Some Australian news briefs

Uranium stupidity

Since the Chinese already have nuclear weapons, what earthly good is it going to do to harass them over whose uranium they use in making bombs?



Government officials negotiating the sale of Australian uranium to China admit there is no guarantee it will never be used in nuclear weapons. Australian diplomats, due to meet their Chinese counterparts today in Canberra, are expected to push for China to agree to safeguards similar to those signed by other nuclear weapons states that buy Australian uranium, such as the US, Britain and France. The agreements are designed to prevent the use of Australian uranium in nuclear weapons. However, they allow countries with both nuclear power and nuclear weapons programs to mix Australian uranium with uranium from different sources.

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Australia has brick-thick "security" staff too

Two brothers with muscular dystrophy were made to crawl to their car after security guards at a Melbourne shopping centre refused to let them take wheelchairs through the front entrance, their sister said today. Sandra Costa said her brothers, aged in their 40s, were in tears after security at Westfield's Fountain Gate shopping centre, in Melbourne's south-east, forced them to discard the borrowed wheelchairs at the entrance. She said she was told it was policy not to allow the centre's wheelchairs out of the complex but bollards prevented vehicles getting up to the entrance. "It was only probably about three metres to get the chairs out but the security guard wouldn't allow us to bring them out," she told Southern Cross radio. "So one of my brothers had to get down and crawl to the car ... the other one half-crawled; I picked him up but it's really hard to get them in the car because they're big guys.....

Westfield issued a statement apologising for the incident, saying the guidelines for use of wheelchairs at its centres would be reviewed immediately. "The company is investigating the incident, which appears to have arisen over the interpretation by staff of guidelines governing the safe use of wheelchairs and other equipment provided to shoppers outside the centre," the shopping giant said. "The company deeply regrets the embarrassment and indignity suffered by the two shoppers and their family and will seek to meet with them privately to apologise and explain the steps taken to avoid this or similar incidents occurring again."

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The chronically corrupt NSW cops again

Two former senior NSW police officers face charges relating to a major corruption investigation targeting Australia's top crime body. Former Australian Crime Commission officer Samuel John Foster is due to face a Sydney court next month on charges relating to his alleged association with drug dealers, the ABC reported today. The NSW Director of Public Prosecutions has given the go-ahead to charge Foster's former ACC partner, James McCabe. However, tracking down McCabe could present a challenge to authorities. It's believed the former Victorian officer lives in Cambodia. Former National Crime Authority chairman John Broome said on ABC radio that the lack of an extradition treaty with Cambodia would be a major hurdle in efforts to prosecute McCabe. Both officers have been under investigation since 2003, for activities that took place while on secondment with the ACC. In 2004, NSW Police Integrity Commission (PIC) hearings were told details about how McCabe and Foster, while working for the ACC, allegedly tried to obtain drugs from a police informant for personal use. ABC radio said McCabe had been allowed to travel to and from Australia, despite being under investigation.

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