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Oprah Winfrey forbes hollywood celebrities

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 16 Maret 2013 | 20.47

OPRAH Winfrey has topped the Forbes magazine list of most-influential celebrities of 2013 for the second year in a row.

Forty-eight per cent of people rated Winfrey, 59, as "influential," according to the magazine's survey this year.

The survey ranks 7500 celebrities by 46 different attributes.

Despite her Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN) having struggled in the ratings since its launch, Oprah was down just one point from 2012.

Reuters pointed out that OWN had received a boost from Winfrey's January interview with cyclist Lance Armstrong, a world exclusive in which he admitted to years of doping.

She also conducted a high-rating interview with Beyonce.

Winfrey edged out Steven Spielberg, in second place, by just one point.

Fellow filmmakers Martin Scorsese, Ron Howard and Star Wars creator George Lucas round out the top five.

U2 rocker Bono and actor-director Clint Eastwood are also in the top 10.

Meanwhile, two of Oprah's proteges also made the top 10: Dr. Mehmet Oz, at seven with 40 per cent of respondents rating him influential; and Suze Orman at number nine.

Commenting on her "notable attribute" - being "classy" - Forbes also listed Barbara Walters at number eight with a 37 per cent influential rating.


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Berlusconi tax trial postponed

FORMER Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has obtained another postponement of one of his trials, as judges agreed to adjourn a hearing on his tax fraud appeal trial.

In October, Berlusconi was handed a four-year jail term, reduced to one year because of a remit law, because his family firm Mediaset created an offshore scheme to reduce its tax bill. He said he was prime minister at the time and knew nothing of it.

The Milan court hearing the case accepted a request by Berlusconi's lawyers to postpone a hearing that was set for Saturday, because Berlusconi was busy in Rome for the election of the new speakers of the houses of parliament.

Under Italian law, defendants do not have to be present in court.

But if they claim they want to follow a hearing but have a "legitimate impediment" preventing them from doing so, judges may agree to adjourn proceedings.

Saturday's hearing was moved to March 23, the day on which, according to the original schedule, an appeal verdict was due to be delivered.

The trial may be suspended again if judges agree to a request by the defence to move proceedings from Milan to Brescia. Berlusconi says this is necessary because he claims that Milan courts are biased against him.

Prosecutors have in return complained that Berlusconi is using stalling tactics to block trials against him.

Over the past week, Berlusconi has secured several postponements of hearings in his other ongoing trial in Milan, which sees him accused of soliciting an underage prostitute and of abuse of power.

The media mogul and politician has often been in the news for legal troubles. He was handed a one-year prison term for a smear campaign against a political rival, and was accused by a former lawmaker of bribing him to defect from the centre-left.

But despite the scandals, Berlusconi, a populist conservative, still holds sway with voters. In elections last month, he was only just beaten by the centre-left.


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President elected for Italy's lower house

LAURA Boldrini, a former UN refugee agency official and a passionate advocate for migrants' rights, has been elected president of Italy's lower house of parliament.

Boldrini, a first-time deputy for the Left, Ecology and Freedom (SEL) party, was also supported by the Democratic Party (PD), the biggest faction in the centre-left alliance that won the February 24-25 elections by a whisker.

Boldrini's election to the presidency of the Chamber of Deputies on Saturday cleared one obstacle to the creation of a government.

A president for the Senate, or upper house, also needs to be chosen, but the election is harder because no coalition has enough seats in the chamber to elect its own candidate.

The centre-left has proposed Piero Grasso, formerly Italy's top anti-mafia prosecutor. His chances of winning rest on the Five Star Movement (M5S), an anti-establishment party which has emerged as the third-largest force in parliament.

Centre-left leader Pier Luigi Bersani has repeatedly asked the M5S to strike a deal, but has so far been rebuffed.

Grasso's main rival is outgoing president Renato Schifani, supported by the centre-right coalition of former premier Silvio Berlusconi.

Italian President Giorgio Napolitano said he would start government coalition talks on Wednesday.

He urged politicians to be ready for compromise in order to break the deadlock.

Bersani is trying to form a government with the M5S and has ruled out a grand coalition with Berlusconi.

There is also a centrist grouping led by outgoing premier Mario Monti, but it did not win enough seats to be able to act as kingmaker.

The political stalemate has raised fears that Italy will be left rudderless for a prolonged period, despite the urgent need for reforms to create jobs and growth amid a severe recession.

However, financial markets have, for the moment, remained relatively calm.

If no ruling majority can be formed in coming weeks, new elections may be called. However, this cannot happen until the newly elected parliament votes on a successor to Napolitano, whose term ends in May.


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Planned burnings set to resume in Victoria

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 15 Maret 2013 | 20.47

Tanya Plibersek says relations may be improving between the Victorian and Commonwealth government. Source: AAP

MELBOURNE March 15 AAP - Victorians can expect less hazardous fires because of controlled burns, set to resume in light of improving weather conditions, the state government says.

As the recent heatwave that gripped Melbourne eases, the Department of Sustainability and Environment (DSE) and Parks Victoria will resume their fuel reduction program.

Environment and Climate Change Minister Ryan Smith said the state government was stepping up its efforts to protect Victorians from wild fire hazards.

"Planned burning is an important part of our work to reduce the threat of severe bushfires," he said.

DSE chief fire officer Alan Goodwin said the decision to restart planned burns had been made subject to suitable weather conditions.

"We know that seeing smoke when the weather is still warm, especially after experiencing bushfires like we've had, can cause concern for some people," he said.

"It's vital that we carry out these planned burns whenever the weather is right."

About 215,000 hectares of land is marked for burning.

Fuel reduction includes the controlled burning of grassland, branches and other materials that are highly flammable in extreme heat.


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Qantas owes workers $50,000: union

The Transport Workers Union of NSW says about 400 workers are owed $50,000 by Qantas. Source: AAP

A UNION says $50,000 in disability allowances owed by Qantas to 400 workers will be donated to a charity if the airline pays up.

The Transport Workers Union of NSW said on Friday the money was part of a disability allowance under the terms of their Workplace Agreement for exposure to construction work.

It says about 400 workers are owed the entitlement from the airline with amounts ranging from as little as $5 up to about $200 per person.

"This money has not been paid despite an agreement months ago that the airline would cough up the entitlements," the union's Sydney sub-branch secretary, Mick Pieri, said in a statement.

"The airline quibbled over the exact amounts owed to our members and argued that some members were entitled to very little, if anything at all.

"Rather than engage in a long legal battle over a few hundred dollars per person, our members decided that it would be better to donate the agreed combined total to charity."

A Qantas spokesman said the money would be paid straight to workers, who could then make their own decisions about where it should go.

"Qantas has made it clear that we will make these payments for the agreed amounts directly to our employees," he said.

"We have been awaiting confirmation from the Transport Workers Union on this before proceeding."


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Five face jail over fake UK movie

THE clue was in the title.

In some ways A Landscape of Lies was a typical indie film, with a tiny budget, a B-list cast and an award from an American film festival.

What made it special was that it was created solely to cover up a huge tax fraud.

Five people in Britain face jail sentences after being convicted this week of attempting to bilk the government of STG2.8 million ($A4.1 million) in a moviemaking scam reminiscent of Academy Award-winning hit Argo - without the heroic hostage rescue.

Prosecutors and tax authorities say the fraudsters claimed to be producing a made-in-Britain movie with unnamed A-list actors and a STG19 million budget supplied by a Jordanian firm.

In fact, officials say, the project was a sham, set up to claim almost STG1.5 million in goods and services tax for work that had not been done, as well as STG1.3 million under a government program that allows filmmakers to claim back up to 25 per cent of their expenditure as tax relief.

Britain's tax agency, Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, said that the filmmakers had submitted paperwork and already received STG1.7 million when checks revealed "that the work had not been done and most of the so-called suppliers and film studios had never heard of the gang."

The self-described movie producers were arrested on suspicion of tax fraud in April 2011 - and decided their best shot at avoiding criminal charges was to hastily make a film.

Paul Knight, a true-crime writer turned low-budget filmmaker, was hired to write and direct A Landscape of Lies, described in its internet movie database entry as a crime thriller about a Gulf War veteran out for justice for a murdered comrade.

The production was announced in film industry magazines. The casting of Andrea McLean, a host of talk show Loose Women,as a troubled, bisexual therapist was reported in the tabloid Sun. The producers also recruited a former soap actor - Marc Bannerman from the BBC's EastEnders"

Neither the stars nor Knight were accused of knowing about the fraud.

A Landscape of Lies was released straight to DVD in Britain in 2011. But it did garner some fans, winning a commendation called a Silver Ace award at last year's Las Vegas Film Festival.

That wasn't enough to deter the tax authorities. Five producers from various parts of Britain - Bashar Al-Issa, Aoife Madden, Tariq Hassan, Ian Sherwood and Osama Al Baghdady - were convicted Tuesday of conspiracy to cheat the public revenue at London's Southwark Crown Court. They will be sentenced March 25.


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Find new ways to spread faith, says Pope

Pope Francis has warned in his first mass that the Catholic Church risks becoming a charity. Source: AAP

POPE Francis has urged the troubled Catholic Church not to give in to "pessimism" and to find new ways of spreading the faith "to the ends of the earth".

"Let us not give in to pessimism, to that bitterness that the devil offers us every day," the 76-year-old Argentinian told an audience of the world's cardinals on Friday, his third day in office.

In a reference to the declining number of worshippers in many parts of the world, he urged the cardinals to find "the courage to persevere and also to find new ways to bring evangelisation to the ends of the earth".

Francis said he and they were "elderly", but old age brought wisdom.

"Let us give this wisdom to young people like good wine that gets better over the years," he said.

The first Latin American Pope in history hailed his predecessor Benedict XVI's historic resignation as a "courageous and humble act".

Benedict, who last month became the first Pope to stand down for 700 years, had "lit a flame in the depth of our hearts that will continue to burn", he said.

The new Pope wore white papal vestments but also plain black shoes, not the red shoes favoured by his German predecessor, for the address in the ornate 16th-century Clementine Hall in the Apostolic Palace at the Vatican.

Jorge Mario Bergoglio has signalled his will be a more simple papacy, stripped of the fineries enjoyed by his predecessors, and has called for a return to the Church's roots.

On Thursday, he gave a stark warning that the Church, wracked by scandal and Vatican infighting, risked becoming just another charitable organisation if it strayed from its true mission.

The speeches are part of a series of events leading to his inauguration mass on Tuesday - a significant date in the Catholic calendar because it is the Feast of St Joseph, the patron saint of the universal church.

The new pontiff is also due to meet his predecessor, who has withdrawn to the papal summer residence in Castel Gandolfo, in the coming days.

The surprise election of the son of an Italian emigrant railway worker, who was considered a rank outsider before the cardinals began their confidential deliberations, has sparked hope for change in the Catholic Church.

His elevation is also being seen as a nod to the Church's power in Latin America, home to 40 per cent of the world's Catholics. In Europe, its traditional power base, it is ageing and declining.

Projecting an image as a simple man of the people, the Pope chose to name himself after St Francis of Assisi, the 13th century saint who shunned the riches of his family to devote himself to God and the poor.

As archbishop of Buenos Aires, he lived in a modest apartment rather than the official residence, and took buses to work, and he has already made his mark in Rome with his informal style.

The Vatican revealed that following his election Francis had turned down a ride in the papal limousine and instead insisted on boarding a minibus with the cardinals.

But the new Pope's past in Argentina, and especially his actions during its 1976-83 military dictatorship, are coming under the microscope.

Bergoglio and other Catholic clergy were lambasted by leftist critics for failing to act against the regime during Argentina's "Dirty War" in which 30,000 people died or disappeared.

Under particular scrutiny is his role in the arrest of two young Jesuits, Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics, who were taken to a notorious torture centre by the junta.

Bergoglio was alleged to have betrayed the young missionaries to the regime because they had become opposition sympathisers and he wanted to preserve the Jesuits' political neutrality.

For his part, Bergoglio has always denied any implication in the case of the two missionaries, and even insists he intervened with the head of the junta, Jorge Videla, to beg for their freedom.


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Girl, 13, missing from Melbourne

A 13-YEAR-OLD girl has gone missing from Melbourne's outer suburbs.

Eliza Falua was last seen at a medical centre in Dandenong at around 4.30pm (AEDT) on Friday, police said.

She was due to be collected by family members at Dandenong railway station at 3pm.

Police have concerns for Eliza's welfare.


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Wild cyclonic weather to hit Lord Howe

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 14 Maret 2013 | 20.47

A tropical cyclone is expected to cause extreme winds and surf on Lord Howe Island. Source: AAP

A TROPICAL cyclone is expected to pass close by Lord Howe Island on Friday morning, lashing the island with damaging winds and surf, the weather bureau says.

The Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) said on Thursday night that the category two cyclone was tracking south in the northern Tasman sea, and would pass to the east of the Pacific island on Friday morning.

On its website, BoM said the island off the NSW coast could expect "damaging surf, heavy swells and abnormally high tides" through the rest of Thursday and Friday.

This included wind gusts up to 150km/h until the early hours of Friday, it said.

BoM advised that the cyclone would weaken as it passed by the island.

It also said heavy rain caused by the cyclonic conditions would probably cause flash flooding overnight.

Residents and holidaymakers on Lord Howe Island were being warned to bunker down as the cyclone approaches.

Luke Hanson, the manager of the largest guest lodge on the island, said the conditions were "scary" as the cyclonic winds headed for the island.

"This cyclone's a direct hit, this will be the first time we've been whacked by a category two," Mr Hanson told AAP by phone.

"Everyone's a bit nervous, we've been getting all the guests settled, they've all had an early dinner and gone to bed, and they're just going to ride out the night.

"They don't come to Lord Howe Island in March thinking they're going to get hit by a cyclone."

He said residents had been strapping down outside furniture and sandbagging in preparation for the weather to worsen overnight.

Meanwhile, a high seas weather warning has been issued for Tropical Cyclone Tim, which is currently about 500km east northeast of Cairns.


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Honda recalls vehicles for braking issue

Honda is recalling vehicles for brakes that can suddenly kick in when the driver isn't braking. Source: AAP

HONDA is recalling nearly 250,000 vehicles, including 1000 in Australia, for brakes that can suddenly kick in when the driver isn't braking.

No crashes have been reported related to the defect.

The affected vehicles were produced from March 2004 to June 2006.

The affected models include the Acura RL, Acura MDX, Pilot, Odyssey, Legend, StepWgn and Elysion.

The problem is caused by electronics and wiring in the vehicle-stability-assist system.


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Man's body found near Broken Hill

THE body of an elderly man has been found near Broken Hill in outback NSW.

Police said two elderly men, aged 81 and 78, went missing on Wednesday near Broken Hill after leaving the isolated mining town in a four-wheel drive.

Police told AAP on Thursday night that a search for the men was launched on Thursday, and the vehicle was located on Thursday.

One of the elderly men was found deceased near the vehicle while the other man was found alive, they said.

The 4WD may have become bogged, police said.

The ABC reports that the men were on a prospecting trip in a remote part of the region.

It also reports that the man who was found alive has been taken to hospital and is in a stable condition.

In a statement, police said the 4WD was found in remote country known as Euriowie, about 70km north of Broken Hill, about 1.45pm (AEDT) on Thursday.

Police say a report will be prepared for the coroner.


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UK, France prepared to arm Syrian rebels

FRANCE and Britain are ready to arm rebels in Syria, even without full support from the European Union, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius says.

UK government sources said on Thursday that no decision had been taken to seek the lifting of the EU arms embargo on Syria, but "all options" remain on the table.

Prime Minister David Cameron hinted earlier this week that Britain could decide to ignore the arms ban and supply weapons to rebels fighting Bashar Assad's regime, telling MPs that he hoped the EU would act together if it became necessary, but "it's not out of the question we might have to do things in our own way".

Cameron is visiting Brussels for a summit with other EU leaders, but Downing Street said Syria was not expected to feature on the agenda.

It is understood that Britain wants to see what impact is achieved by the recent move to supply "non-lethal" assistance - including armoured cars, body armour and secure communications equipment - before further decisions are taken.

Fabius on Thursday suggested London and Paris could ask for an EU meeting planned for May to be brought forward, possibly to the end of March.

Speaking to France Info radio, Fabius said Britain and France were asking the Europeans to lift the arms embargo "so that the resistance fighters have the possibility of defending themselves".

If unanimous EU support for lifting the measure is lacking, the French and British governments would decide to deliver weapons, Fabius said, adding that France "is a sovereign nation".

"We must move quickly," he said.

Responding to Fabius's remarks, a UK foreign office spokesman said: "Our objective is clear - an end to the violence and a political transition to a more democratic Syria through a political solution.

"As it stands, the political track has little chance of gathering momentum unless the regime feels compelled to come to the negotiating table. They need to feel that the balance on the ground has shifted against them.

"The foreign secretary has been clear he hasn't ruled out any options for the future."


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Govt lets down defence victims: taskforce

THE head of a taskforce investigating alleged abuses in the defence force says he's disillusioned with the federal government's failure to act on claims - and thinks victims may be too.

DLA Piper taskforce leader Gary Rumble told a Senate Foreign Affairs Defence and Trade hearing on Thursday that he was disappointed none of the matters raised in a 2012 report had been acted on.

Law firm DLA Piper was commissioned to examine abuse allegations following the Skype scandal at the Australian Defence Force Academy (ADFA) in 2011 and uncovered 775 plausible abuse allegations across every decade since the 1950s. The earliest related to events in 1951.

"I am deeply concerned that the government's lack of action and decision last year may have distressed individuals who were hoping for some response to their specific issue (and) worn down the willingness of those who told their stories ... to continue to be involved," Dr Rumble said.

He said he was worried the lack of action would encourage perpetrators and potential witnesses to think they could escape punishment.

Dr Rumble said the taskforce had been directed to write a second report for the Chief of the Defence Force and Service Chiefs but only the defence minister, Stephen Smith, had seen it.

Mr Smith wrote to him saying it would not have been appropriate for anyone other than him to see the report.

Earlier on Thursday, Mr Smith told parliament new complaints to the taskforce's hotline had been building steadily since it opened last November.

At March 4, there had been 1041 complaints.

Just over 780 were made by personal phone call and in voicemail messages, while 260 were sent by email.

Taskforce chairman, retired judge Len Roberts-Smith, told Mr Smith there was no realistic prospect of its work being completed within the initial 12-month term, so the government has agreed to a six-month extension, with the taskforce now due to conclude its investigations by the end of May 2014.

As well, there will be an end-of-May 2013 deadline for new allegations to be made.

The taskforce is examining individual allegations, which if sufficiently substantiated could allow victims to claim up to $50,000 in compensation.

It is also considering whether a full royal commission is needed to address outstanding allegations at ADFA in the 1990s and allegations of sexual and other abuse of naval cadets at the former navy training centre, HMAS Leeuwin, which operated from 1960-84.

The taskforce said it appeared the abuse at Leeuwin occurred in the 1960s and 1970s.

"Much of the alleged bullying and violence appears to have been unreported," Mr Smith said.

Shadow Defence Minister David Johnston slammed the federal government's "snail pace" response and the way in which Mr Smith has handled the issue as if it were an "afterthought".


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Spain's Inditex posts record 2012 profit

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 13 Maret 2013 | 20.47

THE world's biggest clothing group, Spain's Inditex which controls the Zara brand, has posted a record 2012 net profit as strong sales abroad, especially in Asia, and a global expansion offset belt-tightening by its domestic consumers.

The company said its 2012 net profit rose 22 per cent to 2.36 billion euros ($A3.00 billion) in the 12 months ending on January 31 while sales were up 16 per cent to 15.9 billion euros.

Inditex, founded 40 years ago in Arteixo, Galicia, by billionaire Amancio Ortega, the son of a railwayman, reported a net opening of 482 stores during the period, including 121 in China and its first outlets in Armenia, Bosnia, Ecuador, Georgia and Macedonia.

The company, whose other brands include teen label Bershka, higher-cost offering Massimo Dutti and casual line Pull and Bear, now has 6009 stores in 86 countries.

Spain, which is undergoing a double-dip recession, accounted for 21 per cent of its sales, down from 25 per cent in the previous 12-month period while the rest of Europe accounted for 45 per cent of its sales, the same as in the same year-ago period.

Asia accounted for 20 per cent of the company's sales, up from 18 per cent.

Store sales rose 12 per cent between February 1 to March 11, compared with the same period last year.

The company plans to open between 440 and 480 new shops around the world in 2013.

Ortega vaulted from fifth into the third spot in the Forbes list of global billionaires last year, making him the biggest gainer.


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Police detain child 'bombers' in Pakistan

PAKISTANI police have arrested around a dozen children, some as young as 10, suspected of being used to plant bombs for separatist militants, officers say.

The arrests were made in raids over the past 24 hours, local police chief Mir Zubair Mahmood said while presenting the children at a news conference in Quetta, the capital of the restive province of Baluchistan.

A Baluch militant organisation had lured the children, who came from poor families, to leave packages containing home-made bombs in markets, dustbins and on routes used by police and security forces, Mahmood said.

Mahmood said the militants chose the youngsters knowing that police would not suspect small children or garbage collectors.

"Some of the children said they did not know what the packets contained and what they are doing," he said.

"They said they were happy they would get a small amount of money for dropping the packets."

Some of the boys, aged between 10 and 17, have confessed to involvement in about a dozen blasts in the city including a bombing near a vehicle of the paramilitary Frontier Corps (FC), he said.

The January 10 bomb blast killed two FC soldiers and nine civilians.

Baluchistan has been hit by an insurgency in recent years by Baluch nationalists demanding political autonomy and a greater share of profits from the province's wealth of natural oil, gas and mineral resources.

The province has also been the focus of rising sectarian violence and Quetta has been hit by two huge bombings this year targeting minority Shi'ite Muslims that have killed nearly 200 people.


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Rental vacancies decrease across NSW

RENTAL properties across NSW have become harder to get with vacancy rates dropping throughout the state, particularly in middle and outer Sydney and the Orana region, a new report says.

The Vacancy Rate Survey, released on Thursday by the Real Estate Institute of NSW (REINSW) lobby group, said the availability of rental properties in Sydney shrunk 0.3 per cent to 1.9 per cent of the market.

Vacancies in suburbs within 10 kilometres of the CBD remained stable at two per cent.

But in areas 10-25 km from the city, availability contracted 0.4 per cent to two per cent and in the outer suburbs, more than 25 km from the CBD, vacancies dropped 0.4 per cent to 1.8 per cent.

In Wollongong, they slid 0.1 per cent to 2.7 per cent and in the Hunter region vacancies sit at 2.3 per cent after a 0.3 decrease, despite a 0.5 per cent increase in Newcastle.

Coffs Harbour saw a retraction of 0.4 per cent but still boasts a 3.9 vacancy rate, the highest in NSW.

In the Riverina, the only area outside Newcastle where properties were freed up, the percentage of empty rental properties rose 0.8 points to 3.5 per cent.

Rentals in the southeast of NSW were also hard to find, with a 0.2 per cent decrease in the region and a 0.4 drop to 1.6 per cent in Albury.

The most difficult area to find a rental property was in the Orana region which includes Dubbo, Cobar and Mudgee.

Vacancy rates there slipped 0.6 per cent to 1.1 per cent.

REINSW president Christian Payne has laid the blame for the market contraction on the NSW government, saying it has failed to encourage investment in the property market.

"We need action today from the government to address the inadequate, expensive and complex planning system, and an inequitable property tax regime," Mr Payne said in a statement.

"If not remedied, the crisis will continue to have significant negative impacts on the future prospects of NSW both economically and socially."


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British PM tells party to tone down tweets

BRITISH Prime Minister David Cameron has warned his Conservative MPs not to air their grievances about the party's dismal poll ratings and his leadership on Twitter, reports say.

Cameron and his new party strategist Lynton Crosby, who helped Australia's John Howard win four elections, told Tory MPs they risked damaging their prospects for the 2015 general election.

According to the Daily Mail newspaper, Cameron's office said backbenchers were "participants, not commentators" after a string of what it called "distracting" comments on the social media website.

The Conservatives, the senior partners in a coalition government with the centrist Liberal Democrats, slumped to 27 per cent in a weekend poll and came a humiliating third in a recent by-election that they had hoped to win.

Combined with the continual economic gloom in Britain, which risks entering a triple-dip recession, MPs are becoming increasingly vocal in their criticisms of Cameron's leadership.

However, the prime minister's warning about Twitter appeared to have fallen on deaf ears.

MP Sarah Wollaston, who has complained that Cameron's inner circle is "too posh, male and white", took to Twitter to reject the demands to keep quiet.

"I cannot 'participate' without the freedom to 'comment', even if that is sometimes inconvenient to the executive," she tweeted.

She also noted the irony that Crosby's call for discipline appeared to have been leaked to the media beforehand.


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Fourth Bulgarian man sets himself on fire

A BULGARIAN man is in critical condition after setting himself on fire outside the presidency, authorities say, in the fourth such case in a recent wave of protests.

The 51-year-old man was hospitalised with 25 per cent burns after dousing himself with petrol and setting himself ablaze in the capital on Wednesday, the interior ministry said.

Three other men have died after self-immolating in an upsurge of public anger since last month against poverty and corruption in the European Union's poorest country. The protests forced the resignation of the government on February 20.

A caretaker technocrat government took office on Wednesday to run the country ahead of early elections on May 12 that polls suggest will return a highly fragmented parliament.


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Take or leave media reform, says Conroy

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 12 Maret 2013 | 20.47

THE government's proposed media reforms are a "take it or leave it" package which, if not passed by the end of next week, will be dumped, says Communications Minister Stephen Conroy.

Senator Conroy said there will be no bartering or cross-deals to get the legislation passed, adding that the government won't be dragged around for months to try to get the reforms passed.

"It is a package, take it or leave it," Senator Conroy said.

He said an independently appointed advocate would overlook the media landscape and could rule on whether proposed mergers would go ahead.

He said there was enormous economic pressure coming to bear on the industry which could lead to consolidation of ownership.

Senator Conroy said Fairfax Media and the TEN Network were under pressure, while Nine had just emerged from a mountain of debt.

"Diversity of opinion is a vital life blood of any democracy so we cannot afford further concentration of media ownership in this country," he said.

The criteria to be used by the media advocate to define what is in the public interest would include a media organisation's audience reach, the frequency and depth of its services, and whether it going out of business was worse than blocking the merger and having a reduced number of voices.

Reforms were needed because the Howard government watered down the cross-media laws in 2007, he said.

"We have got greater economic pressure today to see greater merger activity and that is not going to be in the public interest of all Australians or the interest of a democracy to have less voices," he said.


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Cost cuts or peril, Access tells retailers

EDS: Not for use before 0001 AEDT Wednesday, March 13

By Colin Brinsden, AAP Economics Correspondent

CANBERRA, March 13 AAP - Short-term gains from discounting which come at the expense of profit margins have made it more important than ever for retailers to cut costs, an independent forecaster says.

Deloitte Access Economics expects soft consumer demand will continue to affect the sector in 2013, after a disappointing 2012.

In its latest quarterly retail forecasts report, real or inflation adjusted sales are likely to grow by 2.2 per cent in 2012/13 and by 2.5 per cent in 2013/14.

But by 2014/15, retail growth should improve by 3.6 per cent as broader economic conditions and housing activity improves.

"Retailers waiting for the cavalry to arrive are increasingly focusing on containing their costs in order to stay viable," Deloitte Access Economics partner David Rumbens said on Wednesday.

While discounting can help sales in the short term, he said it was often at the expense of profit margins.

"In order to keep prices low on a sustainable basis, and remain competitive in the market, cost control is key," Mr Rumbens said.

However, there were signs retailers were having some success, with wage growth in the sector slowing to the pace seen immediately after the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

Mr Rumbens said Australia's underlying economic story was not as strong as it had been in recent years, providing the rationale for Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) interest rates cuts.

He said the cutting cycle was still to fully work through the economy.

"So future consumer spending growth should at least match income growth," he said.


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Rate of temporary work concerning: ACTU

EDS: Not for use before 0001 AEDT Wednesday, March 13

CANBERRA, March 13 AAP - Australia has overtaken recession-hit Spain as the OECD country with the second-highest rate of temporary workers.

Empirica Research to be released on Wednesday at a national summit on jobs and society shows 27.9 per cent of work in Australia is temporary.

Only Chile has a higher rate of temporary work.

ACTU President Ged Kearney will open the National Community Summit with a speech outlining how workplace changes are threatening social cohesion.

"We have forgotten that the burdens of economic change do not fall equally, that the drive to a more efficient and flexible economy has hurt some people more than others and increased inequality," Ms Kearney will say.

The Empirica Research also found 55 per cent of respondents' greatest concern for the future was their children not having access to good jobs when they grow up.


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Sharks, manta rays win trade protection

Written By Unknown on Senin, 11 Maret 2013 | 20.47

SEVERAL shark species and the manta ray have won international trade protection in a move hailed by conservationists as a breakthrough in efforts to save them from being wiped out by overfishing.

The deal at a major wildlife conference in Bangkok on Monday marked a rare victory in the fight by environmentalists to reverse a slump in populations of sharks - the world's oldest predator - due to rampant demand for its fins.

Rather than a complete ban, the 178-member Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) voted to restrict cross-border trade in the oceanic whitetip, the porbeagle, three types of hammerheads and the manta ray.

The agreement, which must still be formally approved by the CITES plenary session, delighted conservationists who warn that Asia's voracious appetite for shark fins is causing their population to plunge.

"The tide is now turning for shark conservation," said Elizabeth Wilson of Pew's Global Shark Conservation Campaign.

"With these new protections, oceanic whitetip, porbeagle, and hammerhead sharks will have the chance to recover and once again fulfil their role as top predators in the marine ecosystem."

Monday's deal would require countries to regulate trade by issuing export permits to ensure their sustainability in the wild, otherwise they could face sanctions by members of CITES, a global treaty which protects some 35,000 species.

Under the CITES framework, however, a party may ask to reconsider the decision at the plenary session, as happened in 2010 when an initial agreement to control international trade in the porbeagle was later overturned.

Conservationists say sharks are slow to reproduce and may become threatened with extinction without better monitoring and management.

"During their lifetimes they have relatively few offspring and they only start reproducing at a relatively late age - they're more like mammals in many ways than fish," said Colman O'Criodain, an expert with the WWF.

Asian nations led by Japan and China - where shark fin soup is considered a delicacy - tried in vain to block the proposals, which were pushed by countries including Brazil, Colombia and the United States.

If the deal gets final approval, the five species would join the great white shark, the whale shark and the basking shark, which already enjoy international trade controls. Members would have 18 months to introduce the new measures.

The CITES meeting is also discussing how to tackle illegal trade in ivory and rhino horn with environmentalists calling for wildlife trade sanctions against countries that fail to take sufficient action.

A proposed ban on international trade in polar bears was rejected last week, with opponents warning that it would distract from the bigger threat from global warming.


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Frenchman to proclaim new pope to world

THE honour of announcing the next leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics will fall to French cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, who will proclaim the outcome of the conclave from St Peter's Basilica.

The Bach-loving former Vatican diplomat will speak in Latin on a porch over St Peter's Square after the conclave of cardinals announces a new pope has been elected by sending out white smoke from the Sistine Chapel.

"Annuntio vobis gaudium magnum. Habemus papam! (I announce to you a great joy. We have a pope!)", Tauran will say and then announce the name of the elected cardinal and the papal title he has chosen.

The 70-year-old from Bordeaux has the official title of "cardinal proto-deacon", meaning he is the most senior cardinal from the order of deacons.

The college of cardinals is divided up into three orders: bishops, priests and deacons.

Tauran used to be the top Vatican official for inter-religious dialogue. He previously served as head of the Vatican's diplomatic service and travelled the world for late pope John Paul II.

His own election is seen as highly unlikely but if this happens then it would fall to another cardinal to announce his name in front of the cheering crowds in St Peter's and TV cameras from around the world.


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Queen delivers Commonwealth Day message

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 10 Maret 2013 | 20.47

THE Queen has promoted the theme of opportunity through enterprise in her Commonwealth Day message for 2013.

She said the theme was a celebration of achievements, "particularly those that may have seemed challenging, daunting or even impossible which have helped to build strength, resilience, and pride in our young people, in our communities and in our nations.

"Great achievements in human history have a number of common characteristics. From climbing the highest mountain, to winning a sporting competition, making a scientific breakthrough, building a successful business or discovering unique artistic talent, these outcomes all begin as a simple goal or idea in one person's mind.

"We are all born with the desire to learn, to explore, to try new things. And each of us can think of occasions when we have been inspired to do something more efficiently, or to assist others in achieving their full potential. Yet it still takes courage to launch into the unknown.

"Ambition and curiosity open new avenues of opportunity.

"That is what lies at the heart of our Commonwealth approach: individuals and communities finding ways to strive together to create a better future that is beneficial for all.

"Our shared values of peace, democracy, development, justice and human rights, which are found in our new Commonwealth Charter, mean that we place special emphasis on including everyone in this goal, especially those who are vulnerable.

"I am reminded of the adage, nothing ventured, nothing gained. As we reflect on how the Commonwealth theme applies to us individually, let us think about what can be gained with a bold heart, dedication, and teamwork.

"And let us bear in mind the great opportunity that is offered by the Commonwealth of joining with others, stronger together, for the common good."


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