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Govt embarrassed over Huawei: Labor

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 02 November 2013 | 18.59

Labor says confusion over the coalition government's stance on Huawei's NBN ban is embarrassing. Source: AAP

CONFUSION over whether or not the coalition government would back a ban on Chinese telecoms giant Huawei tendering for work on the NBN was "amateurish and somewhat embarrassing", a senior Labor MP says.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott ruled out overturning the ban this week, despite his Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Trade Minister Andrew Robb earlier indicating it could be reviewed.

The former Labor government instituted the ban based on security advice from spy agencies ASIO and the Defence Intelligence Organisation.

Matt Thistlewaite, Labor's shadow parliamentary secretary for foreign affairs, said Mr Turnbull and Mr Robb were guilty of dangling a carrot in front of the Chinese telco.

"Having Tony Abbott and the Attorney General George Brandis come out and put paid to those arguments I think was a little bit amateurish and somewhat embarrassing for this government," Mr Thistlewaite told Sky News on Saturday.

"I have no argument with the approach that they've taken in terms of the outcome of the policy. The issue I have with is the comments of Andrew Robb and Malcolm Turnbull in the lead up to the decision being made."


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Furniture factory ablaze in Sydney

Fifty firefighters are battling a large blaze at a western Sydney furniture factory. Source: AAP

FIFTY firefighters are battling a large blaze at a western Sydney furniture factory.

Fire & Rescue NSW (FRNSW) says no one is feared missing but the fire has spread into the roof of the single-storey factory on Warren Avenue, Bankstown.

The fire has been contained but crews were still working to extinguish the flames on Saturday evening.

One man has been taken to hospital suffering smoke inhalation, a FRNSW spokesman told AAP.

"Firefighters have managed to protect adjoining properties," he said.


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Man injured in Bathurst ute roll

A man has sustained serious head injuries in a ute accident in NSW, police say. Source: AAP

A MAN has sustained serious head injuries in a ute accident on a private property south of Bathurst, NSW.

Police say the ute rolled at a property at Perthville about 4.30am (AEDT) on Saturday.

A 29-year-old local man who'd been travelling in the ute tray was thrown from the vehicle and suffered serious head injuries.

He's been airlifted to Westmead Hospital and is in a serious but stable condition.

The driver, a 33-year-old man from North Richmond, was taken to Bathurst Hospital with suspected rib injuries.

His front-seat passenger, a 29-year-old man from Pokolbin, escaped with bruising.

Police will interview the men once they are deemed well enough.


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Japan, Russia to expand defence ties

JAPAN and Russia have held their first high-level defence and diplomatic talks and agreed to step up cooperation between their militaries amid regional security concerns such as North Korea and China.

Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida and Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera, and their Russian counterparts Sergei Lavrov and Sergei Shoigu also agreed on Saturday to hold joint military and anti-piracy exercises and establish a defence consultation framework. Their countries' defence ties are geared up toward peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific region and would not affect existing alliances, including one between Japan and the US, they said.

Lavrov told a news conference after Saturday's talks that upgrading defence ties between the two countries could serve their national interests in resolving terrorism and North Korea's nuclear threats, as well as other regional disputes. He welcomed the talks as a landmark development for Russia and Japan, and said that this new cooperation would not interfere with the Japan-US alliance.

Kishida also said that Japan's alliance with Washington remains "the cornerstone" of Tokyo's foreign and security policy.

Earlier Friday, Japan and Russia agreed to continue discussing a territorial dispute that has kept the nations from signing a peace treaty.

"We need to act constructively. We should not be emotional, and avoid provocative remarks," Lavrov said in Friday's news conference.

The diplomats also agreed to hold vice-ministerial talks in late January or February, ahead of Kishida's planned visit to Russia in the spring.


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School kids escape Sydney bus fire

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 01 November 2013 | 18.59

School children have fled a burning bus after it caught fire on the M2 motorway in northwest Sydney. Source: AAP

DOZENS of children from rural NSW had a city excursion to remember, with their bus bursting into flames on a busy Sydney motorway.

All escaped uninjured, but a quick-thinking off-duty policeman who inhaled smoke as he attempted to douse the flames is in hospital under observation on Friday night.

The Transport Safety Bureau will investigate how the fire broke out on the bus as it travelled along the M2 at Baulkham Hills just after 3pm (AEDT).

Inspector Phil Brooks from the NSW Police Traffic and Highway Patrol Command said the officer was riding his motorcycle home from work when the bus burst into flames.

As teachers led about 35 school children away from the burning bus, the officer ran toward it with a small fire extinguisher.

"He was able to intervene very quickly, and we'll certainly look at acknowledging his efforts," Insp Brooks told the Nine Network.

He said the students and teachers were on their way back to Orange in central NSW after a school excursion.

A Fire & Rescue spokeswoman told AAP the engine compartment of the bus had caught fire and the first emergency call came in at 3.13pm.

Three fire crews extinguished the blaze.

A NSW Police spokeswoman said the Office of Transport Safety Investigations would look into how the fire started.


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Second bikie case postponed in Qld

A SECOND bikie court case has been postponed in Queensland because of comments made by Premier Campbell Newman.

A case in the Cairns Magistrates Court was adjourned on Friday, a day after a Supreme Court judge put a Brisbane bikie bail case on indefinite hold.

The defence lawyer in the Cairns matter asked for the case to be postponed pending the outcome of an appeal by the Director of Public Prosecutions against Justice George Fryberg's decision in the Supreme Court.

Justice Fryberg ruled on Thursday there was a risk comments by Mr Newman would be seen to have influenced the outcome and the court's integrity would have been affected.

The premier was quoted in media urging judges to act according to community expectations.

In Cairns, Odin's Warriors bikies Peter Johnson and Mark Filtness, both 47, were the first gang members arrested and charged with offences under the state's new anti-bikie gang laws.

Both were released on bail, but they returned to court on Friday afternoon, where Defence Lawyer Philip Bovey asked for the case be postponed.

"I have asked the magistrate to adjourn pending a consideration of the issue raised by Justice (George) Fryberg in the bail review matter of Brown," Mr Bovey told reporters outside court.

The Cairns case was adjourned until November 15.

In the appeal documents, the DPP argued Justice Fryberg shouldn't have taken into account a media report of the premier's comments as it was irrelevant.

The documents also reject the judge's finding that a reasonable member of the public would perceive the comments would influence the court, and that an appropriate response was to stay the proceedings.

Alleged Bandido Jarrod Brown was granted bail in the Holland Park Magistrates Court on October 18.

He's charged with drugs and ammunition possession, possessing drug paraphernalia and obstructing police.

He faced court a day after strict new laws designed to stop bikies walking free on bail were passed.

The DPP applied for a Supreme Court review of the magistrate's decision last week, but Justice Fryberg put the application on hold until further order because of Mr Newman's comments.


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WA Senate result to be revealed

Greens senator Scott Ludlam says the AEC should hold off declaring the WA Senate election. Source: AAP

THE result of the West Australian Senate vote recount is set to be revealed this weekend amid concerns that more than 1300 missing ballots may mean the state has to go to a new election.

The Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) directed a recount of some WA Senate ballot papers, prompted by the close result of just 14 votes for the sixth Senate seat and appeals by the Australian Greens and Australian Sports Party.

During the recount, that looked at informal votes and 1.2 million above-the-line ballot papers, 1375 votes which had been verified in the initial count could not be "located, rechecked or verified in the recount process".

The AEC apologised and has hired former Australian Federal Police commissioner Mick Keelty to independently, and urgently, inquire into the matter.

Meanwhile, the AEC WA manager Peter Kramer says the results of the recount and distribution of preferences will be known on Saturday afternoon and the candidates have been asked if they want to appoint scrutineers to observe the distribution of preferences.

But some politicians including Australian Greens Senator Scott Ludlam, and Palmer United Party leader Clive Palmer have decried the process.

Mr Palmer believes the original election result should stand.

The initial result gave seats to the Palmer United Party's Zhenya Wang, Labor's Louise Pratt and Joe Bullock and the Liberals' David Johnston, Michaelia Cash and Linda Reynolds.

AEC spokesman Phil Diak said there was nothing to suggest an "untoward removal" of the ballot papers.

Special Minister of State Michael Ronaldson did not think it was an "issue of skulduggery", but said it was a disturbing development which required an inquiry.

Independent senator Nick Xenophon thinks there should be a fresh election in WA if the ballot papers cannot be found.

"Better to cost money now than have a result where there is a question mark over those that have been elected," he said.

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten said WA deserved an explanation and while there was a way to go with due processes, another election could not be ruled out.

"This is a very serious matter," he said in Canberra.


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Qld reef assessment paints grim picture

The federal and Queensland governments have released a new plan to protect the Great Barrier Reef. Source: AAP

FEDERAL Environment Minister Greg Hunt says a new long-term plan will improve the health of the Great Barrier Reef and increase protection, but green groups say it doesn't go far enough.

The long-awaited strategic assessment draws on scientific evidence to give an overview of the state of the reef and outlines a plan to better protect the World Heritage site.

Mr Hunt acknowledged there were some serious concerns, but is hopeful the strategy will ensure the reef's survival.

"What has happened in the past is what we have to live with, but we can control and improve the future of the reef through our actions," he told reporters on Friday.

The assessment concluded the best way to halt and reverse damage to the reef was to put in place a new management framework and examine the "cumulative effect of human activities and natural forces", rather than threats in isolation.

Mr Hunt said the framework would set tougher environmental standards for future developments.

"We make no apology for applying tougher standards going forward," he said.

The report also called for a "net benefit policy", so that any activities along the coast and in the marine park produced an overall benefit to the reef.

It also said a new reef recovery program was needed, involving local communities, industry and indigenous groups, as well as a reef-wide monitoring and reporting program.

Australian Marine Conservation Society spokeswoman Felicity Wishart welcomed the assessment but said developments along the state's coast must be stopped if Australia was serious about protecting the reef.

"If the target is to improve the health of the reef then stop doing anything that's going to damage it," she told AAP.

Ms Wishart called for Mr Hunt to reject a proposal to expand the Abbot Point coal port near Bowen if he was serious about improving water quality.

That project involves dredging three million tonnes of soil and dumping it on the reef.

WWF Australia spokesman Nick Heath said the report confirmed large sections of the reef were in "dire straits".

He said given the assessment showed inshore areas were in either poor or very poor condition, those in power couldn't justify approving inshore dredging projects.

The report found that while corals were in good condition at the northern end of the reef, both inshore and offshore corals in southern areas were in decline.

The biggest threats came from the crown-of-thorns starfish, severe weather, nutrient and pesticide run-off from farms, illegal fishing, bycatch and dredging.

Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority chairman Russell Reichelt said while many of the impacts of those threats were already widely known, the assessment had looked at their "accumulative impact".

"There needs to be a multi-pronged approach," he said.

"(With this in mind) we can make a difference and restore the damage to the reef."

Queensland Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney said it was important for decisions about the reef to be based on scientific facts, not "alarmist claims" by environmental groups that can't be verified.

The strategic assessment will be open for public comment until January 31.


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WA Senate count descends into chaos

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 31 Oktober 2013 | 18.59

The fate of WA's six Senate seats look set to be decided in court - or with a by-election. Source: AAP

THE fate of Western Australia's six Senate seats looks set to be decided in court - or with a by-election - after the Australian Electoral Commission admitted it had lost more than 1300 votes.

The already controversial recount was thrown into turmoil on Thursday when it was discovered the votes from the Pearce and Forrest electorates could not be found.

Electoral Commissioner Ed Killesteyn immediately asked former Australian Federal Police commissioner Mick Keelty to investigate how the 1375 votes were misplaced.

The AEC said the 1255 formal above-the-line ballots and 120 informal votes could not be located, rechecked or verified, despite searches of every electoral premise where the ballots were stored or transported from.

And with Clive Palmer and Senator Scott Ludlam both voicing their disbelief at the bizarre turn, AEC spokesman Phil Diak said the commission itself might ask the Court of Disputed Returns to finally declare the winners.

"The distribution of preferences and the declaration of the poll will go ahead and it is required to go ahead," Mr Diak said.

"Then the commission will consider the implications, and whether itself it regards the result as one that may need further consideration."

Mr Diak added that there was a provision for a fresh by-election to be held, which the ABC's election expert Antony Green also said could happen.

As Mr Keelty was tasked with investigating the embarrassing blunder, Special Minister of State Senator Michael Ronaldson was promising a review of all aspects of the election process, including in WA.

"Incidents such as this go to the heart of the AEC's reputation. Trust in our democratic institutions is paramount," Senator Ronaldson said.

Mr Palmer, whose Palmer United Party candidate Dio Wang won a Senate seat in the initial count, said he intended to protest the process in the High Court, and also called for a full judicial inquiry.

"There is no question that the recount is invalid," Mr Palmer told AAP.

"If they declare a poll based on the second one they are seeking to manipulate the result, and they are doing that for an improper purpose in our view.

"Is the AEC trying to rig the election? Are they committing a fraud? Or are they just completely incompetent?"

Senator Ludlam, who lost his seat in the first tally when one crucial choke point in the count left him 14 votes short, said the result should not be declared until the missing ballots are found.

"It is going to shake people's confidence if the votes can't be found and if they declare the result, because that effectively disenfranchises people," Senator Ludlam said.

Once the writ has been issued, there is a 40-day window when any result can be challenged in the Court of Disputed Returns.

Mr Keelty's remit will include establishing the facts regarding the misplaced ballot papers, and identifying any failures that may have occurred.

"I wish to stress that Mr Keelty will undertake this investigation independently of the AEC and will be able to avail himself of whatever resources and access to staff and information he may require to assist his examination of this matter," Mr Killesteyn said.


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Pizza king mystery in Vic shooting attacks

Australia's pizza champion has had three of his Melbourne restaurants peppered with bullets. Source: AAP

AUSTRALIA'S pizza champion has had three of his Melbourne restaurants peppered with bullets.

But Tony Cannata didn't want to talk about the overnight shootings, which occurred on the same night his Woodstock pizza chain promoted his return to the kitchen to create his signature slices.

The three Woodstock Pizza restaurants - one of which is under construction - were fired at with multiple rounds about an hour apart.

The first shots struck a side window of the North Fitzroy restaurant around 11pm (AEDT) on Wednesday.

Shots were then fired into the vacant building in Essendon, and a third restaurant in Brunswick East.

Mr Cannata, who was crowned Overall Champion Pizzaiolo (pizza maker) at the Australian Pizza Championships last month, had just finished a shift at his Lygon Street eatery.

"I'm very emotional at the moment," he said before declining to comment further.

"I've got nothing to add. The police are investigating the matter. I'm sure they'll get to the bottom of it."

One of his staff members expressed relief that no one was injured in the shooting attacks.

Detective Inspector Adrian Dalzotto said police could not overlook the possibility that a message was being sent to Mr Cannata.

"Whatever it is, we can't overlook the coincidence that there's three premises all run by the one business," he said.

"Whatever it is, the motive and message and whatever, we've still got to work through that."

Police have so far found no links to bikie gangs but aren't ruling out the possibility either.

"Any shooting, any violent incident, we're going to look at everything, that will be part of our inquiries," he said.

He said the shootings may have been planned for after the restaurants were closed, but agreed it was lucky no one was injured.

"They're in areas where, down there in Fitzroy and Brunswick, you could have had anybody down there," he said.

Mr Cannata has been steadily raising his profile and appeared on an Italian community TV show earlier this year.

"For me, it's not a job, it's a lifestyle," he told News Corp Australia in September when he won Australia's gold award in pizza making.

"It is an art and it is a market that continues to evolve."

He is due to fly to Italy and Las Vegas next year for the World Pizza Championships.


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Man avoids jail over X Factor stabbing row

A man has avoided jail for a fight that resulted in the stabbing of a former X Factor contestant. Source: AAP

A MAN has avoided jail for his involvement in a fight that resulted in the stabbing of a former X Factor contestant.

Mohamed Hamdin, 22, was handed two years probation after pleading guilty to affray for his involvement in the fight outside a Sydney nightclub on October 14, 2012.

Former X Factor contestant Jelal Edmonds, 19, was stabbed in the torso after the fight broke out in Paddington, following a launch party for his new single.

Hamdin was involved in the fight with another man who pulled out a knife and stabbed Mr Edmonds, who performs as part of the Sydney rap duo Lazy J.

The man is expected to stand trial over the incident at a later date.

Magistrate Lisa Stapleton told a Sydney local court on Thursday the act of affray was "reprehensible", but noted that it was separate to the stabbing.

Lazy J came into the public eye in 2009 when the duo made it to the top 24 of X Factor Australia.

Court documents reveal Hamdin, who came to Australia as a refugee with his family, was among a group of Sudanese men at a VIP room at Eleven Nightclub on Oxford Street, where Mr Edmonds and his band mate Panapa Iafeta were due to perform.

An argument involving a man who was with Hamdin broke out on the dance floor over a girl Mr Edmonds was dancing with.

Hamdin and up to nine others left the club, but allegedly stood three metres from the entrance rapping and singing for some time.

Shortly after Mr Edmonds and Mr Iafeta performed their set, they were approached by Hamdin and two other men after leaving the club.

Mr Iafeta said he felt someone punch him in the back of the head, turned around and saw Hamdin standing behind him.

"Why the f*** do you want to dog shot me? Why don't you hit me one-on-one - face to face?" Mr Iafeta said, according to court documents.

Witnesses said they saw 10 to 15 people in the brawl than ensued.

Mr Edmonds felt a sharp pain on the left side of his chest and later discovered he had been stabbed above the heart.

He was rushed to hospital for emergency surgery.

Ms Stapleton said Mr Edmonds was "totally innocent" in the incident.

She said the men involved were trying to prove they were "bigger and tougher than everyone else".

"It's an affront," she told Sydney's Downing Centre Local Court.

"People should be able to go out and enjoy themselves ... without fear."

Hamdin, who is from Auburn, was facing a maximum of 10 years in jail for the affray charge. He is now on a good behaviour bond for two years.


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Mixed views on NSW same-sex marriage bill

Same-sex marriage has been described as unconstitutional and evil during debate in NSW parliament. Source: AAP

SAME-SEX marriage has been variously described as unconstitutional, evil and inevitable during debate in the NSW parliament.

NSW on Thursday became the fourth Australian state or Territory, after Tasmania, South Australia and the ACT, to introduce a bill that would allow gay marriage.

If passed, it would erase discrimination from state law and help young people struggling with their sexuality, Labor MLC Penny Sharpe, a member of the working group which drafted the bill, said.

"There are still young people in this state who get up every day hoping that no one notices or no one asks if they are gay, a fag, a poof, a lezzo, a dyke or words much, much worse," Ms Sharpe said.

"I want every person who has struggled simply for being who they are ... to know there are people in the community who won't accept this discrimination."

Liberal MP John Ajaka told parliament state laws would simply create different classes of marriage across the country.

But same-sex marriage was "inevitable" in Australia given growing support in the community, Labor MP Walt Secord said.

Liberal MP Peter Phelps said he'd rather marriage be out of the reach of all governments, while Christian Democratic MP Fred Nile warned the bill threatened to undermine the "sacred institution" of marriage between a man and a woman.

In an article in the Sydney gay community newspaper, The Star Observer, NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell re-stated his preference for national same-sex marriage laws to avoid a "patchwork quilt" of state legislation.

Only a change to the federal Marriage Act would deliver marriage equality, he wrote.

Outside parliament a throng of protesters gathered to rally against the bill, holding up signs reading "God Loves Sinners, But Hates Sin" and singing hymns.

Protester Ken Higgs, 61, of Taree, said same-sex marriage was "evil".

"Of course it's evil. It's a perversion of the concept of marriage," he told AAP.

The ACT passed same-sex marriage laws, to come into effect on November 7 - only to face a possible High Court challenge by December.

On Tuesday an attempt to revive Tasmania's same-sex marriage debate in the state's upper house was voted down.

The South Australian parliament threw out a gay marriage bill after it was introduced in June.

Attempts to allowing same-sex marriage have also been rejected in the federal parliament.

The NSW bill had been carefully drafted to withstand potential High Court challenges, Penny Sharpe told ABC Radio.


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Big two supermarkets focus of govt review

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 30 Oktober 2013 | 18.59

The price war between the nation's big two supermarket chains could hurt consumers in the long run. Source: AAP

THE price war between the nation's big two supermarket chains could hurt consumers in the long run if food suppliers don't have money to invest in their businesses.

With competition policy unchanged in more than 20 years, the federal government is pushing ahead with a "root and branch" review of how it applies to the food industry.

Small Business Minister Bruce Billson says, while intense competition between Coles and Woolworths has led to lower grocery prices, there are concerns this has happened at the expense of suppliers.

"Some of the alleged behaviour of supermarkets may not necessarily breach the competition laws as they are today," Mr Billson told a food industry conference in Canberra on Wednesday.

"But at the same time, it doesn't mean that the status quo is necessarily delivering the most efficient or optimal outcomes for the market, our economy and for our consumers."

Mr Billson described Section 46 of the policy governing the misuse of market power as a "hunting dog that won't leave the porch".

"It looks fantastic, it may growl, but it rarely bites," he told the Australian Food and Grocery Council (AFGC) gathering.

The review's terms of reference will be released by the end of this year, before ahead of the examination in 2014 by an independent panel of eminent business people, competition law experts and consumer groups representatives.

AFGC chief executive Gary Dawson favours an industry code, enforceable through the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), rather than government intervention.

Mr Dawson has already spent many hours with Coles and Woolworths negotiating the code.

"They have entered it in a great spirit. They understand the tensions created by the market conditions as much as anyone," he told the National Press Club in Canberra.

For now, consumers are enjoying "fantastic" low supermarket prices.

"But in the longer run, if we restrict choice, and it has already restricted choice, it restricts innovation, it has a chilling affect on (supplier) investment. That's a problem," Mr Dawson said.

It could also lead to higher grocery prices in the longer term.

Independent South Australian senator Nick Xenophon says it's "genuinely frightening" that Coles and Woolworths hold about 80 per cent of the dry grocery market.

In the UK, four separate chains hold a similar percentage of the market, and the largest chain in the US can only hold about 20 per cent due to laws that limit market share.

"We need similar laws here in Australia. Whatever the outcomes of the federal government's 'root and branch' review ... our courts need to have the power to break up a company that abuses its market power," Senator Xenophon said.

ACCC chairman Rod Sims told the conference the watchdog's final assessment of an investigation into the treatment of suppliers by the major supermarkets been delayed from late this year until around March because of the "complexity and breadth" of the examination.


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Car sector reviewed as future 'uncertain'

A new government inquiry has triggered speculation about the car industry's future in Australia. Source: AAP

LABOR and industry have sounded a warning over the future of car-making in Australia, as the government launched an inquiry into ways to boost jobs and exports.

The coalition, which promised ahead of the September election to review auto industry assistance, has asked the Productivity Commission to initially report on the issue by December 20, with a final report due by the end of March.

The inquiry will look at Australia's attractiveness for investment, how other countries assist their car industries, consumer preferences, workplace arrangements and innovation.

It will examine ways to support the industry, including re-targeting the current Automotive Transformation Scheme and reducing taxes and red tape.

Treasurer Joe Hockey says he has a responsibility to spend taxpayers' money wisely.

"We are not running down the street chasing an individual car maker with a blank cheque made out by the Australian taxpayer. It's got to be a partnership," Mr Hockey said.

"We don't want to see any job losses ... but also we want to ensure that Australian taxpayers are not being held to ransom by any company."

Industry Minister Ian Macfarlane will talk with Toyota executives in Japan this week, having already spoken with Holden boss Mike Devereux.

Opposition industry spokesman Senator Kim Carr said manufacturers needed action, not more inquiries.

"This is a government that is now playing chicken with the automotive companies," Senator Carr told AAP.

"They are using this report as a ruse to get them past the South Australian election (on March 15, 2014)."

Senator Carr has been told the board of General Motors, Holden's American owner, had met three weeks ago to discuss the future of Australian operations.

"The mood is bleak," he said.

The former industry minister said Australia lagged well behind other car-making countries in terms of public investment in the industry.

On a per capita basis over a year, Australia spent $17 compared with $90 in Germany and $264 in the United States.

A spokesman for Holden told AAP the company would make a submission to the inquiry, but he would not speculate beyond the current generation of products, which are due to be replaced in 2016/17.

"We are continuing to talk to the government, but we are not going to speculate on deadlines," the spokesman said.

In a leaked email from Mr Devereux to some Holden dealers, the company chief said he would lead the talks with the government before taking up a new senior role with GM in China at the end of the year.

"As you well know, the future of the manufacturing industry is uncertain," Mr Devereux wrote.

He said he would contribute in his new role to the future success of Holden by "influencing the future product portfolio for the Australian market".

South Australian Premier Jay Weatherill said this week the federal government should not delay a decision on a further "co-investment package" for Holden, which employs 1700 people at its Elizabeth plant and another 300 at the engine making plant at Port Melbourne.

Ford signalled this year it would close its Victorian car-making facilities by October 2016.


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Tensions rise in Vic police holding cells

Prisoners and police are unhappy that offenders are kept in police cells due to overcrowded jails. Source: AAP

PRISONERS and police officers are unhappy that offenders are kept in police cells due to overcrowded jails.

The Police Association of Victoria says fights have broken out between prisoners kept in police holding areas due to the cramped conditions, putting further pressure on officers.

Court cases will be scheduled on weekends as part of attempts to get matters dealt with as quickly as possible and tackle the problem of overcrowded remand cells.

Police Association assistant secretary Bruce McKenzie says officers are outraged at being taken away from police duties to babysit prisoners.

"We are getting inundated with complaints from our members who have police cells attached to them, who are overburdened by the responsibilities of looking after prisoners in police cells who ought to be in Corrections Victoria facilities," Mr McKenzie said.

Mr McKenzie says the situation has passed crisis point and was becoming a safety concern for prisoners and police officers.

"It is extremely tense in police cells, prisoners are being kept in there for too long," he said.

He said police cells were unsuitable for prisoners and never designed to accommodate them long-term due to the lack of exercise facilities, no programs and not enough access to natural light.

Mr McKenzie says the government needs to act quickly and find a temporary place to hold low-risk prisoners such as a disused military or government facility.

He says prisoners in cells in Ringwood have been fighting with each other due to the cramped conditions.

Attorney-General Robert Clark said weekend court sittings were "well-advanced" and were being scheduled while new prison places are constructed, with the government, corrections and police working together.

"Weekend sittings of the magistrates court are one of the proposed initiatives that have arisen as a result of that collaboration," Mr Clark said.

Opposition police spokeswoman Jacinta Allan said the prison system was not coping with the crisis that was created by overcrowding.

"It is a significant problem, it is a system that is at crisis and breaking point," Ms Allan said.

"Communities in the suburbs and regional victoria are deeply concerned about what it means for their community safety and law and order," she said.

She said up to 500 police a week are being taken off frontline duties to babysit prisoners in police cells.

Costs have recently been awarded against Corrections Victoria in cases where prisoners have not been brought to court, including a $2300 order made on Wednesday because a defendant was not taken to court on the first day of his murder committal hearing last week.

Corrections Victoria says temporary accommodation is being created at prisons to help ease the backlog while prisoners may appear in court via videolink where possible.


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NSW drunk drivers to get car lock devices

REPEAT and high-range drunk drivers will have to prove their sobriety before their car starts under a new NSW government program.

An alcohol interlock will be installed on a person's car if they have been caught drink driving twice in five years, or once with a blood alcohol level above 0.150.

Magistrates will also have the power to make motorists keep the interlock in place for longer than the mandatory minimum term of 12 months.

The NRMA suggested the interlocks legislation will be introduced in NSW Parliament next year.

Interlocks are connected to a vehicle ignition and will stop the car from starting if the driver has been drinking.

"Road safety experts estimate the introduction of mandatory interlocks will prevent at least 140 alcohol-related crashes, six fatalities and 102 injuries in the first five years alone," Roads Minister Duncan Gay said.

"We also believe there will also be about 500 fewer drink driving offences per year across the state once mandatory interlocks are introduced."

Drink drivers convicted of a second offence in two years will have to pass a driver's knowledge test as part of the changes.

Drivers who exceed their demerit point limit twice in five years will also have to re-sit the knowledge test and complete an education course.

There is already a voluntary alcohol interlock program operating in NSW.

The government expects the new mandatory program could put interlocks in the vehicles of as many as 8000 people a year.

The opposition supported the program and said it was essential a clear message was sent that drink driving was unacceptable.

"Figures from the NRMA show that one-in-six people caught for a drink driving offence will do it again," opposition roads spokesman Ryan Park said.

"This is one way of trying to stop the number of drink driving tragedies on our roads, especially by repeat offenders.

"If people want the privilege of driving again after drink driving convictions, they should have to install and pay for one of these devices."


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Spain miners halt work as gas leak kills 6

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Oktober 2013 | 18.59

Six miners have died in a northern Spanish coal mine after an apparent leak of methane gas Source: AAP

SPANISH miners have launched a 48-hour work stoppage as they recall the horror of a methane gas leak that killed six coal workers in the industry's deadliest accident in 18 years.

The gas suffocated the six workers in a mine in northwestern Spain on Monday, officials said, spreading so quickly 700 metres underground that miners had no time to put on protective masks.

Another five workers injured at the Santa Lucia mine, near the town of Pola de Gordon, were taken to hospital and are in a stable condition, officials said.

Eleven miners were reportedly working in a 200-metre long gallery when disaster struck.

The four-metre high, five-metre wide passage was accessible via a cage lift.

Methane, a colourless and odourless gas and a deadly enemy of miners for centuries, is not toxic in small quantities. But it deprives the air of oxygen and can quickly asphyxiate at high concentrations.

Jesus Gonzalez, 30, one of 116 workers there at the time of the disaster, told AFP he was working in another part of the mine when the accident occurred in section seven.

"I was about to have a sandwich when it happened and I saw everyone running out," Gonzalez said on Tuesday.

People were shouting "Let's go to section seven, the roof has collapsed," the miner said. The movement of the rock may have pushed methane through the passage, he added.

"I was taking out the stretchers to the street, they were coming out asleep without a single scratch. It was simply the methane displacing the oxygen, an overwhelming asphyxiation. One mouthful of that and that's it, like birds."

Most of the victims were in their 30s, however, including parents of young children, he added.

Major Spanish union federations, the CCOO and UGT, called a two-day halt to work in Spain's mines. About 40 mines are in operation, mostly in the north, and the aim is to lower employment from some 8,000 in 2011 to 4,500 by 2018.

"Both federations have decided to call a 48-hour strike in all mining operations in the country as a symbol of respect, condolences and mourning for our workmates," they said in a joint statement.

The unions urged the National Commission for Mining Safety to investigate urgently and to take measures to prevent further such disasters.

The company that owns the mine, Hullera Vasco Leonesa, blamed a methane gas leak and said an investigation was underway into the cause of the accident.


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Witness tells of violence against Tanilla

A man accused of murdering his girlfriend's daughter became angry at the child before her death. Source: AAP

WHEN Carly Knight saw a picture of two-year-old Tanilla Warrick-Deaves on the front paper of her local paper, she immediately recognised the dead child.

She had witnessed a violent incident three weeks earlier involving the little girl and a man on her street in Wyong, on the NSW Central Coast.

The crown alleges the man was Warren Ross, who has pleaded not guilty to murdering his girlfriend's child at a house in Watanobbi on the Central Coast on August 25, 2011.

Ms Knight told the NSW Supreme Court that some time in early August she was in her driveway taking her two sleeping children and groceries out of her car when she heard a very loud and violent noise nearby.

Minutes later she saw a man screaming at a small child.

"His head was bobbing up and down, arms waving ... he was just going crazy," Mr Knight told Ross' murder trial on Tuesday, while breaking down in tears.

"He picked up the small child. I could see her arms and legs waving around.

"He struck her. She flew through the air in front of him."

Ms Knight said he had struck her so hard that afterwards the man had to walk several paces toward the crying child.

Opening the trial, crown prosecutor Erik Balodis said 28-year-old Ross had been trying to toilet train the girl in the weeks leading up to her death and became frustrated that she would not learn.

One visitor to the house was told by Ross that he tried to discipline the child by hitting her with an extension cord, a wooden spoon and making her run laps around the house, the jury heard.

"She just doesn't learn," Ross allegedly told the man.

Two days before Tanilla died in Wyong hospital, Ross had become angry because the child had failed to keep chickens in a cage in the backyard.

He kicked and hit her, made her run laps around the living room before she wet her pants, Mr Balodis told the jury.

The jury then heard Tanilla was put in a cold shower before Ross held her above the toilet bowl by one leg and screamed: "This is the toilet. You're f***ing filthy", despite protests from her mother Donna Deaves to stop.

He dragged her along the floor where she banged her head against a wooden door, the court heard.

Tanilla spent the last two days of her life lying in a pram with bruises and head injuries until an ambulance was finally called.

Donna Deaves, who the jury heard had pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the basis of criminal negligence, will tell the jury what happened to her child on the days before she died, the court heard.

But defence barrister Sarah McNaughton SC told the jury in her opening statement to "keep in mind the crown's main witness Donna Deaves was police's other main suspect for causing the death of the child".

"Ms Deaves has also been known to be violent towards her children."

Ms McNaughton said Donna Deaves is getting a reduction in her sentence for helping the prosecution and that she gave her current version of events to the police a month after the death of her daughter.

"She had early given a different version," she said.

The trail before Justice Stephen Rothman continues on Wednesday.


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PetroChina Q3 profit up 19 per cent

STATE-OWNED PetroChina says third-quarter profit rose by a fifth as it benefited from fuel price reforms that lifted refining margins at Asia's biggest oil producer.

The Beijing-based company, which operates more than 20,000 petrol service stations in China, said reforms earlier this year allowed politically sensitive fuel prices to more closely track rises in international prices. That contributed to better results at its refining and natural gas businesses.

PetroChina Co said on Tuesday profit in the July-September period rose 19 per cent to 29.8 billion yuan ($A5.13 billion) over the year before.

Revenue rose 5.5 per cent to 581.7 billion yuan.

Losses at the refining and chemicals division shrank to 20 billion yuan in the January- September period, nearly half the loss in the same period last year, which was "a result of taking advantage of the newly promulgated pricing mechanism for refined products", chairman Zhou Jiping said in a statement.

China's price controls are aimed at keeping politically sensitive inflation in check.

Income at PetroChina's natural gas business jumped 26-fold to 23.4 billion yuan for similar reasons. Authorities allowed suppliers to raise prices in July by 15 per cent.

Crude oil output rose 2.2 per cent to 698 million barrels in the first nine months of 2013, but the exploration and production division's profit fell 10 per cent to 147 billion yuan on higher costs and a 3.6 per cent drop in the average selling price for crude.


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Housing helps NSW turn deficit to surplus

The NSW government says its 2012/13 budget position improved by more than half a billion dollars. Source: AAP

A STRENGTHENING Sydney property market and one-off revenue rises have lifted the NSW budget out of deficit in its last financial year.

Treasurer Mike Baird told parliament on Tuesday the final budget position for the state in 2012/13 was a $239 million surplus.

That's compared to a $374 million deficit the government said it was expecting when it handed down its budget in June.

"That's a good news story for the people of NSW," he told parliament.

Mr Baird said the "modest" improvement was largely due to higher than expected stamp duty receipts which added around $198 million to the budget bottom line.

"The housing sector is certainly rebounding back," the treasurer said.

He warned against reading too much into the numbers, pointing to a number of "one-off" factors that led to the $613 million turnaround.

That includes the government's lease of ports Botany and Kembla, which delivered a one-off transfer duty receipt of $215 million.

But he said $50 million of "responsible" spending cuts made by the coalition government had contributed to the turnaround.

The surplus result also reduced the risk of NSW losing its triple-A credit rating, Mr Baird said. Last week, agency Standard & Poor's decided to keep the state's rating on negative outlook.

Mr Baird warned with economic conditions remaining soft, there was "plenty of work to do" before the state was on a path to a "sustainable" surplus position.


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Cascade directors launch legal action

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 Oktober 2013 | 18.59

Cascade Coal's directors are seeking a judicial review of findings made against them by ICAC. Source: AAP

THE directors of Cascade Coal are seeking a judicial review of findings made against them by the NSW corruption watchdog.

Their action, launched in the NSW Supreme Court on Monday, comes in response to ICAC's report on circumstances surrounding the Mount Penny coal tenement and exploration licence.

"The directors completely reject the Commission's adverse findings against them," the statement says.

"The directors acted properly at all times and complied with all obligations in relation to the disclosure of relevant information to the New South Wales Government."

The action has been launched by Cascade directors John McGuigan, Richard Poole and John Atkinson, who were subject to corruption findings in an ICAC report handed down in July.

In the report, the ICAC also recommended the DPP consider prosecuting former NSW mines minister Ian Macdonald after it found he rigged a 2008 tender process for Mt Penny in the NSW Bylong Valley west of Newcastle.

The coal tenement was owned by the family of his disgraced former colleague Eddie Obeid.

A consortium of investors in Cascade Coal, in which the ICAC found the Obeids had disguised their 25 per cent stake, won the right to explore for coal at Mt Penny.

The statement from Cascade says there is no finding of wrongdoing by any directors involved in the legal action or by the company in relation to the creation of the Mt Penny tenement or the grant of the Mt Penny exploration licence.

"The ICAC report makes it clear that the Mt Penny Exploration Licence was granted by the Department in accordance with procedures and processes laid down by the NSW Government," it says.

The plaintiffs are seeking to have the corruption findings against them struck out and a declaration that ICAC's findings against them were wrong in law.

They also want all findings that they engaged in conduct with the intention of deceiving public officials or public authorities about the involvement of the Obeids struck out.


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Keep Antarctica free from mining: Hunt

The Abbott government says it is committed to opposing any mining in Antarctica. Source: AAP

THE Abbott government says it is committed to opposing any mining in Antarctica amid warnings the southern continent could be facing a rampant increase in mineral exploitation.

Environment Minister Greg Hunt said it was critical Australia maintained its strong presence in the region as he unveiled the terms of reference for a 20-year Antarctic strategic plan.

He said a central objective would be to ensure Antarctica remained a "rare place of peace in the world", where pristine environmental values were upheld for the next century and beyond.

"Our goal is to make sure that this is not a place of strategic competition, that it is not a place of mineral exploitation," he told reporters in Hobart on Monday.

"The only drilling in Antarctica should be for ice cores and not for minerals."

Last week, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute warned there was growing interest in Antarctic from new players, and the continent could face problems regarding sovereignty and mining if left unaddressed.

Its report "Cold Calculations" examines how Australia could protect its territorial, environmental and research interests in Antarctica while ensuring it remains free from confrontation and exploitation.

"We could see the Antarctic Treaty break down, illegal fishing become rampant, our territorial claim disputed, the environment irreparably damaged, and a cold rush for oil, gas and minerals begin," the report states.

Mr Hunt made an "iron-clad commitment" to work within within the Antarctic treaty system to try to establish an international consensus that the continent remains free of mining for centuries to come.

Australia was one of the first signatories to the 1959 treaty overseeing Antarctica, and claims about 40 per cent of the continent's territory.

The strategic plan will also seek ways to develop Tasmania's status as a gateway to Antarctica, and recommend what is needed logistically to expand Australia's scientific capacity on the ground.

The plan will be head by Tony Press, the director of the Australian Antarctic Division in Hobart, and is due to be complete by July next year.


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Chinese migrant kills cousin's wife, kids

A Chinese immigrant in the US is accused of stabbing to death his cousin's wife and four children. Source: AAP

A CHINESE immigrant who neighbours say struggled to survive in America has been arrested on five counts of murder in the stabbing deaths of his cousin's wife and her four children in their New York home - using a butcher knife.

The suspect, 25-year-old Mingdong Chen, implicated himself in the killings in Brooklyn late on Saturday, police said.

"They were cut and butchered with a kitchen knife," said chief of department Philip Banks III.

Two girls, nine-year-old Linda Zhuo and seven-year-old Amy Zhuo, were pronounced dead at the scene, along with the youngest child, year-old William Zhuo. Their brother, five-year-old Kevin Zhuo, and 37-year-old mother, Qiao Zhen Li, were taken to hospitals, where they were pronounced dead.

Chen is a cousin of the children's father and had been staying at the home for the past week or so, Banks said. He came to the US from China in 2004 and seemingly struggled to make it, Banks said on Sunday.

"Ever since he came to this country, everybody seems to be doing better than him," he said.

On Saturday night, Chen had apparently been acting in such a way that concerned Li, Banks said. She tried to call her husband, who wasn't home, but couldn't reach him.

Banks said Li called her mother-in-law in China, who also was unsuccessful in reaching her son. The mother-in-law reached out to her daughter, who lives in the neighbourhood, Banks said.

She and her husband came to the house and banged on the door, then called police.

"It's a scene you'll never forget," Banks said. The victims had wounds in their necks and torsos.

Chen was in custody. He also faces counts of assault on a police officer, which happened while he was being processed, and resisting arrest, Banks said.

Bob Madden, who lives nearby, saw a man being escorted from the building by police. He was barefoot, wearing jeans, and "he was staring, he was expressionless", Madden said.

The working-class neighbourhood has a large Chinese community.


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Two dead, one missing as storm lashes UK

About 60 flights have been cancelled at Heathrow Airport due to predicted hurricane-force winds. Source: AAP

NEARLY 300,000 homes have been left without power in Britain and France, and trains and planes cancelled as a fierce storm battered the region, leaving at least two people dead.

A 17-year-old girl died after a tree fell on to the static caravan where she was sleeping in Hever, southeast England, and a man in his 50s died when a tree fell on his car in Watford, north of London, police said.

The rough conditions at sea forced rescuers to suspend the search for a 14-year-old boy who was washed out to sea from a beach in East Sussex on England's south coast on Sunday.

More than 450 people were stranded for several hours on two ferries outside the port of Dover after it was closed to sea traffic, as huge waves lashed the coastline on both sides of the Channel.

Winds reached 99 miles per hour (159 kilometres per hour) on the Isle of Wight off the southern English coast, according to Britain's Met Office national weather centre.

Heavy rain and winds of 80 mph elsewhere brought down hundreds of trees, while a crane fell onto the roof of a government building in central London. Police said nobody was hurt in that incident.

The Energy Networks Association, an industry body, said 220,000 homes across Britain were without power, as electricity lines were knocked down across the country.

In northern France the storm left some 65,000 homes without power early on Monday, according to the ERDF distribution network, after wind gusts reached 139 kilometres per hour. Earlier ERDF had estimated 75,000 homes were affected.

Southern England bore the brunt of the storm, with train operators cancelling services across the region in anticipation.

Many commuters delayed their journeys until it passed, leaving central London stations eerily quiet during what normally would have been the rush hour.

The capital's Heathrow airport cancelled 130 flights, about 10 per cent, while delays were reported on the Eurostar cross-Channel train service due to speed restrictions.

Meanwhile more than 30 firefighters were deployed to a gas explosion in Hounslow, west London, after a falling tree caused a gas main to rupture. Three houses collapsed and two others were damaged, the fire service said.

"Clearly this has been a difficult night for many Londoners and continues to be an incredibly trying morning," said Mayor of London Boris Johnson.

He said transport and emergency services were "working flat out in an effort to keep London moving and minimise disruption as far as is possible." Several major bridges were also closed, including the Severn Bridge over the estuary between England and Wales.

The Met Office said 50 millimetres (almost two inches) of rain fell in some areas overnight as the storm tracked eastwards across Britain.

The Environment Agency issued 133 flood alerts and warned that flooding was likely across 12 areas of southwest England, including Devon and Cornwall.

The storm, named St Jude in Britain after the patron saint of lost causes whose feast day was on Monday, had earlier been predicted to be the worst for a decade.

Forecaster Helen Chivers had told AFP the expected damage was likely to be comparable with a storm seen in October 2002, although stronger winds have been recorded since then.

However, the devastation fell far short of that caused by the "Great Storm" of October 1987, which left 18 people dead in Britain and four in France and caused damage worth 1 billion ($1.6 billion or 1.2 billion euros at current exchange rates).

The Met Office had given plenty of warning of St Jude - in contrast to 1987 when BBC weatherman Michael Fish famously assured viewers just hours beforehand that no hurricane winds were expected.


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Teen stabbed at Melbourne party

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 27 Oktober 2013 | 18.59

Two people were injured at a party attended by about 200 youths in Melbourne's western suburbs. Source: AAP

A 15-YEAR-OLD boy has been stabbed during a fight at a large Melbourne party.

Police say the teenager was stabbed twice and a 17-year-old suffered head injuries at a party in a Deer Park hall on Saturday night.

Up to 200 youths attended the party.

Police were called and dispersed the crowd.

The 15-year-old boy was taken to the Royal Children's Hospital in a stable condition.

The 17-year-old was taken to Sunshine Hospital and released early on Sunday morning.

Police are looking for two men who they believe may be able to assist their enquiries.


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Vic opposition slams road compo plans

Victoria's opposition say proposed changes to the road accident compensation scheme are unfair. Source: AAP

PROPOSED changes to Victoria's road accident compensation scheme are unfair and unjust, the state opposition says.

The Victorian government will this week introduce laws to parliament that would change the eligibility for Transport Accident Commission (TAC) payments.

As part of the changes, relatives of victims will face more stringent guidelines for trying to claim compensation for mental injuries suffered as a result of road collisions.

Opposition Leader Daniel Andrews said the government was being unnecessarily cruel.

"They intend to make, I think, some of the worst changes that you could imagine to the way our traffic accident compensation scheme works," he told reporters on Sunday.

"They are bad changes, they are the wrong changes - unfair, unjust and we'll oppose them."

Assistant Treasurer Gordon Rich-Phillips said the laws made reasonable changes, and would provide more counselling for families.

"These reforms will ensure there is a clear, modern definition of what constitutes a serious mental injury for the purposes of lump-sum compensation," he told AAP.

"This legislation will ensure that the TAC continues to provide relevant and appropriate support to victims, preserves their common-law entitlements, and helps to keep the cost of the scheme under control for Victorian motorists."


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Girl killed in Qld kangaroo crash

A five-year-old is clinging to life after a kangaroo smashed through a car windscreen in Queensland. Source: AAP

A SIX-YEAR-OLD girl has died after a kangaroo smashed through the front windscreen of a car in Queensland.

Police say the kangaroo and the car collided on the Warrego Highway at Kingsthorpe on the Darling Downs about 3am (AEST) on Sunday.

The girl was rushed to Toowoomba Base Hospital with life-threatening injuries and she died on Sunday afternoon.

Another child and two adults in the car were taken to hospital with minor injuries.

Police say investigations into the crash are continuing.


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Passengers stuck as Melb train breaks down

About 100 people have spent up to two hours stuck in Melbourne's city loop tunnel after a breakdown. Source: AAP

ABOUT 100 passengers have spent up to two hours stuck in Melbourne's city loop rail tunnel after a train breakdown.

Passengers had to be walked out of the tunnel by emergency services personnel, after the Frankston line train broke down when the device connecting it to overhead powerlines developed a fault between Melbourne Central and Parliament on Sunday afternoon.

Passengers, including six mobility impaired people, spent up to two hours stuck on the train as MFB crews rescued them.

A second train was also affected by the breakdown, leaving passengers stuck between Parliament and Richmond stations, Metro spokeswoman Larisa Tait said.

Those passengers were taken to Richmond station.

The trains remain stuck in the tunnel but Ms Tait said the morning peak should not be affected.

"We would be very confident that this will be cleared later this evening and it won't affect tomorrow morning's peak," she told AAP.

Trains on the Frankston, Pakenham, Cranbourne and Sandringham lines are running direct to Flinders St and are experiencing 20 minute delays.

Ms Tait said during the evacuation passengers on the Frankston train had to walk about 500m through the tunnel to Melbourne Central station.

"There is some space in there but there's not a lot, so it can be a delicate task," she said.

An Ambulance Victoria spokesperson said no-one was injured as a result of the incident but one person was taken to hospital with a medical condition.


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