Thứ Hai, 1 tháng 4, 2013

Anti-CSG group demands Qld inquiry

THE Queensland government is facing calls for a full public inquiry into rushed CSG project approvals.

Former Queensland bureaucrat-turned whistleblower Simone Marsh claims approval for an $18 billion Santos project and a $20 billion Queensland Gas Company (QGC) project in 2010 was rushed through without crucial information.

The senior environmental specialist told the ABC's Four Corners program she and other decision-makers did not have information necessary to properly assess the environmental impact of the projects.

A spokesman for Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney says the claims are nothing new and are under investigation by the Crime and Misconduct Commission (CMC).

The government will not be commenting on the issue, he says, but green groups aren't holding back.

The Lock the Gate Alliance says the CMC should hold a public inquiry to address the issue.

"Any public servant who has signed an environmental authority for any of these projects has breached several sections of the Environmental Protection Act and, therefore, is likely to have committed official misconduct," Mr Hutton said.

"This situation came about because of improper political pressure that was placed on the public servants, as Simone Marsh has described."

Santos and QGC agreed with the government that the allegations had been aired previously.

They said they complied with all government requirements and did not try to influence the approvals process.

Industry spokesman Rick Wilkinson, who heads the Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association, told the program the right procedures were followed.

"And there were many checks and balances on the way through," he said.


View the original article here

Man drinks 'unknown' liquid in court then dies

bottled water

The convicted arsonist died after drinking an unknown substance during sentencing.
Source: Supplied

  • Michael Marin guilty of burning down his $3.5m home
  • Convicted man took a sip of unknown liquid, collapses
  • Paramedics were unable to revive him

AN Arizona man convicted today of deliberately burning down his $US3.5 million mansion in 2009 collapsed and died in the courtroom after the verdict was read.

A Phoenix jury found 53-year-old Scottsdale man Michael Marin guilty of arson of an occupied structure.

Shortly after he heard the verdict, video showed Marin taking a drink from a bottle of an unknown liquid. He then made a choking or throat-clearing noise, wheeled his chair around, and collapsed on the floor.

Paramedics attended to him, but could not save his life.

Marin was not in custody during the trial and it is possible he deliberately harmed himself.

Marin's mansion burned down in July 2009.

He told authorities he escaped the blaze by climbing down a rope ladder while wearing a scuba tank and diving mask to protect himself from the smoke. Prosecutors claimed Marin set fire to his house because he could no longer pay the mortgage.


Read more about the court case at myfoxphoenix.com

If you or someone you know may be at risk of suicide contact Lifeline 13 11 14, beyondblue 1300 22 46 36, or Salvo Care Line 1300 36 36 22.


View the original article here

Fire at Muslim school in Myanmar: 13 dead

THIRTEEN people, including children, have been killed after a fire broke out in a Muslim school in Yangon due to a suspected electrical fault, police in Myanmar's (Burma's) main city say.

The blaze comes against a backdrop of heightened Buddhist-Muslim tensions in Myanmar following recent sectarian clashes, but police said initial indications suggested that the blaze was accidental.

"Thirteen people, mostly children, were killed during a fire at a Muslim religious school in downtown Yangon," a police officer at the scene told AFP.

"We assume that it was due to an electrical short circuit."

Firefighters extinguished the blaze, which broke out in the early hours of Tuesday morning, he said.

Police called for calm and promised to establish a committee - including Muslim leaders - to look into the cause after an angry crowd gathered at the scene demanding answers, according to an AFP reporter.

The building housed a mosque and a religious school where children were staying while taking a summer class. Local residents said the victims were believed to be orphans.

A second police officer said the 13 dead were among more than 70 people sleeping at the school when the fire broke out.

"The rest of the children were rescued," he said.

The Myanmar Police Force reported on its official Facebook page that the victims died from burns or smoke inhalation.

"According to the investigation by township police officers, the fire was caused by excessively high (electric) voltage," it added.

Safety standards are generally poor in impoverished Myanmar, which is emerging from decades of military rule.

A wave of sectarian violence that began on March 20 has left 43 people dead and mosques and homes burned in several towns in central Myanmar, prompting the government to impose emergency rule and curfews in some areas.

Yangon has been tense but mostly peaceful following the clashes, which were apparently triggered by an argument in a gold shop that triggered a riot which later spread.

The conflict poses a major challenge for Thein Sein, who has won international praise for his reform efforts since taking office two years ago.

The situation has calmed in recent days after the former general on Thursday vowed a tough response over the violence, which he blamed on "political opportunists and religious extremists".

Sectarian strife involving Buddhists and Muslims in the western state of Rakhine last year left at least 180 people dead.


View the original article here

Aussie market higher at noon

THE Australian stock market was firmer at noon, on track to post a third straight day of gains, with the healthcare and industrials sector leading the broader market higher.

At 12.06pm (AEST), the All Ordinaries index had risen 38.4 points, or 0.84 per cent, to 4618.2 points.

On the ASX 24, the September share price index futures contract was up 36 points at 4555 points, with 18,451 contracts traded.

The local bourse opened about 0.9 per cent higher, but eased back during the morning in keeping with trading patterns of recent times amid sluggish volume and turnover on the last day of the 2010/11 financial year.

Bell Potter senior adviser Stuart Smith said the market had for the past several months gone through "a bit of a spell" between 11.30am and 12pm.

"I'm don't know if it's waiting for overseas markets to open or what, but it sounds like it," Mr Smith said.

"We are in bear phase, but we are trying to climb out of the bear pit," Mr Smith said.

"We are just heading into a positive direction for end of the year and I think everybody is happy with that."

The best-performing sector at 12.06pm was healthcare, up 1.75 per cent according to IRESS data.

Industrials (up 1.59 per cent) and utility stocks (up 1.33 per cent), also were strong during the morning.

Overnight, Wall Street extended gains to a third straight day, while futures contract prices for gold, oil and copper also settled firmer.

Meanwhile, a positive vote in the Greek parliament on austerity measures designed to avoid the nation defaulting on its debts also buoyed market sentiment.

Making news today, Insurance Insurance Australia Group (IAG) maintained guidance of an insurance margin of 8-10 per cent for 2010/11, after saying the Christchurch earthquake earlier in June would cost up to $65 million in net insurance claims.

IAG was steady $3.38, while the insurer's industry peers were flat to higher. QBE was steady $17.04, Suncorp was up one cent at $8.02, and Bank of Queensland was up nine cents, or about 1.2 per cent, at $8.14.

The biggest mover was CSL, which advanced 2.4 per cent, or 77 cents, to $33.07.

National turnover in Australia was 1.15 billion securities worth $1.63 billion.

There were 647 stocks up and 352 down, while 376 were unchanged.


View the original article here

Heavy rains kill at least 16 in China

TORRENTIAL rains have killed at least 16 people and affected 1.5 million people in southern and northern parts of China.

The official Xinhua News Agency says the heavy rains over the past three days have affected 450,000 people and wiped out crops in the southern Guangxi region.

Another 730,000 people have been affected in the southern province of Jiangxi, and 312,000 are affected in the adjacent manufacturing powerhouse province of Guangdong.

Xinhua quoted a local government official as saying the direct economic losses so far are $US20.3 million ($A20.26 million), and that water levels in 10 reservoirs and several major rivers have risen above warning levels.

Xinhua said rainstorm-triggered floods have also hit areas of Inner Mongolia in the north of China.


View the original article here

Man drinks 'unknown' liquid in court then dies

bottled water

The convicted arsonist died after drinking an unknown substance during sentencing.
Source: Supplied

  • Michael Marin guilty of burning down his $3.5m home
  • Convicted man took a sip of unknown liquid, collapses
  • Paramedics were unable to revive him

AN Arizona man convicted today of deliberately burning down his $US3.5 million mansion in 2009 collapsed and died in the courtroom after the verdict was read.

A Phoenix jury found 53-year-old Scottsdale man Michael Marin guilty of arson of an occupied structure.

Shortly after he heard the verdict, video showed Marin taking a drink from a bottle of an unknown liquid. He then made a choking or throat-clearing noise, wheeled his chair around, and collapsed on the floor.

Paramedics attended to him, but could not save his life.

Marin was not in custody during the trial and it is possible he deliberately harmed himself.

Marin's mansion burned down in July 2009.

He told authorities he escaped the blaze by climbing down a rope ladder while wearing a scuba tank and diving mask to protect himself from the smoke. Prosecutors claimed Marin set fire to his house because he could no longer pay the mortgage.


Read more about the court case at myfoxphoenix.com

If you or someone you know may be at risk of suicide contact Lifeline 13 11 14, beyondblue 1300 22 46 36, or Salvo Care Line 1300 36 36 22.


View the original article here

US man drinks liquid, dies in court after guilty verdict

AN Arizona man convicted today of deliberately burning down his $US3.5 million mansion in 2009 collapsed and died in the courtroom after the verdict was read.

A Phoenix jury found 53-year-old Scottsdale man Michael Marin guilty of arson of an occupied structure.

Shortly after he heard the verdict, video showed Marin taking a drink from a bottle of an unknown liquid. He then made a choking or throat-clearing noise, wheeled his chair around, and collapsed on the floor.

Paramedics attended to him, but could not save his life.

Marin was not in custody during the trial and it is possible he deliberately harmed himself.

Marin's mansion burned down in July 2009.

He told authorities he escaped the blaze by climbing down a rope ladder while wearing a scuba tank and diving mask to protect himself from the smoke. Prosecutors claimed Marin set fire to his house because he could no longer pay the mortgage.


Read more about the court case at myfoxphoenix.com

View the original article here