Australia PM puts economy at heart of re-election

July 15 (Reuters) – Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard sought to sell her Labor government’s economic credentials on Thursday, warning that the conservative opposition’s policies could risk a robust economy.

In her first major economic speech since becoming prime minister on June 24, Gillard set out her platform for re-election at polls expected within months, centering on job creation.

“I believe a strong economy is the foundation of everything else that as prime minister I want for this great country of ours,” Gillard told the National Press Club in Canberra.

“As prime minister I will make my economic judgments based on what gives Australians the best opportunity for access to work.”

The government, on course for a narrow election victory according to opinion polls, tweaked its economic forecasts on Wednesday, predicting robust commodity prices due to Chinese demand will ensure the budget returns to surplus in 2012/13, far ahead of most other rich nations.

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It also forecast unemployment would fall to 5 percent in 2010-11 and 4.75 pct in 2011-12.

Gillard said the economy had emerged from the global financial crisis stronger than many other developed nations due in part due to the government’s A$52 billion ($46 billion) stimulus package in 2009.

“I say to the Australian people, now is not the time to take risks with the Australian economy,” said Gillard, Australia’s first female prime minister who appears far more at ease dealing with the media than her predecessor Kevin Rudd.

“It is a time for prudent and careful economic management, not a time to take risks with a Liberal Party that got it wrong on the global financial crisis, that opposed (stimulus) action to support Australian jobs and that would have allowed hundreds of thousands of jobs to be destroyed.”

Gillard said a new mining tax, which is forecast to raise A$10.5 billion in revenue from 2012, would fund a cut in corporate tax and a rise in pensions but would be dumped by conservative leader Tony Abbott if he was elected.

“Remarkably, my opponent would deny Australians these benefits because he is refusing to accept the tax that our biggest mining companies have agreed to pay,” she said.

PM SELLS ECONOMIC CONSERVATISM

Economic management is traditionally a major issue in Australian elections. And while Australia’s healthy economy, in its 17th year of growth, should be a winning ticket for the government, voters still believe the opposition has the edge in economic management, according to opinion polls this week.

The opposition, which ruled for 12 years before Labor was elected in 2007, is also committed to achieving a budget surplus, and has said it would put downward pressure on interest rates, cut debt and cap spending.

But it differs from the government over its opposition to a new mining tax and a planned carbon price to fight climate change.

Despite her left-wing background, Gillard has sold herself as an economic conservative, dismissing concerns her government would be an old-style, big-spending Labor administration.

Gillard said growth in spending would be capped at 2 percent a year once the economy was growing above trend.

She also said Australia could not rely solely on its resource sector for future economic prosperity, warning doing so could create a two-speed economy of haves and have nots.

“Australia today is a great beneficiary of the economic growth in China and the demand for our mineral resources in our region. But if anyone thinks that gives us a free ticket to easy prosperity, they are mistaken,” she said.

She said a re-elected Labor government would push for micro-economic reforms to ensure Australia remained a competitive and modern economy, but also provided social dividends.

“The microeconomic challenges of the future are not a simplistic choice between the market and the state,” said Gillard.

“Simply applying the extreme free-market medicine of liberalisation and privatisation without thought or care is not a solution. Maintaining an instinctive hostility towards the public sector and all it provides is equally wrong.” ($1 = 1.131 Australian Dollar) (Editing by Ed Davies and Sugita Katyal)

(Reuters) – A shrewd combination of youthful talent, experience and sound tactics propelled Germany to a 4-0 drubbing of Australia in their opening World Cup game, surprising many who had written off the three-times champions. Sports Captain Michael Ballack was one of five players forced out of the squad through injury and the team’s two chief strikers netted only a handful of goals between them in the German league last season. While Spain and Brazil have yet to play, Germany’s performance was the most impressive so far at the World Cup and it will focus minds in Group C as the team that comes second will face the winners of Germany’s Group D in the second round. British bookmakers cut the odds on Germany winning their fourth World Cup to 9-1 from 12-1 immediately after the match. The Australian defense had been expected to mount stiff resistance to the out-of-form strikers Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski. But unlike France against Uruguay, the German side unlocked the Australian defense with neat passing down the flanks and penetration through the middle from the 21-year-old pivot of the team, Mesut Ozil. Captain Philipp Lahm linked deftly with Ozil and the 20-year-old right winger Thomas Mueller to leave the Australians floundering, carving out a string of openings in the first 20 minutes that should have produced more goals. Coach Joachim Loew said afterwards that Mueller had been chosen over the more experienced Piotr Trochowski precisely for his ability to carry the ball to the edge of the penalty box and really penetrate dogged defenses. Loew will also be pleased that in-form striker Cacau came off the bench and buried his first chance to round off the German win, despite being left out for Klose. “It was a difficult decision not to field Cacau straightaway,” said Loew after the game. “I just knew I had a strong substitute there on the bench.” Loew said it had been important for the team to get a sound win under their belts to build confidence and that the defense had been excellent. He warned it was just the start, but his youthful side has already proved many doubters wrong. England will now be all the more anxious to avoid coming second in Group C and running the risk of facing Germany in the second round. (Editing by Ossian Shine)

DURBAN (Reuters) – Germany began their quest for a fourth World Cup in devastating style Sunday with a thumping 4-0 victory over Australia in their opening Group D match.

Sports

With a fluent performance fitting for the first match of the tournament at the magnificent Moses Mabhida stadium, the youngest German World Cup squad for three quarters of a century put down their marker as serious title contenders.

Forwards Lukas Podolski and Miroslav Klose gave their side a 2-0 halftime lead to vindicate coach Joachim Loew’s faith in them despite a recent lack of goals, with winger Thomas Mueller and substitute Cacau finding the net after the break.

Australia, who started both halves brightly and battled gamely throughout, played the last 34 minutes with 10 men after Tim Cahill was dismissed for clattering into Bastian Schweinsteiger.

Germany lead Group D from Ghana, who beat Serbia 1-0 in Sunday’s earlier match in Pretoria.

“It was very important that we won because we gained a lot of self confidence,” said Loew, whose team face the Serbians next on June 18.

“We can now hope to make the last 16 with just one more win. All players were very, very focused. We did many things right but this is just the start.”

GERMAN TRIUMVIRATE

It was the triumvirate of captain Philipp Lahm, Mesut Ozil and Mueller who laid the foundation for victory as the Germans took to the wings and fired in low, hard passes to outflank and unpick the much-vaunted Socceroo defense.

“I think the way we set up our attacks, the way we passed balls to and fro is something we have been working on very intensively over the past few years,” Loew said.

“We were very good on the ball and we created beautiful goals.”

In the eighth minute, Ozil found Mueller in what looked to be an offside position and his cutback allowed Podolski to smash the ball into the net via Mark Schwarzer’s flailing arm.

Klose should have doubled the lead in the 24th minute but he blasted wide when Podolski’s cross left him free in front of goal. He made amends just two minutes later, however.

Lahm lofted a high cross in from the right, Schwarzer came charging out to claim the ball but Klose beat him to it and headed into an empty net for his 49th international goal.

“Everything worked today,” said the 32-year-old, top scorer at the last World Cup on home soil.

“We have three points in the bag but we have not won anything yet. But we did gain a lot of respect with this success tonight.”

With the Australian spirit sapped in the second half by Cahill’s sending off, Mueller got his reward for a fine performance on the right flank when he found space in the box and screwed the ball into the net off the post in the 68th minute.

Cacau, who had just replaced Klose, completed the scoring two minutes later after Ozil had beaten the offside trap to play in the striker to drill the ball into the net.

“It was not the day for us,” said Australia coach Pim Verbeek. “They were better and the reality is the next two games we have to win. There is no discussion about that. Drawing is not enough.

“We have six days to recover physically and mentally and then we have to show the right spirit.”

Verbeek said Germany had shown they were a “fantastic side” and had not been weakened by playing youngsters.

“Every player they brought in made the team not weaker but stronger,” the Dutchman added.

(Editing by Ossian Shine)

Analysis: Germans prove their strength in depth

(Reuters) – A shrewd combination of youthful talent, experience and sound tactics propelled Germany to a 4-0 drubbing of Australia in their opening World Cup game, surprising many who had written off the three-times champions.

Sports

Captain Michael Ballack was one of five players forced out of the squad through injury and the team’s two chief strikers netted only a handful of goals between them in the German league last season.

While Spain and Brazil have yet to play, Germany’s performance was the most impressive so far at the World Cup and it will focus minds in Group C as the team that comes second will face the winners of Germany’s Group D in the second round.

British bookmakers cut the odds on Germany winning their fourth World Cup to 9-1 from 12-1 immediately after the match.

The Australian defense had been expected to mount stiff resistance to the out-of-form strikers Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski.

But unlike France against Uruguay, the German side unlocked the Australian defense with neat passing down the flanks and penetration through the middle from the 21-year-old pivot of the team, Mesut Ozil.

Captain Philipp Lahm linked deftly with Ozil and the 20-year-old right winger Thomas Mueller to leave the Australians floundering, carving out a string of openings in the first 20 minutes that should have produced more goals.

Coach Joachim Loew said afterwards that Mueller had been chosen over the more experienced Piotr Trochowski precisely for his ability to carry the ball to the edge of the penalty box and really penetrate dogged defenses.

Loew will also be pleased that in-form striker Cacau came off the bench and buried his first chance to round off the German win, despite being left out for Klose.

“It was a difficult decision not to field Cacau straightaway,” said Loew after the game. “I just knew I had a strong substitute there on the bench.”

Loew said it had been important for the team to get a sound win under their belts to build confidence and that the defense had been excellent. He warned it was just the start, but his youthful side has already proved many doubters wrong.

England will now be all the more anxious to avoid coming second in Group C and running the risk of facing Germany in the second round.

(Editing by Ossian Shine)

Germany will face tougher opponents, warns Loew

(Reuters) – Germany will face tougher World Cup opponents than Australia and must keep their feet on the ground despite crushing the Socceroos 4-0 in their opening match, coach Joachim Loew said Sunday.

Sports

The team’s defense was excellent and he was very happy with the attacking play, Loew said, but he felt Germany’s youngest World Cup squad for three-quarters of a century could have closed down spaces in the middle of the field better.

“This was the first match of our tournament and we know that Australia is not going to be the ultimate benchmark,” Loew told a news conference.

“There will be more difficult opponents to play. So this was a good warm-up. We will be happy about this win,” he said.

Germany face Serbia on June 18 and Loew said they could provide stiffer competition, given they lost to Ghana Sunday and will need to win to get their campaign back on track.

“Serbia lost today, so they will be quite a different benchmark,” he said. “What we need to do is remain focused.”

Loew defended his decision to play Lukas Podolski and Miroslav Klose, despite their goal drought last season. Both came through for their coach, each scoring to put Germany 2-0 up by half time.

“I didn’t have to stick to these players, they didn’t have to deliver on any promises,” he said.

“I simply know that I can fully rely on these players even though they might not score in one match, even if they go through a bad patch. I have full confidence in them.”

Australia’s resolute and well-organized defense had been expected to pose problems for the German attack, but Loew said he told his players to focus on pushing low balls forward to create gaps — a tactic that paid off well in the game.

“The way we set up our attacks, the way we passed balls to and fro, is something we have been working on very intensively,” he said. “We tried to play long straight passes … and keep the ball low. And that created problems for the Australians.”

“Everybody expects things to kick off nicely and well after a long preparation so we can be happy and confident,” he said.

“We want to reach the round of 16 at least so we can be satisfied.”

(Editing by Ossian Shine)

Australia launches anti-doping campaign aimed at young athletes

(Reuters Life!) – A hard-hitting poster showing an athlete injecting a prohibited substance is at the center of a new Australian anti-doping awareness campaign, with the warning “You can never win your reputation back.”

Lifestyle

Australian Sports Minister Kate Ellis Monday launched the campaign aimed at both young, up-and-coming athletes and elite sportsmen and women.

“This confronting poster sends the important message to athletes that doping is never okay and that your reputation, once lost, is something you can never get back,” said Ellis.

“Doping can ruin an athlete’s health but it can be just as damaging for an athlete’s reputation and ultimately has the potential to end careers.”

Australian Olympic and World Champion rower Amber Halliday and Paralympic swimmer and world record holder Matthew Cowdrey are among several athletes named as Campaign Ambassadors.

“I can relate to the pressure young athletes are under while trying to carve out a career in sport,” said Halliday, who has moved into cycling following her rowing career.

“This campaign highlights the fact that no matter how good athletes get, no matter how many races they win or goals they score, it will all come crashing down if they have cheated through doping.”

The “You can never win your reputation back” campaign will run through June and July and encourages Australians to visit the anti-doping website (www.asada.gov.au).

(Reporting by Michael Perry)

Valbuena lifts France, Van Persie double

New blood and a change of formation paid dividends for France as debutant Mathieu Valbuena netted the winner in a 2-1 World Cup warm-up win over Costa Rica on Wednesday.

With 16 days until the start of the tournament in South Africa, the Netherlands also secured a morale-boosting win as Robin van Persie scored twice in a 2-1 victory over Mexico.

France, playing in a 4-3-3 formation instead of the usual 4-2-3-1 under coach Raymond Domenech, produced some neat football but looked shaky at the back.

Midfielder Carlos Hernandez put Costa Rica ahead early but an own goal restored parity and Valbuena struck seven minutes from time.

The Dutch, without a number of regular starters including Arjen Robben, Mark van Bommel and Wesley Sneijder, followed England’s example by overcoming Mexico.

Van Persie proved his worth as central striker with two fine volleys to give Mexico coach Javier Aguirre some thinking to do after another inconsistent performance, following their 3-1 defeat by England at Wembley. Javier Hernandez headed a consolation for the Mexicans 16 minutes from time.

“Van Persie was excellent tonight with two beautiful goals, but we missed the power in the second half and allowed Mexico to play much better,” Netherlands Bert van Marwijk said.

Australia became the first team to arrive for the World Cup when they landed in Johannesburg.

“For everybody, this is a new experience to train and to play in altitude,” coach Pim Verbeek said at Johannesburg’s OR Tambo airport.

“So we have to find out how it works and what we can do the upcoming days, we still have work to do, but that’s why we have 15, 16 days to prepare ourselves.”

If the World Cup suddenly seemed a lot closer for the Australians, Spain midfielder Cesc Fabregas was still being forced to duck questions about his club future.

Fabregas, a transfer target for Barcelona, had hoped to get his future sorted out well before the start of the tournament but the Arsenal man had to leave his fate in the hands of club manager Arsene Wenger.

“He told me to concentrate on my football and to concentrate on the World Cup,” Fabregas told reporters at Spain’s training camp in Madrid.

“He told me to leave it in his hands and he will deal with whatever happens with my future. That’s what I’m doing. Just concentrating on football.”

TIPPING THEM

If economists are correct, Fabregas and his national team mates will be concentrating on football right up to the final on July 11, with a poll released on Wednesday tipping them as winners.

Reuters polled a global field of 74 soccer fan economists and 24 respondents said Spain would follow up their Euro 2008 success with triumph in South Africa.

A total of 23 expected Brazil to make it six World Cups, while just one economist expected Italy to retain their title.

There are more serious calculations to be done by coaches, of course, with the June 1 deadline for naming their final 23-man squads looming.

United States coach Bob Bradley named his party on Wednesday, keeping faith with central defender Oguchi Onyewu.

Experienced striker Brian Ching was the surprise ommission from the U.S. squad.

Germany coach Joachim Loew has named his final squad. It has already been reduced to 22 by an injury to midfielder Christian Traesch and the coach will be relieved it was not reduced still further.

Striker Thomas Mueller crashed during a mountain bike run with squad members at their Italian pre-World Cup training camp, needing several stitches to his injured chin, but avoided any bone or muscle injuries.

The opening match at the World Cup will be played at Soccer City, where South African tribal chiefs and healers have slaughtered a cow outside the stadium as part of rituals to appease the spirits of ancestors and welcome fans.

Phepsile Maseko, national coordinator for the Traditional Healers’ Organisation, said on Wednesday the ceremony was intended to cleanse the air and ensure spirits were not frightened by the many languages that would be spoken during the month-long tournament.

(Writing by Kevin Fylan and Justin Palmer; editing by Ed Osmond

To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Oz politician ‘sick of being sexualised’ by female NSW Premier

Melbourne, May 20 (ANI): Australian politician and member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly Adrian Piccoli is enraged over New South Wales Premier Kristina Keneally’s remarks about his hair and suits.

The politician said he is sick of being “sexualised” and was fed-up with Keneally”s comments about his suits and his lack of hair across the floor of the NSW Parliamentary Bear Pit.

Things came to a head when Piccoli asked Speaker Richard Torbay to intervene after the latest taunt.

“I take great offence at constantly being sexualised by the Premier. If it”s not my suits, it”s my hair,” News.com.au quoted Mr Piccoli as saying.

Piccoli later called out that he was “happily married” and Keneally could be heard to retort, “Oh, you wish”.

Former sex discrimination commissioner Pru Goward, who is now a Liberal MP, said the Premier”s behaviour would be considered unacceptable other workplaces.

“This is a particular job, it is not an average job. Most Australians in their workplaces are not allowed to do this sort of thing,” she said.

“What happens in Parliament is privileged but the truth is in any other workplace if a boss or a peer in public ridiculed somebody along those lines, not just once but frequently – she does it every week – it wouldn”t be accepted behaviour, people just would not get away with it.”

“We”ve been very conscious not to refer to anything about her dress,” Piccoli said.

“Nobody makes reference to the way she dresses. I referred to her hair once after she referred to mine.”

Speaker Richard Torbay told Mr Piccoli in his three years controlling the Bear Pit of State Parliament it was “the worst point of order” he had ever heard. (ANI)

Afridi says aggression, ending ‘mental hang up’ critical for Pak success against Oz

Karachi, May 20 (ANI): Flamboyant Pakistan T20 skipper Shahid Afridi believes that his team suffers from a ‘mental hang up’ when it comes to competing with the World Champions Australia, and he wants to help players break that ‘jinx’ concerning the Kangaroos.

In the recent years, Pakistan have had a nightmarish record against Australia, with the latest being the January-February tour where Pakistan failed to register even a single win against the hosts.

It came close to defeating Australia in the semifinal of the just concluded ICC T20 World Championship in the West Indies, but faltered at the last moment.

Afridi said the loss almost shattered his heart, but he pointed towards the positive aspect of the loss that at least Pakistan played some tough and competitive cricket.

“I would have been left completely shattered but what gave me hope was the fact that we played aggressive cricket and a victory against Australia was within our reach,” The News quoted Afridi, as saying.

“It would have been great had we go on to win that match but once again the Australians proved that they are still the best in the world,” he added.

The hard hitting all-rounder pointed out that defeating Australia has never been easy, but the teams competing against the world champions would have to match the aggression of the Kangaroos to stand any chance.

“I must make it clear that beating Australia will never be easy. But I’m also confident that we can do it. What we need is to overcome our mental hang up and just play brave cricket. The thing is that the Aussies are mentally very tough and the only way to beat them is by going out there and giving it our best shot. You have to be really aggressive against that team because there is no other way to tackle them,” Afridi said.

Afridi said he is eagerly waiting for the two T20 encounters against Australia during the upcoming series in England, as the best chance of ending the team’s poor run against Australia is to defeat them in the game in which they are considered to be the best.

“It would take a gigantic effort to beat Australia in the Test series but Twenty20 cricket is a different story. We have a very good team for the shortest format and can beat any opposition on our day,” he said. (ANI)

Afridi says aggression, ending ‘mental hang up’ critical for Pak success against Oz

Karachi, May 20 (ANI): Flamboyant Pakistan T20 skipper Shahid Afridi believes that his team suffers from a ‘mental hang up’ when it comes to competing with the World Champions Australia, and he wants to help players break that ‘jinx’ concerning the Kangaroos.

In the recent years, Pakistan have had a nightmarish record against Australia, with the latest being the January-February tour where Pakistan failed to register even a single win against the hosts.

It came close to defeating Australia in the semifinal of the just concluded ICC T20 World Championship in the West Indies, but faltered at the last moment.

Afridi said the loss almost shattered his heart, but he pointed towards the positive aspect of the loss that at least Pakistan played some tough and competitive cricket.

“I would have been left completely shattered but what gave me hope was the fact that we played aggressive cricket and a victory against Australia was within our reach,” The News quoted Afridi, as saying.

“It would have been great had we go on to win that match but once again the Australians proved that they are still the best in the world,” he added.

The hard hitting all-rounder pointed out that defeating Australia has never been easy, but the teams competing against the world champions would have to match the aggression of the Kangaroos to stand any chance.

“I must make it clear that beating Australia will never be easy. But I’m also confident that we can do it. What we need is to overcome our mental hang up and just play brave cricket. The thing is that the Aussies are mentally very tough and the only way to beat them is by going out there and giving it our best shot. You have to be really aggressive against that team because there is no other way to tackle them,” Afridi said.

Afridi said he is eagerly waiting for the two T20 encounters against Australia during the upcoming series in England, as the best chance of ending the team’s poor run against Australia is to defeat them in the game in which they are considered to be the best.

“It would take a gigantic effort to beat Australia in the Test series but Twenty20 cricket is a different story. We have a very good team for the shortest format and can beat any opposition on our day,” he said. (ANI)

Bob Geldof slams Australia’s treatment of Aborigines

Melbourne, May 19 (ANI): Irish singer Sir Bob Geldof has slammed Australia for its treatment of Aborigines, saying that it was “economically stupid” and “absurd”.

Geldof, 58, was speaking at a breakfast for West Australian mining entrepreneur Andrew Forrest’s nation-touring GenerationOne movement, which aims to halt indigenous disparity.

He said Australia has “exiled” indigenous Australians from the nation.

“They were forced to be exiled from themselves and that must stop,” News.com.au quoted him as saying.

“You need to pull them back into themselves because you’ve acknowledged them as being.

“The spiritual core of yourselves will only be filled when this is done,” he stated.

He urged the “rich bastards” in attendance at the breakfast to contribute wholeheartedly to Forrest’s fight to end indigenous disparity, and likened indigenous affairs in Australia to situations he’d witnessed in third-world Africa.

“I said on the radio back in 1984 that to die of want in a world of surplus is not only intellectually absurd, it is morally repulsive. Well let’s add economically illiterate to that,” he said.

“You’ve removed from your society of ‘having a go’ 500 thousand of your own. That is absurd. It’s economically stupid.

“Just like those 44 million African children (given access to education from the Live Aid campaign) will be a massive driving force in the world economy, so your own Aboriginal people require to be allowed in. The access point is education,” he added. (ANI)

‘Binge listening’ in clubs causes hearing loss

Sydney, May 19 (ANI): Forget about binge drinking, it is ‘binge listening’ that’s harming the youngsters who go clubbing.

Youngsters in Australians are apparently showing early signs of hearing loss due to night outs at pubs and clubs, where they get exposed to three weeks” worth of noise in one night.

In a new survey, Harvey Dillon, the director of research at the National Acoustic Laboratories, found that out of the 1000 people quizzed, more than two-thirds of young people reported hearing loud music at venues such as nightclubs and pubs. He also measured the sound exposure of eight people.

“Most people were getting almost no noise until they went out on the weekend, and then they were getting up to three weeks” worth of noise in one night,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Dillon, as saying.

He insisted that most people were unaware of the risks of being exposed to loud music.

He said: “Of those with the highest exposure to dangerous noise about 6 per cent thought they had no risk of hearing damage and 20 per cent thought they had a very small risk.

“You never notice the small losses but even occasional damage causes permanent hearing loss and eventually it accumulates and you do notice,” he said. (ANI)

Australians fined £216 for not locking cars securely!

London, May 18 (ANI): Australian motorists who fail to lock their cars are not only being targeted by thieves, but also being fined by the police.

Officers in the Yarra Ranges north east of Melbourne have warned careless car owners that they will be fined 358 dollars (216 pounds) if they don”t properly secure their vehicles.

The move has come as an initiative to slow the increasing number of car break-ins.

Almost 40 per cent of those thefts last year were from unlocked cars, police have estimated. Valuables stolen from cars include laptops, wallets, satellite navigation systems, cash and bags.

Leading Senior-Constable Graeme Rust, from the Yarra Ranges traffic management unit said that continual warnings were being ignored by the town dwellers, and so the police were forced to use a Road Safety law passed by the Victorian state government, which allows the authorities to levy a fine on unattended unlocked vehicles.

“Did you know that if you do not switch the engine off, apply the hand brake, close the windows and lock your car you could be fined?,” The Telegraph quoted Rust as saying.

“I urge everyone to look to see that valuables are removed or out of sight and make sure your car is locked before leaving it unattended.”

However, the move hasn’t gone down well with the locals.

“Great country we live in. Make a simple mistake and if the crimes don”t make a victim of you the cops will do it for them,” said Peter Roehlen, a local. (ANI)

Experience gives Aussies advantage says Clarke

Australia captain Michael Clarke believes his team’s superior big match experience will give them a “huge advantage” in Sunday’s Twenty20 World Cup final against England.

Seven of the likely Australian starting line-up have featured in a World Cup or Champions Trophy final while England skipper Paul Collingwood is the only from his team to have played such a game — back in 2004.

“The guys who have taken part in big cricket matches — it doesn’t necessarily have to be a final — have a huge advantage,” said Clarke.

“There were probably guys in our squad that were picked not only because they are great Twenty20 players but have experience as well, World Cup experience, big test match experience.

“Having a few senior players around will help the youngsters control their emotions.”

The four Australians without final experience are 20-year-old leg spinner Steve Smith, left-arm pace bowler Dirk Nannes and Twenty20 specialists Dave Warner and David Hussey.

The other big difference between the two line-ups is that England’s features three South African-born players and an Irishman in their top five batsmen.

Collingwood is the only player born in England in that top order, a dominance by foreign born players that would be hard to imagine for an Australian team.

“Never say never,” said Clarke with a grin when asked if such a scenario would be possible.

“I haven’t seen it yet in my career, though. But if you asked the guys playing in that England team if they’re proud to be a part of that side I’m certain they’d say yes.

“Kevin Pietersen’s got the Lions tattooed on his arms, so he’s obviously very proud of playing for England.

“Every single player in that England team will come out and try their best, as will we,” said the Australia skipper.

Australia reached the final thanks to an astonishing comeback against Pakistan in St. Lucia on Friday and Clarke said rather than put that game aside, he wanted his team to remember what it showed about them.

AMAZING GAMES

“I don’t think I want the guys to forget that. I think that memory will stick in my mind for the rest of my career. It’s one of the most amazing games of cricket I’ve been involved in,” he said.

“I think we need to understand and accept that game’s gone. But just keep in the back of your mind that what we showed the other day could happen out here as well.”

Mike Hussey hit 60 off 24 balls as Australia hit 23 off the last over to win their semi-final against Pakistan in dramatic style, having looked out of the game.

“In our minds, we need to be very confident that we’re never out of the game, we always have a chance,” he said.

“There will certainly be tough times in the game tomorrow. We’re going to be under pressure, not be getting as many wickets as we’d like or as many runs off a certain over or certain bowler.

“But the acceptance is that, with our team, we can chase whatever total, or bowl a team out for what we need,” he said.

Clarke said though that he was under no illusions that his team would need to be at their very best against England.

“England are a very good team, they have shown that in this tournament they have beaten a lot of good teams and will be tough to beat tomorrow,” he said.

(Editing by Pritha Sarkar; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Bligh calls for fair budget share for ‘growth state Qld’

Premier Anna Bligh says Queensland should be recognised in tonight’s federal budget as the growth state of Australia.

The Federal Government hopes the budget will give it a much-needed bounce in the polls but faced by the debt hangover from its stimulus spending, there is not much scope for pre-election sweeteners.

Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan says his third budget will be responsible with major investments in the health sector and a boost to superannuation.

The Federal Opposition has warned the Government against unveiling any big new spending measures in tonight’s budget.

Ms Bligh says Queensland needs continued investment in service areas like health.

“I hear the federal Treasurer saying that this is a ‘no-frills’ budget,” he said.

“I do hope that Queensland will be recognised as the growth state of Australia.

“To the extent that there are some good outcomes for Australians, I hope Queensland gets its fair share.

“We need infrastructure investment, our growing population needs continued investment from all levels of government, particularly in those high priority service areas like health.”

Proposed resources tax

Queensland Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek says he and Premier Anna Bligh should join forces to fight the Commonwealth’s proposed mining tax.

Mr Langbroek has invited Ms Bligh to fly to Canberra with him tomorrow if as expected the tax is included in tonight’s budget.

He says state jobs are at risk.

“If Kevin Rudd brings in this mining tax, I call on her to have a bipartisan mercy dash to Canberra to stop this tax being inflicted on Queensland,” he said.

“I’m prepared to go with Anna Bligh to represent on behalf of all Queenslanders with Anna Bligh to stand up for Queensland.”

Super mining tax ‘an incredible mistake’

Chamber of Commerce and Industry Queensland (CCIQ) says the Commonwealth’s proposed super mining tax could spell the end of the Rudd Government.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the 40 per cent super profits tax on mining companies will give Australians their fair share of revenue.

But CCIQ spokesman David Goodwin says it is an incredible mistake.

“I think if we thought the insulation program was big, this will dwarf it,” he said.

“What this has done is potentially killed the goose that has laid the golden egg – it is just a matter of when.

“How many jobs will be lost in the meantime, and probably more important – how bad will Australia’s international standing be for a place for mining investment.”

Bligh support

Meanwhile, the Queensland Resources Council (QRC) says it hopes Premier Anna Bligh can persuade the Federal Government to reconsider the proposed new mining tax.

QRC chief executive Michael Roche says the mining tax will jeopardise $100 billion worth of projects in Queensland.

Mr Roche and other mining leaders met with Ms Bligh last night to share their concerns.

“She made it clear she was serious about working with industry to get this tax improved, so that we get a positive outcome from Queensland investment and Queensland jobs,” he said.

He says Ms Bligh was sympathetic and has offered to take it up with the Commonwealth.

“I’m expecting that not long after [Federal] Treasurer [Wayne] Swan has delivered and bedded down his budget, he can expect to be contacted by the Queensland Government seeking talks about the problems with this so-called super profit tax,” he said.

Climate change report highlights Indigenous health risks

A new report has found the health of Indigenous Australians living in coastal areas such as the Torres Strait could be at risk due to climate change.

The report commissioned by the Federal Government found climate change will elevate existing health risks for Indigenous people and create a whole new set of health problems.

They include respiratory illness and increasing incidence of heat stress and dehydration.

The loss of livelihoods and population displacement will also have a serious impact on the health and nutrition of those living in remote island communities.

Climate Change Minister Penny Wong delivered the report while touring the Torres Strait.

Abbott sides with big miners over tax

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says he cannot see how the Coalition could back the Government’s move to put a 40 per cent tax on mining profits.

Mr Abbott has given his strongest indication so far that the Opposition will block the tax after meeting with senior mining executives in Canberra today.

Mr Abbott has been speaking with BHP Billiton executive Marius Kloppers and Rio Tinto Australia managing director David Peever in Canberra as Prime Minister Kevin Rudd held a series of meetings with mining heavyweights in Perth.

The Government’s announcement on Sunday that it would impose a tax on the above-normal profits of mining companies has been met with outrage from the resources sector and has seen mining stocks plunge.

Emerging from today’s meeting, Mr Abbott said he could see “no way” the Coalition could support the tax.

“I reiterate that I can see no good arguments for this great big new tax,” he said.

“It is a very, very bad tax. The only way to avoid it is to ensure there is a change of government at the next election.”

Overnight London-listed shares in BHP Billiton shed nearly 8 per cent and Rio Tinto shares dropped more than 6 per cent.

The Government has accused the mining industry of running a scare campaign and Mr Rudd has indicated he will not budge from the 40 per cent rate.

“It’s inevitable that mining companies are going to complain,” he said.

“We intend through an extended consultation process to work our way through it.

“A whole range of points of view were put [forward today]. We’ll try and work through the detail of that.”

Greens Leader Bob Brown has urged the Government to stick to its guns.

“The mining corporations have far too much say in the running of this country without being representative, they are a massive lobby on both parties in Canberra,” he said.

“They have the Coalition on a string, but this Labor Government, which stands up for average Australians, should stay strong on what is a proper idea.”

‘Heavy-handed’ tax

Mincor Resources managing director David Moore says the tax will have dire consequences for the industry.

“We can only hope and pray that through the consultation process there’s is a sense returned to how this tax is applied, and hopefully the tax goes away altogether,” he said.

Toro Energy managing director Greg Hall says his company may have to reconsider at least one project.

“We’re evaluating our project in Western Australia on the basis of this additional tax regime and determining what that means for us,” he said.

WA Premier Colin Barnett says the tax should be dropped or scaled back.

“This is very heavy-handed,” he said.

Meanwhile, Canadian finance minister Jim Flaherty says the new tax could benefit his country because investors will seek places to invest that have lower taxes.

ARIA Awards return to Ten

Network Ten and the ARIA Awards have worked out their differences and are going to try working together again.

“What can we say? We missed each other,” Ten’s chief programming officer David Mott said in a statement.

The music industry awards night had been partnered with Network Ten for 15 of the previous 16 ceremonies when the Nine Network took it on for last November’s broadcast.

But only 700,000 Australians tuned in for the Thursday night ceremony, down from 1.09 million viewers the year before.

It was one of the least-watched broadcasts in years.

“The Ten Network has been our loyal partner for many of our last 24 years and it’s an absolute thrill to be renewing our relationship once again,” ARIA chairman Ed St John said.

Nielsen says Australians are T20 title contenders

Melbourne, May 5 (ANI): Lashing out at critics who consider Australia’s performance in Twenty20 to be dismal, coach Tim Nielsen has said that his team has performed well so far and are in the contention for the title.

“I get my neck out of joint a bit when people say Australia hasn”t done well in Twenty20 cricket. We haven’t won one of these tournaments, I agree,” Nielsen said.

“But there have only been two of them, we made the semi-finals of the first one and got knocked out poorly in England, but we”ve won our fair share in that amount of time,” The Daily Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

“We just haven’t had the high-level of success that we’ve had in other forms of the game. But we’re learning, we’re getting better,” he said.

He said Australia demonstrated that in emphatic style with their 34-run victory against world champions Pakistan in their opening match of the tournament in St Lucia.

“I think it’s an experience thing. When we first started playing Twenty20 cricket we had them crammed at the end of a Test series or in between 10 one-dayers,” Nielsen said of Australia’s attitude towards Twenty20 cricket.

“I just think the fact we’ve been able to get the group together for a while, we’ve experienced IPL, we’ve had a couple of goes at this tournament now, I think we’re getting closer and getting better at it,” he added. (ANI)

Umar Gul blames ‘dropped catches bane’ for loss against Australia in World T20

Islamabad, May 4 (ANI): Injured Pakistan fast bowler Umar Gul has held the team’s poor fielding display responsible for the massive 34-run defeat against Australia in the ICC World T20 Championship.

Gul, who failed to recover on time from his shoulder injury and was omitted from the T20 squad for the coveted tournament at the very last moment, said Pakistani fielders dropped too many catches, which changed the result of the match.

“Catches win matches, and you simply cannot drop players of the calibre of Shane Watson and David Hussey. The catches that Misbah-ul-Haq and Salman Butt dropped hit Pakistan very hard,” Gul said.

Hussey was dropped by Salman Butt near the long-off boundary on five. The drop cost Pakistan dearly as he went on to smash 53 off 29 deliveries, which included four sixes in a Mohammed Sami over.

Misbah-ul-Haq then dropped Watson at mid-wicket adding to Sami’s woes. The Australian all-rounder went on to score 81 runs off 49.

“Both catches should have been taken and could have entirely changed the course of the match. On flat decks like the one in St Lucia, bowlers need the support of their fielders, but yesterday the support wasn”t there. With Watson gone and Hussey back in the pavilion early, Pakistan could have applied some pressure on the Australians,” PakPassion.net quoted Gul, as saying.

Gul, who is Pakistan’s most successful T20 bowler, hailed captain Shahid Afridi’s decision to open the bowling with spinner Mohammed Hafeez, but said the skipper lacked a “Plan B” when the move backfired.

“It was a plan that was clearly designed to stifle dangerous Aussie opening batsman David Warner, who is recognised as being more comfortable against pace, rather than spin. However when Hafeez started to get hit around, then the plan should have been altered straight away. But it seemed to me that there was no alternative plan,” Gul said.

He also pointed out that Pakistani bowlers lacked variations, and were pretty predictable in the match.

“The pitch was slow and very good for batting. In those circumstances you have to vary your length, line and pace. I would have expected more bouncers, slow bouncers, quick bouncers, especially after Sami got rid of Warner to a short ball. I was surprised that we didnt see more shorter deliveries,” Gul said. (ANI)