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'Six-point' Diaz a no show

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 31 Agustus 2013 | 04.30

Jaymes Diaz cut-out at the Greenway election forum / Pic: Phil Rogers Source: Supplied

Liberal candidate for Greenway, Jaymes Diaz gets grilled by Ten reporter John Hill. Here are the highlights. Courtesy Channel Ten

THE elusive Jaymes Diaz was a no-show at a federal election forum for the federal seat of Greenway last night.

With about 100 locals in the audience at Blacktown RSL Club, candidates fielded questions on costs of living, local business, paid parental leave, coal seam gas, childcare, party preferences and how they would represent the interests of Greenway on the national stage.

However it was difficult to avoid the elephant in the room in the absence of Mr Diaz, who is currently favoured to win the marginal seat.

DIAZ DODGES QUESTIONS AT COMMUNITY FORUM

The other candidates posed with a cardboard cutout of the infamous Liberal, while members of the audience called him a coward for not showing up.

Mr Diaz made an embarrassing gaffe earlier this month when he was unable to name the key points in the Coalition's border protection policy.

Anthony Belcastro, candidate for Katter's Australia Party, took it upon himself to pose the question on everyone lips - "Where is Jaymes Diaz?"

"Here we have a candidate who wants to take your voice to Canberra and what do we end up with - an empty chair," he concluded.

Sitting Labor MP Michelle Rowland was keen to point out her list of achievements over the past three years including grants secured for community projects such as Com4Unity, increased funding for local schools, the redevelopment of Blacktown Hospital and the arrival of the National Broadband Network.

TEN's John Hill talks to Liberal candidate for Greenway, Jaymes Diaz. Courtesy Channel Ten

"In short I believe in equality of opportunity and I don't believe you should be limited by the postcode you grew up in," she said.

"I've delivered on every promise I made in my maiden speech to parliament."

Ms Rowland took aim at the generosity of the Coalition's proposed paid parental leave scheme.

"I don't think it is socially equitable," she said.

"It is more important to maintain our existing scheme as it is being used and it is affordable."

All candidates at the forum made a commitment against coal seam gas mining and promised to push for increased child care funding.

Chris Brentin from the Greens defended the carbon tax while arguing Australia's future lies in the use of renewable energy.

"We care about people and we care about the environment and the harmony between the both of them," he said.

"Clean energy is going to create 70,000 new jobs for western Sydney."

The heated debate had its lighter moments, including when Palmer United Party's Jodie Wootton was forced to defend Clive Palmer's plan to build Titanic 2 in China.

While Mr Diaz never responded to his forum invitation, Tom Lillicrap from the Australian Sex Party and Allan Green from the Christian Democratic Party declined the opportunity to attend.


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Caine slams Connery Alzheimer's claims

British actors Michael Caine, left, and Sean Connery in Edinburgh, Scotland.  Caine has rejected a story in which he is alleged to have said that his friend Connery had "lost his senses." Source: AP

SIR Michael Caine has slammed a German newspaper report alleging he revealed his pal Sir Sean Connery is suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

Editors at Bild reported the Alfie star said Connery was struggling to cope with dementia, and was quoted as saying, "One must have serious concerns for him.''

However, the article has come under fire from Caine, who is baffled as to where the newspaper got it from.

He tells Britain's Daily Mirror, "It's all bulls&#nbsp;&#nbsp;&#nbsp;, completely preposterous. I did some interviews over in Germany for a new film and I can only assume someone has twisted my words or got the wrong end of the stick.

"I haven't seen Sean for a couple of years, but my wife and I spoke to him on the phone on his birthday this week and he was very well.

"He was fine, in complete control of his senses and his usual self. This stuff about Alzheimer's is just nonsense. I have no idea where they are getting it from.''

Bond star Connery has been plagued by rumours of ill health for several years, and only makes rare public appearances after retiring from life in the limelight in 2011.
 


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Six-point' Diaz a no show

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 30 Agustus 2013 | 04.30

Jaymes Diaz cut-out at the Greenway election forum / Pic: Phil Rogers Source: Supplied

Liberal candidate for Greenway, Jaymes Diaz gets grilled by Ten reporter John Hill. Here are the highlights. Courtesy Channel Ten

THE elusive Jaymes Diaz was a no-show at a federal election forum for the federal seat of Greenway last night.

With about 100 locals in the audience at Blacktown RSL Club, candidates fielded questions on costs of living, local business, paid parental leave, coal seam gas, childcare, party preferences and how they would represent the interests of Greenway on the national stage.

However it was difficult to avoid the elephant in the room in the absence of Mr Diaz, who is currently favoured to win the marginal seat.

DIAZ DODGES QUESTIONS AT COMMUNITY FORUM

The other candidates posed with a cardboard cutout of the infamous Liberal, while members of the audience called him a coward for not showing up.

Mr Diaz made an embarrassing gaffe earlier this month when he was unable to name the key points in the Coalition's border protection policy.

Anthony Belcastro, candidate for Katter's Australia Party, took it upon himself to pose the question on everyone lips - "Where is Jaymes Diaz?"

"Here we have a candidate who wants to take your voice to Canberra and what do we end up with - an empty chair," he concluded.

Sitting Labor MP Michelle Rowland was keen to point out her list of achievements over the past three years including grants secured for community projects such as Com4Unity, increased funding for local schools, the redevelopment of Blacktown Hospital and the arrival of the National Broadband Network.

TEN's John Hill talks to Liberal candidate for Greenway, Jaymes Diaz. Courtesy Channel Ten

"In short I believe in equality of opportunity and I don't believe you should be limited by the postcode you grew up in," she said.

"I've delivered on every promise I made in my maiden speech to parliament."

Ms Rowland took aim at the generosity of the Coalition's proposed paid parental leave scheme.

"I don't think it is socially equitable," she said.

"It is more important to maintain our existing scheme as it is being used and it is affordable."

All candidates at the forum made a commitment against coal seam gas mining and promised to push for increased child care funding.

Chris Brentin from the Greens defended the carbon tax while arguing Australia's future lies in the use of renewable energy.

"We care about people and we care about the environment and the harmony between the both of them," he said.

"Clean energy is going to create 70,000 new jobs for western Sydney."

The heated debate had its lighter moments, including when Palmer United Party's Jodie Wootton was forced to defend Clive Palmer's plan to build Titanic 2 in China.

While Mr Diaz never responded to his forum invitation, Tom Lillicrap from the Australian Sex Party and Allan Green from the Christian Democratic Party declined the opportunity to attend.


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Caine slams Connery Alzheimer's claims

British actors Michael Caine, left, and Sean Connery in Edinburgh, Scotland.  Caine has rejected a story in which he is alleged to have said that his friend Connery had "lost his senses." Source: AP

SIR Michael Caine has slammed a German newspaper report alleging he revealed his pal Sir Sean Connery is suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

Editors at Bild reported the Alfie star said Connery was struggling to cope with dementia, and was quoted as saying, "One must have serious concerns for him.''

However, the article has come under fire from Caine, who is baffled as to where the newspaper got it from.

He tells Britain's Daily Mirror, "It's all bulls&#nbsp;&#nbsp;&#nbsp;, completely preposterous. I did some interviews over in Germany for a new film and I can only assume someone has twisted my words or got the wrong end of the stick.

"I haven't seen Sean for a couple of years, but my wife and I spoke to him on the phone on his birthday this week and he was very well.

"He was fine, in complete control of his senses and his usual self. This stuff about Alzheimer's is just nonsense. I have no idea where they are getting it from.''

Bond star Connery has been plagued by rumours of ill health for several years, and only makes rare public appearances after retiring from life in the limelight in 2011.
 


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Six-point' Diaz a no show

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 Agustus 2013 | 04.30

Jaymes Diaz cut-out at the Greenway election forum / Pic: Phil Rogers Source: Supplied

Liberal candidate for Greenway, Jaymes Diaz gets grilled by Ten reporter John Hill. Here are the highlights. Courtesy Channel Ten

THE elusive Jaymes Diaz was a no-show at a federal election forum for the federal seat of Greenway last night.

With about 100 locals in the audience at Blacktown RSL Club, candidates fielded questions on costs of living, local business, paid parental leave, coal seam gas, childcare, party preferences and how they would represent the interests of Greenway on the national stage.

However it was difficult to avoid the elephant in the room in the absence of Mr Diaz, who is currently favoured to win the marginal seat.

DIAZ DODGES QUESTIONS AT COMMUNITY FORUM

The other candidates posed with a cardboard cutout of the infamous Liberal, while members of the audience called him a coward for not showing up.

Mr Diaz made an embarrassing gaffe earlier this month when he was unable to name the key points in the Coalition's border protection policy.

Anthony Belcastro, candidate for Katter's Australia Party, took it upon himself to pose the question on everyone lips - "Where is Jaymes Diaz?"

"Here we have a candidate who wants to take your voice to Canberra and what do we end up with - an empty chair," he concluded.

Sitting Labor MP Michelle Rowland was keen to point out her list of achievements over the past three years including grants secured for community projects such as Com4Unity, increased funding for local schools, the redevelopment of Blacktown Hospital and the arrival of the National Broadband Network.

TEN's John Hill talks to Liberal candidate for Greenway, Jaymes Diaz. Courtesy Channel Ten

"In short I believe in equality of opportunity and I don't believe you should be limited by the postcode you grew up in," she said.

"I've delivered on every promise I made in my maiden speech to parliament."

Ms Rowland took aim at the generosity of the Coalition's proposed paid parental leave scheme.

"I don't think it is socially equitable," she said.

"It is more important to maintain our existing scheme as it is being used and it is affordable."

All candidates at the forum made a commitment against coal seam gas mining and promised to push for increased child care funding.

Chris Brentin from the Greens defended the carbon tax while arguing Australia's future lies in the use of renewable energy.

"We care about people and we care about the environment and the harmony between the both of them," he said.

"Clean energy is going to create 70,000 new jobs for western Sydney."

The heated debate had its lighter moments, including when Palmer United Party's Jodie Wootton was forced to defend Clive Palmer's plan to build Titanic 2 in China.

While Mr Diaz never responded to his forum invitation, Tom Lillicrap from the Australian Sex Party and Allan Green from the Christian Democratic Party declined the opportunity to attend.


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Caine slams Connery Alzheimer's claims

British actors Michael Caine, left, and Sean Connery in Edinburgh, Scotland.  Caine has rejected a story in which he is alleged to have said that his friend Connery had "lost his senses." Source: AP

SIR Michael Caine has slammed a German newspaper report alleging he revealed his pal Sir Sean Connery is suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

Editors at Bild reported the Alfie star said Connery was struggling to cope with dementia, and was quoted as saying, "One must have serious concerns for him.''

However, the article has come under fire from Caine, who is baffled as to where the newspaper got it from.

He tells Britain's Daily Mirror, "It's all bulls&#nbsp;&#nbsp;&#nbsp;, completely preposterous. I did some interviews over in Germany for a new film and I can only assume someone has twisted my words or got the wrong end of the stick.

"I haven't seen Sean for a couple of years, but my wife and I spoke to him on the phone on his birthday this week and he was very well.

"He was fine, in complete control of his senses and his usual self. This stuff about Alzheimer's is just nonsense. I have no idea where they are getting it from.''

Bond star Connery has been plagued by rumours of ill health for several years, and only makes rare public appearances after retiring from life in the limelight in 2011.
 


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bombers out of finals, Hird banned

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 27 Agustus 2013 | 04.29

The latest live news coverage and commentary from Australia's No. 1 media company. Stream 1

ESSENDON is banned from the finals and James Hird banned from working in the AFL for 12 months.

AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick has just handed down the penalties after Essendon agreed to plead guilty to bringing the game into disrepute.

The Bombers have been fined $2 million and will forfeit their place in the 2013 finals series.

History books will record Essendon as finishing ninth this season. Essendon's opponent on Saturday night, Richmond, will still be playing for four premiership points.

Essendon players remain eligible to win this year's Brownlow Medal and Rising Star Award.

The club is prohibited from exercising its first and second-round picks in next two drafts.

Hird is banned from working at any AFL club in any capacity for 12 months effective August 25 this year.

Assistant coach Simon Goodwin will coach the Bombers against Richmond and after 12 months Hird will be welcomed back as Bombers senior coach - just in time for next year's finals.

AFL CEO Andrew Demetriou and chairman Mike Fitzpatrick hand down Essendon's punishment.

Hird can attend AFL matches but cannot be paid by the Bombers in any capacity.

He did not attend tonight's announcement, with chairman Paul Little speaking after the AFL chiefs. Little described the penalties as "tough but fair".

"I think the players probably do feel let down," Little said.

"All I can say to them is there is a clear way forward and ask that they forgive us for mistakes that we've made."

Essendon football manager Danny Corcoran is banned for six months - two of them suspended - effective October 1 this year.

Assistant coach Mark Thompson has been fined $30,000.

The case against club doctor Bruce Reid was adjourned to Thursday. He is contesting the charges against him.

The Bombers pleaded guilty to bringing the game into disrepute and assistant coach Mark Thompson and football manager Danny Corcoran agreed that as a consequence of their actions the club breached AFL rule 1.6.

Bombers coach James Hird leaves AFL House.

FItzpatrick said the issue involved in the supplements program are "disturbing".

He said Essendon never set out to submit a supplement program that stepped outside the WADA code.

But he said it was "experimental" and "inadequately vetted and controlled" and the Bombers could not be certain their players had not taken banned drugs.

"On behalf of the AFL Commission I want to send a clear message that nothing and no one can come ahead of the duty of care owed to our players and the integrity of the competition," AFL chairman Mike FItzpatrick said.

Fitzpatrick said the outcome was supported by 17 clubs and AFL Players Association and shows "no single club is above our great game"

He said Essendon "regrets the impact" potential consequences may have on players and AFL competition.

"A number of significant lessons have be learned, and changes made."

AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou said James Hird had accepted that his actions breached the rules by providing a risk that players could have taken prohibited substances - although there was no evidence "at the moment" to issue infraction notices.

"ASADA have made it very clear that their investigation remains open," he said.

Demetriou said Essendon was dumped from the finals "to make sure we didn't taint the competition".

The race for the eight takes a dramatic turn after Essendon is kicked out of the AFL finals.

He said aead-rubber against Richmond in the last round "not the ideal situation". "I would hope…Richmond and Essendon supporters show up to that game."

Essendon issued a statement saying it accepted responsibility for "failings at our club" in 2011 and 2012.

"The club also accepts the penalties imposed by the AFL and welcomes that this matter has been brought to a close for the club and the three individuals," the statement said.

"In the Deeds of Settlement, the AFL acknowledges that neither Essendon Football Club nor any of the individuals charged set out to implement a supplements program that would result in players being administered prohibited or potentially harmful substances."

Demetriou said the saga was a "complex issue" that the AFL had taken "very seriously".

"Hopefully we can all put this behind us.

"The AFL has a duty to all of its stakeholders that we look after our players."

Mark Thompson leaves AFL House after a second day of negotiations. Picture: Wayne Ludbey

He said the AFL needed to remind everyone that when young men go to a football club, they'll be welcomed into a "professional environment", and that no one in the industry has enjoyed this "sorry saga".

The decision follows two days of negotiations at AFL House.

Fitzpartrick rejected suggestions for an inquiry into leaks or allegations the AFL tipped off the Bombers they were under investigation.

"I don't think we intend to hold an inquiry … I think the accusations of leaking were interesting, but from the commission's point of view we saw no evidence of that."

"I think it became a far more public event than it needed to be. And as Andrew said, it's had some effect on the season.

"But as Andrew said we have to deal with (issues like this). If it means we have to have a public slanging match for six months, then we have to have a public slanging match."

JON RALPH ANALYSIS: FOOTY'S BLACKEST DAY

MORE TO COME

Essendon assistant coach Mark Thompson joins AFL 360 immediately after his hearing with the AFL.

Earlier, Supreme Court action remained on the table as Essendon officials continue negotiations with the AFL today.

It's believed the legal teams working for the club and coach James Hird remained adamant a settlement can only be reached on the back of a significant watering down of the AFL's charges against them.

Hird and his lawyer Julian Burnside arrived at AFL House earlier this morning, along with Mark Thompson, Danny Corcoran and Bruce Reid as the football public called on the AFL to stop talking with the Bombers and just impose a penalty.

SCROLL DOWN TO GET LIVE UPDATES AND JOIN THE DEBATE

Talkback radio was this morning full of disgruntled football fans wanting an end to the saga now, and calling on the league to reaffirm its position as the boss.

Essendon coach James Hird and wife Tania leave their Toorak home this morning. Picture: Mark Dadswell

The game's other stakeholders have also begun to question how what was supposed to be a disciplinary hearing turned in to a protracted negotiation.

It's believed Burnside planned to front the nine AFL Commission members and re-iterate his stance that they should recuse themselves from the hearing and that Hird should go before an independent tribunal to plead his case.

Essendon clings to draft pick hopes

Dons plead for their future

Ban disastrous for Hird, says Thompson

Formal talks between the AFL and Essendon to resolve the penalties over the club's suspect 2012 supplements program started again in Melbourne this morning, trying to break the stalemate left on Monday night.

Essendon, Hird, club doctor Bruce Reid, assistant coach Mark Thompson and Bombers football manager Danny Corcoran have all been charged with bringing the game into disrepute arising from the supplements program at the club.

Fans show their devotion for James Hird. Picture: Alex Coppel

Corcoran and Reid have arrived at AFL House flanked by their legal teams, while Essendon chief executive officer Ray Gunston and chairman Paul Little are also inside as negotiations over possible penalties continue.

The AFL Commission hearing lasted all day Monday, and broke up late on Monday night with no resolution.

Senior assistant coach Mark Thompson said officials in the commission's sights were "nowhere near" accepting many aspects of the damning disrepute charges laid by the AFL last week.

This morning Hird, dressed in a suit and an Essendon tie, left his Toorak home with wife Tania about 8.45am.

Thompson said last night he believed he had been charged as a drug cheat and "I am not - so that's what I am fighting on, my reputation and integrity, and I want to clear my name".

The Bombers will resume talks at 11am about penalties that could see them stripped of premiership points and fined.

Thompson described the sanctions being negotiated as "possibly more severe than anything in the history of the game".

The race for ninth

Dr Bruce Reid and his legal team leave AFL House. Picture: Michael Klein.

Thompson told AFL 360 on Fox Footy it would be "disastrous" if Hird were suspended for 12 months.

"The rap sheet that got put into the media last week, it is nowhere near that at the moment. We are trying to scrub as many (charge particulars) off at the moment to be reasonable and be charged for what we believe is fair in our eyes ... we have all been quite reasonable.

"The fines and punishment the club are going to receive, it is quite severe, it is probably more severe than anything in history. No one has ever had their points taken off them.

"Draft picks as well, and then you look at it and say, actually we haven't been charged, no players have been charged.

"We have broken no rules or codes, and no players have used prohibited substances, so for us to accept what has been offered is being very generous and kind."

Little, Hird, Thompson, Corcoran and Reid all fronted up before 2pm yesterday with an army of lawyers - including human rights lawyer Julian Burnside, acting for Hird, and QC Jack Rush - in tow.

Tania Hird was also present.

Key players including Thompson, Reid and Corcoran began leaving at 7 o'clock last night.

The Bombers had been locked in intense negotiations with the league since Thursday, when a meeting of club presidents and the AFL Commission left Essendon isolated in its fight against the league. The presidents declared unanimous support for the AFL on Thursday and agreed the commission was the right forum to hear charges.

Earlier that day, Hird lodged a writ in the Supreme Court aimed at blocking the AFL Commission from hearing his charge and forcing the league to hand over more specifics about the charges and potential witnesses.

An emotional phone call from an unidentified mother of a Bombers player to a Melbourne radio station early on Thursday morning is believed to have turned the tide of public opinion against Essendon and Hird.

The more conciliatory mood from the Essendon camp came as a stark contrast to comments from Little and Hird last Wednesday, when they fronted the media after the release of a damning 34-page summary of charges was released by the AFL.

Little said then the league was determined to punish the Bombers "as though we are drug cheats", while Hird described the release of charge particulars as an "ambush".

The charge sheet alleged Essendon players may have been given the banned drug Thymosin Beta-4 among 15 substances administered in its supplements program in 2011-12. It also said Hird had suffered unspecified "significant" side-effects from drugs.

The Herald Sun had earlier revealed an allegation from the charge sheet that players were to receive 1500 injections of AOD-9604 and a version of Thymosin and more than 16,500 doses of Colostrum and 8000 doses of Tribulus.

Footy's biggest drugs scandal erupted on February 5 this year when Essendon "self-reported" its potential performance-enhancing drugs problem to the AFL and invited the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority to investigate.

Since then, ASADA has interviewed more than 130 witnesses and referenced 13,000 documents for an interim report into the Bombers.

The anti-doping body's investigation will continue, with the no guarantees that individual players won't face doping charges in the future.

- with Grant Baker, Michael Warner


04.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bombers out of finals, Hird banned

The latest live news coverage and commentary from Australia's No. 1 media company. Stream 1

ESSENDON is banned from the finals and James Hird banned from working in the AFL for 12 months.

AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick has just handed down the penalties after Essendon agreed to plead guilty to bringing the game into disrepute.

The Bombers have been fined $2 million and will forfeit their place in the 2013 finals series.

History books will record Essendon as finishing ninth this season. Essendon's opponent on Saturday night, Richmond, will still be playing for four premiership points.

Essendon players remain eligible to win this year's Brownlow Medal and Rising Star Award.

The club is prohibited from exercising its first and second-round picks in next two drafts.

Hird is banned from working at any AFL club in any capacity for 12 months effective August 25 this year.

Assistant coach Simon Goodwin will coach the Bombers against Richmond and after 12 months Hird will be welcomed back as Bombers senior coach - just in time for next year's finals.

AFL CEO Andrew Demetriou and chairman Mike Fitzpatrick hand down Essendon's punishment.

Hird can attend AFL matches but cannot be paid by the Bombers in any capacity.

He did not attend tonight's announcement, with chairman Paul Little speaking after the AFL chiefs. Little described the penalties as "tough but fair".

"I think the players probably do feel let down," Little said.

"All I can say to them is there is a clear way forward and ask that they forgive us for mistakes that we've made."

Essendon football manager Danny Corcoran is banned for six months - two of them suspended - effective October 1 this year.

Assistant coach Mark Thompson has been fined $30,000.

The case against club doctor Bruce Reid was adjourned to Thursday. He is contesting the charges against him.

The Bombers pleaded guilty to bringing the game into disrepute and assistant coach Mark Thompson and football manager Danny Corcoran agreed that as a consequence of their actions the club breached AFL rule 1.6.

Bombers coach James Hird leaves AFL House.

FItzpatrick said the issue involved in the supplements program are "disturbing".

He said Essendon never set out to submit a supplement program that stepped outside the WADA code.

But he said it was "experimental" and "inadequately vetted and controlled" and the Bombers could not be certain their players had not taken banned drugs.

"On behalf of the AFL Commission I want to send a clear message that nothing and no one can come ahead of the duty of care owed to our players and the integrity of the competition," AFL chairman Mike FItzpatrick said.

Fitzpatrick said the outcome was supported by 17 clubs and AFL Players Association and shows "no single club is above our great game"

He said Essendon "regrets the impact" potential consequences may have on players and AFL competition.

"A number of significant lessons have be learned, and changes made."

AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou said James Hird had accepted that his actions breached the rules by providing a risk that players could have taken prohibited substances - although there was no evidence "at the moment" to issue infraction notices.

"ASADA have made it very clear that their investigation remains open," he said.

Demetriou said Essendon was dumped from the finals "to make sure we didn't taint the competition".

The race for the eight takes a dramatic turn after Essendon is kicked out of the AFL finals.

He said aead-rubber against Richmond in the last round "not the ideal situation". "I would hope…Richmond and Essendon supporters show up to that game."

Essendon issued a statement saying it accepted responsibility for "failings at our club" in 2011 and 2012.

"The club also accepts the penalties imposed by the AFL and welcomes that this matter has been brought to a close for the club and the three individuals," the statement said.

"In the Deeds of Settlement, the AFL acknowledges that neither Essendon Football Club nor any of the individuals charged set out to implement a supplements program that would result in players being administered prohibited or potentially harmful substances."

Demetriou said the saga was a "complex issue" that the AFL had taken "very seriously".

"Hopefully we can all put this behind us.

"The AFL has a duty to all of its stakeholders that we look after our players."

Mark Thompson leaves AFL House after a second day of negotiations. Picture: Wayne Ludbey

He said the AFL needed to remind everyone that when young men go to a football club, they'll be welcomed into a "professional environment", and that no one in the industry has enjoyed this "sorry saga".

The decision follows two days of negotiations at AFL House.

Fitzpartrick rejected suggestions for an inquiry into leaks or allegations the AFL tipped off the Bombers they were under investigation.

"I don't think we intend to hold an inquiry … I think the accusations of leaking were interesting, but from the commission's point of view we saw no evidence of that."

"I think it became a far more public event than it needed to be. And as Andrew said, it's had some effect on the season.

"But as Andrew said we have to deal with (issues like this). If it means we have to have a public slanging match for six months, then we have to have a public slanging match."

JON RALPH ANALYSIS: FOOTY'S BLACKEST DAY

MORE TO COME

Essendon assistant coach Mark Thompson joins AFL 360 immediately after his hearing with the AFL.

Earlier, Supreme Court action remained on the table as Essendon officials continue negotiations with the AFL today.

It's believed the legal teams working for the club and coach James Hird remained adamant a settlement can only be reached on the back of a significant watering down of the AFL's charges against them.

Hird and his lawyer Julian Burnside arrived at AFL House earlier this morning, along with Mark Thompson, Danny Corcoran and Bruce Reid as the football public called on the AFL to stop talking with the Bombers and just impose a penalty.

SCROLL DOWN TO GET LIVE UPDATES AND JOIN THE DEBATE

Talkback radio was this morning full of disgruntled football fans wanting an end to the saga now, and calling on the league to reaffirm its position as the boss.

Essendon coach James Hird and wife Tania leave their Toorak home this morning. Picture: Mark Dadswell

The game's other stakeholders have also begun to question how what was supposed to be a disciplinary hearing turned in to a protracted negotiation.

It's believed Burnside planned to front the nine AFL Commission members and re-iterate his stance that they should recuse themselves from the hearing and that Hird should go before an independent tribunal to plead his case.

Essendon clings to draft pick hopes

Dons plead for their future

Ban disastrous for Hird, says Thompson

Formal talks between the AFL and Essendon to resolve the penalties over the club's suspect 2012 supplements program started again in Melbourne this morning, trying to break the stalemate left on Monday night.

Essendon, Hird, club doctor Bruce Reid, assistant coach Mark Thompson and Bombers football manager Danny Corcoran have all been charged with bringing the game into disrepute arising from the supplements program at the club.

Fans show their devotion for James Hird. Picture: Alex Coppel

Corcoran and Reid have arrived at AFL House flanked by their legal teams, while Essendon chief executive officer Ray Gunston and chairman Paul Little are also inside as negotiations over possible penalties continue.

The AFL Commission hearing lasted all day Monday, and broke up late on Monday night with no resolution.

Senior assistant coach Mark Thompson said officials in the commission's sights were "nowhere near" accepting many aspects of the damning disrepute charges laid by the AFL last week.

This morning Hird, dressed in a suit and an Essendon tie, left his Toorak home with wife Tania about 8.45am.

Thompson said last night he believed he had been charged as a drug cheat and "I am not - so that's what I am fighting on, my reputation and integrity, and I want to clear my name".

The Bombers will resume talks at 11am about penalties that could see them stripped of premiership points and fined.

Thompson described the sanctions being negotiated as "possibly more severe than anything in the history of the game".

The race for ninth

Dr Bruce Reid and his legal team leave AFL House. Picture: Michael Klein.

Thompson told AFL 360 on Fox Footy it would be "disastrous" if Hird were suspended for 12 months.

"The rap sheet that got put into the media last week, it is nowhere near that at the moment. We are trying to scrub as many (charge particulars) off at the moment to be reasonable and be charged for what we believe is fair in our eyes ... we have all been quite reasonable.

"The fines and punishment the club are going to receive, it is quite severe, it is probably more severe than anything in history. No one has ever had their points taken off them.

"Draft picks as well, and then you look at it and say, actually we haven't been charged, no players have been charged.

"We have broken no rules or codes, and no players have used prohibited substances, so for us to accept what has been offered is being very generous and kind."

Little, Hird, Thompson, Corcoran and Reid all fronted up before 2pm yesterday with an army of lawyers - including human rights lawyer Julian Burnside, acting for Hird, and QC Jack Rush - in tow.

Tania Hird was also present.

Key players including Thompson, Reid and Corcoran began leaving at 7 o'clock last night.

The Bombers had been locked in intense negotiations with the league since Thursday, when a meeting of club presidents and the AFL Commission left Essendon isolated in its fight against the league. The presidents declared unanimous support for the AFL on Thursday and agreed the commission was the right forum to hear charges.

Earlier that day, Hird lodged a writ in the Supreme Court aimed at blocking the AFL Commission from hearing his charge and forcing the league to hand over more specifics about the charges and potential witnesses.

An emotional phone call from an unidentified mother of a Bombers player to a Melbourne radio station early on Thursday morning is believed to have turned the tide of public opinion against Essendon and Hird.

The more conciliatory mood from the Essendon camp came as a stark contrast to comments from Little and Hird last Wednesday, when they fronted the media after the release of a damning 34-page summary of charges was released by the AFL.

Little said then the league was determined to punish the Bombers "as though we are drug cheats", while Hird described the release of charge particulars as an "ambush".

The charge sheet alleged Essendon players may have been given the banned drug Thymosin Beta-4 among 15 substances administered in its supplements program in 2011-12. It also said Hird had suffered unspecified "significant" side-effects from drugs.

The Herald Sun had earlier revealed an allegation from the charge sheet that players were to receive 1500 injections of AOD-9604 and a version of Thymosin and more than 16,500 doses of Colostrum and 8000 doses of Tribulus.

Footy's biggest drugs scandal erupted on February 5 this year when Essendon "self-reported" its potential performance-enhancing drugs problem to the AFL and invited the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority to investigate.

Since then, ASADA has interviewed more than 130 witnesses and referenced 13,000 documents for an interim report into the Bombers.

The anti-doping body's investigation will continue, with the no guarantees that individual players won't face doping charges in the future.

- with Grant Baker, Michael Warner


04.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Oh. Miley. God. Can't stop cringing

Written By Unknown on Senin, 26 Agustus 2013 | 04.30

Mylie Cyrus' recent performance at the MTV Music awards raised more than a few eyebrows. Courtesy: MTV

 Miley Cyrus performed an almost X rated dance with Robin Thicke  at Video Music Awards. Courtesy MVA/Vine

Miley Cyrus twerked a little too hard on the MTV VMA stage. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

Robin Thicke, aka the Zebra Man, and Miley blur the lines preeeeeeetty hardcore. Picture: AP Source: AP

THERE'S awards ceremony shock value and then there's Miley Cyrus.

The 20-year-old singer took raunchy performances to a whole new cringe-worthy level at the MTV Video Music Awards today shocking fans with an explicit display of tongue-wagging, twerking and grinding.

While the singer has been keen to shed her teen sweetheart image, we'd like to think there are other ways of doing it.

Cyrus, who was on stage to perform her latest single We Can't Stop first entered the stage from inside a giant teddy bear in a tiny one-piece.

Thrusting her tongue out at the audience as if she's been struck down with a case of rabies, the performance only got more bizarre from there.

Miley Cyrus "twerks" against Robin Thicke and right, on stage. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

Surrounded by a gaggle of dancing care bears the star then hip-thrusted and gyrated her way around the stage, provocatively gesturing towards her crotch at regular intervals.

Pulling moves that should only be seen in a really bad porno, the star turned it up a notch when Robin Thicke entered the stage to perform a duet of his single Blurred Lines.

Miley, put the tongue away. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

And just when you thought her outfit couldn't get any skimpier, Cyrus ripped off the garment to dance around in her undies with an oversized foam hand reminiscent of the Coles "Down, Down" adverts.

Cyrus then danced around Thicke in her "underwear" before twerking on his crotch and rubbing her "Coles" foam finger across his privates.

Miley, explain THIS, young lady. Picture: Getty Images Source: Supplied

Naturally, Twitter exploded immediately after the performance, with many expressing their disgust at her racy display.

Stars including Rihanna and One Direction looked on as bewildered as most of the audience.

The reaction of Will Smith's family summed up what most were thinking as they shielded their eyes and dropped their jaws.

Will Smith and his family had the exact same reaction as this newsroom. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

But the performance, however shocking, wasn't entirely unexpected.

Speaking with MTV before the show, Cyrus promised a "crazier" VMA moment than the infamous Britney and Madonna lip lock of 2003 and boy did we get it.

Just for one more look: CANNOT UNSEE. Picture: AP Source: AP

"We've got better in store for you guys, it's going be even crazier than the kiss," she declared.

"This is just the beginning of my movement."

Hold onto your hats folks, if this is just the start, we're not sure we really want to see what else Miley has in store.

Pictures of One Direction and Rihanna's recations have gone viral. Picture: Twitter Source: Supplied


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Thompson: Ban disastrous for Hird

Essendon assistant coach Mark Thompson joins AFL 360 immediately after his hearing with the AFL.

ESSENDON senior assistant Mark Thompson says it would be "disastrous" for James Hird to be suspended for 12 months.

"He's a young coach who is learning his way and he didn't deliberately set out to do anything wrong," Thompson said on AFL 360 following prolonged negotiations at AFL headquarters today.

"I would think that if the AFL knocked him out for 12 months he would struggle to want to get back.

"I call it the perfect storm because everybody has had some responsibility to it... not too many have more (responsibility) than others.

"It was a lot of people who probably made the wrong choices based on the current rules that are in place."
Thompson refused to rule out walking away from the game.

"Anything's open... right here, right now is that I've been charged for being a drug cheat - and I'm not.


"I'm fighting for my reputation, my integrity and I want to clear my name."

But Thompson conceded he was ready to plead guilty as long as the AFL withdraw aspects of the charges laid against him.

"There was 80 per cent of it (charge sheet) that I want to fight...so unless it really gets serious and reflective of what I'm responsible for them we're going (legal action).

"We're trying to scrub as many off as we can, to be responsible and to be charged for what we think we are responsible for - what is fair in our eyes.

Negotiations involving Thompson, Essendon, coach James Hird, club doctor Bruce Reid and football manager Danny Corcoran would continue on Tuesday.

Senior Essendon officials, chairman Paul Little and chief executive Ray Gunston remain at AFL House locked in tense negotiations over potential punishment for Essendon.

Hird and his legal team, including human rights campaigner Julian Burnside SC, were expected to tell the commission that his Supreme Court action challenging the Commission's right to hear charges against the Bombers star has not been withdrawn.

SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVE UPDATES AND TO JOIN THE DEBATE

Commissioners arrived about 8am and key Essendon officials were all at AFL House by 1pm.

The Commission is expected to detail proposed penalties against Hird, most likely a 12-month suspension from any AFL activity, and precise details of the formal charges.

It would be open to Hird then to back away from his court action and to accept the sanction, as part of a wider Essendon penalties package, or to declare he will fight on in court.

Hird has claimed he has been denied natural justice by the AFL and said the AFL Commission, including CEO Andrew Demetriou, should be barred from considering charges against him.

HIRD PREPARES FOR THE LONG GAME

Essendon is clinging to the hope it could retain prized draft picks as part of a deal that will see it stood down from the finals today.

A decision regarding what penalties and sanctions will be handed down to Essendon is expected today.

The supplements drama will come to a dramatic resolution when Essendon bows out of finals consideration, with Hird almost certain to have coached his last game of the year.

The AFL Commission is currently meeting at AFL House where it is expected to hand down the punishment for Hird and the Bombers.

Essendon chairman Paul Little and the club's acting chief executive, Ray Gunston, arrived at AFL House at about 1pm.

Commission members were seen arriving at league headquarters this morning.

Hird has been considering abandoning Supreme Court action and submitting to a 12-month ban demanded by the AFL ahead of a return in 2015.

Hird and wife Tania leave talks at AFL House. Picture: Andrew Tauber

The Bombers coach today went to Windy Hill for a few hours before returning home, but did not offer any comment to the waiting media pack.

It is expected senior assistant coach Mark Thompson will escape with a fine of $20,000.

Veteran club doctor Bruce Reid is understood to be preparing to stand down as early as today. He was adamant he would not be part of a compromise deal.

Essendon will be forced to accept a fine of up to $2 million. The fourth individual charged, football manager Danny Corcoran, will be stood down for three months.

The AFL's lawyers, Minter Ellison, and Essendon's QC, Jack Rush, were locked in discussions on Sunday. Hird's legal team was not directly involved.

Essendon's president says he's confident the club can reach an agreement over punishment for the drugs saga.

KEEP HIRD'S SEAT WARM

The AFL Commission began meeting at 8am today and while many facts are agreed between the two parties, it might take all day to reach a resolution.

AFL commissioner and Wesfarmers chairman Richard Goyder arrived at AFL house around 8am.

Expecting a long day he told his driver it was unlikely he would be picked up at 4pm.

Commissioner Sam Mostyn arrived shortly before 8am. Commissioner Bill Kelty at around 8.30am.The former ACTU secretary had said he would excuse himself from AFL Commission meetings due to his friendship with Hird.

Essendon assistant coach Mark Thompson reacts to photographers as he arrives at the AFL Commission hearing. Picture Wayne Ludbey

The Bombers were lobbying the AFL to keep their draft picks or lose just the first two picks at this year's national draft in November.

They argue it would penalise the players and hurt the club for a decade, but the league has pushed for a two-year exclusion from the first two rounds of the draft.

Hird's lawyer Julian Burnside SC labelled the AFL's actions "scandalous" and accused them of bullying Hird.

But the Bombers have effectively conceded defeat. Now the club is trying to limit the damage to its reputation and future success.

An insight into what the AFL might deem acceptable was contained in a draft "accepted facts" document provided to Essendon.

Essendon CEO Ray Gunston and chairman Paul Little arrive at AFL House. Picture: Wayne Ludbey

It stated:

THE club failed to adequately protect the health, welfare and safety of the players.

THERE was an unacceptable risk that players may have been administered substances that were prohibited by the AFL Anti-Doping Code and the World Anti-Doping Code.

THE club is unable to determine whether players were administered substances prohibited by the AFL Anti-Doping Code and the World Anti-Doping Code.

Essendon has refused to sign an agreement that says officials deliberately set out to breach anti-doping rules.

James Hird leaves his Toorak home this morning. Picture: Hamish Blair

Hird will either accept a 12-month ban or Essendon will stand him down for next season while he continues to fight his legal battle.

But that second option looks less likely, with legal figures saying many points in his Supreme Court writ would be undermined by Essendon's guilty plea.

On Saturday night Hird issued two contradictory statements - that he wanted his punishment wrapped up in the club's sanctions, but that he wanted to clear his name first.

"First of all I want to prove I'm innocent of a lot or 99 per cent of those charges," he said.

"I look at those charges and they make me sick that they're out there and that people would believe that is the truth about me.

Bombers club doctor Bruce Reid arrives with is legal team at AFL House. Picture: Michael Klein

"I'm determined to clear that up. Then we'll go from there about suspension or not suspension."

Bombers captain Jobe Watson on Sunday continued to express support for Hird but said the fate of his coach was beyond the club's control.

"I mean, it's not whether or not we want him to coach - it's the decision of the Commission and that's the reason there is a Commission," Watson said.

Reid is determined to protect his reputation as a medical practitioner. He has told confidantes he will continue his fight separate to Essendon.

 Essendon chairman Paul Little spoke on Saturday night of a middle ground, which meant that the AFL was prepared to drop the focus on drug cheating and instead hit the Dons with governance charges.

Essendon football manager Danny Corcoran and his legal team arrive at AFL House Picture: Michael Klein

While the sanctions are unprecedented, attention will quickly turn to who fills the coaching void.

HIRD OPENS UP AFTER GRITTY WIN

Thompson would be available given he will only be fined but has made it known he is not interested in a senior coaching position.

Former Bombers stars Mark Harvey and Neale Daniher have been linked to the club but a one-year secondment would not appeal if Hird was definitely returning.

Hird's barrister Burnside said "the AFL's bullying tactics seem to be the standard in Australia now".

Essendon QC Jack Rush outside AFL House. Picture: Wayne Ludbey

"The AFL seems to think it's OK to bully a bunch of individuals and a club without letting them have a fair hearing. I think the AFL's conduct has been scandalous."

- with James Dowling, Andy Burns 

James Hird and assistant coach Mark Thompson are expected to learn their fate today. Picture: Michael Klein


04.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Abbott's Mr Negative shattered

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 25 Agustus 2013 | 04.30

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott outlines his plan for the first hundred days if he becomes Prime Minister

Tony Abbott poses with his wife Margaret and daughters Bridget and Frances during the 2013 Coalition Campaign Launch at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre in Brisbane. (Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

THE Coalition's campaign launch has been peppered with positivity in a well-orchestrated show to kill off Tony Abbott's Mr Negative vibes.

The would-be prime minister was joined by his daughters Bridget and Frances, deputy Julie Bishop and Nationals leader Warren Truss as their official campaign kicked off in front of about 750 party faithful.

The two Abbott girls were the event's surprise speakers when they introduced their dad and promised he would look after Australia, as he had looked after them.

Tony Abbott sets out his vision

PM Kevin Rudd suspends campaign but has time for TV show

That was despite the family having tried to discourage him from making a tilt at the Liberal leadership, daughter Frances revealed.

"He's our dad and we didn't want to see him discouraged or disappointed," she said.

"But Dad said when you really believe in something you have to back yourself and so he did."

Video: Peter Beattie and Christine Milne on Meet the Press

Video: Voice of Australia on Coalition campaign launch: Live at 5pm

While Frances spoke of her "netball dad", daughter Bridget spoke of the man who proudly volunteers for different causes.

"My dad looks out for everyone and I know he will look after you," she said.

Tony Abbott speaks during the 2013 Coalition Campaign Launch at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre in Brisbane. (Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

Mr Abbott outlined his plans for the first days and months of a Coalition government in a rousing speech preceded by the launch's official song, which carried lines including "we believe in hope" and "let's build a brighter future".

Mr Abbott said his first priorities would be to launch his asylum boats policy and scrap Labor's recent tax changes to company car leasing "on day one".

Within 100 days he would scrap the carbon tax and the NBN would have new business plan.

But his biggest cheer came for his "fair dinkum paid parental leave scheme".

He promised there would be two million more jobs within 10 years and that the budget would be in surplus by the end of his first term.

The polls indicate Tony Abbott will be our next Prime Minister. What sort of leader will he be? Bolt Ep25 Seg1

Greens plan for asylum seekers

Mr Abbott also pledged $200 million towards dementia research, a HECS-style loan scheme for apprentices, and to index the Commonwealth Senior's Health Card.

The money for demential research over five years would help researchers working on a cure for the condition that affects more than 320,000 Australians, he said.

The interest-free loans for apprentices in areas of skill shortages would provide up to $20,000 over four years to help them with costs like tools and equipment.

And the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card would immediately be indexed to CPI if he won Government to give more self-funded retirees access to cheaper medication.

The card gives cost of living assistance to retirees who are of pension age but do not qualify for the age pension and the thresholds of $50,000 for singles and $80,000 for couples has not increase since 2001.

Mr Abbott did not outline any new savings during his speech that might pay for promised plans.

He waited until the end off his speech to criticise Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Labor, warning: "As you know from bitter experience, if you reward bad behaviour, you get more of it."

But the most colourful criticisms came from Ms Bishop, who spoke of "fake Kevin".

Julie Bishop compares Kevin Rudd with the Incredible Hulk during her speech at the Coalition campaign launch

She listed Mr Rudd's different personas, including ocker kevin, cool Kevin who's cooking with gas, nerdy Kevin and pious Kevin, but said while he masqueraded as mild-mannered, he was actually a monster.

"The trouble with Kevin is he's a fake".

Mr Newman drew laughter when he set about tearing down some of Labor's "lies" and referred to the ALPs use of actors in its campaign.

He said Australians were sick of Mr Rudd's negative spins and tactics.

"They have had enough of your spin, your tantrums and your amnesia," he said of the Prime Minister.

Attendees to descend on the Queensland capital for the traditional backslapping and schmooze fest at the Queensland Performing Arts Complex included coalition MPs, supporters, staffers and party members.

Former Prime Minister John Howard sat in the front row with wife Janette.

One woman who has been coming to the events since she was a child said the mood was "very positive".

"This is the best atmosphere I can recall for a long time," said Dimity, a life member of the LNP who did not wish to give her last name.

Former Prime Minister John Howard looks on during the 2013 Coalition Campaign Launch at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre in Brisbane. Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images) Source: Getty Images

###


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Night of violence: Brawls shut glam club

Sydney's Ivy nightclub, a haunt of the city's upper-crust. Picture: Supplied. Source: NewsComAu

SYDNEY'S exclusive Ivy nightclub was forced to close after riot police were called to a series of brawls that left a patron and a bouncer in hospital.

Two men were also arrested after the night of violence at the club, described on its website as a "glamorous urban oasis".

The first incident occurred at 2.15am (AEST) on Sunday when a security guard attempted to kick out a 28-year-old man, who suffered cuts to his head during the struggle.

Five minutes later a fight involving several men broke out and a 22-year-old and 17-year-old allegedly assaulted security guards as they tried to leave.

The men were arrested and taken to The Rocks Police Station. The licensee agreed to close the premises at 3am but the fighting continued on the street, resulting in a security guard being taken to hospital with facial injuries.

Inquiries are continuing, including into how a minor came to be on the premises.

It's not the first time the Ivy has been associated with violent behaviour, with four Ivy bouncers sentenced last year over the bashing of a patron.

Ivy will return to normal trading on Monday.

###


04.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

'#Hate' slaying: accused's chilling tweets

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 24 Agustus 2013 | 04.30

James Edwards, 15, charged with first-degree murder. Source: Supplied

Danny Ford, Chief of Police in Duncan, Oklahoma, reveals more information on the murder of Australian student, Christopher Lane. Courtesy MMM

ONE of the Oklahoma teens accused of gunning down a jogger had allegedly tweeted an anti-white message and warned, ''It's time to start taken life's''.

The vicious comments on 15-year-old James Edwards' Twitter feed fueled speculation that the slaying of Christopher Lane, 22, was a hate crime and not a random attack by "bored" thugs.

Edwards, who is black, tweeted in April, ''90% of white ppl are nasty. #HATE THEM.''

Three days before Mr Lane, who was white, was fatally shot last Friday while jogging, Edwards tweeted, ''With my n---as when it's time to start taken life's.''

And one day before the murder, he wrote on Facebook, ''I've never been this mad in my life.''

In another post that day, he wrote cryptically, ''Bang 2 drops in one day.''

Police in the small Oklahoma town of Duncan are said to be scouring social-media for clues to the possible motives of Edwards, Chancey Luna, 16, and Michael Jones, 17, but so far have not publicly linked racial hatred to the death of Lane, an Australian student attending college in Oklahoma on a baseball scholarship.

US prosecutors handling the case said Friday there was no evidence to suggest the killing was racially-motivated.

Several commentators have questioned why authorities had not pressed to have hate crime charges added to the indictment of Edwards and Luna, who are both charged with murder. However Stephens County District Attorney Jason Hicks said while authorities were aware of the comments made by Edwards, there was not enough evidence to pursue extra charges.

"At this point, the evidence does not support the theory that Christopher Lane was targeted based upon his race or nationality," Mr Hicks said in a statement. "The evidence is insufficient to establish that race was the primary motive in the murder of Christopher Lane."

Mr Hicks later told CNN that Luna came from a mixed race family, and that the third teenager arrested with the duo, Jones, was white.

"I have nothing in my files, paperwork or audio recordings that suggest that Christopher Lane was killed because of his race or nationality," Mr Hicks said on CNN.

James Francis Edwards Jr, 15, Michael Dewayne Jones, 17, and Chancey Allen Luna, 16, have been charged over the killing of Christopher Lane. Source: AP

Police said Jones confessed, telling investigators they decided to kill someone and randomly picked their victim.

''We were bored and didn't have anything to do, so we decided to kill somebody,'' Jones was quoted as saying.

Mr Hicks agreed that this explanation appeared to be the most likely. "I tend to think that the police chief's (Danny Ford) comments, that is they did it out of boredom are probably accurate," he said.

Court documents show that when Jones was initially questioned by police, he said he couldn't reveal who pulled the trigger of the .22-caliber revolver that killed Lane because ''he would be killed,'' the Duncan Banner newspaper reported.

Joyce Smith of Duncan called 911 for emergency assistance for Christopher Lane. WARNING Sensitive material.

Another Duncan resident, James Johnson, who is black, said he alerted police when the teens threatened to kill his son because the youth had refused to join their gang, an offshoot of the Crips.

Mr Johnson called police, who quickly arrested the three teens in their black Ford Focus in the parking lot of a church near his home.

This picture was posted on the Facebook page of girlfriend Sarah Harper with the message: "I love you Christopher Ryan Lane. I love you so much babe. From 2009 until forever you will always be mine and in a very special and protected place in my heart." Supplied: Facebook Source: Supplied

Mr Johnson suggested one other explanation for the murder, claiming Lane's death was an "initiation" rite for the gang.

''I don't think it was an initiation; I know it was an initiation," he told Australian media. "My son told me that it was an initiation.''

Authorities in Duncan indicated their investigation is far from finished, noting they haven't found the murder weapon, which Jones said was given to somebody by one of the teens.

Mr Lane was a Melbourne native who went to the States to play baseball at East Central University in Ada. An online fund set up to help bring his body back to Australia topped $100,000 yesterday.

A private memorial for Lane was scheduled for tomorrow at Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond.

This article originally appeared on the New York Post. With AFP

Sarah Harper at the memorial when Christopher Lane was shot dead while jogging. Picture: AP Source: AP


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Affleck and the Batman backlash

Ben Affleck is likely to be far from the biggest issue for a Superman and Batman team-up movie, scheduled to begin shooting next year. Picture: Robyn Beck Source: AFP

  • Ben Affleck cast as batman
  • Petitions to Warner Bros to rethink its decision
  • Do you agree, or could Affleck pull off the Caped Crusader?

THE Internet erupted Thursday night after Warner Bros announced that Ben Affleck will play the Caped Crusader for its Superman and Batman team-up movie.

Jokes (many of them imagining a Batman from South Boston) flew on Twitter. Petitions with thousands of signatures were launched to urge Warner Bros to rethink its decision.

Ben Affleck played a blind superhero in 2003's Daredevil

Affleck, just months ago the toast of Hollywood for his best picture-winning Argo, hasn't had so much scorn heaped on him since Gigli.

Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez starred in 2004's Gigli

The response, roughly equivalent to news of the apocalypse, was undoubtedly out of proportion. After the leaden, joyless Man of Steel, adding Affleck - an actor of light, easy charisma and an increasingly capable filmmaker - can only improve a franchise currently in the hands of Sucker Punch director Zach Snyder and the beefy but unremarkable Superman actor Henry Cavill.

Affleck is likely to be far from the biggest issue for the film, which is scheduled to begin shooting next year and be released in summer 2015. He has already proven to be a more interesting Superman, too, by playing a bitter George Reeves in the atmospheric 2006 docudrama Hollywoodland.

There's a long history of casting overreaction that's later turned out laughable. There were plenty of critics when Daniel Craig, who had the audaciousness of being blond, inherited James Bond. Some, too, questioned Jennifer Lawrence's suitability for Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games. And who would have guessed that Michael Keaton would make arguably the best of all the Batmen?

Are there any actors you think have been wrongly cast in key roles? Comment below

But Affleck's casting speaks to a larger shift in this age of the superhero blockbuster. Affleck will be following in the footsteps of Christian Bale, the star of Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy - the artistic apogee of the superhero movies, a series that treated its hero not as cartoon but a vessel for exploring themes of terrorism and justice.

The days of such aspirations, though, seem to be dwindling. Sam Raimi isn't shepherding Spider-Man anymore. Most of the most popular superheros are on their second or third reboot. After the success of Joss Whedon's The Avengers, Hollywood is looking increasingly to pairing its comics. Another Avengers film is on the way. And after the Superman-Batman movie, a Justice League film (with Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Flash, Aquaman and others) is rumoured to follow.

These are the kinds of projects that could be seen as a sign of jumping the shark if this wasn't a movie genre built on men in tights. The superhero blockbuster, still the biggest draw at the multiplex - with US$408.2 million ($452 million) - Iron Man 3 is easily this year's biggest box-office hit, has made gimmickry a way of business, not a fault.

In the past, superhero movies didn't need stars: The brand was the main attraction.

But being a major star, Affleck comes with a lot of baggage that many expect will grate similar to how George Clooney did in Joel Schumacher's 1997 Batman and Robin - a film so bad, it's often been cited as a catalyst for more serious, dramatic interpretations of superheros.

It's ironic because Affleck has appeared to ape the career of Clooney (a producer on Argo) by shifting into directing and flirting with politics. Affleck, 41, will take on Batman at a slightly older age and in a more established place in his career. But he'll be best to listen to another piece of advice from Clooney: At least don't let them put nipples on the Batman suit.


04.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bombers expect sanctions soon

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 23 Agustus 2013 | 04.30

Julian de Stoop brings you the latest news from Windy Hill after James Hird cancelled his planned public response to the AFL at the last minute.

PAUL Little has conceded Essendon will cop AFL sanctions for poor governance and people management and says there should be a resolution to the drawn-out saga soon.

The chairman penned an open letter to the Bombers members tonight, heightening speculation the Dons will be tossed out of this year's finals series.

But Little said the Dons would not accept copping the drug cheats tag.

"We have made mistakes in terms of governance and people management, and we apologise for them," Little said.

"We also accept there will be AFL sanctions as a consequence…but the evidence does not extend to drug cheating, and we're working to ensure that the charges and ultimate penalties reflect this.

"The ongoing controversy is harmful to our players and their families, our officials, the club, other AFL clubs and the AFL itself."

The letter came amid talks between Essendon and the AFL that could see James Hird stand down as coach.

Hird left Windy Hill declaring he will stay on as coach, two hours after Bombers assistant coach Simon Goodwin insisted Hird would lead Essendon against Carlton tomorrow.

But discussions with the AFL in a bid to end the dispute could result in Hird standing aside and the club being stripped of its 2013 premiership points - ruling it out of the finals.

The Bombers could retain their draft picks under the deal, The Australian reports.

IT'S NOT ALL ABOUT YOU, JAMES

GET LIVE UPDATES ALL DAY AND JOIN THE DEBATE BELOW

Under the proposed settlement Hird would be free to continue his legal action against the AFL and defend the charges against him.

James Hird was MIA at Windy Hill this morning as one of his assistants, Simon Goodwin, addressed the media.

Yesterday, Hird launched Supreme Court action against the league over its handling of the drugs investigation.

The Essendon coach lodged documents in the Supreme Court alleging that in February AFL boss Andrew Demetriou and his deputy Gillon McLachlan tipped off the club about investigations into drug use at the club.

HIRD ON ROPES AFTER BODY BLOWS

BOMBERS COACH DEFIES TIDE

He was due to front a huge media pack at Windy Hill this morning but Goodwin took his place in a last-minute switch. Hird told reporters later that he was busy preparing for tomorrow night's match against Carlton.

James Hird at his house in Toorak today. Picture: Hamish Blair

He answered only a couple of questions as he got into his car outside the Bombers headquarters, saying the phone call from a player's mother to radio station Triple M yesterday was "very concerning".

"I think the welfare of our players is something that we all hold in high regard and are very concerned about, so it was very concerning to hear it," Hird said.

The first question asked of Goodwin was whether Hird would definitely coach tomorrow night.

"As far as I know he's definitely going to be senior coach, yes," Goodwin said.

"It's obviously been a very difficult time for everyone, a very stressful time, but to James's credit he has been outstanding with the players, his No.1 thing has been about the players and making sure this team performs. I think now we're really looking forward to Saturday night and putting on a good performance against Carlton."

Western Bulldogs president Peter Gordon speaks on behalf of the 17 clubs who will support the AFL through the ongoing Essendon saga.

Goodwin defended Hird over an emotional phone call yesterday from a woman claiming to be the mother of a young Essendon player who said Hird had made the drugs saga all about him.

"It was hard to listen to for anyone involved in the footy club," Goodwin said.

"I think our primary concern from a club's perspective has been the players and their families.

"The club has been fantastic in really looking after the parents and making sure they're well educated, and I think they're going to continue to have that support."

EXPERT WARNS OF CANCER LINK

Goodwin also disputed reports that some players were considering their future at Windy Hill.

"Not that I've seen ... the players have been absolutely resolute," Goodwin said.

Eddie McGuire leads the presidents out of the meeting today at AFH House. Picture: Tim Carrafa

"They want to be here."

He praised young midfielder Jake Melksham for re-signing with the club this week.

Essendon's media spokesman said Hird was "stuck in meetings" and was unavailable to speak.The team trained for about 20min at Windy Hill this morning, with Hird on track for about 10min.

He received strong support from about 100 loyal Essendon fans, with one yelling "Stick it up em, Hirdy!" as he emerged from the players' race while several held banners of support.

There was also a special cheer with club doctor Bruce Reid emerged, one fan calling out "We love you, Doc"

Demetriou this morning said he didn't see the drugs crisis as a personal battle with James Hird.

"These headlines are certainly not of my making. I've consistently maintained that James Hird has been a great contributor, he's a legend of the game ... and he's entitled to have his say and put his case forward," he said on 3AW.

"I don't get personal and I'm not interested in that sort of thing."

The mother of an Essendon player says the AFL club have created the worst nightmare for parents such as her.

Demetriou repeated it would be best for the game if the issue was resolved before the finals and said there was still an open invitation for Essendon to attend Monday's commission meeting despite the club asking for a deferment.

"If they still want to show up on Monday obviously they can, but at this stage it will be up to lawyers to decide when that date will be in the future. But it is important to get this resolved.

Demetriou also refuted the allegations in Hird's Supreme Court writ.

"It was impossible to tell Essendon anything when I was not privy to the information," he told ABC radio.

Demetriou said he had yet to discuss the writ with the AFL's legal counsel, but he did not believe it would stop him sitting on the AFL Commission when it heard the case against the Bombers.

21 August 2013 will go down in Australian sporting history as the day that the AFL and one of its oldest clubs, Essendon, declared war on each other.

Last night, Western Bulldogs president Peter Gordon said the 17 clubs had met without the AFL and Essendon and "resolved to unanimously support the integrity of the AFL Rules".

HIRD'S DRUG-FREE COURT CHALLENGE

After almost three hours of crisis talks at AFL House, one club president told the Herald Sun: "The 17 clubs have had enough.

"We want it resolved and we want it resolved within the AFL structure. The mood among the presidents was thatEssendon has been fast and loose, and we have to protect the game.

"We all believe Essendon has a right to defend itself, but none of us want one club to stuff up the competition."

Essendon coach James Hird wants to have the charges against him heard by an independent tribunal.

Gordon said: "In our view, it is of paramount importance that every effort be made to resolve these matters within the AFL industry. We wish to unanimously express our confidence in the AFL Commission and AFL management.

"In the meantime, we call upon all parties to exercise restraint and discretion in any public comments about this matter, and with the safety and welfare of players and their families and the integrity of the game as the paramount considerations."

CAREY BACKS HIRD OVER AFL 'CONFLICT'

Bombers chairman Paul Little declared on Wednesday that his club had "lost total confidence in the AFL executive".

The club declined to comment, but high-level talks to resolve footy's greatest fight are believed to be continuing.

Finals are just 15 days away.

The Bombers are guaranteed a berth in an elimination final - if their points are not docked as punishment for their 2012 supplements program.

PLAYER'S 'MUM' SLAMS HIRD, CLUB

Hird took charge of training and showed no sign of standing down ahead of tomorrow night's clash with Carlton at the MCG.

Before the meeting, Port Adelaide president David Koch walked in, saying: "No one wants a slanging match.

"I think there are all sorts of questions that everyone has on where we're up to.

"We just want as much information as we can. We all have a duty of care to our players and that includes having the very best information."

Hawthorn president Andrew Newbold said: "It needs to end as soon as it can.

"I'm really concerned about the good of the game and the effect that it's having on the sport in general, on the kids out there.

''The other codes in Australia must be looking at us and rubbing their hands in glee."

HIRD CLAIMS 'TIP-OFF' IN COURT ACTION

Carlton president Stephen Kernahan said: "We all read (the charges) yesterday and it wasn't great reading. I go in with an open mind."

"Sticks" would later leave, backing the AFL.

This morning, Former Kangaroos CEO Eugene Arocca said Essendon had backed Hird until now but it should be looking after itself.

"There's obviously an argument or view that things are starting to split up and the football club is always first and should always be first," he told 3AW radio.

"It seems to me that outside of it at some stage those interests are going to diverge and the club has to make a call. It's hurting the club."

On radio earlier in the day the mother of an unnamed Bombers player directed an on-air tirade at the club.

"It's all right for James and the board of Essendon to say they have not cheated," she told Triple M.

"The whole question is not about cheating. The whole question is about morals, it's about ethics and it's about the trust that the parents put on the club for the club to take care of their child, their kids."

The club said it couldn't identify the caller.

James Hird's writ detailed a meeting on February 5 where McLachlan allegedly told club officials: "You can't say Essendon did not use drugs, because my information is you have used them.

"(AFL integrity officer) Brett Clothier knows the names of the drugs and he will be here soon.

"The Australian Crime Commission is going to hand down a report. There is going to be a meeting of all the (sporting) codes.

GOLDEN BOY A MAN OF STEEL

"If you come forward earlier and invite ASADA to investigate, then the investigation will look better for you."

The AFL declined to comment.

ACC chief John Lawler said: "Given legal proceedings have been initiated, it would be inappropriate for the ACC to make any further statement at this time."

Hird is arguing in court for the convening of an independent tribunal and the removal of Demetriou and other AFL commissioners from any hearing.

He is also seeking:

PROPER particulars of the charges against him.

DETAILS of the witnesses the AFL proposes to call.

COPIES of all documents the AFL will seek to tender.

DETAILS of the substance of the evidence they will give.

It is expected that Hird's legal team, led by Julian Burnside, QC, will front Monday's AFL Commission to repeat its demands, despite the other clubs' resolve.

- with Warwick Green, Michael Warner, Sam Edmund


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A gaffe, or just an odd, angry shot?

Posters of World War II leaders are seen behind PM Kevin Rudd as he speaks during a visit to Bede Polding College in Sydney. Will he be held to account for letting Hitler into the shot, or will political correctness take a deep breath and move on? Source: Supplied

THE votes pouring into our poll suggest Australians think their leaders are hobbled by political correctness, but the latest picture of Kevin Rudd should test that.

The PM is speaking in front of a montage of World War II posters and a certain A Hitler happens ot be in the middle of the shot. Should he have been more careful? Have his minders let him down? Is it the photographer's fault? Will outrage follow? Does it even matter at all?

Are we straightjacketing our leaders, or does this just come with the territory? Vote in our poll in the blog of the day's events below to tell us what you think:


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Girl raised alarm after machete murder

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 22 Agustus 2013 | 04.29

A police officer who shot a man, who later died, at the scene of a double homicide 'had no other option'.

A MAN who allegedly killed two people with a machete was shot by police on the footpath of a suburban street.

 A girl, 12, raised the alarm after a woman  and a man were brutally slain at a Coolum Beach home overnight.
 
The girl, in the house at the time,  ran to a neighbour's house about 10pm telling them two people had been stabbed in the house.

The alleged assailant was shot by police two doors down from the murder house, with neighbours witnessing him moaning on the ground before he was taken away by paramedics.

Family and friends of the murdered couple have told couriermail.com.au a machete was used in the murders.

Shocked neighbours have told of hearing screaming followed by six gunshots.

Police on the scene of a shooting at the Sunshine Coast. Picture: Megan Slade

It is understood the couple living in the house were a local builder and his partner.

The alleged assailant is understood to be the man's brother, who had been living with the couple for the past 12 months.

Police, responding to a 000 call, shot the alleged assailant and he later died in hospital.

The killer was believed to have used a knife to attack his brother and his partner.

Police tape off a street in Coolum after a shooting. Picture: Megan Slade

Investigators are looking into the history of the attacker.

Sources say the man had been living at the premises for a significant time, about 12 months.

He had prior dealings with police, but had not been involved in any serious matters.

Residents said they had been aware of the man living with the couple over the past year.

Police on the scene of a shooting at Coolum. Picture: Megan Slade

He was described as in his 40s and appeared to be slightly unstable.

One resident recently saw him pushing a pram up the street, with a "cranky" face.

It has been speculated that he had a child to an ex-partner.

The dead couple have been described as a lovely couple who caused no trouble.

A man has died in a police shooting at a house where two other people were found dead. Picture: Megan Slade

The woman was regularly spotted riding her bike around town.

Her partner had built the couple's home on Yandina-Coolum Road, the main road into town.

"They were lovely, they were never a problem, they were sweet as," said one neighbour.

"They were really nice people. There was never any drama or any noise."

Police on the scene of a shooting at Coolum. Picture: Megan Slade

The two police officers involved were on their first shift for the night.

They started at 10pm and at 10.10pm attended a domestic disturbance at the address.

Driving the police car was a first year Constable while his partner, a Senior Constable with 10 years' experience, was in the passenger seat.

As they arrived, the offender approached the Senior Constable's side of the car and threatened him. The officer had no choice but to shoot.

Police were called to the home at Coolum Beach about 10pm Wednesday after reports of a disturbance.

A man at the home was shot when a police officer was forced to discharge his gun.

The man was taken to Nambour Hospital in a serious condition. The man subsequently died from the wounds.

Police found a male and female dead at the scene.

Queensland Police Union general secretary Ian Leavers told The Courier-Mail the officer's instincts about the man had been correct.

"The only information they had at that stage was that it was a domestic. They were not to know he had killed two people,'' Mr Leavers said.

"You only draw your weapon and use it as a last resort,'' he said.

"These officers are both married, family men in their 30s and this will stay with them forever.

"Their colleagues will be supporting them and I'm sure they will be keen to get back to work."

Mr Leavers, who spent the night at the scene, said the male senior constable acted appropriately in the situation.

"Things unfolded extremely quickly,'' Mr Leavers said.

"The police officer had no other option and in instances like this, you would only use a firearm to defend your life and we support the police officers involved.''

Mr Leavers said the ethical standards command has already interviewed police at the scene, including the officer who had to use deadly force.

He described the officer as a well-respected family man who had more than 10 years' experience in the service.

"It's a tragedy all round that the male person who was shot has subsequently died as well,'' he said.

"It's a very difficult time for the officers and their families.''

Mr Leavers said the officers had only just started their shift when they were called to the incident.

A coronial investigation will take place alongside the ethical standard command's probe, he said.

Yandina-Coolum Rd, where the incident occurred, is expected to be closed for most of today as investigations continue.

Earlier, Sunshine Coast District Superintendent Maurice Carless said the death of the two people were suspicious, with the crime scene covering "quite a large area".

"(The) investigation (is) examining all angles, it's too early to tell yet or to determine what's occurred," he said.

"The crime scene covers quite a large area and will be examined thoroughly."

He would not confirm if the two male police officers who responded to calls to authorities had been threatened by the man shot last night, who was taken to Nambour Hospital but has since died.

Superintendent Carless said he could not confirm if the man shot by police had been involved in the suspicious deaths of the man and the woman found nearby, or if he was armed during the confrontation with police.

"We are treating it as a suspicious at this stage," he said.

He said not all of last night's events occurred inside the home.

"The crime scene covers quite a large area and will be examined thoroughly… the exact location of particular pieces of evidence are yet to be explored."

He would not comment on the condition of the male and female bodies discovered by police.

"The state of the victims is unknown at this stage," Supt Carless said.

"The exact unfolding of events will be a matter examined by the Coroner."

It is understood police are still working to contact the family of those involved.

"These incidents are tragic for all involved and our thoughts go out to all the families involved in this matter," Supt Carless said.

Reporting by Stephanie Bennett, Kathleen Donaghey, Peter Hall and Brittany Vonow


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France threatens force against Syria

  • France pledges force over alleged gas attack
  • 'Chemical' horror: Activists claim 1300 dead
  • Distressing images of victims released
  • GRAPHIC IMAGES: WARNING MAY DISTRESS
  • Bodies lined shoulder-to-shoulder in tragedy

UPDATE: FRANCE has threatened the international community will use armed force against Syria if the chemical massacre that may have claimed more than 1000 lives is confirmed.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said if the United Nations Security Council was unable to make a move, "decisions will be taken in other ways".

"If this is proven, France's position is that there must be a reaction," Mr Fabius told French television network BFM.

"There would have to be a reaction with force in Syria from the international community, but there is no question of sending troops on the ground."

Meanwhile, AFP reports German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu have held a press conference in Berlin. Mr Davutoglu said a "red line was crossed" in Syria and called for international action following reports of a massacre involving chemical weapons.

"All red lines have been crossed but still the UN Security Council has not even been able to take a decision. This is a responsibility for the sides who still set these red lines and for all of us," Davutoglu told reporters in Berlin.

Syria is under intense pressure to allow UN weapons inspectors into the site which the opposition says left hundreds dead and provoked revulsion around the world.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Here at News.com.au, we're well aware that images of the victims of the Syrian gas attack - particularly children - will distress many readers. We don't take the decision to publish these pictures lightly. But as the editor, I don't resile from it either. The more such images are censored, the less reason there is for the world to sit up and pay attention to the horror show which is playing out in Syria daily. If you feel you don't need to look at the pictures, please don't click on the gallery marked with a warning. - Luke McIlveen

CLICK BELOW FOR GRAPHIC IMAGES FROM SYRIAN MASSACRE

Damascus has flatly denied the allegations but a US official cited by the Wall Street Journal said on Thursday there were "strong indications" regime forces had indeed unleashed chemical weapons during attacks the previous day on rebel zones near the capital.

The National Coalition said more than 1300 people had died while videos and photographs showed scenes of people foaming at the mouth and of bodies stacked up in morgues.

In one video posted on YouTube, children are seen receiving first aid in a field hospital, notably oxygen to help them breathe. Doctors appear to be trying to resuscitate unconscious children.

Another video showed what activists said was a case of hysteria following a chemical strike in the eastern suburbs. The authenticity of the videos has not immediately been verified.

A Syrian girl in shock screams in Arabic "I am alive" following an attack in which Syrian opposition claim the regime used chemical weapons in eastern Ghouta, on the outskirts of Damascus. The image grab taken from a video uploaded on YouTube by the Arbeen unified press office on August 21, 2013. It has not been independently verified.

A young girl held her head in her hands and frantically repeated "I'm alive'', as a man in a white coat tried to comfort her.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that Syrian forces on Thursday bombed and shelled a number of rebel zones where the Coalition alleged the attacks took place the previous day.

Western governments demanded immediate access for a team of UN inspectors already in Syria to probe previous allegations of chemical weapons strikes to the sites of the alleged attacks.

The head of the UN inspection mission, Aake Sellstroem, was in talks with Damascus "on all issues pertaining to the alleged use of chemical weapons, including this most recent reported incident," a UN statement said.

There are claims thousands of people have been killed in a Syrian army chemical weapon bombardment.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest demanded the inspectors be given "immediate access to witnesses and affected individuals" and "the ability to examine and collect physical evidence without any interference or manipulation from the Syrian government."

Washington has previously described chemical weapons use as a red line that might prompt it to intervene militarily in Syria.

The Wall Street Journal reported a senior administration official as saying the claims of a chemical weapons attack appeared to have some credibility.

"There are strong indications there was a chemical weapons attack - clearly by the government," the unnamed official said.

A handout image released by the Syrian opposition's Shaam News Network shows a woman mourning over a body wrapped in shrouds laid out in a line on the ground with other victims which Syrian rebels claim were killed in a toxic gas attack by pro-government forces.

"But we do need to do our due diligence and get all the facts and determine what steps need to be taken."

Human rights groups backed calls for access for the UN inspectors to the sites of the alleged attacks.

Should the allegations be true, "the attacks would amount to war crimes," said Amnesty International's deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, who urged the UN inspectors to visit the site.

The UN inspectors arrived in Damascus on Sunday with a strict mandate to investigate three sites for the alleged use of chemical weapons.

This citizen journalism image provided by the Local Committee of Arbeen which has been authenticated based on its contents, shows a Syrian girl receiving treatment at a makeshift hospital in Arbeen town, Damascus after an alleegd toxic gas attack. (AP Photo/Local Committee of Arbeen)

A high-ranking Syrian security source described the idea that the army would use chemical weapons while UN weapons inspectors were working inside the country as "political suicide".

The opposition National Coalition's George Sabra said more than 1300 people had been killed in what he "The Syrian regime is mocking the UN and the great powers when it strikes targets near Damascus, while the (UN weapons inspectors) are just a few steps away,'' the opposition National Coalition's George Sabra said, describing the attack as a "coup de grace that kills all hopes for a political solution in Syria''.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says news of the massacre in Syria is "repugnant" and he wants United Nations weapons inspectors to investigate.

 "The use of weapons of mass destruction in any circumstances is intolerable and unacceptable in any civilised nation," Mr Rudd told reporters in Victoria on Thursday.

In this citizen journalism image provided by the Local Committee of Arbeen, a man and woman mourn over the dead bodies of Syrian men after an alleged poisonous gas attack fired by regime forces that killed 1300 people, including many children. Picture: AP

"When weapons of mass destruction, including chemical weapons, are used against civilian targets it is repugnant beyond description."

Following an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council in New York, the council's president, Argentina's envoy Maria Cristina Perceval, said: "There must be clarity on what happened and the situation must be followed carefully.''

She added that members "welcomed the determination of the secretary general to ensure a thorough, impartial and prompt investigation''.

The 15-nation body expressed "strong concern'' about the allegations and agreed that any chemical weapons use is "a violation of international law''.

A handout image released by the Syrian opposition's Shaam News Network shows people inspecting bodies of children and adults laying on the ground as Syrian rebels claim they were killed in a toxic gas attack.

The US, Britain and France demanded that a team of UN experts already in the country be granted immediate access to investigate the claims.

Videos and photographs showed row upon row of bodies wrapped in white shrouds lying on a tile floor, including many children. There was little evidence of blood or conventional injuries and most appeared to have suffocated.

A pharmacist who treated victims said:  "Their mouths were foaming, their pupils were constricted, and those who were brought in while still alive could not draw their breaths and died subsequently."

Survivors, some twitching uncontrollably, lay on gurneys with oxygen masks covering their faces.

Citizen journalism image provided by Aleppo Media Center AMC which has been authenticated shows a Syrian boy holding an Arabic placard that reads: "if Syria's children bled petrol, the entire world would have intervened," during a demonstration against the alleged chemical weapons attack at the suburbs of Damascus. (AP Photo/Aleppo Media Center, AMC)

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's office said he was "shocked'' by the reports and that UN weapons experts in Syria to probe previous allegations were in discussions with Damascus.

Security Council members France, Britain, the United States, Luxembourg and South Korea requested the meeting, which was held behind closed doors.

Britain, France, Germany and the United States sent a formal request for an investigation of the incident to Ban's office, citing ''credible reports of the use of chemical weapons'' in a letter.

Western governments demanded immediate access for the inspectors to investigate the new allegations. Russia, a longstanding ally of the Damascus regime, echoed the call for an inquiry but said it suspected a ''provocation'' by the opposition and its foreign backers.

Syria has denied opposition claims that chemical attacks on several Damascus suburbs killed 1,300 people including children. Mana Rabiee reports.

The White House said it's "deeply concerned" about reports that chemical weapons were used by Syria's government against civilians.

The allegations of gassing civilians dwarfed all previous such accounts in the increasingly bloody civil war.

The Syrian Network for Human Rights reported that 647 Syrians were killed in the attacks, and it attributed nearly 590 of those deaths to chemical weapons.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, considered the most authoritative group tracking casualties in the conflict, estimated at least 136 dead from an air assault but didn't address whether chemical weapons appeared to be involved.

A Syrian military soldier holds his AK-47 with a sticker of Syrian President Bashar Assad and Arabic that reads, "Syria is fine." Syrian opposition groups claimed scores have died in which some activists say regime troops used "poisonous gas."

Observatory director Rami Abdul-Rahman cited activists in the area who said "poisonous gas'' was fired in rockets as well as from the air. He said that he had documented at least 136 deaths, but said it was not clear whether the victims died from shelling or toxic gas.

The Local Coordination Committees activist group said hundreds of people were killed or wounded. The Syrian National Coalition, the main Western-backed opposition group in exile, put the number at 1300, basing its claim on accounts and photographs by activists on the ground.

Syria is said to have one of the world's largest stockpiles of chemical weapons, including mustard gas and the nerve agent sarin.

Jean Pascal Zanders, an independent researcher who specialises in chemical and biological weapons and disarmament, said that in videos of the aftermath of the attacks, the hue of the victims' faces appeared to show many suffered from asphyxiation.

However, he said the symptoms they exhibited were not consistent with mustard gas or the nerve agents VX or sarin.

Mustard gas would cause blistering of the skin and discoloration, while the nerve agents would produce severe convulsions in the victims and also affect the paramedics treating them - neither of which was evident from the videos or reports.

"I'm deliberately not using the term chemical weapons here,'' he said. "There's plenty of other nasty stuff that was used in the past as a chemical warfare agent, so many industrial toxicants could be used too.''

A pharmacist in the town of Arbeen who identified himself as Abu Ahmad said he attended to dozens of wounded people in a field hospital after the shelling on Zamalka and Ein Tarma early Wednesday. He said many were moved to Arbeen.

The bodies of 63 of the dead had signs of a chemical weapons attack, he said, though he could not confirm this.

"Their mouths were foaming, their pupils were constricted, and those who were brought in while still alive could not draw their breaths and died subsequently,'' he told The Associated Press via Skype.

"The skin around their eyes and noses was grayish.''

Activists in nearby Zamalka told Abu Ahmed that an additional 200 people died in that town on Wednesday.

Syria's information minister, Omran al-Zoubi, denied government troops used chemical agents, calling the activists' claim a "disillusioned and fabricated one whose objective is to deviate and mislead'' the U.N. mission.

The head of the U.N. team, which has a mandate to investigate previous claims of alleged chemical attacks, said he wants to look into the latest claims.

Speaking to Swedish broadcaster SVT, Ake Sellstrom said the high numbers of dead and wounded being reported "sound suspicious.''

"It looks like something we need to look into,'' Sellstrom, who is Swedish, was quoted as saying.

He said a formal request from a member state would have to go through U.N. channels and Syria would need to agree - and there is no guarantee that it would.

Ghazwan Bwidany, a doctor treating the injured, told the BBC the main symptom, especially among children, was suffocation, as well as salivating and blurred vision.

"We don't have the capability to treat all this number of people," he said.

Opposition sources accused the army of multiple chemical weapons strikes -- one in Moadamiyet al-Sham, southwest of Damascus, and more in the capital's eastern suburbs.

The Local Coordination Committees (LCC), a network of activists, reported hundreds of casualties in the "brutal use of toxic gas by the criminal regime''.

And in videos posted on YouTube, the Syrian Revolution General Commission, another activist group, showed what it called "a terrible massacre committed by regime forces with toxic gas.''

In one video, children are seen being given first aid in a field hospital, notably oxygen to help them breathe. Doctors appear to be trying to resuscitate unconscious children.

Other images - distributed by the oppisition Shaam News Network -  show lines of uncovered bodies, many of them children.

Specialists in the impact of chemical weapons said the video evidence was not entirely convincing.

"At the moment, I am not totally convinced because the people that are helping them are without any protective clothing and without any respirators,'' said Paula Vanninen, director of Verifin, the Finnish Institute for Verification of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

"In a real case, they would also be contaminated and would also be having symptoms.''

John Hart, head of the Chemical and Biological Security Project at Stockholm International Peace Research Institute said he had not seen the telltale evidence in the eyes of the victims that would be compelling evidence of chemical weapons use.

"Of the videos that I've seen for the last few hours, none of them show pinpoint pupils... this would indicate exposure to organophosphorus nerve agents,'' he said.

State news agency SANA said "reports on the use of chemical weapons in Ghouta (the Damascus suburbs) are totally false. It's an attempt to prevent the UN commission of inquiry from carrying out its mission.''

The UN Security Council met to discuss the allegations as UN officials said that talks were already under way with President Bashar al-Assad's government on securing access to the alleged attack sites.

The head of the UN inspection mission, Aake Sellstroem, was ``in discussions with the Syrian government on all issues pertaining to the alleged use of chemical weapons, including this most recent reported incident,'' a statement said.

Washington demanded that the inspectors be given unfettered access.

"For the UN's efforts to be credible, they must have immediate access to witnesses and affected individuals, and have the ability to examine and collect physical evidence without any interference or manipulation from the Syrian government,'' said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.

Washington has previously described chemical weapons use as a red line that might prompt it to intervene militarily in Syria.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said: "I hope this will wake up some who have supported the Assad regime, to realise its murderous and barbaric nature.''

Moscow, which has said it has proof of chemical weapons use by the rebels in March, expressed scepticism about the opposition's claims.

The foreign ministry said the timing of the allegations as UN inspectors began their work "`makes us think that we are once again dealing with a premeditated provocation.''

The heavy bombing on the outskirts of the capital could be heard by residents of Damascus, where a grey cloud capped the sky.

The Britain-based Observatory, which relies on a vast network of activists on the ground and medics, said the army operation was aimed at the recapture of Madhamiyat el-Sham, an area southwest of Damascus.

The Syrian Observatory called for inspectors to hastily visit the stricken sites and ensure access for medical aid.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon insisted Monday that the inspectors be granted unrestricted access to Syrian sites where chemical weapons have allegedly been used in the country's 29-month-old conflict.

The inspectors, expected to visit three sites including Khan al-Assal near Aleppo in the north, are due to be in Syria for 14 days, with the possibility for an extension of the mission.


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