Monday, March 26, 2012

RACIST NOTE LEFT NEXT TO MURDER VICTIM'S BODY

Comment:

WHAT is this? Killing innocent for what? So how 'good' is the killer who says that Muslim is so and so? How Christian 'piety' is he for killing an innocent? WHO now is the killer or terrorist???

Also not to worry, in America, the average Muslim male/female is more likely to be considered a suspect 'terrorist' than a white extremist.

So where is the Obama's policy to reduce 'racism' and encourage 'religious tolerance' ?!


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http://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/-/world/13264336/racist-note-left-next-to-murder-victims-body/ (26 March 2012)


RACIST NOTE LEFT NEXT TO MURDER VICTIM'S BODY
Yahoo!7, March 26, 2012, 1:40 pm

A note was left next to the body of an Iraqi woman reading, "Go back to your own country. You're a terrorist", after she was bashed to death.

Shaima Al Awadhi, 32, was found lying in a pool of blood in her family California home after being repeatedly hit in the head with a tyre iron.

Her 17-year-old daughter, Fatima, has told a US television station that the killer left the note next to her mother's body.

California police have confirmed that a note was found near the mother-of-five’s body but have not released details of its contents.

Ms Al Awadhi's family reportedly told police that they had received a similar note earlier in the month but had dismissed it as a childish prank.

Hanif Mohebi, the director of the San Diego chapter of the American-Islamic Relations, expressed concern about reports Ms Al Awadhi was the victim of a hate crime.

"Obviously our community is worried about this, but we want to make sure we get all the facts before we do anything," he said.

Local police lieutenant Mark Coit says investigators believe the incident is an isolated event, but are exploring all aspects of the investigation.

"A hate crime is one of the possibilities, and we will be looking at that, … but we don’t want to focus on only one issue and miss something else," he said.

Ms Al Awadhi migrated to the US with her husband in 1993 and had only recently moved to California from Michigan, local reports say.

Police are continuing their investigation.



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Monday, February 13, 2012

ANZ Bank to Cut 1,000 Jobs, Citing ‘Difficult Environment’





ANZ Bank to Cut 1,000 Jobs, Citing ‘Difficult Environment’
February 13, 2012, 4:02 AM EST

By Jacob Greber and Soraya Permatasari
(Updates with National Australia rates move in third paragraph.)

Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., the third-largest bank in Australia, plans to eliminate about 1,000 jobs and reiterated a pay freeze for most senior executives as it combats a slump in lending growth.

The domestic cuts will be made by Sept. 30 and will primarily involve middle-management, back-office and support staff, the Melbourne-based bank said in an e-mailed statement today. ANZ Bank currently employs 49,000 people globally, including about 24,000 in Australia, it said.

ANZ Bank joins Westpac Banking Corp. in confirming plans to reduce jobs as the nation’s lenders confront the weakest demand for home lending since 1977. The two banks, citing a surge in wholesale funding costs, raised on Feb. 10 their standard variable mortgage rates independently of the central bank, which left borrowing costs unchanged last week. Commonwealth Bank of Australia and National Australia Bank Ltd. increased their rates today.

“You’d expect banks to be very vigilant on costs in the current environment and to do whatever is needed to pull the cost lever very hard,” said Prasad Patkar, who helps manage about $1 billion at Platypus Asset Management Ltd. in Sydney. “The banks up until the crisis have had 15 years of stellar profit and revenue growth and during that period you would expect a bit of fat has been built into the system.”

Shares of ANZ Bank rose 1.6 percent to A$21.77 in Sydney. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 stock index gained 0.9 percent. ANZ Bank is scheduled to publish on Feb. 17 a trading update for the three months ended Dec. 31.

Westpac Cuts

“A different and very difficult environment is now emerging for banks globally,” Philip Chronican, chief executive officer of ANZ Bank’s Australian business, said in today’s statement. “Just as we are seeing in other parts of the Australian economy, we are also having to adapt our business to the new conditions and become leaner, more agile and more customer-focused so we ensure the bank remains strong and can grow and invest for the future.”

As many as 400 people will lose their job at Westpac, Australia’s second-largest bank, with most of the positions affected to be from the Sydney-based lender’s head office and technology and operations divisions, spokeswoman Supreet Gosal said Feb. 2.

Peter Hanlon, Westpac’s acting head of Australian financial services, told the Australian newspaper on Feb. 2 that a slowdown in business and consumer activity is happening across the board. He said conditions are as bad as he’s seen them in his 30 years of banking, according to the newspaper.

Two-speed Economy

UBS AG forecast last month that Australian banks may eliminate 7,000 jobs in the next two years as they seek to pare labor costs that account for 58 percent of expenses.

Companies outside of Australia’s booming mining industry are struggling, and the so-called two-speed nature of the nation’s economy was reflected in the loss of 29,300 jobs in December, capping the worst year for employment since 1992.

ANZ Bank staff in Australia were told today of 492 roles affected by the reductions, the lender said in the statement.

“In this environment, the right thing to do is to be upfront with our staff and with the community about the changes needed in banking and their implications,” ANZ Bank’s Chronican said. “We are acutely conscious of the impact of these reductions on individual staff members and we will be making every effort to use natural attrition, to redeploy staff, and to utilize our training funds to support those people affected.”

‘No Justification’

Today’s job cut brings the number of finance industry reductions since the start of the year to 2,000, according to the Finance Sector Union, which represents some bank workers.

“There is no justification for any Australian bank to slash jobs,” Leon Carter, the union’s national secretary, told reporters in Melbourne today. Given their combined profit of more than A$24 billion ($25.7 billion) last year, “if anyone can afford to invest in Australian finance jobs it is our four big banks,” Carter said.

ANZ Bank will also continue to “constrain senior executive salary increases,” as part of a measure it announced last year, the bank said in today’s statement.

For “most senior executives, that means salaries will remain fixed for the 2012 financial year,” the bank said.

--With assistance from Michael Heath in Sydney. Editors: Malcolm Scott, James Gunsalus

To contact the reporters on this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net; Soraya Permatasari in Melbourne at soraya@bloomberg.net

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Comment:

How about the millions of dollars that their CEOs earn annually, the basic salaries, bonuses and other benefits?! Don't forget, even in economic crisis and hard times, these CEOs are still given the millions of dollars bonuses. The everyday employees with minimal and basic salaries are being layoff. Now that is fair????!



Sunday, February 5, 2012

BODY SCANNING LEGISLATION GOING AHEAD (IN AUSTRALIA) !

Comment:

Yes, yes, I know all too well, the airport authorities are all too willing to scan others (e.g. private parts, and bodies), and the nude beach goers, and the bitches, and the nude artists and models, sure they have nothing to worry - EXCEPT the law professors, who say that its against privacy laws and human rights laws, and the religious leaders and professors, who say that its against basic human decency and morality (to show oneself nude to others).

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BODY SCANNING LEGISLATION GOING AHEAD

AAPUpdated February 5, 2012, 7:38 pm


Body scanners are soon to be installed across all Australian international airports as part of a government plan to beef up anti-terrorism measures. Legislation allowing for the scanners, designed to locate metal and non-metal items under clothing, will be introduced in federal parliament this week, after the technology was trialed in Sydney and Melbourne.

Once introduced, passengers departing Australia may be required to pass through one of the scanners as part of standard screening processes. Aside from those with serious medical conditions, any passenger whorefuses may be denied the right to board their flight.

Transport Minister Anthony Albanese says there is no need for passengers to be concerned about modesty, as the machines only produce a generic outline, with no defining features.

To further protect people's privacy, the images will not be able to be copied, nor will they be stored. "It will simply identify the spot on the body where there is something that needs to be checked," Mr Albanese told Sky News on Sunday.

The technology was trialled by 23,000 volunteers in Sydney and Melbourne.

"They were queueing up. People wanted to try out this new technology," Mr Albanese said.

[Note: WHO ARE THOSE PEOPLE, WHO SO-CALLED "WANTED TO TRY THIS NEW TECHNOLOGY"... SEE MY COMMENT ABOVE!! ]

The new technology will be rolled out across airports from July. The government announced plans to beef up anti-terrorism measures at airports in 2010, after the attempted 2009 Christmas Day attack on a US-bound flight by Nigerian underpants bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.


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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Top Cop Mark Standen Found Guilty



Top Cop Mark Standen Found Guilty


Mark Standen, former assistant director of the NSW Crime Commission, arrives for hearing at the Downing Centre Court in Sydney. Picture: Frank Violi

ONE of the nation's most powerful investigators has been found guilty of plotting to import drugs worth more than $120 million.
Mark William Standen remained unmoved as the jury of 11 handed down their guilty verdicts to three charges today, after a Supreme Court trial lasting almost five months.
The former assistant director of the New South Wales Crime Commission had pleaded not guilty to conspiracy to import and supply more than 300kg of the drug pseudoephedrine, used to make speed and ice.

Standen, 54, also denied using his role as a senior detective to pervert the course of justice. The father-of-four spent 25 days in the witness box during his trial in a bid to explain the hundreds of hours of covert evidence gathered in a lengthy investigation. He admitted discussing an "unlawful scenario" with his business partner and friend Bakhos "Bill" Jalalaty, that would involve the importation of drugs in a shipment of rice - but he never believed his buddy was serious.

However he also admitted telling plenty of lies - especially to AFP investigators during a four-hour interview done shortly after his arrest on June 2, 2008.

The Crown alleged Standen's relationship with British-born informant James Henry Kinch, became corrupt, leading to the pair joining with legitimate businessman Bakhos "Bill" Jalalaty to stage the daring operation.

The Crown claimed Standen, motivated by a "dire" financial state thanks to gambling and other debts, had agreed to help Kinch import the drugs for a significant slice of the profits.

Jalalaty's legitimate business, Crown Prosecutor Tim Game SC argued, provided an authentic "front" for the illegal drug operation.

The jury's verdict ended a trial that was originally estimated to last about two months - but instead went for close to five. The case was beset with delay, frustration and controversy, with jurors at one stage threatening mutiny.

In a letter to the trial judge and lawyers for both sides, the jurors detailed the heavy impact the trial was having on their lives, as it entered the 15th week - with no end in sight.

Standen, who has been in protective custody for the past three years, now faces life in jail.

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/national/top-cop-mark-standen-found-guilty/story-e6frfkvr-1226113019370#ixzz1ijb4GOQ4

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(December 08, 2011)


Former NSW crime fighter Mark Standen jailed for drug importing
BY: LEO SHANAHAN From: The Australian December 08, 2011 12:02PM


Mark Standen has been jailed for at least 16 years for his role in drugs importation among. Picture: Nic Gibson Source: The Daily Telegraph


THE man who once was one of NSW's top crime fighters is to serve a minimum 16 years in jail for attempting to import more than $100 million worth of illegal drugs.

Mark Standen, 54, was sentenced this morning in the NSW supreme court for his role in an attempt to import $120m worth of pseudoephedrine into Australia between 2007 and 08.

Pseudoephedrine is used to make the drugs speed and ice.

Justice Bruce James said that Standen's role in the attempted importation 'abused his position' as the former assistant director of the NSW crime commission, and knew how much and when the drugs were supposed to arrive in the country and did so for a financial gain.

Standen was sentenced to 22 years in jail and with a non-parole period of 16 years. He will not be eligible for release until 2024. He has been found guilty of conspiracy to import and knowingly taking part in a supply of a large quantity of commercial drugs.

During his time involved in the drug smuggling plot Standen was the assistant director of the NSW Crime Commission, one of the state's most elite crime fighting organisations.

Standen had been found guilty of being one of the chief conspirators in a plan to bring in at least 300kg of pseudoephedrine in a rice shipment from Pakistan.

The former police officer, who had been heavily involved in operations against drug importation, worked with English criminal turned informer James Kinch and Sydney food importer Bakhos Jalalaty.

Mr Jalalaty was sentenced last year to a minimum six years for his role in the conspiracy, while Ketch is currently currently in a Bangkok jail waiting trial on drug importation charges.




Monday, December 19, 2011

MIGRANT BOAT SINKS OFF INDONESIA, 200 FEARED DEAD !

http://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/-/world/12397106/migrant-boat-sinks-off-indonesia-200-feared-dead (19 Dec 2011)

MIGRANT BOAT SINKS OFF INDONESIA, 200 FEARED DEAD
AFP, December 19, 2011, 1:07 am

WATULIMO, Indonesia (AFP) - More than 200 people were feared dead after a heavily overloaded boat packed mostly with Afghan and Iranian asylum-seekers sank off Indonesia en route to Australia, rescuers said Sunday.

Australia's government called the sinking "a terrible tragedy", but came under pressure from campaign groups which said its tough approach to refugees was partly responsible for such disasters.

The fibreglass boat had a capacity of 100 but was carrying about 250 people when it sank on Saturday, 40 nautical miles off eastern Java, in heavy rain and high waves, Indonesian officials said.

Thirty-three survivors were plucked from the shark-infested waters, officials said, after the vessel sank along a well-worn -- and occasionally lethal -- route from Java to Australia's remote Christmas Island.

Officials said there was little hope of finding any other passengers alive, which would make the sinking Indonesia's deadliest migrant boat accident.

"We sent out five boats and three helicopters but no survivor or body was sighted. It's unlikely they were washed up on islands as the closest shore is 40 miles away," district search and rescue official Kelik Purwanto told AFP.

Purwanto said the accident was the "worst disaster involving migrant boats" to date.

"If we find no survivor, then this is by far the largest loss of life," he added.

National Search and Rescue Agency spokesman Gagah Prakoso earlier said "it's very likely they have all drowned."

"It's impossible even for a good swimmer with a life vest to swim to shore safely in such extreme conditions. When boats sink like this, the bodies usually surface on the third day," he told AFP.

Bad weather, strong winds and waves of up to five metres (16 feet) hampered rescue efforts on Sunday, with 300 rescuers including navy and police officers deployed to comb the sea for bodies.

One survivor, 17-year-old Afghan student Armaghan Haidar, said he was sleeping when a storm came up and began to rock the boat.

"I felt water touching my feet and woke up. As the boat was going down, people were panicking and shouting and trying to rush out," he told AFP ashore.

"I managed to swim out and hang on to the side of the boat with about 100 others. (There were) about 20 to 30 others with life jackets, but another 100 people were trapped inside," he said.

Survivors were floating in the sea for six hours before fishermen rescued them, survivors and officials said.

The survivors are being kept at a community hall near Prigi beach, 640 kilometres (400 miles) southeast of Indonesia's capital Jakarta, and say they had official UN documentation to prove their refugee status.

Survivors interviewed by AFP and local officials said that most of the passengers came from Afghanistan or Iran, and they had paid agents between $2,500 and $5,000 to seek asylum in Australia.

Others claimed to be Iraqi, Pakistani, Turkish or Saudi nationals, and that their papers were lost at sea.

Haidar, the Afghan student, said he flew from Dubai to Indonesia and boarded a boat in West Java.

"We want to go to Christmas Island and live a better life in Australia," he said. "There is nothing in Afghanistan. There's a lot of terrorism. We couldn't study, go to college, find jobs. There's no future for us there."

Thousands of asylum-seekers head through Southeast Asian countries on their way to Australia every year and many link up with people-smugglers in Indonesia for the dangerous sea voyage.

Christmas Island is a favoured destination for people-smugglers, lying closer to Indonesia than Australia. Nearly 50 would-be migrants are believed to have died in wild seas during a shipwreck there in December 2010.

"Our focus today is on the search and rescue effort and our thoughts today are with the people who died and with the families of those still lost at sea," Australian Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare said of Saturday's sinking.

"Whenever people make a dangerous journey and risk their lives, I am concerned," he said, adding that Australia had offered an Orion surveillance aircraft to help the rescue effort.

Australia has failed in its efforts to set up a regional processing centre in neighbouring countries to reduce the flow of asylum-seekers heading to its shores.

The number of boatpeople arriving in Australia ballooned to almost 900 in November, with at least nine ships intercepted in Australian waters so far this month.

Ian Rintoul, coordinator of the Refugee Action Coalition, said any sympathy the Australian government or opposition expressed for those who died at sea would amount to "hypocrisy" until the parties adopted humane policies.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees in November said at least nine people were killed when an overloaded vessel capsized in rough seas off Java on the way to Kupang in eastern Indonesia.




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The History of Christmas Island

Source:
(Accessed on 10th January 2012)

The History of Christmas Island:

In 2001, as part of the Howard government’s Pacific Solution, 4000 islands were excised from Australia’s migration zone. This policy was directed at discouraging ‘boat people’ and allowing the Australian government to circumvent its international obligations to those claiming asylum whilst on Australian soil. As part of the Pacific Solution, asylum seekers who arrived by boat were sent to either the excised Christmas Island, or the island nation of Nauru.

In 2007, the Department of Immigration finished construction of an Immigration Reception and Processing Centre on Christmas Island. The centre, which contains approximately 800 beds, cost over $400 million to build and at least $30 million a year to run.

Christmas Island today:

Although the current government has taken steps towards changing this detention policy, most notable by closing the detention centre on Nauru in February 2008, the 4000 islands remain excised and the government has reaffirmed its commitment to using the facilities on Christmas Island to process asylum claims.

In August 2008, Amnesty International Australia's National Director, Claire Mallinson, along with representatives from UNHCR, HREOC and the Ombudsman's office, visited Christmas Island to inspect the finished detention centre and asses the facilities for detaining and processing unauthorised arrivals.

Following this visit, a joint letter to the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Senator Chris Evans, was signed by Amnesty International and nine other organisations expressing concern about "the high security, prison-like character” of the Christmas Island Immigration Detention Centre. In the letter, the organisations point out that Christmas Island is “an extremely harsh and stark environment to detain people seeking asylum".

It is unclear why the government continues to use the facilities on Christmas Island when there are a range of alternatives on the mainland that provide a much more appropriate environment to accommodate refugee applicants - particularly for children.

Christmas Island detainees are denied their rights:

Amnesty International Australia believes that asylum seekers should not be punished for their mode of arrival. Holding people who arrive by sea on Christmas Island is clearly a punitive measure, not only because of the unwelcoming environment, but also due to the distance from mainland Australia. The remote location of Christmas Island - 2,600 kilometres northwest of Perth - restricts detainees from accessing the same range of legal and health services available to detainees on mainland Australia. Since many of the people held on Christmas Island are survivors of torture and trauma, it is unacceptable that they do not have access to a full range of medical and counselling services.

Moreover, asylum seekers lodging applications from Christmas Island do not have the same rights when applying for refugee status as those on mainland Australia.

For example, on Christmas Island there is no time limit for the processing of refugee claims unlike on the mainland where processing must take place within 90 days of application. Amnesty International Australia believes that all asylum seekers claiming protection should have the same rights, regardless of whether they arrived by plane or boat.

The continuing use of Christmas Island as an offshore detention centre is not consistent with the Australian government’s stated policy of treating all asylum seekers humanely and with dignity. Amnesty International is calling on the current government to reverse the excision of the 4000 islands and close the Christmas Island Immigration Reception and Processing Centre.



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Thursday, December 1, 2011

OSHC Worldcare: PROBLEMS !!

COMMENT:

This kind of 'hospital rejection' of patients only happens in 'some parts' of Third World countries and Least Developing Countries (LDCs), such as, Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia, Afghanistan, Angola, and possibly also some parts in India.

But to think that it happens in AUSTRALIA, the so called 'developed country', and is label by United Nations, as among the TOP destination and place to live in! Well, think again!!

Also what's the point of buying 'health insurance' card/policy, and making the CEO wealthy, when at the end of the day, your 'health insurance card/policy' is deem WORTHLESS !!

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Source:


Overseas Sector Cries Foul Over Hospital Admission Policies
BY: JOHN ROSS From: The Australian November 30, 2011 12:00AM

THE wife of an international PhD student gave birth in her car after at least five Melbourne public hospitals refused to admit her for obstetrics services. The incident on Friday night resulted from what overseas students say are discriminatory policies that systematically deny them health services available to Australian citizens.

Rosmizi Rahman, 31, said he delivered his son Aasif in the carpark of the emergency department at Sandringham Hospital after a 22km dash across southeast Melbourne. The Monash University student said he ran red lights with his wife Sharifah Rahim in labour, bypassing three public hospitals that had previously denied services to the couple. He made it to Sandringham, which had agreed to admit Ms Rahim as a discounted private patient, but she gave birth before staff arrived. She and her son are recovering at home.

The incident follows revelations that Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital has banned obstetrics and gynaecology care for international students, including those with medical insurance.

Mr Rahman said he and his wife had initially gone to Dandenong, 5km from his Noble Park home, but were denied care because they did not have Medicare cards. "I said we have (compulsory health) cover, but the staff said we don't take this one."

Mr Rahman said when he followed up with a phone call to Southern Health, which runs Dandenong and Monash hospitals, he was told Ms Rahim would be accepted as a private patient for more than $7000.

He said it was hard to understand why they'd been given different reasons for being turned down as public patients. "When we go personally, they say, 'We are full'. Maybe because we are Asian, they just say 'full'."

Frankston said it could not accept patients from outside its catchment area. Others said they could only take people with Medicare cards.

Shamsul Nizam and his wife Azleena Mohamed, both PhD students at Monash, are expecting their fourth child in April. Mr Nizam said he understood the new admission policy was related to a July change that imposed a waiting period for maternity services for new overseas students.

He said the couple had been in Australia for two years and taken out four-year medical insurance policies. "How can things change halfway (through) the policy and we were not informed?" he said.

Southern Health would not say whether it had a specific policy on international students. It said while its primary role was to serve "eligible public patients" it could also accept privately insured people, but services "may vary depending on overall demand".

Zuzana Quinn, an advocate with Monash Postgraduate Association, said: "At no stage were they told that in the event that there was an emergency or their wives went into labour, they would not be refused service."

Mr Rahman said that out of the many phone calls he had made, one staff member had advised him to "just go to any hospital" in an emergency. "But we don't know what is the consequence of that. Dandenong had refused us before this so we thought it might cause problems."

Mary Pozzobon, national business implementation manager with OSHC Worldcare, said she had been asking the Victorian Health Department for months to clarify admission policies for international students. "There's no clear information on whether overseas students will be accepted and how much services will cost them," she said.

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Health Services Commissioner: Make A Compliant

Note: Don't expect that a 'big impact' will happen, or that they will solve all your problem. But putting your news or compliant on their report (Health Services Commissioner), will make them aware of the loophole in their health system - and maybe they will do something about it in the future!

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Source:

Health Insurance CEO Total Compensation in 2009
March 16, 2011 by Michael Ricciardelli

Insurance Co. & CEO (2009) Total CEO Compensation
Aetna, Ronald A. Williams: $18,058,162
Coventry, Allen Wise: $17,427,789 (took over from Dale Wolf)
WellPoint, Angela Braly: $13,108,198
United Health, Stephen Helmsley: $8,901,916
Cigna, David Cordoni: $6,593,921 (took over from CEO H. Edward Hanway)
Cigna, H. Edward Hanway: $18,800,000
Humana, Michael McCallister: 6,509,452
Health Net, Jay Gellert: $3,643,342

Note: Latest figures and salaries are not available, but expect to be higher than the previous year.