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Vic bushfire emergency over: experts

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 18 Januari 2014 | 16.42

Victoria's fire chief says the worst is over, despite 34 fires still active in the state. Source: AAP

THE Victorian bushfire emergency, in which four homes were razed in the state's worst conditions since Black Saturday, is over, with the premier saying lessons learnt from the 2009 fires had saved lives.

The fires of the past few days, mostly started by lightning, scorched more than 100,000 hectares across the state, with 34 still burning on Saturday.

As conditions cooled on the back of a four-day heatwave, authorities downgraded all emergency warnings.

The firefighting effort will continue for days, but Fire Services Commissioner Craig Lapsley told reporters in Melbourne on Saturday he believed the worst was over.

The main fires are raging in the Grampians, the Mallee and Gippsland.

Four homes were lost in the fire that has burnt through more than 51,000 hectares in the northern end of the Grampians National Park and claimed one life.

Several sheds and many kilometres of fencing were destroyed and up to 7500 sheep were affected, most of which will have to be put down.

The tourist village of Halls Gap was saved from the fire's path on Friday by an earlier-than-expected wind change.

By Saturday afternoon, the main threat passed and residents were to be allowed back Saturday afternoon.

Homes were lost in the small town of Brimpaen, while two properties near Dadswells Bridge have also been affected.

The Grampians fire also caused building damage at the Troopers Creek Tavern and the Happy Wanderers Holiday Resort at Wartook.

Authorities say a woman whose body was found at her Roses Gap property on Friday morning died as a result of a medical issue.

Crews are still battling fires in the Mallee region in the state's northwest and in Gippsland in the east, but authorities no longer believe the more than 30 fires raging out of control there will merge to form a 500,000-hectare inferno.

An evacuation order for Halls Gap is the first used since the evacuation policy came in after Black Saturday.

Premier Denis Napthine said authorities would examine how the evacuation went in the Grampians and said compulsory evacuation would not be likely to be introduced.

"I think that would be unworkable more than anything else."

He said the changes made since Black Saturday included better co-ordination of emergency agencies, which led to better handling of the extreme weather conditions than in 2009.

"There is no doubt that the improvements that have been made from the lessons learnt from Black Saturday have saved lives this week," he told reporters in Horsham.

The Black Saturday fires of February 7, 2009, killed 173 people and destroyed more than 2000 houses.

Mr Lapsley said that given the conditions, the impact of the fires this week was "not a bad result".

"You can see that in some respects we've had big fires - 100,000 hectares burnt in a matter of basically two days - but you would think that we've done reasonably well," he told reporters.


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Order out to arrest PNG opposition leader

Orders have been issued for the arrest of PNG's opposition leader over police threat allegations. Source: AAP

ORDERS have been issued for the arrest of Papua New Guinea's opposition leader amid allegations he threatened the nation's police commissioner.

The country's top cop, Tom Kulunga, on Saturday ordered the arrest of Belden Namah on allegations the former deputy prime minister threatened him in a letter.

In the letter Mr Namah allegedly demanded Mr Kulunga reinstate four policemen who were suspended after a warrant was issued for the arrest of Prime Minister Peter O'Neill.

"Failure to accede to my request will result in me taking unprecedented measure to have you arrested and charged under Section 128 of the Criminal Code," Mr Namah is alleged to have said in a letter to Mr Kulunga on Friday.

Mr Kulunga said the statement amounted to a threat.

"I will not allow the actions of an impatient, irrational and erratic man to threaten peace and stability within the country. He will be arrested forthwith for threatening," Mr Kulunga said in a statement.

"We are fed up with the tantrums of the Opposition Leader who is acting like an impatient, insensitive and thoughtless child.

"He does not respect the rule of law nor does he respect the systems and processes in place."

AAP understands Mr Namah is at his residence near Parliament House in Port Moresby.

Mr Kulunga said the matter of the suspended officers was due to be heard by a court on Monday.

"And yet he has seen fit to write to me and threaten to arrest me over this matter," Mr Kulunga said.

"The Opposition Leader thinks he can take on the roles and responsibilities of everyone.

"Here he is a complainant, an investigator, a prosecutor and now he wants to be the judge also."

Mr Namah was PNG's deputy prime minister until he split with Mr O'Neill just before the 2012 election.

As deputy prime minister, Mr Namah once stormed the Supreme Court and demanded the arrest of the nation's Chief Justice.

More recently, the former military officer demanded the arrest of Mr O'Neill on allegations he ordered illegal payments of state money to controversial law firm Paul Paraka lawyers.

Mr O'Neill repeatedly denied the allegations and has called Mr Namah a nuisance.

Last week he ordered police to investigate Mr Namah and the four police officers, after a court issued a warrant for the arrest of Mr O'Neill, his treasurer Don Polye and Finance Minister James Marape.

The country's anti-corruption watchdog, Taskforce Sweep, says its investigations have not turned up enough evidence to charge the prime minister.

Mr O'Neill controls a coalition government of more than 90 MPs out of 111.

Mr Namah leads an opposition of about five MPs.

Comment has been sought from Mr Namah.


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Plot change for US version of Broadchurch

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 14 Januari 2014 | 16.41

FOX'S entertainment chairman says a remake of the British police drama Broadchurch for US viewers will be faithful to the original, to a point.

Network executive Kevin Reilly said on Monday that the Fox series, titled Gracepoint, will be 10 episodes instead of the eight for Broadchurch. It will also feature a different lead actress and a twist in the ending.

Gracepoint goes into production within a few weeks. It will star the British show's male lead, David Tennant, as a troubled police detective. But Olivia Coleman, who played a dowdy small-town detective and family woman, won't be opposite him again.

Instead, Anna Gunn of Breaking Bad, has been cast in the Fox remake.

Broadchurch was shown in Australia on the ABC in 2013.


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DOC hopeful stranded whales will escape

THE Department of Conservation (DOC) hopes a dozen stranded pilot whales will swim to safety after 40 volunteers attempted to refloat the animals on Tuesday night.

Thirteen whales were stranded near the base of Farewell Spit on the northern tip of the South Island on Tuesday morning.

All but one survived the day thanks to 40 volunteers, many from Project Jonah, who kept the whales cool, wet and shielded from the sun.

DOC and the volunteers managed to float the whales in the high tide on Tuesday night, but the light dimmed before they had a chance to bring the whales together as a pod, Takaka ranger Greg Napp told NZ Newswire.

The whales were spread out over 100 metres, but bringing them together would allow them to communicate and swim out together, he said.

But he remained hopeful the whales, which were floating, would get out to sea.

"They could well swim off tonight and hopefully they will," he said.

If they stayed near the shore, they were likely to be stranded again, he said.

Mr Napp said the whales had been in various states of distress while stranded.

DOC was alerted to a pod of about 60 whales close to the shore off Taupata Point about 8am on Tuesday.

DOC staff lost sight of the other 50 or so pilot whales in the pod, which were still at sea.

Rangers will look for more stranded whales at first light on Wednesday.

Pilot whales regularly become stranded on Farewell Spit and last Monday 39 were stranded near the base. All died naturally or were euthanised.


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6.4-quake shakes Puerto Rico

Written By Unknown on Senin, 13 Januari 2014 | 16.41

A STRONG earthquake out to sea has shaken Puerto Rico, causing minor damage in some places.

Some people reported items falling in their home and dozens said they felt buildings sway in the capital of San Juan, about 100 kilometres from the quake's epicentre, on Monday.

The US Geological Survey said the quake had a preliminary magnitude of 6.4 and struck just after midnight about 57km north of Hatillo.

It said the quake occurred 28km deep.

Puerto Rico's emergency management agency said there was no tsunami warning and that no injuries have been reported.

Earthquakes of similar magnitude have struck near Puerto Rico in recent years, including a 5.4-magnitude one that shook the US territory in March 2011 and another one of the same magnitude that struck on Christmas Eve in 2010.


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Protesters claim win at NSW mine site

COAL mine protesters claim they've achieved their purpose following an ongoing blockade in north western NSW.

About 30 activists on Monday blockaded heavy vehicles at the Maules Creek mine site at Boggabri.

The trucks and machinery are used to build roads and a rail line at the site.

Two people attached themselves to a bulldozer via a cable.

Leard Forest Alliance spokeswoman Georgina Woods claimed one of the attached protesters had been arrested and taken away by police. Confirmation has been sought from NSW Police.

"We stopped a full day's work so we have achieved our purpose," Ms Woods told AAP.

Ms Woods said if the road to Whitehaven Coal's $767 million open-cut mine is cut through the forest, animals, plants and sacred Aboriginal sites would be lost.

She said protesters would remain at the site for weeks to come.

Whitehaven Coal chief executive officer Paul Flynn said the protesters had not changed the operation.

"The protesters there today...have not given rise to any material change to our operations at all," he told ABC Radio.

Protesters also blockaded the site in December after the Federal Court dismissed an application by the Northern Inland Council for the Environment (NICE), which had called for the approval granted by former Environment Minister Tony Burke to be overturned.

Police cut the activists free before arresting them.

Whitehaven has previously said the project would create 800-plus jobs and enjoyed support from most local residents.


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Two dead after explosion in car in Austria

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 12 Januari 2014 | 16.41

Police say two men have died after a hand grenade apparently exploded in their car in Austria. Source: AAP

POLICE say two men have died after a hand grenade apparently exploded in their car in the Austrian capital.

Officers found the men in a Bulgarian-registered car in Vienna's Ottakring district early on Saturday after a passer-by reported hearing shots or an explosion.

One man in the car was already dead and the other died at the scene.

Police were working to identify the men, believed to be around 50, and piece together what happened.

The Austria Press Agency reported that evidence points to a hand grenade having exploded and quoted police spokesman Thomas Keiblinger as saying officials "have no indications that it was thrown into the car".

No other weapons were found.


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UK army cuts jobs but wants recruits

The British government is to have further army redundancies to reduce the organisation's size. Source: AAP

THE British government is to have another round of army redundancies as it continues to reduce the organisation's size.

Defence Secretary Philip Hammond confirmed there are more cuts on the way though the numbers involved are unclear.

The Sunday Telegraph newspaper says it had been told that the army would cut around 3000 jobs this year, but a government source said the figure under discussion was lower.

The regular army is being cut from 102,000 to 82,000 over a number of years while the newly renamed Army Reserve - formerly the Territorial Army - is being expanded from 19,000 to 30,000.

The newspaper said the latest losses are planned as the final wave of job cuts that will see the army lose the 20,000 posts by 2020. Thousands of jobs have already gone in the past three years.

The cuts come despite the army starting a recruitment campaign for both regular troops and reservists after saying it was struggling to attract applicants.

Mr Hammond said a television advertising campaign would "dispel forever the myth that somehow the army isn't recruiting".

Mr Hammond added that 2013 "was not a good year for recruitment".

The new campaign will introduce a simpler online application form, a more streamlined medical clearance process and an army fitness app.

The cuts will be announced next week, the newspaper said.


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