Russia registers first polio death in a decade

MOSCOW, June 13 (Reuters) – Russia has confirmed its first death from polio in more than a decade, the country’s top public health official said on Sunday, Interfax news agency reported.

A citizen of the former-Soviet Central Asian country of Uzbekistan died of polio in the Urals Mountains city of Yekaterinburg in early June, Gennady Onishchenko was quoted as saying. “Tests have confirmed this,” he said.

Onishchenko’s spokeswoman was unavailable to comment on the report on Sunday.

Polio was practically eradicated as a public health problem in industrialised countries in the 1960s, but remains endemic in seven countries, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

Russia last month confirmed its first case in 13 years in an infant visiting from Tajikistan, where at least 12 people have died from a polio outbreak this year.

State news agency RIA Novosti last week reported that an Uzbek man died of polio in Yekaterinburg on June 4, but Onishchenko’s office refused to comment on that report until additional tests in Moscow confirmed the diagnosis.

Onishchenko said four cases of polio had been confirmed in citizens from Central Asia and two other possible cases were being investigated, Interfax reported.

Polio, which spreads in areas with poor sanitation, attacks the nervous system and can cause irreversible paralysis within hours of infection. Children under the age of three are most vulnerable. (Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by Alison Williams)

Work on gas pipeline to start soon as Pak, Iran complete all formalities

Islamabad, Jun.4 (ANI): Pakistan and Iran have finalised all formalities regarding the gas pipeline, and the ground work on the project would start soon following a survey, Pakistan Petroleum and Natural Resources Minister Syed Naveed Qamar Shah has said.

Responding to a question in the National Assembly regarding the progress made on the much publicised pipeline project, Shah said once completed, Pakistan would receive 750 million cubic feet of natural gas per day from Iran, The Daily Times reports.

Shah also informed the house that the project would be of great help to address the massive power shortage in the country, as 5,000 megawatts of electricity is likely to be produced utilising the gas from the pipeline, which has been termed the ‘peace pipeline.’

Out of the total 7.6 billion dollars which would be incurred on the project, Pakistan expects to spend 1.65 billion dollars.

Earlier, the said pipeline was to be extended to India also, but it backed out of the project, as Pakistan refused to forego its demand for a hefty gas transit fee.

The IPI project was conceived in 1995 and after almost 13 years India finally decided to quit the project in 2008. (ANI)

Cameron says Britain must rebalance its economy

Prime Minister David Cameron said on Friday that Britain must rebalance an economy that has become over-indebted, unstable and too dependent on the public sector.

In excerpts released in advance of a speech he was due to give later on Friday in northern England, Cameron said the British economy had been heading in the wrong direction for years, was over-reliant on welfare and increasingly hostile to enterprise.

It was billed as his first major speech since he became prime minister this month, ending 13 years of Labour Party rule.

Cameron, whose centre-right Conservatives formed a coalition with the smaller, centre-left Liberal Democrats after a May 6 election failed to produce an outright winner, has set reducing Britain’s large budget deficit as his top priority.

“As a country we have become indebted on an unprecedented scale. Our huge public debt is the clearest manifestation of our economic mistakes — the glaring warning sign overhead telling us we have taken the wrong route,” he said.

“We have been sleepwalking our way to an economy that is unsustainable, unstable, unfair and, frankly, uninspiring.”

The economy had become “far too dependent on the public sector, with over half of all jobs created in the last 10 years associated in some way with public spending,” he said.

Referring to London’s financial services industry which drove British growth for years before being jolted by the financial crisis, Cameron said the economy had become increasingly unbalanced, “with our fortunes hitched to a few industries in one corner of the country, while we let other sectors like manufacturing slide.”

Cameron said he believed Britain could rebalance economic power across different regions and industries, inject new life into the private sector and move to an economy built on savings and investment rather than debt and borrowing.

“We have set out a series of clear, transparent benchmarks for our economy, from ensuring macroeconomic stability to creating more balanced growth, getting Britain working and ensuring our whole country shares in rising prosperity,” he said.

Cameron’s coalition outlined this week 6.2 billion pounds ($8.9 billion) of spending cuts this year. Further action to tackle a deficit running at 11 percent of GDP — just a few percentage points below that of Greece — is expected in an emergency budget on June 22.

However, senior lawmakers from Cameron’s Conservative Party are unhappy at plans to raise capital gains tax to bring it close to income tax rates, a policy promoted by the Lib Dems.

Cameron inherited an economy just emerging from deep recession. The Office for National Statistics said this week the economy grew by 0.3 percent in the first quarter, up from an initial estimate of 0.2 percent.

(Reporting by Adrian Croft; Editing by Noah Barkin)

NRI Republican candidate in sex scandal

New York, May 26 — Days after she took the lead in a poll of Republican candidates seeking the party’s nomination to contest for Governor of the US State of South Carolina, Indian-American Nikki Randhawa Haley was hit by allegations of infidelity by a political operative-turned-blogger. In a post, the blogger, Will Folks, who worked for current State Governor Mark Sanford said, “Several years ago, prior to my marriage, I had an inappropriate physical relationship with Nikki.” That statement received a sharp rebuttal from Haley. She said, “I have been 100 per cent faithful to my husband throughout our 13 years of marriage. This claim against me is categorically and totally false.”

Sarah Palin, Republican John McCain’s running mate during the 2008 Presidential election, also quickly leapt to Haley’s defence. In an online post Palin wrote that she told Haley: “Hang in there. I’ve been there. Any lies told about you will strengthen your resolve to clean up political and media corruption. You and your supporters will grow stronger through things like this.”

Somdev crashes out of French Open in first round

Paris, May 23 (IANS) A fighting Somdev Devvarman crashed out of the French Open 3-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 3-6 in a marathon first round match against Switzerland’s 65th-ranked Marco Chiudinelli here Sunday.

The 109th-ranked Indian and Chiudinelli were locked in a three-hour long battle before the Swiss evened his head-to-head meetings with Somdev. The Indian had beaten Chiudinelli in their only previous meeting in Dubai earlier this year.

Somdev Friday had become the first Indian in 13 years to qualify for the main draw at Roland Garros. Leander Paes was the last Indian to play in the men’s singles here in 1997 and he lost in the second round to Magnus Norman.

Somdev’s only previous Grand Slam entry was in the US Open last year where he lost to Germany’s Philipp Kohlschreiber.

Fake Swede pilot who flew for 13 years without licence says con was easy

London, May 18 (ANI): A Swedish man, who worked as a passenger pilot without an original licence for 13 years before he was busted, has said it was “surprisingly easy” to fake it.

Thomas Salme, who worked with Scandinavian airline Air One, was even promoted to the post of captain after three years.

He had learnt flying while working as a maintenance engineer for airline SAS, when a pal let him ”fly” the firm”s full-scale flight simulator.

“I”d train there for two or three hours at a time at least 15 to 20 times over one and a half years,” the Sun quoted him, as saying.

He added: “The moral point of view is that I feel ashamed that I did lie but I didn”t ever feel, not once feel, that I put passengers in an unsafe position.”

Later, he produced fake documents and took a test flight in Air One to land a job as pilot.

Salme said: “I got the crackpot idea to apply as a co-pilot at a real airline so I made myself a Swedish flying permit with a logo out of regular white paper.

“It was a fantasy creation. It wasn”t laminated and looked like something I”d made ay home. It was surprisingly easy.

“The documents look different everywhere in Europe. An Italian airline doesn”t know what a Swedish licence looks like. And you can forge all the IDs you need.”

He was eventually caught at the controls of a Boeing 737 belonging to airline Corendon. He had clocked up 10,000 unlicensed hours in the air.

However, judges in Amsterdam rejected prosecution pleas for a custodial sentence last month and even praised his safety record. (ANI)

Chelsea win dramatic Cup final to seal Double

Chelsea overcame a resilient Portsmouth side, who made a mockery of their pre-match billing as lambs to the slaughter, to win a dramatic FA Cup final 1-0 and clinch their first League and Cup Double on Saturday.

Didier Drogba maintained his remarkable knack of scoring at Wembley Stadium with the winner from a 59th minute free-kick after Chelsea had hit the woodwork five times in the first half while Frank Lampard missed a late penalty.

In an astonishing match of twists and turns, Portsmouth’s Kevin-Prince Boateng, who had scored from the spot in the semi-final at Wembley, saw his 56th minute penalty saved.

The triumph gave Chelsea a second straight FA Cup final victory, after they beat Everton last season, and was a third success in four seasons for the west London side.

It was Chelsea’s sixth FA Cup triumph and fifth in 13 years as they became the seventh English club to win the double and the first team since Arsenal in 2003 to retain the trophy.

Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti, who has won the Double in his first season in England, told reporters afterwards: “Its a fantastic victory for me, I am very happy.

FANTASTIC SEASON

“We won’t do anything special to celebrate, I will follow my players and my friends. Wine, sure, champagne. It is right to have a celebration, the team had a fantastic season.”

“It has never happened in my career to hit the bar or post five times in one half… and we didn’t start too well in the second half but I was not worried because we were in control of the game and had chances to score.”

Portsmouth manager Avram Grant said: “It was a very difficult season. It is a season I will not forget. I have won a lot of games in my life, trophies and everything, but this was unbelievable. We always played against the odds.”

In the first final between the champions and the bottom team in the top flight, Chelsea dominated the first half but were thwarted on five occasions when Drogba (twice), Frank Lampard, Salomon Kalou and John Terry all hit the bar or post.

Despite the pressure on their team, Portsmouth’s incredibly vociferous fans made the greater noise inside the sun-drenched stadium and stayed to applaud their players even after defeat.

The match only turned Chelsea’s way when Boateng’s penalty, awarded after Chelsea’s Brazilian substitute Juliano Belletti brought down Aruna Dindane, was saved by Petr Cech’s legs.

Drogba fired home a 25-metre free-kick three minutes later that went in off the inside of a post to maintain his record of scoring in all of the six competitive matches he has played for Chelsea at Wembley — three semi-finals and three FA Cup finals.

Lampard fired wide from the spot in the 88th after Michael Brown clattered into him but Chelsea had already just about done enough to become the seventh club in English history to win the Double, the 11th time the feat has been achieved.

OVERWHELMING FAVOURITES

Chelsea were quoted at 5-1 on to beat Portsmouth who are in administration, have debts of 138 million pounds ($201.2 million) and finished bottom of the Premier League.

Some pundits had predicted a record FA Cup final victory following Chelsea’s 8-0 trouncing of Wigan Athletic when they clinched the league title at Stamford Bridge last Sunday.

But Portsmouth, many of whose players may have been playing their last match for the south-coast club because of the financial problems and relegation, weathered the storm and at times dominated Chelsea for possession and passing.

However, the Londoners had only one first half scare with Cech producing a reflex save to deny Frederic Piquionne.

Pompey’s first close shave came after 14 minutes when Lampard shot against the outside of David James’s left-hand post with a 25-metre drive.

Kalou was guilty of one of the most blatant misses in any Cup final after 27 minutes when he shinned an Ashley Cole cross against the bar in front of an open goal from four metres.

Chelsea captain Terry and Drogba, twice, also hit the woodwork before halftime.

The Ivory Coast striker, who will lead his country at this year’s World Cup finals, showed his utter frustration by smacking the post with his hand.

Chelsea had four other chances in the opening period but needed a stunning reflex save from Cech to keep out an instinctive close-range effort from Piquionne after 22 minutes.

Portsmouth had the brighter start in the second period but there was an air of inevitably about the outcome once Boateng saw his penalty saved and Drogba scored.

The icing on the cake for Chelsea’s England defender Ashley Cole was a place in the record books as he climbed the steps to the Royal Box and collected his sixth FA Cup winners’ medal.

(Editing by Ken Ferris To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Regulars celebrate 82yrs of drinking together at the same Somerset pub!

London, May 12 (ANI): A pair of pub regulars has been drinking together at the same bar since 1928—making it a whopping 167 years between them.

Les Perkins, 98, and Chris Parfitt, 95, first visited the Waggon and Horses at Doulting Beacon, Somerset, aged just 13.

And the inseparable pensioners have been loyal regulars at the boozer ever since and have outlasting at least four changes in management.

Retired farmer Les and former quarry manager Chris say the pub “never changes”.

“Only the people change. Some we”ve liked, some we didn”t. They move on but we always keep coming back,” the Sun quoted Les as saying.

Chris added: “The current owners are very good and the food is excellent, although the landlady”s a bit cheeky.”

Les and Chris were taken for their first drink at the Waggon and Horses by their fathers when each was just 13 years old — in 1925 and 1928.

The two became firm friends despite going to different schools and have now drunk together in the pub for 82 years. (ANI)

Chinese farmer kills official for forcing wife’s abortion

Beijing, May 11 (IANS) A farmer allegedly killed a family planning official in China’s Jilin province and injured her two minor children, after she forced his wife to undergo an abortion.

The farmer, identified as Zhang Xuezhong, killed Jiang Xiaoling May 1 because he was angry she forced his wife to abort their baby, officials said Monday.

Jiang’s husband, Zhao Guogui, also a farmer in Xinhua village, said Monday the alleged killer rushed to his home with a stick and beat his wife to death. He also beat his son, 15, and daughter, 11, both of whom are now in hospital. The girl is in a comatose state in the intensive care unit, hospital officials said.

Zhang has been arrested.

Zhang was angry as Jiang had reported his wife’s pregnancy was in violation of the country’s family planning rules, Zhao said.

‘He is so ruthless. My wife reported to the superiors that his wife was unlawfully pregnant again,’ Zhao was quoted as saying by Global Times.

Jiang discovered in February 2010 that Zhang’s wife was pregnant and tried to make her undergo an abortion. The couple refused and Jiang reported them to higher officials.

After officials convinced her, Zhang’s wife underwent the operation, Zhao said.

Farmers in the countryside are allowed to have a second child if the first one is a girl or has a disability, according to the family planning policy.

Zhang had earlier served 13 years in prison for attempting to kill his father-in-law.

Govt pact unlikely before Monday – UK Conservatives

Britain’s opposition Conservatives and Liberal Democrats will hold more talks on Sunday on a pact after Thursday’s indecisive election, but they are unlikely to reach a deal before Monday, the Conservatives said on Saturday.

The Conservatives won most parliamentary seats in the election but fell short of a majority and are seeking the support of the smaller Lib Dems to end 13 years of Labour rule.

The talks, starting at 11 a.m. (1000 GMT), will be face-to-face between the two parties but below the level of leader, a Conservative Party spokesman said.

He said it was unlikely a deal could be reached by Monday, noting that Conservative members of parliament, who will be briefed on the negotiations, will not meet until Monday evening.

(Reporting by Adrian Croft; Editing by Keith Weir)

1 in 5 Brit teens leaves school ”illiterate and innumerate”

London, May 8 (ANI): A survey has suggested that one in five British teenagers is practically unemployable after leaving school as they lack the English and maths skills that are required for everyday use.

The study said despite the billions spent in attempting to raise standards in the three-Rs, the numbers of 16 to 19-year-olds rendered functionally illiterate or innumerate has failed to improve over the last two decades.

Teenagers” reading ability has barely changed since 1960, it was claimed, leaving thousands of young people struggling to “partake fully in employment [and] family life”.

The conclusions, in research from Sheffield University, come amid continuing fears over levels of basic skills.

Last month, a cross-party committee of MPs said that the number of school leavers without a job or college place had failed to improve “despite one policy strategy after another”.

It will also raise doubts over Labour claims that school standards have risen dramatically in the last 13 years.

On May 7, the National Union of Teachers warned that more action was needed to tackle the “long tail of underachievement” in schools.

In the latest study, academics assessed evidence relating to levels of basics skills among young people between 1948 and 2009.

It said the latest data suggested 22 percent of 16- to 19-year-olds were now functionally innumerate, while 17 percent were illiterate.

Prof Greg Brooks, one of the report”s authors, said it meant more than a fifth of teenagers left school with “very basic competence in maths” which was “clearly not enough to deal confidently with many of the mathematical challenges of contemporary life”.

The report found standards of innumeracy had remained at the same level for 20 years and was “higher than in many other industrial countries”.

Academics said that literacy skills had also failed to improve since the late 1980s.

“People at this level can handle only simple tests and straightforward questions on them where no distracting information is adjacent or nearby,” the Telegraph quoted the study as saying.

“Making inferences and understanding forms of indirect meaning, eg., allusion and irony, are likely to be difficult or impossible.

“This is less than the functional literacy needed to partake in employment, family life and citizenship and to enjoy reading for its own sake,” it concluded. (ANI)

Michael Douglas convinced prison will save son’s life

London, May 4 (ANI): Actor Michael Douglas has revealed in an interview that had his son Cameron not been sent to prison he would have lost him to drugs.

Cameron, 31, had been detained on drugs charges last year following a police raid on his New York hotel room.

He was handed a five-year jail term last month after pleading guilty to charges of methamphetamine possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance and one count of possession of cocaine in January (10).

Douglas, 65, is convinced that the time his son spends behind bars will help him to rebuild his life.

“My son has not been sober for this length of time since he was 13 years old,” the Daily Star quoted him as America’s Today show.

“So he was going to be dead or somebody was gonna kill him, and I think he has a chance to start a new life and he knows that.

“And from my understanding, it’s going to take that amount of time for him to rebuild and start himself afresh.

“He’s a great young man. And I wouldn’t be supporting him if I didn’t feel that way,” he added. (ANI)

Gazprom upbeat on demand despite rival shale gas

MOSCOW, April 14 (Reuters) – Russian energy giant Gazprom (GAZP.MM) on Wednesday projected a further gas output increase in three years, despite increasing competition from alternatives such as shale gas.

Energy

Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller said the company expected to produce 565.5 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas in 2013 compared to a projected 529 bcm this year and 461 bcm in crisis-hit 2009.

“Obviously, the planned output is defined by the positive dynamics of gas consumption both on the domestic and international gas markets, for example, in Europe,” Miller told Russian TV.

He added that the forecast 2013 production is expected to reach a record high in 13 years and exceed volumes extracted in pre-crisis 2008 when the company produced 551 bcm.

Gazprom faces severe competition from shale gas production, which has transformed the U.S. gas market and was one of the driving forces behind the company’s decision to postpone several key projects including the huge Shtokman gas deposit development.

Shale gas in northern Africa also jeopardises Gazprom’s position as the dominant supplier in Europe.

The company is also suffering because spot gas prices in Europe are below its own long-term contract prices, which link natural gas and oil product prices. (Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, editing by Will Waterman)

Brown says would overhaul UK political system

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Wednesday he would overhaul Britain’s scandal-hit parliament, giving people a vote on sweeping political reforms if his Labour Party wins the May 6 election.

Brown’s proposals could help Labour find common ground with the smaller opposition Liberal Democrats, whose support Labour may need to form a government in the event it fails to secure an outright majority.

The prime minister said voters would be given a say on constitutional reforms in a referendum before October 2011, including changing how members of parliament (MPs) were elected and the possibility of an elected upper chamber.

The proposals are in part a response to public disgust with politicians after many MPs abused their expenses by claiming public funds for items such as a duck house or dog food.

“I would … take no joy in victory if it comes without a mandate to get rid of the old discredited system of politics,” Brown said in a speech a day after setting the election date.

More than 140 legislators out of 646, some of whom were embroiled in the expenses scandal, are not standing at the election, widely expected to be won by the opposition Conservatives to end 13 years of Labour rule.

However, many polls suggest they will fall short of a majority, resulting in a “hung parliament” that financial markets fear will not act decisively to slash a gaping budget deficit.

FIRST-PAST-THE-POST REFORM

Brown called for parliaments to be elected for a fixed term, instead of the current system where the prime minister has the power to set the election date within a certain time frame.

He said he would also reform the current first-past-the-post electoral system so that legislators would need the support of more than half of the voters in the area to win election.

This could be done through an “alternative vote” system where the lowest-polling candidates were eliminated in counting until one candidate hits 50 percent of the vote.

Members of parliament would also be banned from working for lobbying companies, said Brown, whose Labour Party is trying to win a fourth consecutive term.

Voters should also be given the right to recall MPs guilty of gross financial misconduct, where politicians would face a U.S.-style vote of confidence in their constituency.

Labour suspended three former cabinet ministers last month after they were secretly filmed saying they could influence government policy for cash.

Brown also proposed allowing members of parliament a vote on lowering the voting age to 16 from the current 18.

The public would also get their say on how the House of Lords, parliament’s upper chamber of appointed life peers and hereditary peers, is shaped in the future. A proportional representation electoral system could be used, Brown said.

The measures will be seen as an attempt to woo the Liberal Democrats, who have long argued for political reform, including a switch to proportional representation.

But the Britain’s third biggest political party dismissed Brown’s proposals.

“How on earth are we supposed to believe anything that Gordon Brown says about political reform when they’ve done nothing for 13 years?,” Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said.

Earlier on Wednesday, Brown and Conservative leader David Cameron clashed over the economy and defence in Brown’s last question and answer session in parliament before the election.

Cameron accused Brown of wrecking the economic recovery with plans to raise payroll taxes and of failing to give British troops in Afghanistan enough helicopters.

(Additional reporting by Adrian Croft and Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Rapist’s sentence reduced

A man convicted of a violent rape in Geelong has had his sentence reduced by two years.

In 2008, Luke Gill was sentenced to 19 years jail with a non-parole of 14 years for the rape and robbery of a 22-year-old woman.

The woman was left fighting for her life after she was dragged down an alleyway and brutally raped in December 2006.

Today, the Court of Appeal reduced Gill’s six year sentence for the robbery of the woman’s purse to two years.

He was re-sentenced to a minimum 13 years jail.

UPDATE 2-Japan retail sales log biggest rise in 13 yrs

(For more stories on the Japanese economy, click [ID:nECONJP])

* Government stimulus boosts sales of autos, electronics

* Gasoline price rises push up sales value

* Sales could fall sharply after stimulus wears off – analyst (Adds more analyst quotes, details)

By Rie Ishiguro

TOKYO, March 29 (Reuters) – Japanese retail sales jumped the most in 13 years in the year to February as government incentives prompted shoppers to open their wallets, but some analysts cautioned about the outlook as such stimulus measures taper off.

Retail sales rose 4.2 percent from a year earlier, more than double a median market forecast for a 1.8 percent gain, government data showed on Monday.

“Given the stagnant income situation, this sizeable rise in retail sales is too good to be true,” said Seiji Shiraishi, chief economist at HSBC Securities in Tokyo.

“Some stimulus measures will continue until April and others will last until September. After these incentives expire, there should be a big negative rebound in retail sales.”

February’s jump came as consumers continued to spend on low-emission automobiles and electronics goods that are backed by government subsidies, while recent rises in gasoline prices gave an additional push to the overall value.

Economists also say the data is not very reliable because it focuses on department stores and other big retailers, which consumers have increasingly been shunning in recent years in favour of specialty retailers and on-line shopping.

“The income and employment situation is severe, and we need to watch their impact on sales,” said an official at the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.

Japan’s jobless rate has recovered to 4.9 percent after hitting a record high last summer. But analysts say the improvement in the job market will slow, with companies still far from operating at full capacity and reluctant to hire new workers.

While consumer spending is faring better than previously thought, analysts expect the fading impact of stimulus measures on domestic demand will curb overall economic growth early this year. [ID:nTOE62802P] (Editing by Hugh Lawson and Chris Gallagher)

McEvoy outed for a month

Top jockey Kerrin McEvoy has been suspended for a month by Racing New South Wales stewards for his ride on Shakes at Randwick on March 18.

Stewards found McEvoy guilty of failing to take all reasonable and permissible measures to give Shakes full opportunity to win or obtain the best placing in a 1,400-metre race on the Kensington track.

McEvoy’s suspension is due to begin on April 4, the day after Golden Slipper day at Rosehill, and he will be free to resume riding on May 4.

Stewards ruled that McEvoy failed to take all reasonable measures near the 600m mark of the race as Mossamine improved three wide to his outside and he remained racing behind El Sonador when there was the opportunity to position Shakes to the outside of El Sonador’s heels and have a clear run in the straight.

Shakes was held up in the straight until the 200m mark and finished third.

McEvoy’s good record over a period of 13 years and the fact the major autumn races at Randwick’s three-week carnival were imminent were taken into consideration when stewards issued the penalty.

The jockey, who is stable rider for the powerful Darley operation, has until Monday to lodge an appeal.

-AAP

Man jailed for brutal abduction

A man has been jailed for 16 years for abducting a man and cutting off his ears on Queensland’s Gold Coast.

Aaron Drew Scheers, 26, pleaded guilty in the Southport District Court to kidnapping David Holmes and causing grievous bodily harm.

The court heard Scheers was a member of the Lone Wolf motorcycle club when the offences took place at Currumbin Valley in 2007.

Judge Clive Wall described the attack as worse than thuggery and said he needed to send a message that such offences would not be tolerated.

He sentenced Scheers to 13 years in jail and a further three years for attempting to pervert the course of justice.

Scheers has been declared a serious violent offender and will be required to serve 80 per cent of his sentence.

His family has indicated he will appeal against the sentence.

Take me as I am, says action man Abbott

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has defended his love of rigorous exercise, saying he is just being himself.

Some senior Liberals are worried Mr Abbott is looking more like an “action man” than a potential prime minister.

And he has been ridiculed in Parliament by the Government for spending too much time on his physique.

Mr Abbott is often seen cycling and surfing and images of the leader clad in “budgie smugglers” are now firmly imprinted in the public’s mind.

This weekend he will compete in an ironman triathlon that includes a 3.8-kilometre swim and an 180km bike ride, and he is also preparing to take part in a 10-day “pollie pedal” bike ride from Melbourne to Sydney.

He has told ABC Local Radio that he will not be changing his plans.

“The pollie pedal has been going now for 13 years [and] I think it’s a great way for pollies to get out of their comfort zone,” he said.

“I don’t think it is something I should stop doing just because I’ve got a different job.

“We need more of these things if we are to build the social fabric.”

Mr Abbott is often seen jogging inside Parliament House early in the mornings.

And earlier this month he became part of an outback drama after being lost in the bush for several hours during a quad bike tour in the Northern Territory.

Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner has used Mr Abbott’s extensive exercise regime to paint him as a man whose mind is not on the job.

“There is one part of his body that does not get much exercise and that is the brain. And it is long overdue that it got a workout,” he told Parliament last week.

Garibaldi contamination victims receive payouts

More than half the court cases arising out of the Garibaldi contamination case in South Australia have been settled, 13 years after they began.

Eight of the 15 District Court cases for personal damages have settled for undisclosed amounts, although court records show one of the payouts is more than $1.8 million.

The claims were brought by people, mainly children, who ate Garibaldi smallgoods contaminated with E. coli bacteria in 1995.

Four-year-old Nikki Robinson died and more than 20 children fell seriously ill.

Many of the surviving victims continue to suffer severe health problems. One is currently recovering from multiple organ transplants.

Another seven court cases are unresolved and have been scheduled for a joint hearing in June.