An Australian news roundup

Bingle in photo bungle



Tourism model Lara Bingle will take her defamation case against a men's magazine to the Federal Court later this month. Bingle appeared on the front cover of Zoo Weekly and featured in a beach shoot wearing five different bikinis in March. But the model claims she never approved the spread, which used revealing photographs taken 11 months earlier, when she was largely unknown. In addition to a breach of copyright, the model claims the magazine defamed her by implying she consented to pose in a G-string bikini for the magazine. Her lawyer, Daudi Sibtain, today said the defamation case also applied to the use of the photographs in promotional material. "It arises out of the production of certain material in magazines and in certain related promotional material," he told the Federal Court.

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Thuggish Leftist leader gets kid-glove treatment



Former federal opposition leader Mark Latham has been placed on a two-year good behaviour bond, with no conviction recorded, for maliciously damaging a digital camera. Mr Latham, 44, pleaded guilty to the malicious damage charge in Campbelltown Local Court today after the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) dropped other charges of assault and stealing...

The one-time prime ministerial aspirant had been facing one count of assault on Shultz and stealing his digital camera, as well as the charge of maliciously damaging or destroying the camera. Prosecutor David Stewart amended the remaining charge against Mr Latham to reflect a reduction in the value of the digital camera from $9000 to $6763.70. Mr Latham's barrister Clive Steirn then handed the court a cheque for $6763.70 in compensation for the camera.

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Queensland eco-dream ends with whimper



The Rocky Point power plant has been sold for one-twelfth of what it has cost the publicly-owned Stanwell Corporation to keep it running. Investment bank Babcock & Brown found $5 million in small change for the co-generation plant in the same week it forked out $317 million for the South Australian assets of US company NRG.

Once one of the poster projects for the Labor Government, Rocky Point was quietly sold off last week with only a statement on the Stanwell website. The plant initially was to supply green electricity to 10,000 households as well as steam and electricity to industrial users, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 100,000 tonnes per year. But it has been plagued by operational problems and faced environmental fines for allowing contaminated water to be dumped in the Logan River, killing fish.

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His Eminence steps up the war of words on Islam



The country's most influential Catholic has offended Islamic leaders for the second time in a month by declaring Islam more warlike than Christianity.

Australia had not been much changed by the rising Islamic threat after September 11, 2001, the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, said. But this could change depending "on how many terrorist attacks" Islamic extremists could "bring off successfully". The million-dollar question" was whether intolerance was a modern distortion of Islam or arose out of internal logic. "It's difficult to find periods of tolerance in Islam. I'm not saying they're not there, but a good deal of what is asserted is mythical."...

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