Thursday, March 1, 2012

Fed: East Timor would like Aust troops to stay on: Ramos Horta


AAP General News (Australia)
08-30-2000
Fed: East Timor would like Aust troops to stay on: Ramos Horta

CANBERRA, Aug 30 AAP - East Timor plans to ask Australian troops to stay and help protect
the troubled territory even after full independence as part of a continued United Nations
peacekeeping presence.

Nobel peace laureate and independence leader Jose Ramos-Horta said Indonesian West
Timor still posed a security risk and foreign troops would help deter further violence.

"We have been thinking about this for a while that even after independence we should
have a few battalions here for a period of years until the threat coming from West Timor
totally disappears," he told the ABC.

"I hope the Australian people will support that."

Foreign Minister Alexander Downer will today visit East Timor as part of celebrations
for the first anniversary of their vote to end Indonesia's often brutal rule.

Australian soldiers form part of the UN Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET),
which is preparing East Timor for its first elections, possibly in one year.

AAP kmh/gmw/

KEYWORD: TIMOR HORTA

2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Company considers legal action on forged letter


AAP General News (Australia)
04-15-2000
Fed: Company considers legal action on forged letter

But Ron Smith, from medialaunch.com.au, challenged the Department of Immigration's
claim that the bogus letter had not been used by the Chinese officials to gain a visa.

"If this letter played no part in them getting into the country, why did they present
it and why is the Immigration Department conducting an investigation," Mr Smith told AAP.

AAP nl/was/br

KEYWORD: VISA 3 BRISBANE (REOPENS)

2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: AOPA members advised not to join legal action yet


AAP General News (Australia)
01-20-2000
Fed: AOPA members advised not to join legal action yet

The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association has advised its members NOT to join a proposed
class action against Mobil over the nation's worst fuel contamination crisis.

A class action was launched in the Federal Court this week by law firm Ebsworth and
Ebsworth on behalf of two aircraft operators, and more aviators are expected to join …

VIC: Bracks steps up drugs as election issue


AAP General News (Australia)
08-31-1999
VIC: Bracks steps up drugs as election issue

On the Victorian campaign trail, Labor has announced planned locations for five safe
injecting rooms while both sides have accused each other of putting politics before lives.

Opposition leader STEVE BRACKS says playgrounds, street corners and parks are already being
used as injecting rooms and a safe house trial would move drugs off the streets.

Under Labor's plan, safe injecting rooms would be built in the city centre, inner-city
Collingwood, bayside St Kilda, Footscray in Melbourne's west and Springvale in the
outer-eastern suburbs.

Three of the five local mayors involved have come out in support of the plan, which Mr
BRACKS says is dependent on majority approval from councils and the community.

But Premier JEFF KENNETT says Labor is playing with people's lives, accusing it of failing
to consider the health and policing risks.

He said he will reconsider his opposition to safe injecting rooms after the results of a
New South Wales trial.

But Mr BRACKS says Mr KENNETT is running a scare campaign and should be more responsible,
given that more than 200 Victorians died this year from heroin overdoses.

AAP RTV kmh/er/wz/rat

KEYWORD: POLLVIC (MELBOURNE)

1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: April 26 to be a public holiday in lieu of Anzac Day


AAP General News (Australia)
04-08-1999
NSW: April 26 to be a public holiday in lieu of Anzac Day

SYDNEY, April 8 AAP - Monday, April 26, would be a public holiday in New South Wales
because Anzac Day was on a Sunday this year, the state government said today.

Attorney-General Jeff Shaw said in accordance with the Banks and Bank Holiday Act 1912 the
Monday would be declared a bank holiday.

The act covers similar circumstances for New Year's Day, Australia Day, Christmas Day and
Boxing Day.

AAP shm/tsm/bwl

KEYWORD: ANZAC HOLIDAY

1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Highlights of the AAP National Wire at 15:30, Dec 22 =2 Sydney


AAP General News (Australia)
12-22-1998
Highlights of the AAP National Wire at 15:30, Dec 22 =2 Sydney

CANBERRA - There have been no cases of HIV or Hepatitis B discovered so far following a
mass testing of women patients who came into contact with a health worker carrying the viruses
at the Canberra Hospital. (PATIENTS ACT 2ND D/L, see also PATIENTS ACT WOOLDRIDGE, N/L to
come)



CANBERRA - The decision whether to have United Nations weapons inspectors back in Iraq was
up to the UN Security Council, not the Iraqi government, UNSCOM chairman Richard Butler said
today. (IRAQ BUTLER)

CANBERRA - Working days lost to disputes in Australia dropped by 14.5 per cent in September
but the construction industry continued to be hit by industrial turmoil, new figures show.
(DISPUTES)



CANBERRA - The federal government today unveiled the unlikely duo of household rubbish and
sugarcane waste as two of the keys to lowering Australia's greenhouse gas emissions.
(EMISSIONS)



CANBERRA - Wheat prices will go into the new year unchanged, despite threats to sales from
the attack on Iraq and the Asian economic crisis. (WHEAT)



MELBOURNE - An appeal court has dismissed an appeal against sentence by a man jailed for a
minimum of 35 years for abducting, raping, torturing and murdering two Bega schoolgirls.
(BECKETT N/L)



MELBOURNE - A 19-year-old man charged with last week's murder of a Melbourne teacher's aide
faces hearings on other matters, including attempted murder. (SEATER)



MELBOURNE - Victoria's privatised electricity companies have agreed to join the state
government's millennium bug monitoring program, allowing public scrutiny of their progress in
dealing with the problem. (Y2K POWER)



MELBOURNE - A man whose defence against a murder charge was that the dead man committed
suicide was today sentenced to 21 years jail, with a minimum of 16 years, for the killing.
(COGLEY SENTENCE N/L)



MELBOURNE - The Victorian government today named a new board of trustees for the Melbourne
Cricket Ground (MCG) introduced today as part of a controversial shake-up. (AFL MCG)



SYDNEY - Cobar miners received their long-awaited payout cheques today and used the
occasion to call for the reopening of a parliamentary inquiry into the protection of workers'
entitlements. (COBAR)



SYDNEY - New South Wales taxpayers were funding two fully-furnished luxury homes for use as
holiday retreats by state MPs, an auditor's report found today. (AUDITOR HOLIDAYS)



SYDNEY - A private company was paid $37.9 million of taxpayers' money to relocate from the
Olympics site at Homebush Bay, according to the New South Wales Auditor-General's annual
report released today. (OLY PRIMO, see also OLY SURVEY)



SYDNEY - Three New South Wales north coast shires were today declared natural disaster
areas after violent thunderstorms hit the Tweed, Ballina and Maclean districts on Friday
night. (STORMS)



SYDNEY - More than two million litres of water swept through Wynyard Railway Station in
central Sydney early today, leaving train services in chaos and shop owners shocked and out of
pocket. (WYNYARD D/L, see also WYNYARD INSURANCE, WYNYARD PEAK, WYNYARD N/L to come)



SYDNEY - Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) chief Barry O'Keefe today
complained that funding cuts were hampering the fight against corruption. (ICAC, N/L to come)



BRISBANE - Hospital foundations can continue to receive proceeds from public assets such as
carparks and cafeterias after state cabinet resolved a $1.3 million question posed by the
Auditor-General earlier this year. (FOUNDATIONS)



BRISBANE - A young family was rescued from a stricken yacht in high seas off Tin Can Bay,
about 250km north of Brisbane, in the early hours of this morning. (YACHT)



BRISBANE - A police standoff with a man at the top of an electricity tower led to a two
hour "brown out" for several thousand residents of the north Queensland city of Townsville.
(TOWER)



BRISBANE - A young father would never forgive himself for punching a fridge which toppled
on to his baby son, killing him, a Supreme Court jury was told here today. (BAGBY)



BRISBANE - Many Queensland graingrowers were facing a lean Christmas with mounting
disappointment at the federal reaction to the disastrous wheat harvest, the Queensland
Graingrowers Association (QGGA) said today. (GRAIN)



ADELAIDE - Scientist are unravelling the mystery of a unique Australian sea creature that
is at the centre of a budding international tourism industry. (DRAGON)



ADELAIDE - Sir Donald Bradman put his fair share of cherries on bats in his cricketing
days, but now fruit lovers will be able to put cherries on their plates bearing his name.
(CHERRIES)



ADELAIDE - Premium red wine production will overtake white wine production by 2000/01,
ABARE said today. (ABARE WINE to come)



ADELAIDE - Scientists are manipulating the genes of sheep to produce shrink-proof wool.
(WOOL to come)



PERTH - Debate over native title legislation was set to last all day and night in the West
Australian Legislative Council, where three bills are up for consideration. (WIK WA)



PERTH - Police have captured West Australian prison escapee James Lindsay Charles Ryder,
who walked out of the minimum security Wooloroo prison just six days after he was transferred
there from a maximum security jail. (RYDER)



PERTH - Boat skippers on Western Australian waterways could soon be breath-tested, under
new legislation expected to go before state parliament next year. (SKIPPERS)


AAP mo

KEYWORD: HIGHLIGHTS NATIONAL 2 SYDNEY

1998 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Main stories in ABC's World Today


AAP General News (Australia)
12-09-2011
Main stories in ABC's World Today

SYDNEY, Dec 9 AAP - Main stories in ABC's World Today:

* French president Nicolas Sarkozy says the next 48-hours represent the last chance
for Europe to dig itself out of its financial blackhole. But, with France and Germany
insisting on a new set of rules that would include closer economic ties, the prospect
of Brussels dictating nations' tax and spending policies has upset a number of EU members.

* Pressure is growing on China to step in with a multi-trillion dollar bailout, despite
warnings that it could demand hard assets in return for buying risky government bonds.

Australia's Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens says the prospect of China becoming a
"white knight" could raise global political and social tensions.

* Toilet paper manufacturer Solaris claims it's being subjected to a misinformation
campaign by Greenpeace and trade unions, forcing it to review its operations in Australia.

The company believes it's been unfairly targeted because it sources its paper from Indonesia
and has warned Asia of a so-called "anti-Indonesian sentiment".

AAP ra/tr

KEYWORD: MONITOR WORLD TODAY

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