afternoon posted two-candidate preferred counts on its website for the seats of Fisher, Fairfax, Indi and Mallee.

It shows Mr Palmer is ahead of his Liberal National Party rival Ted O'Brien by 1920 votes in the Queensland seat of Fairfax.

Liberal frontbencher Sophie Mirabella trails independent Cathy McGowan in the Victorian seat of Indi by 1754 votes.

Former Howard government minister Mal Brough is 1521 votes ahead of Palmer United Party's Bill Schoch in Fisher.

The Nationals' Andrew Broad looks set to take the Victorian seat of Mallee, leading his Liberal rival Chris Crewther by 785 votes.

Among the seats listed as "close" is the NSW seat of Barton, with Labor candidate Steve McMahon 79 votes ahead of the Liberals' Nic Varvaris.

In Eden-Monaro, former Labor minister Mike Kelly is 616 votes behind Liberal candidate Peter Hendy.

Labor MP John Murphy is trailing Liberal challenger Craig Laundy by 652 votes in the NSW seat of Reid.

In Victoria, Labor MP Rob Mitchell is 72 votes ahead of the Liberals' Donna Petrovich in McEwen.

Labor candidate Peter Freeleagus is 141 votes ahead of the Liberal National Party's Michelle Landry in the Queensland seat of Capricornia.

The seat of Petrie was moved out of the "close" category on Monday afternoon. Former parliamentary secretary Yvette D'Ath is 809 votes behind the LNP's Luke Howarth in the Brisbane-based seat.

The Liberals will pick up a Senate seat in the ACT.

Liberal candidate Zed Seselja achieved just over 33 per cent of the vote in counting on Monday afternoon, pushing him ahead of the Greens' Simon Sheikh.

Labor's Kate Lundy has already retained her seat.


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Newman shakes up Qld's department heads

QUEENSLAND Premier Campbell Newman has announced a big shake-up of the state's department heads.

Mr Newman released a list of director-general changes on Monday as part of his plan to improve the public service.

Public Service Commissioner Ian Maynard will become the director-general of Queensland Health following the departure of Tony O'Connell.

Environment DG Andrew Chesterman has been shifted to fill Mr Maynard's previous job.

Energy and Water Supply DG Jon Black will now head the environment department while Natural Resources and Mines DG Dan Hunt will take on Mr Black's old role.

Dr Brett Heyward has been promoted from being on a health taskforce to becoming the Natural Resources and Mines DG.

Sue Rickerby has also been promoted from the Department of Premier and Cabinet to head the Science, Information Technology, Innovation and the Arts department.

Former senior environment bureaucrat James Purtill, who left the public service in 2008, has returned to head the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs and Multicultural Affairs department.

Mr Newman said he's determined to make Queensland's public service the best in the country.

"These appointments will provide the leadership and expertise needed to achieve that goal," he said.

"They are all talented, highly qualified and committed to delivering the first-class public services Queenslanders deserve."

Annastacia Palaszczuk said it was also time for Mr Newman to shake up his ministry.

"There's a number of ministers who are underperforming and if you're doing such a massive shake-up of your bureaucracy, there's definitely going to be something happening in relation to ministers," she said.


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Finance data show housing market improving

Lift-off as NASA joins Instagram

Lift-off as NASA joins Instagram

NASA's incredible galactic-themed photos have been on the radar of space enthusiasts for decades. But it's taken until now for them to arrive in your Instagram feed.

Time to spring clean your finances

Money, money, money

WITH three months until Christmas spending takes hold, now is the best time to give your finances a spring clean and get your money in order.


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Senate chance needed Palmer's money

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 08 September 2013 | 16.41

A Tasmanian mother and former military police officer, could be a Palmer United Party senator. Source: AAP

PALMER United Party (PUP) Senate chance Jacqui Lambie admits she turned to the mining billionaire because she was running out of money.

The Tasmanian mother of two and political novice is in strong contention to pick up the state's sixth Senate seat as counting continues.

Ms Lambie would join former rugby league international Glenn Lazarus in the upper house following the PUP's stunning election debut.

The Burnie-based 42-year-old spent 11 years in the military before becoming a campaigner for injured veterans.

She had been due to serve with the military police in East Timor but hurt her back 48 hours before she was due to leave.

Ms Lambie began her Senate campaign as an independent before sending her veterans' policy to party founder Clive Palmer.

"To be honest I was running out of money," she told AAP.

"I don't lie about that with people.

"I just didn't have the money like the big players did for advertising.

"I said I'm not getting this far and having it all thrown out because I'm too pig-headed to take somebody else's funding."

The veterans' policy calls for more staff and training and better liaison with clients.

"I'm disgusted in what's going on under veterans affairs," she said.

"I also believe this - senators are lazy and they are not doing their job and that's why a large amount of legislation being put through is not right."

In the past 24 hours Ms Lambie has gone from obscure hopeful to micro-party champion.

And she isn't daunted about the prospect of negotiating with new prime minister Tony Abbott.

"It just depends on the deal that's on the table on the day," she said.

"If I don't agree with them, if I don't believe they're going to suit Tasmania, I won't be signing off on anything."

Ms Lambie says too much of Tasmania is locked up and out of reach of miners and the forestry industry.

She is fiercely anti-Greens and would use her PUP conscience vote on same-sex marriage to oppose reform.

Senate counting is not expected to be finalised until almost two weeks after polling day and Ms Lambie, who now holds around half a quota, is not counting her chickens.

"Mate, I'll feel much better once we've signed on the dotted line," she said.


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Senate race raising eyebrows

AUSTRALIAN voters look set to deliver a jumbled Senate where the balance of power is held by minor party players including a former footballer, prompting senior parliamentarians to call for a review of the election process.

A complex system of preferencing will likely deny the coalition a 39-seat majority in the upper house, while granting a Senate ticket to newcomers like former rugby league player Glenn Lazarus in Queensland for the Palmer United Party.

Incoming prime minister Tony Abbott will be forced to negotiate with balance-of-power senators to pass legislation including his promises to scrap the carbon tax and mining tax.

"If the collection of senators are elected that we suspect will be elected, I think that will be a group of people that Tony Abbott will be able to, regrettably, progress some of his policies and reforms through the Senate," re-elected Tasmanian independent MP Andrew Wilkie told reporters on Sunday.

On current projections, the coalition is expected to get three senators in NSW, Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia, two in South Australia and Tasmania and one each in the ACT and NT, leaving it with an unchanged national total of 34.

Labor is set to hold two seats in NSW, Victoria, Queensland, Tasmania and Western Australia, with one each in the ACT, NT and South Australia, giving it a total of 26, down five from its current standing.

NT Labor senator-elect Nova Peris will be the first indigenous woman in parliament.

The Palmer United Party could pick up a second seat, with Jacqui Lambie in Tasmania.

Independent Nick Xenophon will be returned in South Australia where Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young's place remains in doubt.

Senator Xenophon described as "bizarre" the process of micro-party preferencing and said there needs to be greater transparency in the process.

Still in the mix across the nation are candidates from the Australian Motoring Enthusiast Party and the Australian Sports Party.

In NSW, One Nation founder Pauline Hanson is jostling for a place with Liberal Democrats lead candidate David Leyonhjelm.

The Liberal Democrats were positioned first on the lengthy Senate ballot paper and commentators suspect some voters mistook the party name for "Liberal".

Despite little campaigning, the party picked up close to nine per cent of the NSW Senate vote.

"That is a matter that brings the democratic process into disrepute," Liberal Senator Eric Abetz told reporters in Hobart.

"When people see that they are being gamed, they are being tricked, people will lose confidence in the democratic system and ultimately that will need to be looked at."

Until the Senate changeover in July, the Greens will continue to hold the balance of power, making it impossible for the Abbott government to pass legislation such as the carbon tax repeal and toughening up asylum seeker policies unless Labor offers its support.


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Shots fired in suburban Sydney street

Blues boot Tigers in MCG stunner

Juddy

CARLTON has pulled off a remarkable come-from behind victory to stun Richmond in the first elimination final at the MCG today.

Facebook busy on election day

Facebook

WE all know who won the election but who got the most mentions on Facebook? The results are in and some of them may surprise you.

The tallest towers that are big fakes

The tallest towers that are big fakes

THE builders of some of the world's most famous modern skyscrapers are telling tall stories about their true heights. Find out which ones aren't all they seem.

Pole dancing for children. It's a thing

Pole dancing for children. It's a thing

WOULD you let your little girl pole dance? Meet the women who are all for it, and the mum who is getting her daughter a pole for Christmas.

How to get rich the lazy way

How to get rich the lazy way

"YOU'RE not going to get $1 million bucks mucking around on social media" - and other advice from an author who says secret to being rich is doing as little as possible.


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