Saturday 28 October 2006

Relaxed sheik gets rock start treatment, Weekend Australian, 28 October, 2006.




Relaxed Hilali gets star treatment: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnWeekend Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 28 Oct 2006: 9.

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Many of those leaving the mosque carried a flyer from radical Islamic group Hizb ut-Tahrir that described the furore surrounding the sheik's comments as thelatest chapter in Australia's demonisation of Islam and the Muslim community.
Earlier in the day, Sheik Hilali had appeared much more subdued. He had risen early and made his way up to the local newsagency to buy the papers. He had seen the headlines describing him as a "heartless ignorant man" who should be sacked and deported. Leaning heavily on his walking stick, the sheik made his way to the mosque from his house next door.
Some of the worshippers were heavily bearded and in traditional Muslim garb. Others, in workman's clothes, dropped in from surrounding factories and building sites. About 5 per cent of the congregation were heavily robed women heading to the female section at the side of the mosque.



Relaxed sheik gets rock star treatment
John Stapleton
October 28, 2006
WHILE the rest of the country expressed outrage at his comments, Taj Din al-Hilali enjoyed rock star status when he arrived at Lakemba Mosque yesterday.
He was smiling when he exited Sydney's now infamous mosque, clearly buoyed by the backing he had received inside, where 5000 worshippers shouted their support during the midday service.

He was surrounded by more than 200 fervent supporters as he made his way to a waiting car.

Asked if he would resign, he said: "After we clean the world of the White House."

The crowd erupted into applause.

Minutes earlier he had implored thousands of worshippers not to attack the waiting media pack, but to be polite, smile and walk away.

His followers did exactly as they were told.

Many of those leaving the mosque carried a flyer from radical Islamic group Hizb ut-Tahrir that described the furore surrounding the sheik's comments as the latest chapter in Australia's demonisation of Islam and the Muslim community.

The flyer read: "In an age of heightened hysteria generated as part of the 'war on terror', the media and politicians of all persuasions have wasted no time inflaming popular sentiment concerning the question of Islam and its role in Australian society."

Many of the young men at the mosque appeared to agree. One said the furore was "just an excuse to persecute Islam".

Another described community reaction as "definitely over-exaggerated. So much has been added to turn talking about two people committing sin, to making it all about rape."

Earlier in the day, Sheik Hilali had appeared much more subdued. He had risen early and made his way up to the local newsagency to buy the papers. He had seen the headlines describing him as a "heartless ignorant man" who should be sacked and deported. Leaning heavily on his walking stick, the sheik made his way to the mosque from his house next door.

"My comments are misunderstood," he said. "I respect the lady in Australian society. Australia is a free country."

Sheik Hilali apologised for the misunderstanding and said his speech had been intended for Muslim women in Australia.

The arrival of police helped to quieten the tension around the mosque as hundreds of men filed in for morning prayers and the midday service.

Journalists were repeatedly warned by community members that they were unsafe.

Some of the worshippers were heavily bearded and in traditional Muslim garb. Others, in workman's clothes, dropped in from surrounding factories and building sites. About 5 per cent of the congregation were heavily robed women heading to the female section at the side of the mosque.

Few were prepared to speak. However, one Muslim convert, former Christian Kathy Pugh, 50, said she supported everything the mufti had said. "He wants everyone to be modest when they walk out the door. What is wrong with that?" she asked.

Community spokesman Keysar Trad said the mufti had been devastated and hurt by the negative response but would not resile from his service to God.

Less supportive, Tom Zreika, president of the Lebanese Muslim Association, said his group was disappointed that the mufti had yet to explain his comments on women and rape.

"Our community has suffered enough from the response from the wider community," he said. "A lot of our members are quite embarrassed by the comments."

The mufti has said he would not make public statements or give sermons for three months. He is shortly to lead a 35-day pilgrimage to Mecca.

Thursday 26 October 2006

Fatal Bathurst crash a blank for survivor The Australian 26 October 2006

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/archive/news/fatal-bathurst-crash-a-blank-for-survivor/story-e6frg6o6-1111112419059

Fatal Bathurst crash a blank for survivor

26oct-crash
Recovering: V8 Supercars driver David Clark, with Gus the therapy dog in a western Sydney hospital yesterday, says the crash was a 'freak accident'. Picture: Brad Newman Source: The Australian
FROM his hospital bed, V8 Supercars driver David Clark struggles to remember the few seconds before the crash that claimed the life of fellow competitor Mark Porter earlier this month.
The crash at a support race on the Friday before the Bathurst 1000, where the winner received the inaugural Peter Brock memorial trophy, cast a pall over Australia's leading car racing event. Porter, 31, left behind a wife and one-year-old son.
Still receiving treatment for multiple pelvic fractures, a broken arm and a broken leg, Clark spoke publicly of the crash for the first time yesterday from his bed at Nepean Hospital, in Sydney's outer western suburbs.
In a croaky voice, as a result of feeding tubes that had been put down his throat, he said he remembered nothing of the accident or the race itself.
"To tell you the truth, before the actual race is the last thing I remember," he said. "I can remember everything about the weekend until just before the race when I was riding around the pit area on the bike before I got suited up. The accident has gone by. I am trying to get on top of it all. I don't recall anything of the race. I am not in a rush to remember it."
Porter's Holden Commodore was left stranded in the middle of the circuit after spinning out of control while exiting a corner. Seconds later, Clark, travelling at 200km/h in his Ford, slammed into Porter's Commodore, unable to avoid the collision.
The 28-year-old is likely to be moved tomorrow to a hospital in Adelaide to be closer to his wife and three young children.
He said he had not yet managed to speak to Porter's family, although he said he had always got on well with him.
"While I'm grateful for all the care and best wishes I've received, my personal thoughts go out to Mark's family," Clark said.
He said he had watched the accident on the internet, and it was as if he had not been in the car at all.
No one in the racing fraternity is blaming him for the accident.
"It was a freak accident," he said repeatedly. "There wasn't that much we could do about it."
Clark said he was keen to rejoin the Optima Sport team and expected to be racing in the first-round Fujitsu V8 Supercars series in Adelaide in March next year. "I have spoken to all the guys, they are 100 per cent behind me," he said.
"Anything involving speed and metal is going to be dangerous," he said. "That is motorsport. The cars are built for safety but also for speed. You are travelling at up to 300km/h. You are going to get hurt at some stage. I love it, that's the simple fact, I love it. Ask people why they go BASE jumping, they know they could die the next time they do it. I would be back tomorrow if they would let me."
As it is, Clark is expected to spend the next six weeks in hospital. He said his previous most serious accident was in 1993 when he cracked three vertebrae in Germany while competing in the Junior World Go-Kart championship.

Monday 23 October 2006

City has the water for growth, The Australian, 23 October, 2006.

City has the water for growth: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 23 Oct 2006: 4.
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"Water won't hinder the growth of the city, simply because the use of water in supporting Adelaide is the highest economic use water can be put to," Professor [Don Bursill] said.
Professor Bursill will be presenting his findings at an Urban Institute of Australia conference in Adelaide this week.
Professor Bursill said Adelaide used about 200 gigalitres of water a year, about half from the River Murray. This was less than 2 per cent of the average flow into South Australia.

Saturday 21 October 2006

Driver who hit Sophie goes free, Weekend Australian, 21 October, 2006

Driver who hit Sophie goes free: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnWeekend Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 21 Oct 2006: 5.
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At Sydney's Manly Court yesterday, magistrate Andrew George rejected police calls for a custodial sentence for John George Sharman, saying the 81-year-old had led a blameless life, served his country in wartime and expressed true contrition. Sharman was disqualified from driving for a year and placed on an 18-month good- behaviour bond.
Outside court, Sharman's barrister Shane McAnulty said his client was relieved by the sentence, and had been distressed by the case. Sharman refused to speak to the media.

Thursday 19 October 2006

BIG SHOT, The Australian, 19 October, 2006.

BIG SHOT: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Kevin Andrusiak, John StapletonThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 19 Oct 2006: 24.
As the broker roadshow ahead of the $8 billion T3 float winds to a halt, [Sol Trujillo] is getting close to the nub of what Telstra is all about by whipping out his mobile phone to show those charged with selling the T3 stock to their clients just how enthusiastic he is about the company's Next G network.
As he left the plush offices of financial services provider ABN AMRO in Phillip Street, Sydney, where he had been speaking as part of his T3 roadshow, Trujillo was asked how he thought it was going. "I don't think anything has been sold yet," he said.
Meanwhile, index service provider Standard & Poor's has revealed that it intends to treat the instalment warrants in the T3 float alongside normal Telstra stock in index calculations.

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Children of stolen generation part of payout deal, The Australian, 19 October, 2006. Additional reporting.

Children of stolen generation part of payout deal: [1 All-round Country Edition]

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He joined Aboriginal and reconciliation leaders in urging other states to consider adopting his compensation model, which -- as revealed in The Australianyesterday -- will see an independent assessor appointed to allocate ex gratia payments.
NSW immediately called for a national compensation deal, but other states, including South Australia and Victoria, were non- committal. NSW Aboriginal Affairs Minister Milton Orkopoulos vowed to push the issue at a meeting of Aboriginal affairs ministers later this year.