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 Afternoon Edition. Thu 16 Jun 2011


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Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir has been sentenced to 15 years' jail.

Bashir guilty of terrorism charges
Radical Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir is sentenced to 15 years' jail after being found guilty of preparing to use violence for a terrorist act.

Overland denies he quit over crime stats
Victoria's Chief Police Commissioner Simon Overland denies a report into his handling of the state's crime statistics prompted his resignation.

Violence in Vancouver after hockey final loss
Riot police have fired tear gas to control a mob that turned violent in downtown Vancouver after the city's hockey team lost the Stanley Cup final.

Push for photo IDs for domestic flights
A parliamentary committee is calling for aircraft passengers to show photo ID immediately before boarding in a bid to stop organised crime bosses travelling freely under false identities.

MPs' vote could put 'Malaysian solution' in doubt
Federal Parliament has passed a motion condemning the Malaysian asylum swap deal, a move which opens the way for Greens legislation that could scrap the proposal.


 The DrumMore from The Drum > 

Prime Minister Julia Gillard speaks during a press conference when she called an election, July 17, 2010.

Labor's resolve strengthened by JWH's GST
As the first anniversary of the demise of Kevin Rudd approaches, this week's Newspoll shows the Prime Minister's personal support at a record low. But John Howard's 2001 GST turnaround set the precedent of a written-off government coming from behind to win. By sticking with its key policies and its leader Labor will be hoping they can achieve the same thing.

Great Recession, Great Depression: a sign of things to come
Is Barack Obama being haunted by the ghost of Great Depression past?

Community approach to asylum seeker settlement
A trial of community settlement of asylum seekers in Tasmania could show the rest of Australia that detention centres are an unnecessary blight on this nation.

Speaking on what you don't know is taking the easy way out
Jimi Bostock's piece criticising the ANU Women's Collective's protest against Bettina Arndt was the true example of 'speaking on what we do not know'.

We have behaved like colonial bullies in the live beef affair
The behaviour of the Gillard Government over an ABC report on an abattoir in Indonesia is an outrage at moral, economic and diplomatic levels. How our neighbours put up with us as we pursue a civilising mission, seeking to impose our own values, like Spanish conquistadors or 19th century European colonisers, is a mystery.


 WorldMore World Stories > 

Bashir guilty of terrorism charges
Radical Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir has been found guilty of funding a terrorist training camp in the Indonesian province of Aceh.

Health authorities defend closing TB clinics
The federal Health Department has defended a decision to scrap tuberculosis clinics for Papua New Guinea (PNG) nationals in the Torres Strait Islands off far north Queensland from July.

Abu Bakar Bashir: Timeline of extremism
An Indonesia court will today deliver its verdict in the terrorism trial of radical Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir.


 Science & TechnologyMore Science & Technology Stories > 

Man charged after alleged computer hack
A man has been charged after he allegedly hacked into the computer system of an Adelaide online company he used to work for.

Red moon unaffected by Chile ash
The ash from a volcano in Chile would have had little impact on this morning's lunar eclipse, the New South Wales Anglo-Australian Observatory says.

LulzSec hackers set up telephone hotline
Lulz Security hacker group is flaunting its notoriety with a telephone hotline for people to call and suggest targets for cyber attacks.


 EnvironmentMore Environment Stories > 

Carbon tax ad pledge puts independents offside
Independent MPs Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor have criticised a surprise announcement from the Federal Government on a carbon price advertising campaign.

Woodchipper rejects pellet levy
South East Fibre Exports on the New South Wales far south coast has rejected a push for a levy on the industry, in light of its wood pellet facility being given the green light this week.

Volunteers gather to rid reserve of lily
A team of international volunteers have joined forces to protect the only coastal wilderness area in New South Wales, south of Eden.



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