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Qld man charged with attempted gun murder

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 12 April 2014 | 11.51

A MAN has been charged with the attempted shooting murder of a woman south of Brisbane.

Police say the woman, 36, suffered two gunshot wounds to her arm during a disturbance at a Chambers Flat property on Friday night.

A 38-year-old man has been charged with attempted murder, unlawful possession of a firearm, acts intended to maim and entering a dwelling with intent.

He is due to appear in Beenleigh Magistrates Court on Monday.


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Two police injured in Adelaide pursuit

Two police officers have been injured after a dramatic car chase through central Adelaide. Source: AAP

TWO police officers have been injured after a dramatic car chase through central Adelaide.

A stolen white Hyundai was reversed into a police vehicle after crashing into another vehicle in the city's centre on Friday night.

Police pursued the Hyundai but abandoned the chase, only to find the car a short time later.

Two officers were then struck by the car as they tried to arrest the driver.

They arrested two 14-year-old passengers, but the driver fled through a nearby park.

The officers were taken to the Royal Adelaide Hospital with minor injuries.

The youths were charged with theft and aggravated serious criminal trespass in relation to a break-in at Woodville.

They were refused bail and will appear in the Adelaide Youth Court on Monday.


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Vic hoons' cars clamped in own driveways

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 11 April 2014 | 11.51

Victorian police will trial using wheel clamps on hoons' cars to reduce the costs of impounding. Source: AAP

MELBOURNE'S hoon drivers face having their cars clamped outside their own homes.

Police will use wheel clamps on hoons' cars in a bid to reduce the costs of impounding vehicles.

Road Policing Command Assistant Commissioner Robert Hill says police impounded 4600 vehicles last year, with a similar number expected this year.

"We believe immobilisation will reduce our vehicle storage costs, but more importantly, it will alleviate officers having to wait around for tow trucks and get them back on the road," Mr Hill said on Friday.

Officers will decide if a hoon driver caught for excessive speeding, repeat drink-driving or driving while disqualified will have their car immobilised at their home or if it should be taken to an impound facility.

Third-party contractors will put wheel clamps or steering locks on the cars within 10 days of the offence.

A sticker will be put on the car warning about fines for tampering with the immobilisation device or unauthorised relocation.

The immobilisation option will be trialled across metropolitan Melbourne for the next six months.


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Coca Cola Amatil flags 15% earnings drop

Weakness in its Australian beverages division have hit Coca Cola Amatil's first half earnings. Source: AAP

BEVERAGES supplier Coca-Cola Amatil (CCA) is reviewing all its operations after flagging a 15 per cent fall in first half earnings due to weakness in its Australian operations and higher costs in Indonesia.

New group managing director Alison Watkins, who joined CCA from agribusiness GrainCorp in early March, says CCA would review its assets, cost base, marketing strategies, spending priorities, product mix and productivity.

"There are clearly some structural issues impacting our business which will require us to challenge our model thoroughly if we are to continue to deliver long-term sustainable growth," Ms Watkins said on Friday.

"So, we have commenced a strategic review."

CCA will provide details at its annual general meeting in May.

CCA expects its earnings for the first six months of 2014 to be around 15 per cent less than the $374 million in earnings before interest and tax (before significant items) the company recorded for the same period a year ago.

Shares in CCA had fallen $1.57, or 13.77 per cent, to $9.83 by 1337 AEST, in the wake of the profit warning.

Ms Watkins said that in February CCA had highlighted concerns about weak consumer confidence and spending in Australia, and rising costs in Indonesia.

Since that time, discounting by competitors such as Pepsi had put pressure on CCA's margins in major supermarkets, and the company had not been able to lift prices to compensate for rising costs.

Also, the consumer response to some of CCA's marketing campaigns had been weaker than expected.

CCA had held market share in carbonated soft drinks and grown share in sports and energy drinks but was not participating effectively enough in the water segment, which was the standout growth category in grocery outlets.

In non-grocery outlets, which includes cold drink fridges, convenience stores, and fast food restaurants, consumer demand had been soft.

Also, fast food chains were gradually taking over from small family-run outlets such as fish-and-chip shops. CCA makes a smaller profit from sales to fast food chains because the chains have the scale to demand lower prices.

In Indonesia, there was intense competition and a swing by consumers to multi-serve packs and water, which were less profitable products.

Sales volumes in Indonesia were up but were offset by a slide in the value of the Indonesian rupiah, and higher wages and fuel costs.

Ms Watkins said CCA remained excited by the longer-term opportunities in Indonesia, given a sound market, solid economic growth, rapidly rising incomes, and strong growth in per capita consumption of commercial beverages.

"But is a developing market, and we will undoubtedly go through periods of volatility," she said.

CCA said its SPC Ardmona packaged fruits and vegetables business had lifted its sales 10 per cent during the quarter thanks to strong consumer support in the wake of financial assistance from the Victorian government for the struggling business.


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Tripodi questioned Obeid's motives: ICAC

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 10 April 2014 | 11.51

Former NSW minister Tony Kelly has admitted a cabinet minute that didn't favour AWH was rewritten. Source: AAP

FORMER NSW powerbroker Joe Tripodi says Eddie Obeid's repeated questioning about Australian Water Holdings made him wonder if the Obeid family had a financial stake in the firm.

Mr Tripodi told the corruption watchdog that Obeid had asked him about the progress of AWH chief executive Nick Di Girolamo's "matter" - a lucrative deal with the NSW government - on a number of occasions.

The Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) is probing allegations the Obeid family had a secret $3 million stake in the company and stood to make up to $60 million if the proposed public-private partnership got up.

"There was (sic) a couple of times where he had asked me how his matter was progressing, Mr Di Girolamo's matter," Mr Tripodi said, including during his time as the state's infrastructure minister.

The "nature of the question" made him wonder if the Obeids had a stake in AWH, he said, but Obeid disclosed only that his son Edward Obeid Jr was working for the company.

"On one occasion, I said to him, Eddie, you and your family don't have any commercial interest in this? He said no, no, Junior's giving Australian Water a hand up in Queensland," Mr Tripodi told the commission.

Earlier on Thursday, the inquiry heard evidence from former NSW planning minister Tony Kelly, who said he spoke to Mr Tripodi about an AWH cabinet minute Mr Kelly had instructed be rewritten.

Mr Kelly said Mr Tripodi arrived unannounced at his property in Wellington - about a five-hour drive from Sydney - but that the visit took place before he was contacted by ICAC investigators.

"Mr Tripodi knocked on my door. He had a hamburger and a coffee," Mr Kelly said.

He said the pair chatted for up to half an hour about what their former parliamentary colleagues were up to.

Mr Tripodi then mentioned fellow former Labor minister Frank Sartor was writing a book "bagging out Labor", which was to include mention of the allegedly doctored minute.

"And then he finished his hamburger and said, OK, good to catch up with you," Mr Kelly said.

The inquiry continues.


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Ten posts $8 million loss

Ten Network has posted an $8m first half loss, a substantial improvement compared to a year ago. Source: AAP

TEN Network Holdings has posted an $8 million first half loss, a vast improvement on the $243 million loss it suffered 12 months ago.

The TV network lifted its revenue to $331.6 million for the six months to February 28, up 7.8 per cent compared to its first half results last year.

Chief executive Hamish McLennan said the network had its best summer ratings period since 2008, thanks to its coverage of the T20 Big Bash League cricket and the Sochi Winter Olympics, which helped lift revenues.

But the higher revenues were offset by an 8.2 per cent increase in costs, linked to the coverage of the Big Bash and the launch of new morning television programs late in November.

Mr McLennan said the network would work to rein in costs but would spend money where necessary to boost Ten's performance.

"Strict cost control is part of Ten's DNA and we will continue to find new ways to work smarter and more efficiently. At the same time, we will make prudent and strategic investments in content to execute our turnaround strategy."

Mr McLennan also warned the network continued to face tough conditions in the advertising market.

"Advertising market conditions remain short, with many advertisers reluctant to commit to long-term campaigns," he said.

"As a result, the outlook for the television advertising market is uncertain at this stage."

The company will not pay an interim dividend.

Ten Network shares were up one cent at 27 cents at 1413 AEST.


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Eddie Obeid in the box at ICAC

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 09 April 2014 | 11.51

Former Labor powerbroker Eddie Obeid is due to give evidence to the NSW corruption watchdog again. Source: AAP

CROOKED former NSW minister Eddie Obeid has taken his place in the corruption watchdog's witness box.

Obeid's much-anticipated appearance before the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) began with an admission he had raised the subject of Australian Water Holdings (AWH) with several Labor heavyweights.

He said he'd talked about infrastructure firm AWH, or its chief executive Nick Di Girolamo, with former NSW treasurer Michael Costa, former water minister Phil Costa and former premiers Nathan Rees, Morris Iemma and Kristina Keneally.

The ICAC is probing allegations the Obeid family had a secret stake in AWH and stood to make millions if a $1 billion public private partnership with the NSW government got up.

But Obeid on Wednesday echoed the testimony of his sons Paul and Moses, who have already told the commission that a document entitled "Sale of Shares" in fact recorded a decision to lend $3 million to Mr Di Girolamo.

Despite intense media attention in the public inquiry, Obeid told counsel he had never heard any suggestion that his family had bought into AWH.

"I'm aware of a loan," Mr Obeid told counsel assisting Geoffrey Watson.

"I don't read the newspapers."

He also told the inquiry he was not aware Mr Di Girolamo was best friends with his son Edward, to which Mr Watson asked: "Aren't they godfather of each others' children?"

Obeid also said Edward never told him he was going to begin working for AWH.

Instead, he eventually heard it "down the grapevine".

"It wasn't a secret was it?" Mr Watson asked.

"Well I just wasn't told," Obeid replied.

"As far as I was concerned, Edward was working in the family business."

But Obeid emphatically denied raising AWH with former NSW ministers Joe Tripodi and Tony Kelly, who are both slated to follow him into the ICAC witness box on Wednesday.

Obeid will return to the witness box on Wednesday afternoon.


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Manufacturing not all bad news: report

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 08 April 2014 | 11.51

AUSTRALIA'S manufacturing sector is not all doom and gloom despite the recent string of job losses, a report says.

The Manufacturing Workforce Study 2014 says the jobs decline was driven by a transition out of heavy industrial manufacturing and into hi-tech, and higher value-added, goods where Australia has shown it is globally competitive.

"Aggregate employment in this industry has been decreasing ... and at the same time Australia's prosperity has increased," said Sue Beitz, general manager of the Australian Workforce and Productivity Agency (AWPA) which prepared the report.

"We also know that it is not doom and gloom in every single (manufacturing) sector ... we do see that there are fabulous opportunities in the areas of pharmaceutical, biotechnology, food and beverage, either in moving to the higher end of production or entering new markets."

The report says Australia needs to increase the skill levels of the manufacturing workforce, noting almost half (45.2 per cent) of existing workers do not hold any post-school qualifications.

"Recently the high dollar has been touted as a real challenge ... The issue is really about how we continue to adapt our manufacturing industry from the capital intensive to knowledge intensive offering," Mrs Beitz said.

"And this challenge of getting clever people out of laboratories and into businesses."

The report found almost one million Australians (936,400) were employed in manufacturing and this has declined 10.2 per cent over the past decade (or around 106,600 jobs).

Under the "three most plausible scenarios" considered by the AWPA, manufacturing job were forecast to continue to decline 1.0 to 1.5 per cent per annum out to 2025.

The report's release comes amid speculation the Abbott government is preparing to abolish AWPA and merge its functions into the Department of Industry.

AWPA, established by Labor in 2012, includes representatives of Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI), the Australian Industry Group and unions.

"The Abbott government claims it wants input from industry, yet it is apparently seeking to disband the key national policy and research body on skills, which brings stakeholders together," opposition industry spokesman Kim Carr said.


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Batts scheme termination killed business

FORMER environment minister Peter Garrett's word that the home insulation program would last caused the financial ruin of a Queensland company, an inquiry has heard.

Greg Rashleigh has told a royal commission his company, All Seasons Insulation, ramped up business after he attended a meeting in March 2009 where Mr Garrett said the scheme would run for two years or until the money ran out.

Mr Rashleigh built a $2 million manufacturing mill.

Eleven months later, the Rudd government scheme, introduced during the global financial crisis, was prematurely terminated after the deaths of four installers.

Mr Rashleigh was forced to close his Toowoomba-based business of 34 years in May 2010, leaving him with the unused mill and $3.36 million worth of stock, the inquiry was told.

He later received 15 per cent commonwealth compensation for the insulation stock.

"Mr Garrett was the minister at the time and he was the one who was going to tell us if we could ramp up or not," Mr Rashleigh said.

"Hearing it from him, especially from him, was sufficient for me to say we have to get going."

Mr Rashleigh said he could still picture Mr Garrett gesturing emphatically with his right hand while giving his word.

"I can see him doing it right now ... he's got a hand three times as big as mine," he said.

Mr Rashleigh said the early termination of the pink batts scheme left the industry in tatters.

"It was like someone turned the tap off," he said.

"One day you were working 24/7 ... the next day there was nothing."

Mr Rashleigh said the industry still hadn't recovered.

"Insulation is a dirty word. Nobody wants to know it," he said.

The inquiry continues.


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Talks on Japan trade deal difficult: PM

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 06 April 2014 | 11.51

PM Tony Abbott says he's optimistic but not certain about finalising a free trade deal with Japan. Source: AAP

TONY Abbott's push to resolve free trade talks with Japan appears on shaky ground, with the prime minister admitting he's not certain of striking a deal during his visit to Tokyo.

Mr Abbott had hoped to finalise a free trade deal with Japan, Australia's second-largest trading partner, as a matter of priority on his first official visit to north Asia.

He ambitiously pledged at the September election to end years of stalemate and strike free trade agreements with Japan, South Korea and China within 12 months.

But a resolution from fierce last-minute talks in Tokyo has eluded negotiators, who have struggled all week to gain ground on several final issues.

Mr Abbott said on Sunday he was "optimistic" a deal could be struck during his stay in Tokyo, but conceded the talks had been difficult.

"This government is determined to bring them to a swift and satisfactory conclusion," he told reporters in Tokyo.

"I'm hopeful but not certain."

Trade Minister Andrew Robb arrived in Tokyo ahead of the prime minister to try and break the impasse, but after hours with Japan's agriculture minister could only say talks had entered an advanced but difficult stage.

Mr Abbott said negotiations had "meandered" under Labor after former prime minister John Howard initiated talks in 2007.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop also blamed the opposition for neglecting the task, saying the federal government had "six lost years" to regain.

She dismissed suggestions Australia's recent victory in the UN's top court over Japan's whaling program could have stalled talks, saying both nations would "move on".

"We are hopeful of signing, or at least getting an official confirmation about the state of the Japan Australia free trade agreement," she told ABC TV.

The deadlock could be on the agenda when Mr Abbott meets his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe on Sunday evening for a private dinner.

Mr Abbott's visit will be formally acknowledged in a state ceremony on Monday, but the prime minister said he'd been "thrilled" at the welcome so far.

He said there was more than trade behind his visit to Japan, with an announcement on defence co-operation with the conservative Abe government expected in coming days.


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Police shoot man in Brisbane

A man has been shot by police responding to a domestic disturbance on Brisbane's bayside. Source: AAP

A MAN is in a critical but stable condition after being shot by police during a domestic dispute on Brisbane's bayside.

Two police officers arrived at the Capalaba unit about 7.30pm (AEST) on Saturday.

When they tried to arrest the man, the male officer was allegedly thrown through a plate glass window and was severely cut.

It is understood a policewoman responded by shooting the offender twice in the stomach.

Police Union president Ian Leavers said the situation escalated quickly.

"She made an instant decision with the view of protecting her partner's life," Mr Leavers said.

"She is heroic. These are things where you don't get time to consider your decision, you have to make it immediately.

"We're very fortunate that we're not here at the murder of a police officer."

The injured officer is in a serious but stable condition and is expected to have surgery.

It is the second police shooting at the unit complex.

In March 2011, a policewoman shot a man in the groin who had threatened neighbours.

Mr Leavers said he was tired of violence against officers and renewed calls for mandatory sentencing for people who seriously assault police.

"If you threaten the life of a police officer you should go directly to jail," he said.

"There should be no other option."

The Ethical Standards Command is investigating.


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