The Greens, whose votes Prime Minister Julia Gillard needs to pass legislation, “will not be facilitating or supporting this takeover,” leader Bob Brown told reporters today in Canberra. Opposition treasury spokesman Joe Hockey said the offer is “of great concern” and independent lawmaker Bob Katter called the proposal “lunacy.”
Posts Tagged ‘Canberra’
Singapore’s ASX bid faces opposition from Australian lawmakers
Australia’s Greens won’t back Singapore Exchange bid for ASX
Senator Bob Brown, leader of the Greens party in Australia, said Singapore Exchange should not be allowed to buy ASX citing concerns he has with the proposed deal and its impact on the “national interest.” “The Greens will not be facilitating or supporting this takeover,” Brown told reporters in Canberra today.
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‘Go back’, attackers told Indian student in Australia
An Indian student, who was viciously attacked and robbed in this Australian city, says the assault was racially motivated and the assailant screamed, “Go back to your own country”.
Neeraj Bhardwaj, 23, was waiting for a tram near Melbourne Aquarium at 4 a.m. Easter Monday when two drunk men approached him, The Age reported Wednesday.
The men, [...]
Lady Gaga’s Kiwi tour thrills fans as MTV bans her Telephone video
‘Poker Face’ singer Lady Gaga is said to have made quite an impression during her New Zealand tour, despite MTV banning her overly explicit ‘Telephone’ video with Beyonce.
Gaga, 23, real name Stefani Germanotta, thrilled her Kiwi fans with a burning piano, blood and a latex nun outfit in her first concert in Auckland. [...]
Jai Ho! Indian concert on Australia Day
It is said that music transcends all forms of hatred. It will be used again to soothe the growing hostility between New Delhi and Canberra in the face of racial attacks on Indians in Australia.
Come Jan 26, the Australia Day that coincides with Republic Day in India, the Sydney Myer Music Bowl will explode with [...]
Take action against attacks on Indians: India tells Aus
New Delhi has said that Australian authorities must act tough against those behind the attacks on Indians.
Reacting to the latest attack in which Juspreet Singh was set on fire, Overseas Indian Affairs Minister Vyalar Ravi said that it is unfortunate that things are not moving as they were promised and it is very disturbing for [...]
Australia supports green fund for Kyoto Protocol
CANBERRA: At the Copenhaen climate conference on Tuesday, Australia has backed the creation of a U.S. 10 billion dollar a year green fund to help vulnerable countries and called for a new legal treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol.
Australian diplomats backed by the “umbrella group”, which includes the U.S., Canada, Japan and Russia, supported a [...]
Australian PM to meet Manmohan Singh
Australian Prime Minister (PM) Kevin Rudd will meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh this evening and will discuss issues of bilateral and international importance.
Rudd, who arrived here last night on a two-day visit, is expected to hold talks on maritime security.
Both leaders will sign agreements on maritime security and counter- terrorism measures.
Both leaders could also declare [...]
India expresses concern over recurrence of attacks on Indian students in Australia
India on Wednesday expressed concern over the recurrence of incidents of attacks on Indian students in Australia and stressed at the need to undertake more effective measures to prevent recurrence of such attacks.
“Unfortunately the attacks have reoccurred in the last week, so obviously these attacks are a matter of concern for us…we are in regular [...]
New Delhi to persuade Australian PM for uranium sale to India
Energy starved India, which is pressing hard to ensure sufficient nuclear
fuel supply for its drying nuclear reactors, is likely to persuade the visiting Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to open up the uranium sale to India.
” India is more than willing to buy Uranium from Australia and it will be a part of the [...]
Oz PM to visit to India, Singapore
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd heads to India and Singapore this week.
Stronger relations with New Delhi have been a priority for the Rudd Government, and Rudd will undertake a two-day visit to Mumbai and New Delhi, beginning Wednesday, reports Fox News.
Rudd is the most senior member of the government to tread the path to India [...]
China arrests Rio Tinto workers

China has formally arrested and charged four employees of mining firm Rio Tinto with stealing trade secrets and taking bribes, Chinese state media reports.
The accused are Australian national Stern Hu and three Chinese employees of the Anglo-Australian company.
They are charged with using "improper means" to obtain "commercial secrets" about China’s steel and iron industry, Xinhua reports.
The four have been in police custody in Shanghai since early July.
Rio Tinto denies any wrongdoing.
Australia has repeatedly sought a quick resolution of the case, but China has told Canberra not to interfere in the legal process.
China’s State Secrets Bureau on Monday accused Rio Tinto of spying on Chinese steel mills for six years and helping to inflate iron ore prices.
It said Chinese steelmakers had lost 700bn yuan ($102bn; £61.2bn) through overpaying for imported iron ore.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Uighur ‘plight similar to Tibet’
By Nick Bryant
BBC News, Sydney

The Chinese government has tried to pressure Australia’s National Press Club in Canberra to cancel an address by the Uighur leader, Rebiya Kadeer.
But the event, to be carried live on national TV, will go ahead as planned.
China views Ms Kadeer as a terrorist, and has tried to stop other appearances during her trip to Australia.
It is a sensitive time in Australian-China relations, after China’s arrest of an Australian Rio Tinto executive on suspicion of corporate espionage.
Diplomats from the Chinese embassy in Canberra tried to exert pressure on the National Press Club to cancel Tuesday’s speech from the Uighur leader, Ms Kadeer, which, like most of the addresses at the club, will be broadcast live on national television.
"You must withdraw the invitation," an official reportedly told the club.
The official then warned that it would be "regrettable" if relations between China and Australia were harmed by her appearance.
If the speech did go ahead, then it should not be broadcast on national television, the official was reported as saying.
The National Press Club made it clear that it would give a platform to Ms Kadeer, the president of the World Uighur Congress, a group which the Chinese government views as a terrorist organisation.
Her visit to Australia has been dogged by controversy.

Chinese officials demanded the withdrawal of a documentary about her life which was screened at the Melbourne Film Festival.
When organisers refused, the festival’s website came under cyber-attack from hackers in China who replaced film information with the Chinese flag and anti-Kadeer slogans.
Rebiya Kadeer said of the latest controversy that China could not impose its authoritarian will on the whole world.
She said that Australia was a democratic country and not a province of China.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Tuan Sing records 1H09 PATMI of $4.3m
Mainboard-listed Tuan Sing Holdings says it posted a profit after tax and minority interest (PATMI) of $4.3 million for the first half year of 2009.
For the first half of the year, the property segment generated revenue of $18.9 million and profit after tax of $0.6 million.
During 1H09, Grand Hotel Group reported profit after tax of A$10.9 million ($13.2 million) which was inclusive of a A$6.5 million gain on the disposal of its two Hyatt hotels in Canberra and Adelaide.
Industrial Services posted revenue of $49.1 million and profit after tax of $1.2 million.
Retail recorded revenue of $16.8 million and loss after tax of $2.8 million in the first half of the year.
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China urges ‘respect’ in Rio case

Beijing has called on Australia to "respect" its legal system, as it probes allegations of bribery by employees at mining firm Rio Tinto.
China’s vice foreign minister Liu Jieyu urged Canberra not to interfere after the arrest of Australian national Stern Hu and three Chinese colleagues at Rio.
They are accused of using bribery to obtain state secrets – souring relations between the two countries.
Rio denies the allegations and no charges have yet been laid.
The facts of the case would constitute a violation of Australian laws if they were to happen in Australia, said Liu Jieyu.
"The Chinese government respects the independent judiciary of the Australian judicial system. I think we would expect that the same from other countries," he added.
"By dealing with this case, we are really establishing or we are really trying to establish a good environment for all companies in China – foreign companies operating in China and local Chinese companies."
Trading partner
Last month, the Australian trade minister, Simon Crean, warned that business relations with China could be damaged if the case of the detained Rio Tinto workers was not handled appropriately.
Australian opposition politicians have complained that the arrest may be in retaliation for the collapse in June of Rio’s proposed deal with Chinese state-owned firm Chinalco.
Rio scrapped a $19.5bn (£11.8bn) investment by Chinalco in favour of a tie-up with fellow Anglo-Australian miner BHP Billiton. Rio Tinto is now finalising a deal with BHP to merge their iron ore operations in Western Australia.
However, Mr Crean did not believe that the two incidents were related
China is Australia’s biggest trade partner, worth $53bn in 2008. Of this, $14bn came from iron ore exports, powered by Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton.
The world’s fastest-growing economy, China consumes more than half the globally-traded iron ore. China needs Australia’s resources and Australia needs Chinese demand.
It has been thanks to the robust Chinese demand for its natural resources that Australia has so far managed to avoid falling into a recession.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Earth-sized scar seen on Jupiter
Australian man alerts Nasa to hole in planet’s atmosphere caused by comet or asteroid crash
An amateur Australian astronomer looking through his backyard telescope has discovered that a large comet or asteroid has crashed into Jupiter, creating a hole the size of the Earth in the planet’s atmosphere.
Anthony Wesley, 44, a computer programmer who lives in a small town outside the capital, Canberra, discovered a large scar on Jupiter when he was photographing the giant gaseous planet.
He tipped off Nasa about his discovery, and images taken by the US space agency’s infrared telescope in Hawaii show a scar in the atmosphere near the south pole of the planet.
In a remarkable twist of fate, the discovery was made on the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing and the 15th anniversary of another large comet strike on Jupiter.
Wesley, who spends about 20 hours a week on his passion of watching and photographing Jupiter, spotted the strike using the telescope at the bottom of his garden in Murrumbatema at about 1am yesterday (4pm BST on Sunday).
But he almost missed making the discovery because he was watching the Open golf championship and the second Ashes test match. “I’m a keen golf watcher and unfortunately we were being flogged in the cricket,” he told the Guardian. “I was imaging Jupiter until about midnight and seriously thought about packing up and going back to the house to watch the golf and the cricket. In the end I decided to just take a break and I went back to the house to watch Tom Watson almost make history.
“I came back down half an hour later and I could see this black mark had turned into view.”
He recorded the moment in his observation log: “I noticed a dark spot rotating into view in Jupiter’s south polar region [and] started to get curious,” he said. “My next thought was that it must be either a dark moon … or a moon shadow, but it was in the wrong place and the wrong size.
“By two o’clock I’d come back up to the house and was sending alerts to all the people I could think of that should be looking at this and especially the professional astronomers with specialised instruments for measuring this,” he said.
Wesley emailed scientists at Nasa’s jet propulsion laboratory in Pasadena, California. Using Nasa’s infrared telescope facility at the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii, they gathered evidence indicating an impact.
“We were extremely lucky to be seeing Jupiter at exactly the right time, the right hour, the right side of Jupiter to witness the event. We couldn’t have planned it better,” said Glenn Orton, a scientist at the Pasadena lab.
“It could be the impact of a comet, but we don’t know for sure yet,” he said. “It’s been a whirlwind of a day, and this on the anniversary of the Shoemaker-Levy 9 and Apollo anniversaries is amazing.”
Wesley has been an ardent star-gazer since the age of 10 when he was given a small telescope. But over the past five years he has been in Jupiter’s thrall. “It’s one of my passions. It’s such a dynamic planet, it’s changing all the time. To take a photograph of this type, really it’s a dream come true for me.”
Leigh Fletcher, another Nasa scientist, told the New Scientist: “The impact scar we’re seeing is about the same size as one of Jupiter’s big storms … That, I believe, is about the size of the Earth.”
China tries to block Uighur film

Organisers of Melbourne’s International Film Festival have defied calls from China not to show a documentary about an exiled Uighur leader.
Festival director Richard Moore said a Chinese consular official had insisted that the film be withdrawn, but he had refused to do so.
The film, Ten Conditions of Love, centres on Rebiya Kadeer, the US-based head of the World Uighur Congress.
China accuses the group of inciting recent ethnic unrest in Xinjiang.
Beijing and Canberra are already locked in a row over an Australian mining executive who has been arrested for spying in China.
‘Strident’
Mr Moore said that after the event’s programme was published, he was contacted by Melbourne-based Chinese cultural attache Chunmei Chen who urged him to withdraw the film.
"I said I had no reason to withdraw the film from the festival and she then proceeded to tell me that I had to justify my decision to include the film in the festival.
"No-one reacts well to strident approaches, or to the appearance of being bullied. I don’t think it’s a positive way of behaving," he added.
He said he told Ms Chen he did not have to justify the film’s inclusion, "then politely hung up".

The Chinese consulate in Melbourne has not commented on the incident.
China has accused Ms Kadeer of orchestrating recent bloodshed in Xinjiang, home to the ethnic Muslim Uighurs and a growing number of China’s Han majority.
Violence between the two groups this month has left more than 180 people dead and more than 1,600 injured, Chinese authorities say.
Ms Kadeer, one of China’s richest women, was jailed in China for endangering national security but released in 2005 on medical grounds. She now lives in the US.
Ten Conditions of Love, by Melbourne film-maker Jeff Daniels, tells of Ms Kadeer’s relationship with her activist husband Sidik Rouzi and the impact her campaigning had on her 11 children.
Three of her children have been jailed.
‘Spying’ arrest
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd warned China on Wednesday that governments and corporations around the world were watching how it handled the case of an Australian mining executive.
Stern Hu, the Australian head of Rio Tinto’s iron ore business in China, was detained on suspicion of industrial espionage relating to negotiations with Chinese steel mills over iron ore prices.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
China’s Rio Tinto inquiry widens

China has extended its investigations into alleged spying and bribery by Rio Tinto employees to executives of five Chinese steelmakers.
Baosteel Group, Anshan Iron & Steel Group, Laigang Group and Jigang Group are being probed, the China Daily said.
An executive at another major producer, Shougang Group, was detained last week, news reports said.
Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan has said the case of detained Australian Stern Hu should be handled quickly.
Baosteel, Shougang and Angang are among the 16 delegation members at the talks for fixing 2009 iron ore prices, the China Daily reported.
It said the annual talks, which were supposed to conclude by 30 June, are continuing despite the arrests and investigations.
State secrets
Mr Hu and three other men working for the Anglo-Australian mining firm Rio Tinto were detained last week, accused of stealing state secrets.
Rio Tinto was acting as lead negotiator for global iron ore producers in talks with Chinese mills on the price for annual supply contracts.
The Rio employees are accused of bribing Chinese steel company personnel to obtain summaries of the negotiators’ meetings, according to Chinese news reports.
In Canberra, Australia, the Chinese ambassador was again called in to the foreign ministry on Tuesday, the third summons in a week.
Australia’s opposition is pressing for more aggressive action on Mr Hu’s arrest, but Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner said "yelling and screaming" would not help. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Australia seeks new army robots
By Phil Mercer
BBC News, Sydney

Australia has launched a multi-million dollar competition to build a new generation of military robots.
The winning design must help soldiers fight by remote control in urban combat zones, defence officials say.
The aim is to reduce casualties in urban areas where fighting is unpredictable and treacherous.
The competition is being run by Australia’s Defence Science and Technology Organisation in partnership with the US military.
‘Dirty work’
The government wants to develop an "intelligent and fully autonomous system" capable of carrying out dangerous surveillance missions.
Senior officials in Canberra have said they hope that unarmed robotic vehicles will do some of the army’s "dirty work" in such hazardous theatres.
The ultimate plan is for groups of these sophisticated machines to be sent into battle to help neutralise the enemy.
Research grants of $1.6m (£984,000) have been offered in this joint Australian and American competition. Five shortlisted applicants will be invited to present their ideas at a Land Warfare Conference in Brisbane in November next year.
Before they get to that stage they will have to prove that their prototypes can do the job at a defence base in South Australia, where they will be judged by an international panel of military experts. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



