Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

US factory output rebounded in May

Written By Unknown on Senin, 16 Juni 2014 | 23.23

Rise of the home-made handgun

Rise of the home-made handgun

WITH illegal handguns costing $15,000 and more on the black market, desperate criminals have resorted to converting ear-piercing instruments and spear guns into makeshift pistols.

NSW
  • 1 video
    • Police fire handmade guns 0:43

Foreign buyers to lose their handout

REIQ generic house sale

THE Baird government will scrap foreigners' access to the $5000 New Home Owner Grant in ­tomorrow's state budget.

NSW

Clover's war on cars moves to the suburbs

Clover Moore at Town Hall. Story on

CLOVER Moore is gearing up for a new war on motorists, with parking set to be restricted in business parks 5km from the CBD.

NSW

By gum, Archer has to grow up

Orphaned Joey Koala

WHAT pint-sized eight-month-old Archer the koala lacks in stature he more than makes up for in the cuteness stakes

NSW

Hustlers hit the Lotto ticket jackpot

Hustlers hit the Lotto ticket jackpot

A PAIR of hustlers conned more than $60,000 from two men by "selling'' a Lotto ticket they said was a part of a $20m winning syndicate.

NSW

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

NSW budget to return to surplus sooner

The Baird government is set to deliver a budget surplus one year earlier than previously predicted. Source: AAP

JUST two months into the job, Treasurer Andrew Constance is set to announce NSW's finances are heading toward surplus earlier than previously expected.

IT is understood Tuesday's budget, which is the last to be delivered by the Baird government before next year's March election, will predict a surplus by 2015/16.

That's one year earlier than forecast by former treasurer and now premier Mike Baird six months ago.Mr Constance is expected to deliver the good news in his first budget on Tuesday, which will mark the start of the Baird government's pitch to voters before next year's March election."We have a state economy that is going gangbusters, driven by our focus on housing and jobs," he told reporters in Sydney on Monday.Borrowing a phrase synonymous with US politics, Mr Constance said his "Super Tuesday" budget would focus on infrastructure, with more than $60 billion going toward roads, rail and hospitals over four years.But Opposition Leader John Robertson dismissed the announcement, saying NSW governments had always spent about $60 billion on infrastructure each budget.Meanwhile, the treasurer acknowledged the state's finances had been affected by cuts in federal funding and said there would be "challenges" in health beyond the forward estimates.It is understood an Abbott government decision to deliver a $703 million payment for the Pacific Highway upgrade this financial year is set to affect the 2014/15 bottom line, leaving it further in deficit.Mr Robertson expects the budget to be "built on cuts", despite "record revenue" from stamp duty and speed cameras."Mike Baird as treasurer has shown that when it comes to cutting, he can cut with the best of them with the deep cuts that we've seen for the last three years," Mr Robertson said.The treasurer is expected to spruik the government's plan to raise $20 billion from the sale of NSW's electricity assets in his budget speech.

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Anger in UK over Blair comments on Iraq

FORMER prime minister Tony Blair has faced derision across the British political spectrum after he said the 2003 invasion of Iraq was not linked to the current unrest in the country.

BLAIR, now a Middle East peace envoy, had "finally gone mad," Boris Johnson, the Conservative mayor of London, wrote in his regular Daily Telegraph column.

An essay on the Iraq crisis published at the weekend by Blair was "unhinged in its refusal to face facts" and made up of a "chain of bonkers assertions," Johnson said on Monday.Blair, a Labour politician, led Britain into the Iraq war alongside former US president George W Bush, justifying it with the mistaken assertion that the late dictator Saddam Hussein was hiding weapons of mass destruction."The Iraq war was a tragic mistake, and by refusing to accept this, Blair is now undermining the very cause he advocates - the possibility of serious and effective intervention," Johnson wrote.Lord Prescott, who was Blair's deputy prime minister, also attacked his former boss, telling Sky News that intervention in Iraq took the West "back to the Crusades" of the medieval period."I don't agree with Tony as I didn't then," he said, adding that Blair's essay confirmed that the 2003 invasion had always been about "regime change".Christopher Meyer, Britain's ambassador to Washington from 1997 to 2003, also criticised Blair, writing in the Mail on Sunday that the decision to invade Iraq was "perhaps the most significant" cause of the current violence.In an essay published on his website Saturday, Blair argued that Britain was not responsible for the current unrest in Iraq: "We have to liberate ourselves from the notion that 'we' have caused this. We haven't." It was "bizarre" to argue that "but for the removal of Saddam, we would not have a crisis," he said."The fundamental cause of the crisis lies within the region not outside it," he wrote."The problems of the Middle East are the product of bad systems of politics mixed with a bad abuse of religion going back over a long time."Blair also repeated his arguments during television interviews and urged the West to intervene, saying that otherwise, it faced future terrorist attacks from extremist Muslim groups."Every time we put off action, the action we will be forced to take will ultimately be greater," he wrote.

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ambulance Vic named in ATSB death report

A MAN who died after being crushed by a crane on a cargo ship lay injured while an ambulance trying to reach him was locked out of the port.

AMBULANCE Victoria had neglected to train officers in how to open gates at Portland - a massive multi-berth facility about 300km west of Melbourne - says a report into the incident.

A crew member telephoned for help for the ship's injured but conscious Chinese assistant electrician but the emergency operator at first could not find the port on a mapping system and so dispatched an ambulance to the general location.Paramedics faced a locked and unmanned gate, unaware that the ambulance service had been provided with swipe cards, the Australian Transport Safety Bureau reported on Monday.They drove to a second gate seeking access and then back to the original entry point where they were lucky to meet a staff member.Despite the hold-up, paramedics reached the man 13 minutes after they were called.Forty-nine minutes later, after a delay arranging to open the gates to leave, the ambulance arrived at Portland Hospital.Shortly afterwards the man died.The ATSB concluded the electrician had been working without proper approvals near an operating crane on the deck of the Singapore-based Toucan Arrow when he was crushed on October 7, 2013.A warning light in the area was inoperative and, because of background noise, he is unlikely to have heard the alarm warning of the crane's approach.Although no one witnessed the incident, a torn strip of his clothing was found on a hatch lid against which he is believed to have been pinned as the remote-controlled crane moved along the deck.The ATSB found the ship's master failed to alert port authorities and therefore an emergency response, including manning of port access gates, did not occur.The ambulance service had not taken up an offer by the port authority to take paramedics on a familiarisation tour of the port.In response, Ambulance Victoria said it was impractical to hold access cards for the variety of sites that may call on its services.Portland-based paramedics have since undergone retraining.

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Lib pair making mischief in the Senate

Senator Cory Bernardi has refused to vote with the government in protest against the deficit levy. Source: AAP

REBEL Liberals Ian Macdonald and Cory Bernardi are unbending in their plans to frustrate some of their government's key budget measures.

SENATOR Macdonald has signalled he will side with the Greens when the upper house votes on a temporary tax levy the government wants to impose on high-income earners from July.

Senator Bernardi doesn't plan to go that far, preferring to abstain from the vote because the measure will pass the Senate with Labor's support.But neither senator was prepared to back a move by the Greens on Monday to make permanent the measure that increases for three years the top tax rate from 45 per cent to 47 per cent for income earned over $180,000.Senator Macdonald, who has threatened to cross the floor of parliament, argues the levy should apply to corporations as well as individuals."I don't think it goes far enough," he told parliament.Senator Bernardi's opposition to the levy comes from his belief that Australians are paying too much income tax now.Both senators are also likely to oppose the government's paid parental leave scheme, a move that threatens not only to embarrass its prime backer Prime Minister Tony Abbott but scuttle the scheme as well."My crossing the floor might be relevant on some occasion over the next year or so," Senator Macdonald warned.Opposition Leader Bill Shorten was keen to play up the pair's stance as a sign of disarray within government ranks.But he also took a pot-shot at the Liberal senators over their decision to stand up for the top one per cent of income earners."I just wish they would stand up for low-paid people with the same vigour," he said.Australian Greens leader Christine Milne isn't impressed with Labor's decision to support the levy."If ever there was a con job on the Australian people this is it," she said, adding her party couldn't support a temporary levy while the budget made an ideological attack on the welfare system.The government for its part is trying to play down any signs of an internal revolt, saying the burden of repairing the budget would have fallen on those receiving welfare payments if it hadn't imposed a levy on the rich."Of course that is not what we think would be right," Finance Minister Mathias Cormann told parliament.

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

More care for lost phone than lost super

A survey has found Australians care more about a lost phone than tracking their missing super. Source: AAP

LOST superannuation? Whatever.

A Westpac survey shows 48 per cent of working-age Australians would do "everything they could" to find their lost mobile phone but just a third would be as vigilant about tracking down $2,500 of their missing super.Westpac retail banking general manager Gai McGrath said the figures reveal widespread apathy about superannuation."For someone in their twenties, $2,500 in super today could amount to more than $22,000 by the time they retire," she said."When you put it in these terms, you start to realise how much of an impact this money can have on your financial future."Ms McGrath said superannuation funds are usually lost as a result of moving to a different fund when a person changes jobs.The report showed more evidence of super apathy with 31 per cent of people saying they would prefer to find $200 in cash than $2,000 in lost superannuation.Nine out of 10 of those surveyed do not know whether they have any superannuation.Tracking down lost super is as easy as going to the Australian Tax Office (ATO) superseeker website and entering your name and tax file number."With $18.2 billion in six million lost and ATO-held super accounts across the country, we have heard amazing stories of people finding tens of thousands of dollars," Ms McGrath said."If the average mobile phone costs around $600 and the average lost super account is more than $2,000, you can see that it makes sense to put as much effort into finding your lost super as you would a lost phone."

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Indian students charged over PM in mag

Rise of the home-made handgun

Rise of the home-made handgun

WITH illegal handguns costing $15,000 and more on the black market, desperate criminals have resorted to converting ear-piercing instruments and spear guns into makeshift pistols.

NSW
  • 1 video
    • Police fire handmade guns 0:43

Foreign buyers to lose their handout

REIQ generic house sale

THE Baird government will scrap foreigners' access to the $5000 New Home Owner Grant in ­tomorrow's state budget.

NSW

Clover's war on cars moves to the suburbs

Clover Moore at Town Hall. Story on

CLOVER Moore is gearing up for a new war on motorists, with parking set to be restricted in business parks 5km from the CBD.

NSW

By gum, Archer has to grow up

Orphaned Joey Koala

WHAT pint-sized eight-month-old Archer the koala lacks in stature he more than makes up for in the cuteness stakes

NSW

Hustlers hit the Lotto ticket jackpot

Hustlers hit the Lotto ticket jackpot

A PAIR of hustlers conned more than $60,000 from two men by "selling'' a Lotto ticket they said was a part of a $20m winning syndicate.

NSW

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

D-day trip veteran marks 90th birthday

A WAR veteran who turned up in Normandy after he was reported missing from his care home in England says he is overwhelmed by the number of cards and gifts he has received for his 90th birthday.

BERNARD Jordan, whose birthday is on Monday, made headlines around the world when he disappeared from The Pines care home in Hove, East Sussex, embarking on a cross-channel trip for the 70th anniversary of D-Day wearing his war medals underneath his grey mac.

But the former Royal Navy officer decided his birthday should be more low-key and is celebrating it quietly with friends and his wife Irene, a spokesman for the veteran said.The Candy Girls, who met Mr Jordan on his way to France, will also be singing to him, the spokesman said.The former mayor of Hove said he wanted to thank everyone for their good wishes after being inundated with at least 2500 birthday cards from around the world following his Normandy adventure."I just can't believe it. It's quite overwhelming to be honest," Jordan said."I want to thank everyone who sent me a card or a gift. Sadly I can't thank everyone in person so I hope they get this message."I'm just one man and I'm nothing special. Anyone would think I'd defeated Hitler on my own."There were a lot of other people on the beaches of Normandy that day, this lovely attention is for them really, not me."Jordan's disappearance on June 5 sparked a police search and his whereabouts was only uncovered when a younger veteran from Brighton phoned later that night to say he had met the veteran on a coach on the way to France, and that they were safe and well in a hotel in Ouistreham.

23.23 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger