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Four arrested over train station stabbing

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 10 Mei 2014 | 16.41

An 18-year-old man is in hospital after he was stabbed at a railway station south of Sydney. Source: AAP

THREE men and a teenage girl have been arrested after a stabbing at a NSW train station.

Policy say an 18-year-old man was found with a stab wound to his back at Sutherland Railway Station early on Saturday.

He was taken to St George Hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

Three men, 19, 23 and 26, and a 17-year-old girl were arrested less than an hour later at Engadine.

Police are questioning them at Sutherland Police Station.

Police are still searching for a fifth man thought to be linked to the stabbing.


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PM pays tribute to beef baron Graeme Acton

PM pays tribute to beef baron Graeme Acton | The Courier-Mail

Last updated: May 10, 2014

PRIME Minister Tony Abbott has paid tribute to Australian beef baron Graeme Acton, describing him as a great and proud man.

NRL Live: Rabbitohs holding on

QLD_SM_SPORT_NRLTITANS_10MAY14

SOUTH Sydney have extended their lead and are working hard to keep the Titans at bay. Follow it live, with Storm v Sea Eagles next.

Justice Crew debut at No. 1

Justice Crew debut at No. 1

JUSTICE Crew join Silverchair, Midnight Oil and, er, Bardot and Scandal'us as the only Australian groups to enter the ARIA singles chart at No.1.

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Easy access to welfare is over: Andrews

Australians who receive the disability support pension will be assessed for the capacity to work. Source: AAP

UP to 20,000 Australians who receive the disability support pension (DSP) will be assessed for the capacity to work, and if deemed able, will be expected to get a job.

In tough talk ahead of the budget, Social Services Minister Kevin Andrews also repeated warnings that the days of young Australians sitting at home on the couch collecting welfare cheques were over.

He said the government believed young people should be either be working or training for work.

"The message out of this is simply this. The days of easy welfare for young people are over. We want a fair system but we don't think it is fair that young people can just sit on the couch at home and pick up a welfare cheque. Those days are over," he told reporters in Melbourne.

Mr Andrews confirmed the budget, to be delivered on Tuesday night, will introduce rules that mean some people collecting the DSP disability support pension will be reviewed for capacity to work.

That will apply to some 10-20,000 people who had gone onto the DSP in the last 5-6 years but not yet assessed under new impairment tables.

"If they are capable of working, whether it is full-time or part-time, then our expectation is that they should be working," he said.

Mr Andrews said measures announced on Tuesday would be just the first instalment of reform.

He said former Mission Australia chief executive Patrick McClure had completed his discussion paper on welfare reforms but would review it in light of budget changes.

The review will be released for public consultation after the budget.

"I will be taking to cabinet further proposals for welfare review. This will go to the structural arrangements," Mr Andrews said.

Mr Andrews said the welfare system now comprised some 50 payments, allowances and supplements assembled ad hoc over the years.

"It is time to have a clear look at making structural change so far as welfare is concerned," he said.

Proposed changes are in line with the report of the National Commission of Audit which said the DSP was costing $15.8 billion a year.

Opposition health spokeswoman Catherine King was critical of the changes to the DSP.

"Why would you be punishing them? Why would you be punishing their income security payments and trying to restrict their access to income support whilst at the same time cutting a whole lot of benefits that support them into work," she told reporters in Melbourne.


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Govt releases climate action draft bill

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 09 Mei 2014 | 16.41

The federal government is seeking public comment on laws backing up its emissions reduction fund. Source: AAP

PUTTING in energy-efficient light bulbs and cutting gas in coalmines could be eligible for taxpayer funding under the federal government's climate policy.

There could also be scope for international carbon emission permits to be counted, despite the government saying they wouldn't be part of its emissions cuts.

Environment Minister Greg Hunt released draft legislation on Friday for the emissions reduction fund, which will replace Labor's carbon tax and carbon farming initiative.

Both major parties are committed to cutting carbon emissions by five per cent below 2000 levels by 2020.

Improving the energy efficiency of homes and factories, capturing landfill and mine gas, improving farm soil and upgrading vehicles will qualify for funding.

Those seeking funding, for projects lasting up to 15 years, will need to pass a new "fit and proper person" test.

And any project for which funding is sought would have to be something not likely to have occurred "under normal business conditions".

The Clean Energy Regulator (CER) would be responsible for registering projects and issuing Australian carbon credit units for verified emissions reductions.

The CER would buy emissions reductions at the lowest available cost, generally through reverse auctions.

The draft bill does not set out the rules for a new safeguard mechanism, which would ensure emissions reductions paid for by the fund were not displaced by a rise in emissions elsewhere.

The safeguard, due to start on July 1, 2015, will be the subject of a separate bill.

Climate Institute chief John Connor said the draft laws were well short of a credible alternative to the current carbon pricing scheme.

The policy could put Australian emissions on track to rise by 30 per cent by 2030, he said.

Mr Connor said the draft laws left the door open for the purchase of international permits.

The CER's new powers would enable it to use almost any process it wanted to buy emissions reduction, undermining the claim to be a market mechanism.

"This draft legislation is still well short of a package that can credibly reduce pollution, let alone reduce pollution enough to help avoid costly climate disruption," Mr Connor said.

"Parliament should instead stay with the current laws, which price and limit pollution and can reduce emissions by up to 25 per cent by 2020 with deeper reductions thereafter."

Submissions on the emissions reduction fund draft bill close on May 23.


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Graffiti tag link to school chook killers

Graffiti tag link to school chook killers | The Courier-Mail

Last updated: May 09, 2014

A GRAFFITI tag that appears to say "Siko" is a lead in a police investigation into the killing of 14 pet chickens at a Perth primary school.

Benji prepared to play reserve grade

Benji Marshall

BENJI Marshall says he is prepared to do whatever it takes to make his return to the NRL a success, even if that means playing reserve grade.

Meet Nine's new Blockheads

The Block

WE don't know their names yet, but TV fans can get their first look at the new contestants on The Block at a special pop up shop this weekend.

Dragons gamble $1.1 million on Benji

Benji Marshall

BENJI Marshall officially became St George Illawarra's $1.1 million gamble, signing the failed rugby union convert until the end of 2016.

10 reasons why we love mums

10 reasons why we love mums

THEY care for us when we're sick, feed us when we're hungry and are always on hand for a hug. They're just some of the reasons mums are the best.

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'Bitterness' behind brutal murders: court

Lian Xie's "bitterness" was behind his murder of five members of the Lin family a court has heard. Source: AAP

NINE-YEAR-OLD Terry Lin was alive for up to two hours after he was allegedly asphyxiated and bashed by his uncle in the boy's family home in Sydney, a court has heard.

The graphic details of the boy's death and that of his four family members were revealed during the crown's opening address at Lian Bin "Robert" Xie's trial on Friday.

Xie is accused of murdering his wife's brother Min "Norman" Lin, 45, Mr Lin's wife, Yun "Lily" Li Lin, 44 and their sons Henry, 12, and Terry, 9 in the early hours of July 18, 2009.

He is also alleged to have killed Lily's sister, Yun Bin "Irene" Yin, 39.

He has pleaded not guilty.

In outlining the crown case, prosecutor Mark Tedeschi QC said Xie was "motivated by bitterness" when he went to their North Epping home on the "particularly dark night" and turned off its electricity.

Without waking anyone, it is alleged Xie went into Min and Lily's bedroom first and murdered them in their beds.

He then killed the third adult, Irene.

These attacks, Mr Tedeschi said, involved numerous blows with a "hammer-like object" and likely happened while they were sleeping or "at most" while they were waking up.

Having killed those that represented the largest "threat", the crown says Xie then went into the bedroom the two boys Henry and Terry shared.

But here a struggle did break out.

Both boys, the crown said, showed signs of defensive wounds, with the crime scene indicating they had moved around their room.

Terry's injuries were consistent with that of a "furious struggle" and the nine-year-old survived for approximately one to two hours after the attack, the court heard.

Everyone except Irene showed signs they were asphyxiated.

None of the Lin family's neighbours heard a thing.

After slaying the family, it is alleged Xie would have been "covered in blood" when he walked the 300 metres back to his own home.

Xie then placed something on his garage floor and "unbeknown to him ... left a small area of blood smear that contained a mixture of three, four or five of the deceased persons," Mr Tedeschi told the jury.

When he cleaned his garage floor the following morning, this spot remained.

The court heard that Xie and his wife Kathy had gone to her brother's home on the morning of the 18th, after Min failed to turn up to work.

After discovering the crime scene, the court heard Kathy "pleaded" with Xie to stay, saying she was scared.

But Xie knowing "he himself was responsible for their deaths" left before eventually driving to Merrylands to pick up Kathy's parents, Mr Tedeschi said.

It is alleged that "many, many months" after the murders, Xie told a prisoner at Long Bay Jail that he had disposed of the murder weapon during this trip.

He is alleged to have also confided that he believed Kathy wouldn't be a danger to him as she had been sedated on the night her family died.

The trial continues.


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All Fairfax staff return to work

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 08 Mei 2014 | 16.41

Staff at Fairfax newspapers in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra are striking over plans to cut jobs. Source: AAP

FAIRFAX Media chief executive Greg Hywood has warned staff the company must change to survive as hundreds of workers ended a snap 24-hour strike over plans to axe 70 more jobs.

Staff at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the Australian Financial Review, the Canberra Times, the Newcastle Herald and Illawarra Mercury walked off the job on Wednesday afternoon after they learned 25 editorial production jobs, 30 photographic positions and 15 jobs in the Life Media division would by cut in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra.

In an email to all staff obtained by AAP, Mr Hywood acknowledged employees have strong views about the cuts and pledged to consult affected workers and the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA), which represents journalists.

Mr Hywood said Fairfax in recent years had endured "painful adjustments" to ensure the company remained for the long haul, but added that the process must continue as the media landscape, technology and readers' tastes change.

"While there will be - and should be - debate about how we are changing the company, I want you to know that nothing is done without serious thought and genuine consultation," he said.

"We have been upfront about what we are doing and why.

"That will not change. Nor will our commitment to delivering the highest quality journalism.

"I know it's not easy - but we have to stay the course."

Simon Johanson, a senior business journalist and a member of the MEAA Fairfax house committee, said he hoped talks with management could begin in the next day or two.

"We are now seeking a meeting with management to try and get a better understanding of what they are proposing, and we would like to change some of the initiatives that they are proposing," he said.

"We are seeking substantial changes to what they plan to do."

This includes finding alternatives to job cuts and an extension to the planned seven-day consultation period offered by management, Mr Johanson said.


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Fears for missing Victorian delivery man

Fears for missing Victorian delivery man | The Courier-Mail

Last updated: May 08, 2014

GRAVE fears are now held for an Indian student who went missing while on his delivery job in Melbourne a week ago.

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Kurnell conversion on track: Caltex

Caltex says the conversion of Kurnell refinery into a fuel import terminal is on time and budget. Source: AAP

FUEL refiner and supplier Caltex's $270 million conversion of its Kurnell oil refinery in Sydney into a major import terminal is on time and on budget.

Kurnell is due to close as a refinery and open as Australia's largest fuel import terminal in the fourth quarter of this year.

"The conversion of the Kurnell refinery to a leading import terminal remains on time and on budget, with the refinery on track to cease operations in the final quarter of this year," Caltex chief executive Julian Segal told shareholders at the company's annual general meeting on Thursday.

After the closure of the Kurnell refinery is complete, the amount of crude oil imported by Caltex will halve - Caltex still operates the Lytton refinery in Brisbane - and imports of refined fuels will increase.

The refinery closure was expected to result in the loss of 330 jobs, with several hundred more contract jobs on the line.

To strengthen the fuel supply chain after the conversion of Kurnell, Caltex has established an Ampol-branded office in Singapore.

The role of Ampol Singapore, which is wholly owned by Caltex Australia, is to source refined fuels and related shipping to Australia.

On behalf of Caltex, Ampol has entered into a deal with Chevron to help procure and supply imported refined fuels.

Mr Segal said that in the first three months of 2014, Caltex had made an unaudited profit of $121 million, down from $190 million in the first quarter of 2013.

Using the company's preferred measure - replacement cost of sales operating profit - unaudited profit was $96 million, down from $146 million in the prior corresponding period.

In the first quarter, Caltex's marketing and distribution business continued to grow despite the sale of Caltex's bitumen business in 2013.

Higher sales of jet fuel and premium grades of petrol and diesel offset a long-term decline in demand for unleaded petrol.

External factors, including currency and crude oil price fluctuations, that affected Caltex's refining and supply business in the second half of 2013 had continued into 2014 and had resulted in the business posting an earnings loss.

Caltex's refiner margin was $US8.78 per barrel, down from $US13.60 in the prior corresponding period.

The Lytton refinery increased production.

Mr Segal said the outlook for the marketing business for the rest of the year was positive, and the full year outcome for refining and supply would depend largely on the level of the refiner margin.

Caltex shares were 42 cents higher at $22.22 at 1320 AEST.


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Corby shoves journalist on parole visit

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 06 Mei 2014 | 16.41

Corby shoves journalist on parole visit | The Courier-Mail

Last updated: May 06, 2014

SCHAPELLE Corby has pushed a journalist while reporting for parole in Bali.

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Budget cuts must be gradual, OECD warns

TREASURER Joe Hockey has been warned to avoid "heavy front loading" his federal budget cuts while faced with a sluggish economy and an unemployment rate set to peak above six per cent.

The Australian economy continues to face near-term uncertainties as the resources investment boom unwinds and non-mining businesses show reluctance to expand, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development believes.

In its Economic Outlook on Tuesday, the Paris-based institution expects the economy to grow at just 2.6 per cent in 2014, well below its long-term average of about 3.25 per cent.

It has cut its 2015 growth forecast to 2.9 per cent from 3.1 per cent six months ago.

The shift away from resource sector investment will mean comparatively low employment growth, with unemployment peaking above six per cent, the OECD says.

The jobless rate unexpectedly dipped to 5.8 per cent in March after hitting 6.1 per cent in February, its highest level in more than a decade.

The OECD does not expect unemployment to show real improvement until the second half of 2015.

As such, it says the treasurer's approach to returning to a surplus should be gradual.

To reach his objective of a budget surplus of one per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2023/24, and taking into account spending commitments already in the pipeline, would require a deficit reduction of about half a percentage point of GDP each year, it says.

That would be about $6 billion a year.

Some of this deficit reduction will happen automatically as economic growth picks up and if bracket creep is allowed to operate; that is, wage inflation taking an individual's salary into a higher tax bracket.

The OECD says subdued inflation pressures will allow the Reserve Bank to keep interest rates low for now and support a continued economic recovery.

However, rapid growth in house prices and mortgage lending "requires continued close attention".

The central bank on Tuesday left the cash rate at a record low of 2.5 per cent, where it has stood since August 2013.

The OECD believes the central bank should start raising interest rates in the first half of 2015.


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NT wants 2500 more Asian migrants per year

THE Northern Territory government hopes to welcome 2500 migrants from Asia to fill labour gaps as part of a proposal to develop northern Australia.

Chief Minister Adam Giles says he is in talks with Prime Minister Tony Abbott and federal Minister for Immigration Scott Morrison about putting in place a regional migration agreement, but admits it hasn't been easy.

"There are challenges in perceptions around the country about increasing migration to the Territory," he told reporters in Darwin on Tuesday.

He said the unemployment rate in the greater Darwin area was 1.3 per cent, posing problems for employers seeking labour, and plans haven't always come to fruition to bring up workers from Sydney and Melbourne, which have higher levels of unemployment.

"We are having a strategic advancement towards Asia; we believe that's the most positive move for the NT as a government and for northern Australia both on investment but also population and trade routes," Mr Giles said.

He said he is working on a trilateral agreement between the NT, East Timor and Indonesia, and still determining what a 2500 growth in migrant workers would mean for the workforce, housing and essential services.

The government is still negotiating the time frame over which the workers would migrate to the NT, which has a long history of welcoming migrant workers, particularly from Asia, and Mr Giles said he hoped that would continue.

"It's important we focus on migration from the northern neighbours when we can't fill those gaps from southern Australia," he said, but stressed the need to ensure the plan had the support from the wider Australian community.

The biggest challenge for workers migrating to Australia from the neighbouring region would be mastering English, said Pak Ade, Indonesia's consul to the NT.

"In Java they are more proficient in English but if you're looking in the eastern part (of the country) you need to encourage them to further their English proficiency," he said.


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NSW donation scandal crosses party lines

Written By Unknown on Senin, 05 Mei 2014 | 16.41

ICAC's Operation Spicer will call Darren Williams into the witness box after a spectacular week. Source: AAP

FORMER coal mogul Nathan Tinkler made tens of thousands of dollars in secret donations so NSW politicians would "bend to his will", the state's corruption watchdog has heard.

The Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) has heard Mr Tinkler's development firm Buildev funnelled $66,000 in donations via his stud farm Patinack and then through EightByFive, a "sham" company set up by ex-Liberal minister Chris Hartcher's former staffer.

The unfolding cash-for-favours scandal has engulfed the NSW Liberal Party and there were claims on Monday that Buildev executive Darren Williams had arranged donations to the NSW Nationals before the 2011 election.

"As discussed we are delighted to accept support for our state election campaign as long as it is not from prohibited donors," then-Nationals NSW director Ben Franklin told Mr Williams in an email.

Mr Williams in turn wrote to Patinack director Troy Palmer: "Mate need $20(k) in here to help these guys, Nats will be running ports. Do you know any one that can help?????"

At the time, Buildev was lobbying for a $1 billion coal loader to be built on the Newcastle foreshore.

Under NSW electoral funding laws Mr Tinkler is barred from making political donations but counsel assisting, Geoffrey Watson SC, said ICAC investigators had uncovered evidence that four of his employees had each made $5000 payments to the National Party.

Days after the coalition swept to power in NSW in 2011, Tinkler Group CFO Troy Palmer passed on a "positive" news article about the lucrative coal loader to his boss - but Mr Tinkler was unimpressed.

The embattled businessman fired off this reply: "this is just to pacify me because I donated to the nats and they are doing f*** all about it. willy (Mr Williams) and govt trying to tell me it is moving forward but i dont see it and the whole thing is being held up in bureaucracy ... we had a bunch of deadbeats before and now we have a bunch of p****s scared to make a decision".

Mr Watson said it showed Mr Tinkler believed he could buy political support.

"That's what was operating down at the old Tinkler Group," Mr Watson put to Mr Palmer.

"Payments made to political parties to get the decision-makers to bend to Nathan Tinkler's will, isn't that right?"

"No, no," Mr Palmer replied.

Although the NSW coalition has featured prominently in ICAC's Operation Spicer, which led to last week's sensational resignation of police minister Mike Gallacher, it is alleged Mr Tinkler was not averse to crossing the floor.

He has been accused of working with former NSW Labor minister Joe Tripodi to depose former Newcastle member Jodi McKay after she refused to accept a bribe.

Mr Watson has indicated that on Wednesday morning he will ask that the inquiry be adjourned to allow further investigations.

The witness list has been shuffled to include Liberal fundraiser Nick Di Girolamo.

He was at the centre of the ICAC's last inquiry, Operation Credo, and his gift of a $3000 bottle of wine led to former NSW premier Barry O'Farrell's demise.


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Abuse not seen as a crime, inquiry told

Senior Christian Brothers will give evidence to the royal commission into child sex abuse this week. Source: AAP

THE Christian Brothers regarded the physical and sexual abuse of children as abhorrent and a moral failing but not a criminal offence, a royal commission has been told.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has also heard double jeopardy laws prevented other men from coming forward to tell of their abuse at the hands of a Brother Dick, who was sentenced to three and a half years after confessing to abusing five "unknown" children.

Allegations of child sex abuse were not passed on to police because the order did not see them as a criminal matter.

"All I can assume, understand, is that there was a mindset that didn't see this first and foremost as a crime; that it was something of a moral failing, contributing to the corruption of the child," Brother Anthony Shanahan, the order's former provincial leader for WA and SA, said on Monday.

"I think they saw it as something that was abhorrent, harmful, although I don't think they understood it as harmful in the way we would now, in terms of consequences for the victim."

The commission last week heard from 11 men physically and sexually abused at four WA Christian Brothers residences at Tardun, Bindoon, Clontarf and Castledare between 1947 and 1968.

Justice McClellan asked Br Shanahan if he thought it extraordinary that the order did not view sex abuse as a criminal offence.

"Yes," he replied.

"Can you explain how the order would have brought themselves intellectually to that position?" Justice McClellan asked.

"No, I can't explain it," Br Shanahan said.

Br Shanahan said there existed a pattern where an accused brother would be transferred.

Christian Brothers who were accused of sexual abuse were still allowed to work with children by being sent to day schools where there would be less opportunity to offend.

"There was a pattern, I think - not completely in 100 per cent of cases, but I think it's a pattern where there was a complaint the person would be transferred to a day school and not a residential school," he said.

When asked by Council assisting the commission Gail Furness if Br Shanahan's predecessors knew of the underlying conduct that led to the transfer, he replied: "Probably, yes."

The commission also heard a series of documented sex abuse allegations dating back to 1919, some against brothers who were shifted to other schools around the country.

Last week an abuse survivor, Edward Delaney, said after he told the superior at Bindoon, Brother Bruno Doyle, of his abuse at the hands of a Brother Parker, he was informed the man had been transferred to Tasmania and was told not to talk about it.

Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions Bruno Fiannaca told the commission the 1994 conviction of Br Dick prohibited others from coming forward in the courts.

The hearings continue.


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Indonesia in dark over Abbott no-show

INDONESIA has received no explanation for Prime Minister Tony Abbott postponing a meeting with the president, nor any indication that asylum seekers are being sent back to its territory, a government spokesman says.

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Firefighter bravery recognised

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 04 Mei 2014 | 16.41

FIREFIGHTERS who attended a fuel spill with the potential to ignite and threaten a Sydney peninsula faced a choice.

Leave the two million litre tank to leak, evacuate the peninsula around Banksmeadow on Botany Bay and wait for a catastrophic explosion.

Or volunteer to wade through the fuel pool and repair the leaking valve.

NSW Fire and Rescue (NSWFR) station officer Ron Morasso looked at his colleagues and made his choice.

"I said to him, 'what was going through your mind'?" NSWFR commissioner Greg Mullins told AAP after presenting Mr Morasso with the fire service's highest bravery award.

"[Mr Morasso] said to me, 'I looked at my crew and thought - he has two young kids, his wife is pregnant, he is only young...it's got to be me'."

Mr Mullins said even a spark from a car passing the Caltex fuel terminal would have risked an explosion with enough ferocity to close Sydney airport and any subsequent fire might have taken days to extinguish.

Mr Morasso, who has since retired, was presented with the NSWFR medal for conspicuous bravery on Saturday.

Other crew members who responded to the spill in July 2013 also received commendations.

Meanwhile, two firefighters who rushed to the aid of a man on fire after a petrol tanker crash on Sydney's northern beaches were also recognised.

Mosman crew members Lloyd Mulder and George Cheeke stayed with the man, who crawled from his car after it burst into flames, until he died at the roadside last October.

Witnesses Andrew Cochran and Maria Tosone also received commendations for trying to pull the man and another person from the car on Mona Vale Road.

And 12 firefighters who responded to a fire at a unit complex in Bankstown in the city's west, where two women attempted to escape by jumping from a fifth floor window, were also among commendation recipients.

Mr Mullins said the blaze was so intense that firefighters' uniforms caught fire and helmets melted.


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Vic govt to unveil infrastructure spend

Vic govt to unveil infrastructure spend | The Courier-Mail

Last updated: May 04, 2014

MELBOURNE'S East West Link tunnel will get more funding and light will be shed on plans for a Melbourne airport rail link in Tuesday's state budget.

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Roar seals title in extra-time thriller

A-League Grand Final - Brisbane v Western Sydney

BRISBANE Roar has come from behind to defeat Western Sydney Wanderers 2-1 in extra time to win the A-League Championship.

The dirty war between Samsung and Apple

The dirty war between Samsung and Apple

IT IS a patent battle that ended in two losers. A jury awarded Apple $US119 million over Samsung's alleged copying of features, and also found Apple illegally used one of Samsung's patents.

This place to stay is a shoe inn!

This place to stay is a shoe inn!

EVER wanted to live a fairytale? Take a look inside the quirky tourist accommodation that's straight out of a nursery rhyme.

The truth about being the eldest

FIRST-born children are more likely to succeed than their siblings. But being the eldest is no picnic, writes Angela Mollard. Here's why.

Don't get dudded on refunds

F25bmfed: Sunshine Marketplace

YOUR chances of getting a refund are greatly improved if you keep good records. But some companies won't budge — even when presented with irrefutable proof.

Time to break out rugs and uggs

QLD_CM_COLD_2MAY14

THE cold snap is in, making for a wintry weekend with parts of Queensland dropping to within a fraction of zero. Find out how cold it really was.

The truth about life on LinkedIn

 Linkedin

OPINION: It's the career networking site that has taken the world by storm but is LinkedIn a valuable tool or unnecessary evil?

Re-live thrilling A-League decider

A-League Grand Final - Brisbane v Western Sydney

BRISBANE Roar has sealed its third A-League Championship with a thrilling extra-time win, coming from behind to beat Western Sydney Wanderers.

The Voice new series: Live

IT'S the third series of The Voice tonight on Channel 9. Join our blog and have your say. Are Kylie Minogue and will.i.am new stars or flops.

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Greens say they're the party to fix NSW

The Greens have announced their upper house line-up for the upcoming March 2015 NSW state election. Source: AAP

THERE'S a smell wafting from the Labor and Liberal party rooms in NSW parliament, the Greens say.

Just days after police minister Mike Gallacher stepped aside following claims in front of the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) over illegal donations to the Liberal Party, Greens NSW MP John Kaye announced on Sunday his new upper house team for the March 2015 election.

Joining him on the ticket will be existing MP Mehreen Faruqi, as well as coal seam gas campaigner and political advisor Justin Field.

Mr Kaye said the team would be highlighting their credentials as an alternative to the major parties.

"NSW politics has been plunged into crisis, not just by the Labor party but also by the Liberal party's endemic addiction to collecting funds from tainted sources," he told AAP.

"This is the time for reform. This is the election campaign where politics needs to change."

Mr Field, who is third on the ticket, said he will be taking out the message of clean water, energy and politics out into the community.

"A stench of corruption now hangs over NSW parliament, but only the Greens are able to say they can clean up politics."

The announcement comes after the Labor party revealed on Sunday that a "record number" of their party's supporters had voted for former MP Verity Firth to be the next state candidate in the Sydney seat of Balmain.

She narrowly lost the marginal inner-city seat to Greens candidate Jamie Parker at the 2011 election.

Mr Parker said the Greens were confident that there needs to be change.

"It doesn't matter who the candidate is, we have seen before that he structure of Labor means they are silenced ... I stand for a different approach to politics," he told AAP.

He said one of the bills the Greens would be be introducing to parliament in the following months is a push to implement 2010 ICAC recommendations on lobbying in NSW.

This included a recommendation to set up an independent body to oversee the role of lobbyists.


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