Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 3, 2013

Kids forced to find a chocolate alternative

Dairy chocolate problems

Wade Claridge, 7, with siblings Rani, 4, and Blair, 11, who are both unable to eat dairy products. Picture: MATT TURNER Source: adelaidenow

IT'S just two days until the Easter Bunny visits, when millions of children around the world rip open pretty foil and devour too much chocolate.

But for some youngsters like Blair, 11, and Rani, 4, of Happy Valley, the sweet stuff can be dangerous.

Unlike most children, the pair cannot eat most Easter eggs, but the Claridge household Easter bunny has been very clever in ensuring they won't miss out on a special surprise come Sunday.

Both children suffer from galactosaemia, a rare metabolic disorder which means consuming any dairy products can cause permanent damage to their bodies.

Just one in 60,000 children are born with the genetic disorder.

Their mum Natasha Claridge was looking at a specialist Facebook page dedicated to the disorder, when she stumbled across a post which changed Easter forever.

It revealed there was, in fact, one brand of chocolate, called Sweet William, her children would be able to eat.

The chocolate manufacturer uses soy beans instead of milk.

"It was always really hard to find," she said.

"They get a real kick out of getting Easter chocolates just like every other child."


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Easter to us means a holiday

Pope Francis

HOLY TIME: Pope Francis in St Peter's Square at the Vatican this week. Only half of adelaidenow respondents said they would celebrate the Christian meaning of Easter this weekend. Picture: AP Source: adelaidenow

MANY are critical of the commercialisation of Easter but embrace the holiday as a much-needed break from work and a time to spend with family.

An adelaidenow survey of 2308 people found more than 80 per cent of respondents believed Easter had become too commercialised, including only 6 per cent who said they were looking forward to chocolate the most.

Instead, about 40 per cent - or 920 people - said the long weekend was the most important part of Easter, ahead of 30 per cent of respondents who nominated the Christian meaning of Jesus's resurrection.

"It is a great excuse to see family and friends - celebrating and having fun with them," one person wrote.

Another wrote: "(I will be) catching up with family and getting stuff done around the house."

For most people - about 1707 respondents - this meant spending the weekend at home. Most said this was because they needed a rest at home, could not afford a holiday, did not want to deal with traffic or had work commitments.

 The majority - 1503 people - said this would result in spending no more than $200 over the long weekend.

But more than 18 per cent said they would exceed this by spending up to $500.

"I'll be catching up on paperwork - as a sole trader it's a task that needs to be done," one person wrote.

Another wrote: "I prefer to catch up with family (and) avoid the holiday crowds."

More than 90 per cent of respondents said they supported police blitzes on drivers during the long weekend.

The sample group was divided in its religious beliefs. Only half of respondents said they would be among those celebrating the Christian meaning of Easter.

Only 556 people said they would definitely attend church and about 60 per cent said they would eat meat today.

But the majority - 1350 respondents - said despite our multicultural society, it was not wrong to have public holidays to mark one religion's holy periods as it marked the nation's religious traditions.


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Scholarships for rural teachers

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HIGH-QUALITY teachers are being offered up to $50,000 to work in hard-to-staff country schools.

Design and technology teachers are the latest to be targeted under the Education Department's scholarship program to ensure the state's public school students have access to the best teachers.

Five $50,000 country teaching scholarships targeting high-quality final-year design and technology teacher education students were advertised this week.

Three more $40,000 scholarships were also offered to university students in their final year of maths and science teaching to meet the demand in country areas.

A department spokeswoman said there was a shortage of design and technology teachers, who were needed in middle school for classes such as woodwork and metalwork and in the senior years for vocational education and training qualifications that led to trades.

"Incentives for all targeted recruits include scholarship money, permanent employment and ongoing support in their first years of teaching," the spokeswoman said.

"The department is keen to recruit high-quality design and technology teachers and for this reason does not have a specific target (capping the number of scholarships to be offered).

"Yearly targets are set to ensure that there is sufficient demand and scholarship numbers are determined based on this information."

The spokeswoman said future scholarship and incentive programs would ensure schools had a maths, science and design and technology teaching workforce that was highly skilled.

This workforce would support the state's science, technology, engineering and maths skills strategy.

Since 2010 under the Teach SA program, the department has provided 13 scholarships to high-quality final-year maths and science teacher education students and 20 career-change maths and science professionals.

Four architecture and industrial design professionals have been recruited to train as technology teachers.

More than 120 teachers have been retrained in maths and science.


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40,000 to see kite festival get airborne

Kite festival

Young Amelia gets set for the Adelaide International Kite Festival at Semaphore. Picture: KERYN STEVENS Source: adelaidenow

MOVE over Easter Bunny - giant flying whales and mermaids will be the main attraction this long weekend.

Thousands of holiday makers will visit Semaphore this Easter weekend for the 16th annual Adelaide International Kite Festival.

Organiser Mike Fardon says up to 40,000 people are expected to attend the event, which will feature more than 40 kite enthusiasts from Australia, New Zealand and India.

They will fly hand-painted kites made from traditional materials, as well as inflatable animals up to 15m long.

"We have to get permission to have a 4WD on the beach, because the large kites have to be tied to heavy things so they don't blow away," Mr Fardon said.

"If the wind picks up, it has been known to drag small cars slowly down the beach."

Professionals will be on the north side of the jetty, while the south side will be open to the public and budding kite flyers such as Amelia, 3.

Her mother Megan Tunney says the Semaphore South family looks forward to the festival every year.

The event is free and will feature demonstrations, kite challenges and lolly drops.

The Adelaide International Kite Festival will be held this Saturday and Sunday, March 30 and 31, from 11am-5pm.


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Kangaroo Island fire threat reduced

THE threat from an uncontrolled bushfire burning out of control on Kangaroo Island has reduced.

The Country Fire Service has warned the fire is burning near Hog Bay rd, Franks Rd and Blue Gums Rd, about 5km from Penneshaw.

The fire has not been contained but the risk to life and property has reduced, according to a CFS statement.

Crews will be in attendance at the fire through the night.

Those in the area are asked to remain aware of the incident and continue to monitor the situation.

For more information contact the Bushfire Information Hotline on 1300 362 361 or visit the CFS website www.cfs.sa.gov.au

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Leaders urge back to basics for Easter

CHURCH leaders have urged South Australians to use the Easter message as inspiration to overcome our materialistic culture, as an adelaidenow survey reveals widespread apathy about the holiday's religious meaning.

Anglican, Catholic and Uniting Church leaders say the Easter story of Jesus's resurrection symbolises the need to look beyond the superficial.

They say true happiness is found by caring for others and addressing social issues - such as binge drinking or families under stress - regardless of religious beliefs.

It comes after an adelaidenow survey of more than 2300 people found only half celebrated the Christian meaning of Easter, while only 556 respondents said they would definitely attend church this weekend.

Anglican Archbishop Jeffrey Driver says the "myth" of materialism has not delivered because after decades of unparalleled material wealth, many social indicators are still "deeply worrying".

"Binge drinking among our young is at almost epidemic levels," he writes in this year's Easter messages, published in The Advertiser today.

"We have higher levels of suicide among young males than in very poor countries.

"The number of children needing out of home care has risen alarmingly over the past 10 years - families are under stress."

Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson says the newly-elected Pope Francis has asked all Catholics to examine their consciences and think about how they can be less materialistic.

"The crucifixion and resurrection of Christ shows us all - Christians and non-Christians alike - the power of love and reminds us that we find true peace and happiness from caring for, and making sacrifices, for each other," he said.

In today's Easter message, Archbishop Wilson reflects on the giving nature of Pope Francis, which has included washing the feet of HIV sufferers and campaigning against the unjust distribution of wealth in his home country.

"So at this historic time in the life of the church, and as we embark on the Easter journey - a time of renewal and hope - let us think about how we can make changes in our own lives that will enable us to bring the joy and mercy of Christ's message to the world that surrounds us today," he writes.

Pope Francis echoed this theme to his 2.1 million Twitter followers this week.

"To experience Holy Week is to enter more and more into God's logic of love and self-giving," he wrote.

Uniting Church SA moderator the Reverend Rob Williams said the Easter message was the "very antithesis of materialism".

"Jesus made the ultimate sacrifice, giving up everything he possessed in life to die on the cross, believing completely in what God was calling him to do," he said.

"Easter is an important time to concentrate on our relationship with God and how this affects our relationships with family and others, rather than centring on material goods.

"In the extended holiday time, I encourage Christians to make the most of spending time with loved ones, family and friends as well as growing their relationship with God."

And he said non-Christians could gain just as much from the Easter message.

"Some claim to be religious but not Christian - people who claim to live their lives by Christian principles," he said.

"Maybe Easter could be a time for them to reaffirm their commitment to those principles and show this by a simple, restrained approach to Easter, rather than going down the materialistic path."

Baptist Churches of South Australia state executive minister the Reverend Mike Mills said Easter was more than an excuse to boost the confectionery industry and enjoy a long weekend.

Archbishop Driver said young people's passion for social justice, the environment and exploring spiritual questions gave him hope that many Australians were "waking up" to the issue of materialism.

"(Materialism) is superficial. It is irritating. And it sells," he writes.

"It sells because as a nation we have bought the myth that unless we fill our lives with stuff, our living will be empty and without meaning."


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Thứ Năm, 28 tháng 3, 2013

Iraq PM threatens early elections

IRAQ'S prime minister has threatened to call early elections that could tighten his grip on power if the nation's political factions fail to break an impasse that has all but paralysed the government.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's gambit is the latest in a months-long political crisis in Iraq that has Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds alike calling for his resignation. The impasse also has fuelled fears of a possible flare-up in violence by insurgents seeking to take advantage of the chaos.

Bombings targeting a Shiite cleric and an anti-al-Qaeda militia fighter killed at least 11 people overnight in Baghdad.

Mr al-Maliki, a Shiite, said continued refusals by his political opponents to negotiate a resolution to the impasse would leave him little choice but to call for a new vote. He did not mention a date.

"When the other party is refusing to sit down at the negotiating table and insists on the policy of creating continued crises ... then the prime minister finds himself obliged to call for early elections in which the Iraqi people will have the final say," he said on his official website.

Mr al-Maliki's threat to hold snap elections comes in response to months of demands for his resignation by Sunni, Kurdish and some Shiite leaders who said they have been sidelined from power. It's unclear whether they have the political will or enough support in parliament to oust Mr al-Maliki in a no-confidence vote.

The influential anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr this week joined Mr al-Maliki's opponents in calling for his resignation, raising the stakes against the prime minister.

By countering with a threat to call for early elections, Mr al-Maliki is betting that his popular support nationwide would hand him a clear-cut victory and assure him undisputed executive authority.

The crisis began when the government issued terrorism charges against the nation's highest-ranking Sunni politician, Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, as the last US troops withdrew from the country. That prompted Sunni politicians to briefly boycott the cabinet, and government work came to a standstill.

The standoff also has raised fears that insurgents could use the political chaos to try to reignite the sectarian animosities that drove Iraq to the brink of civil war five years ago.

Overnight, bombs targeting the Baghdad homes of a Shiite cleric and a member of a Sunni militia that fights al-Qaeda killed at least 11 people. The attacks on two of al-Qaeda's favourite targets brought Iraq's death toll for June to at least 186, making it the bloodiest month since January.


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Chocolatier hops into a busy Easter

Adelaide Chocolate School

Adelaide Chocolate School has been busy preparing chocolate eggs and bunnies for Easter. L-R James, 5 and sister Emily, 7. Picture: Noelle Bobrige Source: adelaidenow

THE Easter Bunny is in for a treat when he stops by Emily and James Hofmeyer's house this weekend.

The siblings are busily making a large chocolate Easter egg to leave out for the bunny this Sunday.

"Easter Bunny always leaves us eggs so this year we wanted to leave him something," Emily, 7, says.

"I love chocolate ... it's my favourite part of Easter."

Five-year-old James says his mum Anna, who owns the Adelaide Chocolate School in North Adelaide, has an important job to do before Easter.

"Mum works for the Easter Bunny," he says.

Ms Hofmeyer says she has been busy since January preparing "some really cool" Easter treats.

"There's never a dull moment when you work with chocolate, particularly in the lead up to Easter," Ms Hofmeyer, 34, says.

The Melbourne St-based school has had its chocolate making classes booked out in the lead up to the four-day holiday. Along with making more than 300 Easter eggs, the Campbelltown resident has made 5kg and 3kg chocolate Easter Bunnies.

"We do have a mould for a 12kg Easter egg as well," Ms Hofmeyer says. "We're constantly washing the windows because we find kids glue themselves to our front window to look at the chocolate."

For more news on the city, pick up a copy of the City Messenger, read our digital edition online, or become a fan of our Facebook page.


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Is it a crime to cook one's own genitals?

TOKYO police are investigating whether a man who cooked his own severed genitals and served them to five paying diners committed a crime, the force said today.

Mao Sugiyama had his penis and testicles surgically removed in March and kept them frozen for two months before cooking them at a public event in May.

Diners each paid 20,000 yen ($250) for a portion.

The police probe came after the mayor of Suginami ward, the Tokyo district where the event took place, said it had involved the display of obscene objects.

"Many residents of Suginami and elsewhere have expressed a sense of discomfort and feeling of apprehension over this," Mayor Ryo Tanaka said.

A Tokyo police spokeswoman acknowledged the complaint, but declined to give further details, citing "an ongoing investigation".

Sugiyama, a painter in his 20s who defines himself as "asexual", did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In an email in May, he confirmed the event had taken place and said it was organised to raise awareness about "sexual minorities, x-gender, asexual people".

In tweets May 18, the artist said steps were taken so his act met all relevant laws, including a ban on organ sales, processing of medical waste and even food sanitation requirements.

Sugiyama said his genitals had been removed by a physician and certified free of infections.


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Finding jobs for people with disabilities

MES - Community Bridging Program

Desma Beasley, Eastern Jobnet coordinator and Paul Wood, employment officer, have set up a new community bridging program in Maylands. Picture: Luke Hemer. Source: adelaidenow

A SERVICE helping eastern residents with disabilities find jobs has been launched.

Community Bridging Services opened its Maylands branch last month.

Eastern co-ordinator Desma Beasley said the organisation aimed to match clients' strengths and interests with employment opportunities.

"We look at a person's skills and what they want to do then call employers and look for roles in those areas," Ms Beasley said. "We are able to match our clients with positions in the retail, manufacturing, horticulture and hospitality industries."

The service is administered by the Education Department and is available to people on disability pensions.

It provides paid part-time or full-time work.

"We certainly want as many people as possible to come along and sign up to our program," Ms Beasley said.

Employment officer Paull Wood said there was a need for the service in the eastern suburbs.

"We've been operating since 1998 (in Adelaide), but have only recently opened an office in the eastern suburbs," Mr Wood said.

"We already have several clients, so the reaction has been great.

"We are hoping to expand our services in the future.

"We can place people with a disability into employment across the state."

For more news on the east, pick up a copy of the East Torrens Messenger, read our digital edition online, or become a fan of our Facebook page.


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Nineteen sect members dead in Nigeria

POLICE in northern Nigeria said 19 suspected members of a radical Islamist sect have been killed in clashes with security forces.

Yobe state police chief Patrick Egbuniwe said overnight that the police and army shot dead two suspected Boko Haram members yesterday in the city of Damaturu. He said two civilians also died in the clashes.

Kano state police chief Ibrahim Idris said authorities in Nigeria's second-largest city shot dead 17 suspected sect members who launched coordinated attacks targeting police on Tuesday night. Idris says one policeman was killed.

Meanwhile, Taraba state police spokesman Amos Olaoye said gunmen also attacked police in the town of Wukari, leaving three policemen and two civilians dead yesterday.

Boko Haram is held responsible for more than 620 deaths this year alone, according to an Associated Press count.


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No role for Assad as Syria deal agreed

World powers have drafted a Syria transition plan but debate is ongoing about a future role for Pres Assad.

Kofi Annan

UN-Arab League special envoy Kofi Annan (right) speaks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov during a meeting of the Action Group for Syria at the United Nations office, in Geneva. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

WORLD powers agreed a plan for a transition in Syria that could include current regime members, but the West did not see any role for President Bashar al-Assad in a new unity government.

Russia and China insisted that Syrians must decide how the transition should be carried out rather than allow others to dictate their fate, as the two powers signed up to the final agreement that did not make any explicit call for Assad to cede power.

The deal came despite initial pessimism from participants about the prospects of the Geneva talks amid deep divisions between the West and China and Russia on how to end the violence that claimed at least 53 lives on Saturday.

Rights monitors said most victims were civilians and hundreds more were trapped in Douma as regime forces stormed the town in Damascus province.

While international envoy Kofi Annan did not name names and said it was up to the Syrians to decide who they wanted in a unity government, he added: "I would doubt that Syrians... would select people with blood on their hands to lead them."

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made it clear that Washington did not see a role for Assad in the transition.

"Assad will still have to go. He will never pass the mutual consent test," she said.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius took the same stance, saying, "It's clear that Assad must stand down".

"No one can imagine for a moment that Assad will feature in the (new) government, any more than anyone thinks it possible for him to establish a neutral environment" required by the agreement, he said, adding that the transition government "will exclude murderers."

British Foreign Minister William Hague admitted that the deal was a "compromise agreement" as Russia played up the fact that it had convinced other world powers that it would be "unacceptable" to exclude any party from the transition process.

A long-time Syria ally, Russia is loathe to cast Assad aside, even as relations between Moscow and Damascus have cooled.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said: "How exactly the work on a transition to a new stage is conducted will be decided by the Syrians themselves."

"There are no demands to exclude from this process any one group. This aspect had been present in many of our partners' proposals. We have convinced them that this is unacceptable," Lavrov said.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi also stressed that "outsiders cannot make decisions for the Syrian people."

As divisions threatened to scupper talks earlier Saturday, Annan warned at the opening of the meeting that history would not look favourably on leaders who failed to chart a strategy to end the bloodshed in Syria.

A failure to unite also raised the spectre that the conflict that has claimed 15,800 lives over 16 months in the strategic Middle East country could spill over to the region and expose the world to fresh threats, said the former UN chief.

"History is a sombre judge - and it will judge us all harshly if we prove incapable of taking the right path today," Annan told the five permanent Security Council members - the United States, Russia, Britain, China and France - as well as regional powers Qatar, Turkey, Kuwait and Iraq.

Meanwhile fighting in Syria has only intensified in recent weeks as both government and opposition forces have received more weapons from their foreign backers.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights warned of a "catastrophic humanitarian situation" in besieged Douma, which "has been subjected to a fierce military campaign since June 21."

Violence has killed "scores and wounded hundreds" there since regime forces escalated attacks on the outlying suburb of Damascus, the group said.

"More than 100 families remain in the town, unable to flee and forced to take refuge in shelters," it said.

An explosion also rocked the Qaboon district of Damascus on Saturday and another blast hit the country's second city Aleppo in the north. A further blast hit an oil pipeline in a rebel-held area of the eastern province of Deir Ezzor.

The latest violence came a day after 73 people were killed nationwide, among them 23 regime troops.

While the violence rages there is also mounting concern about the destabilising impact it has on the region, in particular Jordan and Lebanon.

And the Turkish-Syrian border remains a potential flashpoint.

Turkey has sent tanks, troops and missile batteries toward the frontier, after Syria shot down a Turkish jet just over a week ago.

Meanwhile the head of the rebels' Free Syrian Army told AFP that 2500 Syrian soldiers were "massing 15 kilometres (10 miles) or slightly more from the Turkish border" on Friday.

Egypt's President Mohamed Morsi - elected after a revolution that overthrew strongman Hosni Mubarak - on Saturday called for an end to bloodshed in Syria, in his inaugural address.

"We support the Syrian people. We want the bloodshed to stop," he said.


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Bombings, shootings around Iraq kill 22

BOMBINGS and shootings around Iraq have killed 22 people and wounded more than 50.

The attacks in Shiite neighbourhoods and on security forces underscore how deadly Iraq remains, even though violence has dropped dramatically since a few years ago when the country appeared about to descend into civil war. Over the past month, more than 200 Iraqis have been killed in attacks.

The latest deadliest strike came about 9.30am local time in the Shiite Muslim neighbourhood of Washash in western Baghdad, where eyewitnesses said a taxi exploded outside a local market.

Eight people died and 26 were injured, police and hospital officials said.

Bombings generally are a hallmark of Sunni Muslim insurgents linked to al-Qaeda, and Shiites remain one of their main targets.

Baghdad operations command spokesman Colonel Dhia al-Wakil said no overall conclusion about Iraq's security can be drawn from the overnight attacks, which he said are believed to be unrelated.

He described Iraq's security as "generally stable, and these attacks by no means should be taken as an indication that the terrorists are able to defy our security forces".

He said security forces had defused several car bombs recently and arrested suspects believed to be behind this month's wave of violence.

While violence has dramatically dropped from the wide scale sectarian fighting between 2006 and 2008, deadly bombings and shootings in Iraq still happen almost every day.

The recent increase in attacks comes as the government is embroiled in a months-long political crisis in Iraq that has Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds calling for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to resign for sidelining his political opponents. The impasse has all but paralysed the government.


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Record radiation levels at Fukushima reactor

TEPCO, the operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, said overnight record amounts of radiation had been detected in the basement of reactor number one, further hampering clean-up operations after last year's earthquake and tsunami.

TEPCO took samples from the basement after lowering a camera and surveying instruments through a drain hole in the basement ceiling.

Radiation levels above radioactive water in the basement reached up to 10,300 millisievert an hour, a dose that will kill humans within a short time after making them sick within minutes.

The annual allowed dose for workers at the stricken site would be reached in only 20 seconds.

"Workers cannot enter the site and we must use robots for the demolition," said TEPCO.

The Fukushima operator said that radiation levels were 10 times higher than those recorded at the plant's two other crippled reactors, numbers two and three.

That was due to the poor state of the nuclear fuel in the reactor compared to that in the two others.

The meltdown at the core of three of Fukushima's six reactors occurred after the March 11, 2011 earthquake and ensuing massive tsunami shut off the power supply and cooling system.

Demolition of the three reactors as well as the plant's number four unit was expected to take 40 years and will need the use of new technologies.


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Dotcom's lawyer hits out at US authorities

A NEW Zealand High Court ruling that the armed police raid on piracy accused Kim Dotcom's Auckland mansion was illegal is a major blow to US authorities trying to extradite him, his US lawyer said.

Justice Helen Winkelmann yesterday ruled the search warrants were too broad and police exceeded their powers in seizing what they did.

She also said it was unlawful for copies of Dotcom's computer files to be taken by US authorities and New Zealand police should return copies to 38-year-old Dotcom.

FBI agents, who had sought help from New Zealand police, seized a massive 150 terabytes of data.

The US said German-born Dotcom's MegaUpload website has cost Hollywood studios and other music, software and television copyright owners $NZ500 million ($395 million) by facilitating internet piracy on a massive scale.

They are trying to extradite him and three others to the US to face racketeering, copyright and money laundering charges. Dotcom faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

Dotcom's US-based lawyer, Ira Rothken, told Radio New Zealand today that the ruling is an embarrassment, especially as US authorities have called the case the largest in copyright history.

"One would think, with such a large case, that they would have a higher standard of care in how they conducted themselves," he said.

"In terms of egregious behaviour, this is at the high end of the scale of egregious, wrongful intrusion on privacy."

Mr Rothken said the ruling supported the view that New Zealand police were acting on the beck and call of the FBI.

MegaUpload's lawyers are expected to appear in a Virginia federal court on Friday (US time) to argue that the charges should be tossed out.

Dotcom's next court date in New Zealand is next Wednesday in the High Court at Auckland.


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More dead fish on Adelaide's beaches

dead fish 4

Dead fish on Seaford beach . Picture: Roger Wyman Source: adelaidenow

MORE dead fish have washed up on Adelaide's southern beaches overnight.

The fish washed up at Seaford and Biosecurity SA is an attendance to collect fish for forensic testing.

It follows a similar incident last week when thousands of dead fish were found across long stretches of sand at Moana, Moana South, O'Sullivans Beach and Christies Beach.

Biosecurity SA aquatic pests manager Vic Neverauskas said high levels of algal bloom from hot weather had depleted oxygen levels in the water.

dead fish 5

Dead fish on Seaford beach . Picture: Roger Wyman

Mr Neverauskas said the incident was linked to the dead fish that washed up on Eyre Peninsula this month, with strong westerly winds blowing the algal bloom back towards Adelaide.

"The best information suggests we are dealing with extensive algal bloom from hot weather," he said.

He said the desalination plant had nothing to do with the fish deaths.

dead fish seaford

Dead fish on Seaford beach . Picture: Roger Wyman

dead fish 2

Dead fish on Seaford beach . Picture: Roger Wyman


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Tunisia consul's home bombed

UNKNOWN assailants have thrown a homemade bomb at the home of the Tunisian consul in the Libyan capital, causing some damage but no casualties, officials and witnesses said.

A diplomat said the consul was at home at the time of the attack.

The blast chipped an outer wall of the residence, located in the Naufliyeen neighbourhood, and slightly damaged two nearby cars, the sources said.

A witness said the attack occurred mid-afternoon on Tuesday (local time) when a white car sped past and someone hurled the bomb.

The attack comes amid tensions between Tripoli and Tunis after a former premier of the late Libyan leader, Baghdadi al-Mahmudi was extradited to Libya on Sunday against the wishes of Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki.

It also comes as Libyan medics and officials denied claims by Mr Mahmudi's lawyer that he was beaten and admitted to hospital after his extradition.

Tunisia's post-revolution political alliance had been plunged into crisis over the affair.

Mr Marzouki is furious that Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali ordered Mr Mahmudi's transfer to Libya without his consent.

Mr Marzouki had always opposed the extradition, arguing that Libya's new regime offered insufficient guarantees of a fair trial. But when Mr Jebali approved the move on Sunday, the president was in southern Tunisia for an official ceremony.

Mr Marzouki, a veteran human rights activist, did not sign the extradition order and an adviser said he only found out about Mr Mahmudi's transfer through the media.


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Egypt court rules against military

AN Egyptian court has suspended a government decision allowing military police and intelligence to arrest civilians, a setback for the country's military rulers after the decree drew an outcry from opponents who accused them of trying to impose martial law.

The Justice Ministry issued a decree on June 13 that allowed military police and intelligence agents to arrest civilians for even minor offences such as traffic violations.

Rights activists feared the new powers essentially reproduced the country's hated emergency law, which had expired just two weeks earlier after more than 30 years in force. The emergency law granted broad powers of arrest and detention to police that were abused over the years and fed the popular anger that led to last year's uprising.

Critics said the new powers of detention could extend the rule of the generals, even if they transfer power to the elected president by the end of this month as promised.

"This (court ruling) is the best possible way to have such a repressive law struck down," said Heba Morayef, a researcher with Human Rights Watch in Egypt. "It is a pretty significant decision against a decree that would have permanently given the military this right of law enforcement and encroachment on civilian life."

Military officials said at the time that the new powers were only meant to fill a security vacuum resulting from the uprising when the police force collapsed and disappeared from the streets during the first days of mass protests.

The government, which was appointed by the ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), can appeal the court decision.

The military has pledged to turn power over to a civilian government once a new president is named. On Sunday, Islamist Mohammed Morsi of the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood was declared Egypt's first freely elected president in modern history.

However Mr Morsi is facing a power struggle with the military rulers after they stripped the presidency of its major powers one week before the winner of the election was announced.

The ruling military council has used court decrees and constitutional declarations to stop Islamists from controlling all the executive and legislative branches.

The same court postponed a key decision on overturning the ruling military council's order to disband the Islamist-dominated parliament.


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At least 20 killed in Mali clashes

ISLAMISTS have claimed control of the key town of Gao in Mali's occupied north after fierce clashes with Tuareg rebels left at least 20 people dead.

The al-Qaeda offshoot Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) and Tuareg National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA) began fighting overnight as tensions erupted between the two armed groups which seized the town in March.

MUJAO spokesman Adnan Abou Walid Sahraoui said it had "seized the governor's palace and the residence of MNLA secretary general Bilal Ag Cherif who fled with his soldiers".

He said some 40 members of the MNLA had been taken prisoner.

The governorate had been used by the Tuareg as their headquarters.

A local journalist reported seeing 11 Tuareg fighters lying dead in the suburb of Djoulabougou, while other witnesses counted at least 10 bodies on the road leading to the airport.

A hospital source said they had received three dead bodies of MUJAO members and were tending to 14 injured.

While the two armed groups both seized the main cities of northern Mali in an often unclear and uneasy relationship, the Islamists have taken the upper hand, enforcing strict sharia which has angered local moderate Muslims.

However the Tuareg National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad has remained present, pressing their demand for a secular breakaway state for their traditional homeland which covers the vast north of the bowtie-shaped nation.

The Islamist rebel group Ansar Dine (Defenders of Faith) which is backed by MUJAO and al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), is only interested in a state run under Islamic law.


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Dogs wipe out blue penguin colony

IT took years to build up a colony of blue penguins on New Zealand's West Coast, but it took dogs just a matter of days to kill the lot.

At least 15 birds at Cape Foulwind, near Westport, have been found dead over the past week.

It is likely the entire colony is gone.

West Coast Blue Penguin Trust ranger Reuben Lane says the dead penguins have injuries consistent with a dog attack.

"They all had classic puncture wounds to the head, neck, and upper body and the overwhelming conclusion was that they had died from crushing bites from a dog," he said.

"Going from the information about where they were found it is almost certain a dog, or two, were roaming at night hunting penguins, giving a killing chomp and running on to the next."

Trust chairwoman Kerry-Jayne Wilson said their deaths were a major setback for those involved in the program.

"Almost all penguins killed at this time of year will be breeding birds preparing for the breeding season that is about to begin," she said.

"It is these birds that have the greatest affect on the population's ability to grow.

"This could set our Cape Foulwind project back years."


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Memorial remembers brothers in arms

SOME 4000 Australians are among the brave airmen honoured by a World War II Bomber Command memorial unveiled by the Queen in London.

And amid the pomp and ceremony, religion and royalty of the overnight dedication ceremony came a story of comradeship from Down Under.

"I couldn't really see the Queen and the Duke (of Edinburgh)," said 89-year-old Canberra veteran Frank Ward from his wheelchair toward the rear of the crowd.

"But seeing the memorial and being surrounded by all these old codgers, it made me feel nostalgic.

"We came from all over the world, the members of Bomber Command: Australia, New Zealand, Canada, South Africa.

"Today my thoughts turned to a bloke I met all those years ago while training in Canada, a lovely Maori bloke. I don't even remember his name.

"We were great mates and he was my protector. Like so many of the great men I met during the war, I don't know what happened to him (or) whether he even survived."

Stories like that of the 467 squadron navigator were aplenty overnight, and for some the emotion was too great, as tears flowed freely during the Last Post.

The STG3.5 million ($5.4 million) stone monument in London's Green Park that includes statues of Bomber Command airmen poised in battle pays tribute to the 55,573 who lost their lives during the strategic raids on enemy territory.

More than 10,000 Australians, with an average age of 22, signed up for Bomber Command. Only about 6000 returned home.

One hundred Command veterans from across Australia travelled to London for the memorial dedication.

"There is a sense of relief that there has been a special recognition of their significant contribution to the defeat of the Axis powers during the war. They played a key part," General Mark Kelly said of the Australian contingent present overnight.

Dressed in lilac, the Queen met two Australian veterans, Norman Deady and Dudley Hannaford, after unveiling the memorial.

"What an honour," said Mr Hannaford, 88, from Sydney. "And the fly-past by that old Lancaster (aircraft). Such a privilege to see."


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Forty-two Malawians suffocate in truck

FORTY-TWO immigrants from Malawi have been found dead in a truck in central Tanzania, having perished from asphyxiation, Deputy Interior Minister Pereira Silima said.

"They died of suffocation and had no food," Mr Silima said.

"There were more than 100 people in the truck," a local administration official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"After he had learnt of the dead bodies, the driver abandoned the truck and ran away."

The bodies were discovered in the truck in Dodoma province, about 400 kilometres west of Dar es-Salaam.


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Is it a crime to cook one's own genitals?

TOKYO police are investigating whether a man who cooked his own severed genitals and served them to five paying diners committed a crime, the force said today.

Mao Sugiyama had his penis and testicles surgically removed in March and kept them frozen for two months before cooking them at a public event in May.

Diners each paid 20,000 yen ($250) for a portion.

The police probe came after the mayor of Suginami ward, the Tokyo district where the event took place, said it had involved the display of obscene objects.

"Many residents of Suginami and elsewhere have expressed a sense of discomfort and feeling of apprehension over this," Mayor Ryo Tanaka said.

A Tokyo police spokeswoman acknowledged the complaint, but declined to give further details, citing "an ongoing investigation".

Sugiyama, a painter in his 20s who defines himself as "asexual", did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In an email in May, he confirmed the event had taken place and said it was organised to raise awareness about "sexual minorities, x-gender, asexual people".

In tweets May 18, the artist said steps were taken so his act met all relevant laws, including a ban on organ sales, processing of medical waste and even food sanitation requirements.

Sugiyama said his genitals had been removed by a physician and certified free of infections.


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Whyalla councillor eyes Breuer's old seat

SA speaker Lyn Breuer

Lyn Breuer's safe Labor seat of Giles is set to go to Whyalla councillor Eddie Hughes. Source: adelaidenow

WHYALLA councillor Eddie Hughes is strongly tipped to take the safe outback Labor seat of Giles following the retirement of former Speaker Lyn Breuer.

The seat will shift from control of Labor's Right faction to the Left.

Whyalla is the major population centre in the seat and has a strong union vote based in the steel milling industry.

It is the only non-metropolitan seat held by Labor.

Speaking on ABC radio this morning Ms Breuer, who was first elected in 1997, said she had been thinking about retirement `for quite some time' and had intended to finish after four terms.

"I think people can stay too long in a job; you can go one term too many and I think it's important to always keep that in mind," she said.

The Opposition seized on Ms Breuer's comments to suggest they meant her Labor colleagues who have served four terms or more should follow her example, such as Speaker Michael Atkinson, Transport Minister Tom Koutsantonis, Education Minister Jennifer Rankine, Health Minister Jack Snelling and backbenchers Frances Bedford and Steph Key.

Meanwhile, Chris Picton, a former staffer to retiring local member John Hill, is tipped for preselection in Kaurna.


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Egypt swears in first freely elected president

Morsi

Mohamed Morsi takes the oath of office but his day of triumph is unlikely to mark end of political strife in Egypt. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

ISLAMIST Mohamed Morsi promised a "new Egypt" as he took the oath of office to become the country's first freely elected president, succeeding Hosni Mubarak who was ousted 16 months ago.

At his inauguration before the Supreme Constitutional Court, Morsi also became the Arab world's first freely elected Islamist president and Egypt's fifth head of state since the overthrow of the monarchy some 60 years ago.

He took the oath before the court's 18 black-robed judges in its Nile-side seat built to resemble an ancient Egyptian temple.

"We aspire to a better tomorrow, a new Egypt and a second republic," Morsi said during a solemn ceremony shown live on state television.

"Today, the Egyptian people laid the foundation of a new life - absolute freedom, a genuine democracy and stability," said Morsi, a 60-year-old US-trained engineer from the Muslim Brotherhood, a fundamentalist group that has spent most of the 84 years since its inception as an outlawed organisation harshly targeted by successive governments.

Hundreds of soldiers and policemen guarded the building as Morsi arrived shortly after 11am local time in a small motorcade. Only several hundred supporters gathered outside the court to cheer the new president and, in a departure from the presidential pomp of the Mubarak years, traffic was only briefly halted to allow his motorcade through on the usually busy road linking the city centre with its southern suburbs.

Morsi's inauguration signals a personal triumph. He was not the Brotherhood's first choice as president, and was thrown into the presidential race when the group's original candidate, chief strategist and financier Khairat el-Shater, was disqualified over a Mubarak-era criminal conviction.

Derided as the Brotherhood's uncharismatic "spare tyre", his personal prestige has surged since his victory and his delivery of a Friday speech that tried to present him as a candidate not just of Islamists but of all those who want to complete the work of the 2011 uprising against the authoritarian Mubarak.

"Egypt today is a civil, national, constitutional and modern state," Morsi, wearing a blue business suit and a red tie, told the judges in the wood-panelled chamber where he took the oath of office. "It is a strong nation because of its people and the beliefs of its sons and its institutions."

Morsi later travelled to Cairo University where he was to make his inauguration address. He was given an official welcome by an army band that played the national anthem as he stood to attention. Military ruler Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi was in attendance. His arrival was greeted with chants of, "The army and the people are one hand", from the hundreds gathered in the university's main lecture room.

Established in 1908 as a bastion of secular education, Cairo University later became a stronghold of Islamist student groups in the 1970s. Many of those student leaders have gone on to become senior members of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, the nation's oldest and most powerful Islamist movement.

A handover ceremony hosted by the military generals who ruled Egypt since Mubarak's ouster follows.

Morsi took a symbolic oath on Friday in Tahrir Square, birthplace of the uprising that ended Mubarak's authoritarian rule last year, and vowed to reclaim presidential powers stripped from his office by the military council that took over from the ousted leader.

But by agreeing to take the official oath before the court, rather than before parliament as is customary, he is bowing to the military's will in an indication that the contest for power will continue.

Morsi's speech in Tahrir Square was filled with dramatic populist gestures. The 60-year-old president-elect staked a claim to the legacy of the uprising and voiced his determination to win back the powers stripped from his office by the generals.


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Jews arrested for Holocaust museum vandalism

ISRAELI police arrested three Jewish men suspected of spraying graffiti thanking Hitler for the Holocaust at Jerusalem's Yad Vashem Holocaust museum earlier this month, a spokesman said today.

"Israeli police arrested three male suspects, all three from the ultra-Orthodox sector," police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said, adding that they were from Jerusalem, Ashdod and Bnei Brak, and aged 18, 26 and 37.

"The suspects were questioned in connection with the graffiti in Yad Vashem, and admitted to carrying out the incident, as well as other similar incidents in Jerusalem's Ammunition Hill and a memorial in the Jordan Valley," he said.

On June 11, Hebrew graffiti thanking Hitler for the Holocaust and denouncing Zionism was found sprayed at Yad Vashem.

"Thank you Hitler for your wonderful Holocaust that you arranged for us, it's only because of you that we got a state at the UN," read one of 10 slogans daubed on walls at the museum, sparking shock in the Jewish state which came into being just three years after the end of World War II.

Other slogans read, "The Zionist leadership wanted the Holocaust" and "If Hitler hadn't existed, the Zionists would have invented him".

Suspicion had fallen on extreme ultra-Orthodox opponents of the state of Israel.

Several ultra-Orthodox groups do not believe a Jewish state should exist without the appearance of the Messiah, of which the best-known is Neturei Karta. Rosenfeld said all three suspects were members of that group.

Mr Rosenfeld said the three suspects would be brought to the Jerusalem magistrate's court for a remand hearing today.


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Two held over London Olympics terror plot

TWO Muslim converts suspected of planning an attack on the Olympic Games canoeing venue were arrested in London on Thursday.

Sources told The (London) Daily Telegraph the pair, aged 18 and 32, were seen acting suspiciously close to the venue in Waltham Abbey earlier this week.

Metropolitan Police Counter-Terrorism Command officers arrested the men on terror charges at two residential addresses in east London early Thursday.

A friend of one of the men, Mizanur Rahman, 29, said the arrests "might have had something to do with the fact that they recently went canoeing" on the River Lee, a branch of which runs through the Olympic site in east London.

Police had reportedly combed the banks of the river earlier in the week.

The opening ceremony of the Games takes place on July 27, with the canoeing events being held at both the Lee Valley White Water Centre and Eton Dorney.


Read more about the two men arrested over London Olympics terror plot at The (London) Daily Telegraph

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Islamist Morsi elected Egypt's president

ISLAMIST Mohammed Morsi was declared the winner in Egypt's first free presidential election in history, closing the tumultuous first phase of a democratic transition and opening a new struggle with the still-dominant military rulers who recently stripped the presidency of most of its powers.

In Tahrir Square, the birthplace of the uprising that ousted autocratic President Hosni Mubarak, joyous supporters of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood wept and kneeled on the ground in prayer when they heard the announcement on live television. They danced, set off fireworks and released doves in the air with Morsi's picture attached in celebrations not seen in the square since Mubarak was forced out on Feb. 11, 2011.

Many are looking now to see whether Morsi will try to take on the military and wrestle back the powers they took from his office just one week ago. Thousands vowed to remain in Tahrir to demand that the ruling generals reverse their decision.

In his first televised speech, the 60-year old US-trained engineer called on Egyptians to unite and tried to reassure minority Christians, who mostly backed Morsi's rival Ahmed Shafiq because they feared Islamic rule.

He said he carries "a message of peace" to the world and pledged to preserve Egypt's international accords, a reference to the peace deal with Israel.

He also paid tribute to nearly 900 protesters killed in last year's uprising.

"I wouldn't have been here between your hands as the first elected president without ... the blood, the tears, and sacrifices of the martyrs," he said.

In the lengthy and redundant speech, Morsi appeared to be struggling to compose his sentences. Wearing a blue suit and tie, he looked stiff and uncomfortable and did not smile throughout as he read from a paper. He was non-confrontational and did not mention the last-minute power grab by the ruling military, instead praising the armed forces.

The White House congratulated Morsi and urged him to advance national unity as he forms a new government. White House press secretary Jay Carney said Morsi's victory is a milestone in Egypt's transition to democracy after decades of authoritarian rule under Mubarak. The Obama administration had expressed no public preference in the presidential race.

Left on the sidelines of the political drama are the liberal and secular youth groups that drove the uprising against Mubarak, left to wonder whether Egypt has taken a step towards becoming an Islamist state. Some grudgingly supported Morsi in the face of Shafiq, who was Mubarak's last prime minister, while others boycotted the vote.

Morsi will now have to reassure them that he represents the whole country, not just Islamists, and will face enormous challenges after security and the economy badly deteriorated in the transition period.

Pro-democracy leader Mohammed ElBaradei urged unity after the results were announced.

"It is time we work all as Egyptians as part of a national consensus to build Egypt that is based on freedom and social justice," he wrote on his Twitter account.

The elections left the nation deeply polarised with one side backing Shafiq, who promised to provide stability and prevent Egypt from becoming a theocracy. Because of his military career, many saw him as the military's preferred candidate.

In the other camp are those eager for democratic change and backers of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood who were persecuted, jailed and banned under Mubarak but now find themselves one of the two most powerful groups in Egypt.

The other power center is the ruling military council that took power after the uprising and is headed by Mubarak's defense minister of 20 years.

Just one week ago, at the moment polls were closing in the presidential runoff, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) issued constitutional amendments that stripped the president's office of most of its major powers. The ruling generals made themselves the final arbiters over the most pressing issues still complicating the transition- such as writing the constitution, legislating, passing the state budget- and granted military police broad powers to detain civilians.

"I am happy the Brotherhood won because now the revolution will continue on the street against both of them, the Brotherhood and the SCAF," said Lobna Darwish, an activist who has boycotted the elections.

Also, a few days before that constitutional declaration, a court dissolved the freely elected parliament, which is dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood, leaving the military now in charge of legislating.

Brotherhood members and experts said the results were used as a bargaining chip between the generals and the Brotherhood over the parameters of what appears to be a new power-sharing agreement. The country's new constitution is not written and the authorities of the president are not clear.

This is the first time modern Egypt will be headed by an Islamist and by a freely elected civilian. The country's last four presidents over the past six decades have all came from the ranks of the military.

"Congratulations because this means the end of the Mubarak state," said Shady el-Ghazali Harb, a prominent activist who was among the leaders of the protests in January and February last year.

The results of the elections were delayed for four days amid accusations of manipulation and foul play by both sides, raising political tensions in Egypt to a fever pitch.

The delay plunged the country into nerve-wrecking anticipation and pushed tensions to a fever pitch. Parallel mass rallies by Shafiq and Morsi supporters were held in different parts of Cairo and cut-throat media attacks by supporters of both swarmed TV shows. In the hours before the announcement of the winner, the fear of new violence was palpable.

Heavy security was deployed around the country, especially outside state institutions, in anticipation of possible violence. Workers were sent home early from jobs, jewelry stores closed for fear of looting and many were stocking up on food and forming long lines at cash machines in case new troubles began.

Morsi narrowly defeated Shafiq with 51.7 percent of the vote versus 48.3, by a margin of only 800,000 votes, the election commission said. Turnout was 51 percent.

Farouk Sultan, the head of the commission, described the elections as "an important phase in the end of building our nascent democratic experience."

Sultan went to pains to explain the more than 400 complaints presented by the two candidates challenging counting procedures and alleging attempts of rigging. It appeared to be an attempt to discredit claims that the election commission was biased in favor of Shafiq, the candidate perceived as backed by the military rulers.

The country is deeply divided between supporters of the Brotherhood, liberals and leftists who also decided to back them as a way to stand up to the military, and other secular forces that fear the domination of the Brotherhood, and grew critical of it in the past year. The small margin of victory for Morsi also sets him for a strong opposition from supporters of Shafiq, viewed as a representative of the old regime.

Naguib Sawiris, a Coptic Christian business tycoon who joined a liberal bloc in voicing opposition to the Muslim Brotherhood a day before the results were announced, said he expects the new president to send a reassuring message to Egypt's Christian minority who represent around 10 percent of the population of 85 million.

"There are fears of imposing an Islamic state ... where Christians don't have same rights," Sawiris told the private TV station CBC. Morsi "is required to prove the opposite. ... We don't want speeches or promises but in the coming period, it is about taking action. ... He was not our choice but we are accepting it is a democratic choice."

Hamdeen Sabahi, a leftist presidential candidate who came in a surprising third place in the first round of elections, asked Morsi to live up to his pledges to form a national coalition government and appoint presidential aides from different groups "that express the largest national consensus."

Khaled Abdel-Hamid, a leading leftist politician, said Morsi must fight to get his powers back or he will lose any popular support he may have garnered.

"If he fights to get his power back, we will support him. But if he doesn't fight back, then he is settling for siding with the military," he said.


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Council bans sex in medieval church grounds

A COUNCIL in central England was forced to issue an injunction to stop drunken locals cavorting in a historic church cemetery.

Birmingham City Council and West Midlands Police acted after receiving reports of men and women having booze-fuelled sex sessions in the grounds of 607-year-old St. Mary's Church, the Birmingham Mail reported.

Officials have now issued a Section 222 order, which means that anyone caught having sex in public could be fast-tracked to jail.

Christine Williams, local park manager, said, "If any of them come to the church gates now, I can call a number whereas before we were having to get in touch with the police and we couldn't always get through."

Read more at the Birmingham Mail.


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DNA sample provided in NZ rugby rape probe

THE New Zealand Rugby Union says it is co-operating with a police investigation into allegations that a member of the Baby Blacks raped a woman in South Africa.

A 22-YEAR-OLD woman laid a complaint with police in Cape Town claiming she was raped by a player at the team hotel.

Police spokesman Colonel Vishnu Naidoo said the victim was having trouble remembering anything about the incident.

The woman alleges she was raped in the early hours of Saturday morning at Southern Sun Hotel Newlands after the New Zealand under-20 side were beaten 22-16 by South Africa in the IRB world championship final.

New Zealand Rugby Union chief executive Steve Tew says the allegations was being treated seriously.

"It is an incredibly serious matter both for the alleged victim and also for the alleged perpetrator," he told Radio New Zealand.

He said the team's players and management had co-operated fully with the authorities in South Africa.

At least one player had provided a DNA sample to police and the team did not leave the republic until they were given permission to do so, he said.

Tew said they would continue to assist police where needed.

"We have a very serious criminal allegation made against one of our players and we will co-operate with police until a conclusion is drawn."

A review into the breach of team protocols - players are not allowed to take guests into their rooms - would take place at a later date.

"Right now our focus is ensuring the police in South Africa have all the information and assistance that they require."

The paper that first reported the claim, The New Age, said the team were allowed to leave South Africa only after the New Zealand High Commission intervened.

But the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade rejected that.

"The NZ High Commission in Pretoria has not negotiated special treatment for the individuals concerned," a spokesperson said.

"The team and team management co-operated fully and assisted local police with their inquiries, after which Cape Town police advised they were happy for all members of the team to travel out of South Africa."


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Catholic brother suspect in 37 deaths

A BROTHER at a Catholic institute for disabled boys may have been involved in the suspicious deaths of 37 patients in the 1950s, Dutch prosecutors said.

However, they will not further investigate the deaths because the suspect, identified as Brother Andreas, has died and any alleged crimes happened too long ago to be prosecuted.

The investigation gave no causes of the deaths, but said the boys "were more likely to have died as a result of a crime than of natural causes".

The deaths happened so long ago prosecutors said exhuming bodies of the victims for toxicology tests would likely not have helped pin down a cause of death.

Prosecutors began a preliminary investigation last year after an independent commission of inquiry into sexual abuse in the Dutch Catholic church uncovered an unusually high number of deaths at the now-defunct St Joseph's institute in the southern town of Heel between 1952 and 1954.

Prosecutors said if they had launched a further probe, it would have investigated the actions of Brother Andreas, the St Joseph's institute doctor, identified as Dr Verstraelen, the Congregation of Holy Joseph that ran the institute, the Roermond Diocese and employment inspectors.

Prosecutors said their investigation found Brother Andreas was not qualified to care for disabled boys and the large number of deaths sharply declined after he was transferred to another institution.

The Roermond Diocese called the findings "shocking", in a written reaction, and said it was "incomprehensible" the diocese did not report then the unusually high number of deaths.

The independent inquiry into sex abuse last year reported up to 20,000 children endured sexual abuse at Dutch Catholic institutions over the past 65 years, and church officials failed to adequately address it or help the victims.


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Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 3, 2013

Twin bombs explode in Damascus

TWIN bombs exploded outside the Palace of Justice in Damascus overnight as deadly violence raged across the country and Turkey reportedly deployed missile batteries along its border with Syria.

With fighting in the 16-month-old revolt increasingly focusing on the capital, world powers were preparing for a crucial meeting on ways to end the conflict and to discuss a plan by peace envoy Kofi Annan for an interim government.

The meeting in Geneva, only agreed to after wrangling between Moscow and Washington over the agenda and the guest list, is to be attended by some regional governments but not by rival Middle East heavyweights Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Russia poured cold water on tomorrow's meeting, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov saying Moscow backs a political transition in Syria but rejects Western pressure for the ouster of President Bashar al Assad.

Meanwhile, three people were wounded when the bombs exploded in the car park outside the court complex in central Damascus, state media reported.

A police source said two magnetic bombs exploded in two judges' cars and that a third was being defused.

State television showed footage of heavy smoke rising from the site as firefighters battled the flames.

Elsewhere, violence killed at least 69 people, including 38 civilians, overnight after one of the bloodiest days of the 15-month revolt, a watchdog said.

Turkey, meanwhile, has sent missile batteries, tanks and troops to the border with Syria as a "security corridor" after Syria shot down a Turkish military jet last Friday, media reports said.

There was no official confirmation, but state-run TRT television showed dozens of military vehicles loaded with army personnel reportedly on the move for the volatile border, in a convoy that included low-altitude air defence systems and anti-aircraft guns.


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Egypt swears in first freely elected president

Morsi

Mohamed Morsi takes the oath of office but his day of triumph is unlikely to mark end of political strife in Egypt. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

ISLAMIST Mohamed Morsi promised a "new Egypt" as he took the oath of office to become the country's first freely elected president, succeeding Hosni Mubarak who was ousted 16 months ago.

At his inauguration before the Supreme Constitutional Court, Morsi also became the Arab world's first freely elected Islamist president and Egypt's fifth head of state since the overthrow of the monarchy some 60 years ago.

He took the oath before the court's 18 black-robed judges in its Nile-side seat built to resemble an ancient Egyptian temple.

"We aspire to a better tomorrow, a new Egypt and a second republic," Morsi said during a solemn ceremony shown live on state television.

"Today, the Egyptian people laid the foundation of a new life - absolute freedom, a genuine democracy and stability," said Morsi, a 60-year-old US-trained engineer from the Muslim Brotherhood, a fundamentalist group that has spent most of the 84 years since its inception as an outlawed organisation harshly targeted by successive governments.

Hundreds of soldiers and policemen guarded the building as Morsi arrived shortly after 11am local time in a small motorcade. Only several hundred supporters gathered outside the court to cheer the new president and, in a departure from the presidential pomp of the Mubarak years, traffic was only briefly halted to allow his motorcade through on the usually busy road linking the city centre with its southern suburbs.

Morsi's inauguration signals a personal triumph. He was not the Brotherhood's first choice as president, and was thrown into the presidential race when the group's original candidate, chief strategist and financier Khairat el-Shater, was disqualified over a Mubarak-era criminal conviction.

Derided as the Brotherhood's uncharismatic "spare tyre", his personal prestige has surged since his victory and his delivery of a Friday speech that tried to present him as a candidate not just of Islamists but of all those who want to complete the work of the 2011 uprising against the authoritarian Mubarak.

"Egypt today is a civil, national, constitutional and modern state," Morsi, wearing a blue business suit and a red tie, told the judges in the wood-panelled chamber where he took the oath of office. "It is a strong nation because of its people and the beliefs of its sons and its institutions."

Morsi later travelled to Cairo University where he was to make his inauguration address. He was given an official welcome by an army band that played the national anthem as he stood to attention. Military ruler Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi was in attendance. His arrival was greeted with chants of, "The army and the people are one hand", from the hundreds gathered in the university's main lecture room.

Established in 1908 as a bastion of secular education, Cairo University later became a stronghold of Islamist student groups in the 1970s. Many of those student leaders have gone on to become senior members of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood, the nation's oldest and most powerful Islamist movement.

A handover ceremony hosted by the military generals who ruled Egypt since Mubarak's ouster follows.

Morsi took a symbolic oath on Friday in Tahrir Square, birthplace of the uprising that ended Mubarak's authoritarian rule last year, and vowed to reclaim presidential powers stripped from his office by the military council that took over from the ousted leader.

But by agreeing to take the official oath before the court, rather than before parliament as is customary, he is bowing to the military's will in an indication that the contest for power will continue.

Morsi's speech in Tahrir Square was filled with dramatic populist gestures. The 60-year-old president-elect staked a claim to the legacy of the uprising and voiced his determination to win back the powers stripped from his office by the generals.


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Cops serve Assange with extradition notice

Bob Carr insists Julian Assange's asylum application to Ecuador has nothing to with the Aust govt.

BRITISH police served an extradition notice today on WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who has taken refuge in Ecuador's embassy in London and requested asylum.

Scotland Yard said they had served a "surrender notice" on the 40-year-old Australian requiring him to appear at a police station, adding that failure to do so would make him further liable to arrest.

Assange faces extradition to Sweden over sex crime allegations, having exhausted his options under British law when the Supreme Court overturned his appeal against extradition earlier this month.

Fearing Stockholm would pass him on to the US, he sought refuge at Ecuador's embassy in London on June 19, asking the South American country for political asylum.

Scotland Yard has "served a surrender notice upon a 40-year-old man that requires him to attend a police station at date and time of our choosing," a spokesman said.

"This is standard practice in extradition cases and is the first step in the removal process.

"He remains in breach of his bail conditions. Failing to surrender would be a further breach of conditions and he is liable to arrest."

The embassy declined to comment on the serving of the police notice.

Assange fears he will be extradited from Sweden to the United States to face possible espionage charges, after releasing more than 250,000 US diplomatic cables on the WikiLeaks anti-secrecy website.


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Warning on money transfer phone scam

A PHONE scam asking people to send money for legal representation is being circulated, police have warned.

The callers ask for money to be sent by Western Union money transfer so they can be represented in court over a "car crash they were involved in".

Police said it was another variation of scams where people are told they will receive money if they pay a certain fee.

"SA Police remind everyone that if it sounds too good to be true, it usually is. You should never send money via funds transfer organisations, or directly into bank accounts, based on these types of phone calls," a police statement said.

Anyone who has been a victim of such a scam should call the police assistance line on 131 444. To learn more about this or similar scams visit www.scamwatch.gov.au


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Fire bans end in some districts

FIRE danger season will end in the Northeast and Northwest Pastoral districts this Sunday, the Country Fire Service has advised.

The districts will no longer be subject to fire restrictions from Monday, April 1.

CFS Prevention Services manager Leigh Miller said landowners in the two districts, who were planning to conduct burn-off activities from Monday, needed to be vigilant and mindful of the conditions.

"If you are planning burning off activities you must ensure the fire does not get out of control and potentially threaten lives and property," he said.

"Many areas around the state have not received a significant amount of rain and the ground may still be dry where a fire will burn very quickly and could easily get out of control.

"Any burning off around homes or on properties should be done in suitable weather conditions to help reduce the risk of the burn-off spreading out of control."

Fire bans for the other 13 districts remain in place.

For information on South Australia's fire season dates visit the CFS website at www.cfs.sa.gov.au or contact the Bushfire Hotline on 1300 362 361.


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Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 3, 2013

Warm start, but rain on the way

ADELAIDE'S late burst of spring warmth will continue today, with a top temperature of 29C expected.

Rain will develop during the morning, easing to isolated showers by late afternoon and isolated thunderstorms.

Things will cool for the Easter break, with a maximum of 22C expected tomorrow and cool weather continuing into early next week. 

Isolated showers are also expected across the weekend.


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