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Pedophile 'treasure' tag dreadful: Brother

Written By Unknown on Senin, 26 November 2012 | 23.23

THE description of a convicted pedophile by his religious order's newsletter as a "treasure" is shattering, the head of the Patrician Brothers says.

Brother Philip Mulhall said Brother Thomas Grealy, who was convicted and jailed for the rape of boys in western Sydney in 1997, said featuring a photo of Br Grealy in the order's newsletter was a dreadful mistake.

Br Mulhall said the contributor should have picked up the inclusion and he himself should have.

"I'm shattered by that," he told ABC television.

Asked why Br Grealy was allowed back into the order after his release from jail, Br Mulhall said the policy at the time was to take responsibility for the members of the order.

"He's our member, he's our problem and we have a responsibility to see that he's not a problem for other people.

"That was the rationale.

"He wasn't brought back into the order, he never really left it."

Br Mulhall said he thought the approach should be re-examined but it was the correct decision at the time.

Lawyer Jason Parkinson is representing five other men who allege they were assaulted by Br Grealy when he was a school principal.

"He should have been shunned, he should have been sent away, he shouldn't have been allowed to stay in the order," Mr Parkinson said.

Br Mulhall said he was very open to the federal government's royal commission into sexual abuse.

"I certainly will co-operate with it completely, even if that means criticism of myself or criticism of my colleagues or criticism of people that I know, so that something really good can be learnt for the future."


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Garment workers protest 'deathtraps'

People protest outside the garment-factory where a fire killed more than 110 people on Saturday. Survivors told AFP that the factory did not have proper fire exits. Source: AP

THE builders of the nine-storey factory in which 110 workers died in Bangladesh's worst textile industry fire had only been granted permission for a three-floor construction, an official said Monday.

"We gave them permission to build a three-storey factory. But they expanded the building without any approval from us," Habibul Islam, the government's chief inspector of factories, told AFP.

Mr Islam's comments came as the government and police launched separate probes into the fire on Saturday at Tazreen Fashion that left at least 110 workers dead as many struggled to escape from upper floors.

Survivors told AFP that the factory, built outside Dhaka in 2009, did not have proper fire exits.
Bangladeshi law does not allow expansion of any factory without approval by the Office of the Chief Inspector of Factories.

Dozens of workplace fires have killed more than 600 employees in Bangladesh's booming garment industry since 2006, but none of the owners have been prosecuted for poor safety conditions.

Bangladeshi officials inspect the garment-factory. A police investigation is trying to establish if the owners were to blame for the fire.

The revelations came as garment workers staged mass protests on Monday to demand an end to "deathtrap" labour conditions after the new blaze sparked fresh panic and terror.

Ahead of the first of a series of mass funerals for the 110 victims, survivors of Saturday night's blaze joined several thousand colleagues to block a highway and march in the manufacturing hub of Ashulia.

"Workers from several factories have left work and joined the protest. They want exemplary punishment for Tazreen's owners," said Dhaka police chief Habibur Rahman, referring to a plant near the capital where the blaze broke out late Saturday.

A man takes photographs inside the blackened garment-factory.

Police said Ashulia's more than 500 factories who make apparel for top global retailers such as Walmart, H&M and Tesco declared a wild-cat "holiday", fearing that the protests could worsen and turn into large-scale unrest.

"Most workers are in shock. They want to see safety improvements to these deathtrap factories," Babul Akter, head of a garment union, told AFP.

The protesters chanted a series of slogans, including a demand for Tazreen's bosses to be brought to justice.

Firefighters and workers try to douse another fire at a garment-factory in Dhaka, two days after a similar incident killed more than 110 people.

Local police chief Badrul Alam said officers had opened a murder investigation as a result of criminal negligence. Two government inquiries and the police investigation are trying to establish if the owners were to blame for the fire.

"We won't spare anyone," Mr Alam promised as the Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina announced a day of mourning for the dead, many of whom stitched clothes for international brands. All factories will also be closed on Tuesday.

Dozens of workplace fires have killed more than 600 employees in Bangladesh's booming garment industry since 2006, but none of the owners have so far faced prosecution for poor safety conditions.

Firefighters battled for several hours to contain the weekend blaze, which broke out on the ground floor of the nine-storey Tazreen Fashion plant 30 kilometres north of Dhaka, trapping more than 1000 workers.

Witnesses told how panicked staff, most of them women, cried for help and several leaped to their deaths from upper floors as they tried to escape.

Preparations have been made for the mass burial of the bodies of 59 workers who cannot be identified.

Their remains, most of which were burnt beyond recognition, will be laid to rest at a state graveyard in a southern suburb of Dhaka.

"We are keeping the DNA samples of the dead workers so that we can identify their relatives for compensation," said Dhaka district police commissioner Yusuf Harun who said the death toll was now 110.

Even before the first burials, a new blaze at a 12-storey building housing four factories sparked new scenes of panic as workers rushed to safety.

The latest fire caused widespread damage at the plant on the outskirts of Dhaka, but no casualties were reported after rescue teams searched the building for workers feared to have suffocated in toxic black fumes.

"Most workers broke grilles in the upper floor and escaped to a safe location at an adjacent building," Dhaka district deputy commissioner of police Nisharul Arif told AFP.

Bangladesh has emerged as the world's second-largest clothes exporter with overseas garment sales topping $US19 billion ($18 billion) last year, or 80 per cent of national exports.

The sector is the mainstay of the poverty-stricken country's economy, employing 40 per cent of its industrial workforce, but work conditions are often basic and safety standards low.


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bieber booed by football fans

JUSTIN Bieber has had a hostile homecoming during his half-time performance at Canada's football Grey Cup, facing boos and jeers.

The Toronto crowd booed when the 18-year-old pop star's face popped up on the JumboTron screen. They booed when a host spoke his name. And they booed as he took the stage and throughout his medley of the chart-topper Boyfriend and the disco-inflected Beauty and a Beat.

If Bieber was bothered, it didn't show.

"Thank you so much Canada," Bieber said. "I love you."

Earlier in the week, Bieber was presented with a Diamond Jubilee Medal by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and caused a scene by wearing overalls, unbuttoned on one shoulder, over a white T-shirt, with a backwards baseball cap.

There was sufficient uproar that Harper even weighed in on Twitter.

"In fairness to (Bieber)," Harper tweeted, "I told him I would be wearing my overalls too."

The Canadian Football League may have been hoping to court Bieber's army of tween followers on Sunday. But recent Grey Cup half-time performers have skewed toward the comparatively heavy likes of Nickelback and Lenny Kravitz.

"J-Biebs doesn't scream football, you know? Neither does Carly Rae Jepsen," said Calgary's Ryan Prisque, 22.

The 27-year-old Jepsen also received a mixed reaction at first on Sunday but won the crowd over during an enthusiastic medley of her latest single, This Kiss, and her infectious hit Call Me Maybe.


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Thousands at funeral for Egypt activist

THOUSANDS of Egyptians have turned out for the funeral of an activist who died overnight after he was critically injured in clashes near Cairo's Tahrir Square last week.

Gaber Salah, a member of the April 6 movement known by his nickname "Jika", was hurt in confrontations between police and protesters on Mohammed Mahmud street where protesters had been marking the first anniversary of deadly clashes.

Some wept, others chanted for justice as Jika's white coffin was carried from Omar Makram mosque in Tahrir Square - where activists have been camping out to protest President Mohamed Morsi's assumption of sweeping powers - towards Mohammed Mahmud street, where violence has been brewing for the past week.

Mourners comforted his devastated mother, as one protester carried a sign that read "Glory for Gaber".

"It isn't acceptable to have such killings now. We refuse all sorts of violence," said long-time activist George Ishak who attended the funeral.

"What is happening is a warning to Morsi that the country is in danger," he said.

The funeral comes on the eve of rival mass rallies in response to a decree granting Morsi broad powers that are immune from judicial review and threaten to deepen the country's divisions.


23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More
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