Moore to miss 12 weeks with broken jaw, RGU

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) Australia hooker Stephen Moore, a 46-test veteran, is facing 12 weeks on the sidelines after breaking his jaw in a Super 14 match for his ACT Brumbies. Moore underwent surgery on Saturday in Christchurch, New Zealand following a bad break early in the Brumbies’ 40-22 loss to the Canterbury Crusaders which ended the Australian team’s Super 14 semifinal chances.

He will likely miss next month’s internationals against Fiji, England and Ireland and the first half of the annual Tri-Nations tournament involving South Africa and New Zealand, Brumbies officials said Sunday.

Ings replaced as head of Australian drug agency, OLY

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) Former professional tennis umpire Richard Ings has been replaced as head of the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Agency. Federal Sport Minister Kate Ellis confirmed that Aurora Andruska, the deputy chief executive of government agency Centrelink, will take over from Ings on May 10.

Ellis said Andruska has the experience that ASADA needs to maintain Australia’s reputation as an international leader in the fight against drugs in sport. Ings was forced to reapply for his position after an independent review found internal staffing problems at ASADA..

Rogue kangaroo knocks out ex-footie jogger Down Under!

Melbourne, March 19 (ANI): A kangaroo attacked a jogger on Mt Ainslie in Canberra, Australia.

David Striegl, a former footballer, was running in the bushland reserve in the nation”s capital, when the animal launched on him.

“I turned around and before I knew it, it took a swipe at my face,” News.com.au quoted him as saying.

Striegl laid unconscious and bleeding, until a motorist found him and took him to hospital.

He was discharged the same day, after X-rays and a tetanus shot.

Meanwhile, colleagues at his corporate real estate office have nicknamed him “Skippy”.

Striegl said: “I didn”t want to wait til Monday to face the music. The main thing they”ve been asking is whether I got one (punch) back on the roo.

“I can”t even say that, because one punch and it put me to the floor.

“All my years of playing football and never a fight, and then I have a fight with a kangaroo.”

However, Striegl is not going to stop jogging in the area.

He said: “Yeah, a few guys from work said they might come with me though.” (ANI)

Australia to safeguard international students

Canberra (Australia), Sep. 14 (ANI): Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Julia Gillard said every effort would be made by her government to ensure the safety of international students in the country.

She was speaking on the opening day of a two-day round table meeting in Canberra on Monday to discuss major issues of concern for international students, Sinhua reports.

The overseas student industry, worth 15.5 billion Australian dollars, has been under scrutiny following an outcry earlier this year over violence against Indian students.

“When you’re talking about these grossly objectionable, violent incidents, you’re talking about a number of less than 10 and we are talking about around 100,000 Indian students in the country,” Gillard later told reporters.

“But I can understand why, having seen even one incident — mums and dads having sent their sons and daughters far from home to study would be concerned,” she added.

Gillard told the 31 assembled students, representing every continent on the globe, their voice was deeply important.

She said their views will be fed into Council of Australian Governments (COAG) deliberations on how to boost the international student experience and a parliamentary review that is currently underway. (ANI)

Australia announces new measures to safeguard education for overseas students

Canberra (Australia), Aug.19 (ANI): The Australian Minister for Education, Julia Gillard, today warned education providers that they risk being shut down if they don’t comply with rules relating to international students.

Gillard was speaking in the Australian Parliament at the introduction of an Amendment Bill to the Education Services for Overseas Students (ESOS) Act 2000.

Under the new rules being considered by the Australian Parliament, all education institutions currently registered on the Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students (CRICOS) will be required to re-register under new, tighter criteria by December 31, 2010.

The Bill adds two new criteria for registration: the provider must have the principal purpose of providing education; and the provider must have demonstrated a capacity to provide education of a satisfactory standard.

The process will allow the Australian Government to review the registration of education providers to ensure they are providing quality education services to international students visiting Australia. Most providers are doing the right thing, but this change will help weed out the shonky operators.

The state governments of Australia have already started rapid audits of providers, and these will be extended so that all providers working with international students will need to show they have the best interests of the students at heart and not simply a profit motive.

The Bill will also introduce new processes to ensure greater transparency and accountability of international education providers, including their use of education agents.

The amendments are the first in a series of measures the Australian Government is taking to ensure Australia continues to offer quality international education.

The Australian Government has also announced a full review of the ESOS Act to be headed by Bruce Baird with an interim report due in November 2009. International students will be able to have their say at the upcoming International Student Roundtable in September 2009.

Gillard will visit India from August 29 to September 4. (ANI)

Australia plans to kill 650,000 camels

Canberra (Australia), Aug.9 (ANI): Australian Government officials plan to wipe out 650,000 camels in the remote Outback area of the country.

A Sky News report has said that marksmen are being roped in to shoot down thousands of came from helicopters.

It is being said that the meat of these dead animals will be turned into burgers in a bid to halt these thirsty dromedaries from barging into people’s homes and ripping up their bathrooms looking for water.

Camels were first introduced to Australia in the 1840s to help explorers travel through the Australian desert. There are now about one million camels roaming the country. They compete with sheep and cattle for food, trample vegetation and invade remote settlements in search of water.

But some remain opposed to a mass slaughter.

Camel exporter Paddy McHugh, who runs camel catching operations throughout Australia, said a cull would be ineffective.

“What happens in 15 years when the numbers come back again? Do we waste another 9.5 million pounds,” McHugh said.

But Tony Peacock, CEO of the University of Canberra’s Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Center, said: “To be shot from a helicopter is actually quite humane, even though that sounds brutal. If I was a camel, I’d prefer to just get it in the head.”

Glenn Edwards, who is working on drafting the government’s camel reduction program, said the camel population needs to be slashed by two-thirds to reduce catastrophic damage.

Last week, Erin Burnett, an anchor on American financial news channel CNBC, labeled Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd a serial killer on US TV, after his government announced plans to spend 19 million dollars to cull feral camels in the outback.

A stern-faced Burnett said during a segment on CNBC, “There is a serial killer in Australia and we are going to put a picture up so we can see who it is.”

A large photo of Rudd was then shown.

“That would be the Prime Minister of Australia, Kevin Rudd,” Burnett said. “OK, well, do you know what he is doing? He has launched air strikes – air strikes – against camels in the outback,” she said.

Burnett, with a stuffed toy camel in front of her, broke away from her usual analysis of stock movements on Wall St to vent about the camel cull.

She raised the issue during a segment with CNBC’s colourful financial guru Jim Cramer.

Burnett said there were a million camels living in the wild in Australia.

“They are slaughtering them?” Cramer, looking shocked, asked Burnett. “They are slaughtering them,” Burnett replied.

She also complained the meat and milk from the camels would be wasted.

“Apparently, there is a billion dollars of meat out there,” Burnett said.

“Are they going to do anything with it?” Cramer asked. “No. They’re just slaughtering them,” she said.

“That’s genocide. Camelcide,” Cramer commented.

Burnett then told Cramer she hoped Australians would see her segment.

Camels, which now number more than one million, are destroying fragile ecosystems and trampling all over indigenous sacred sites.

They foul ancient water holes and chomp through the boughs of endangered native trees.

Traveling in large, aggressive packs, they prevent Aboriginal women from venturing into the countryside, for fear of being attacked or trampled.

The situation is expected to get worse, with the camel population predicted to double every eight to 10 years unless action is taken.

The problem has grown so large that the Australian government recently pledged 10 million pounds towards developing a camel control plan. (ANI)

Rudd says navy sex betting ring ‘disturbing’

Canberra (Australia), July 6 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has expressed his dismay over reports of a sex betting ring on board a ship of the Australian Navy.

“Can I say I’m sure the Chief of Navy has all those matters under active investigation and that appropriate action will be taken? These alleged behaviours are disturbing, but it’s important also to get to the facts of it all and we’ll await the investigations by the chief of navy to establish all those facts,” Rudd told reporters here.

Rudd’s comment came after it was revealed that a group of sailors from HMAS Success had been sent home for allegedly organizing a challenge to have sex with as many female crewmates as possible.

The Seven Network reported that the sailors detailed their contest in a document called The Ledger, where dollar values were placed on each woman during an overseas deployment in May.

Larger amounts were offered if the sailors could sleep with a female officer or a lesbian and sailors challenged each other to have sex in various locations, including on top of a pool table, the report said.

The arrangement was discovered while HMAS Success was visiting Singapore.

The captain ordered the sailors to return to Australia immediately after they were formally interviewed.

On Sunday’ Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard called for a full investigation of the incident by the Australian Defence Force.

Gillard said nothing should preclude women from enjoying a full and rewarding career in the Australian Defence Force.

“Obviously this is a matter for our defence forces to deal with and to fully investigate,” Gillard told Network Ten on Sunday.

She said both the government and the nation had been saying for a long time that women should be able to join the army, the navy or air force.

“We don’t want to see anything that precludes women from having a good career in our armed forces if that is what they choose to do with their lives. Clearly these allegations need to be fully investigated,” she said.

The Defence Department confirmed a formal inquiry was underway, but said: “The veracity of any allegations has yet to be confirmed.” (ANI)

Irfan Pathan and Shivangi Dev Marriage on Cards – Irfan Pathan and Shivangi Dev wedding soon

Irfan Pathan and Shivangi Dev Marriage on Cards – Irfan Pathan and Shivangi Dev wedding soon

Indian allrounder Irfan Pathan will marry long-time girlfriend Shivangi Dev, reports Times of India. Shivangi, works as a chartered accountant and a dance teacher in Australia.

Irfan Pathan, first met Shivangi Dev in Canberra, Australia during a practice match in 2003, and fell in love at first sight.

Marriage date and venue has not yet been finalised.

Australian PM urges calm, warns off student vigilantes

CANBERRA: Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd called for calm as Indian students led “vigilante” patrols on Wednesday after a second night of protests in the wake of attacks on foreign students in Sydney and Melbourne. ( Watch )

Scores of Indian students took to the streets of western Sydney, leading to two police arrests, after attacks in both Sydney and Melbourne which have sparked diplomatic protests and fears of an international student exodus from Australia.

“I fully support hardline measures in response to any act of violence towards any student anywhere – Indian or otherwise,” Rudd said. “And furthermore we also need to render as completely unacceptable people taking the law into their own hands.

“It’s unacceptable for anyone to commit an act of violence against any student of any ethnicity anywhere in Australia,” Rudd told local radio. “It’s equally unacceptable for so-called reprisal attacks and for so-called vigilante action as well.”

“I think everyone just needs to draw some breath on this and I think we need to see a greater atmosphere of general calm,” Rudd said.

Rudd made his appeal after Indian students formed vigilante-like groups at train and bus stations in Melbourne following a string of attacks in the city over the past 18 months which Australian authorities insist have been mostly crime-related.

Indian students believe the attacks have been “racist”, warning of a culture of “curry bashings” in Australia, where foreign students are the country’s third biggest export earner, worth more than $12 billion.

China’s government last week joined India in raising concern about sporadic attacks on Chinese students in recent years, urging Australian authorities to ramp up security.

In a bid to ease tensions, police in Melbourne ordered groups of young Indian men patrolling three suburban railway stations at St Albans, Thomastown and Springvale to disband after they gathered to prevent more attacks on their countrymen.

In Sydney, around 70 people gathered in the western suburb of Harris Park, where Indian community representatives claimed to have been attacked by ethnic Lebanese-Australian gangs, responding with baseball bats. Police have warned that Harris Park is a dangerous area at night due to criminal gangs and that the attacks on Indian students were purely opportunistic.

Indian community leaders have also urged students to stay away from protest gatherings to avoid stoking tensions.

Australia’s foreign minister Stephen Smith said it could take “some time” to bring the violence under control, while education experts have warned the damage to Australia’s international reputation as a safe study destination could last even longer.

Police in Victoria state police said they were launching a fresh crackdown to restore order, building on increased patrols already announced. In Sydney, greater numbers of police also patrolled the worst-affected suburbs.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh described the attacks in a speech to Parliament as senseless violence, while foreign minister SM Krishna joined Kevin Rudd in asking students to show restraint and called for calm.

Rudd speaks with Manmohan Singh, to take steps to ensure safety of Indian students

Canberra (Australia)/New Delhi, May 30 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has reassured his Indian counterpart, Manmohan Singh that his government will take appropriate steps to ensure the safety and security of Indian students in Australia.

Diplomatic relations between the two countries are said to be tense after India expressed anger and dismay over attacks on Indian students in Australia.

In a telephone conversation, Rudd congratulated Dr Singh on his recent re-election and also discussed the violent assaults, sources told The Age.

A statement released last night indicated Dr Singh spoke strongly to Rudd about the attacks.

The Indian Prime Minister had “suitably” conveyed his concerns about the vicious attacks, it said.

The Indian foreign ministry called in Australian High Commissioner John McCarthy yesterday to discuss the matter.

It was the first time McCarthy was called in by the Indian Government since the 2007 arrest of Muhammad Haneef, an Indian doctor working in Australia, on terrorism-related charges.

Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna spoke to Foreign Minister Stephen Smith about the issue.

Krishna said the Australian Government had assured him that steps were being taken to protect Indian students.

India’s High Cmmissioner to Australia Sujatha Singh said Victoria Police were insensitive towards some Indian crime victims.

Singh said many students felt insecure and some were unhappy with the police treatment.

Her comments came as Victoria Police again denied that the increasing attacks – which the Indian student community claims could be as many as 70 in 12 months – were racially motivated.

Singh said the Indian high commission in Canberra had received complaints from students about police. When an incident was reported, there was a perception that there was sometimes “a delay in reacting and … perhaps a lack of sensitivity dealing with the issues”.

Singh flew to Melbourne from Canberra to meet Premier John Brumby and police Chief Commissioner Simon Overland following the attack on Sravan Kumar Theerthala, 24, last weekend. He was allegedly racially abused and stabbed with a screwdriver at a party at a house in Hadfield, near Glenroy.

Last night he remained in a coma in intensive care at the Royal Melbourne Hospital. A 17-year-old from Glenroy has been charged with attempted murder. It was the third serious attack this month.

Trauma psychologist Dr Michael O’Neill, who works with Indian victims of crime in Melbourne, said he saw on average one bashed student a week and about half of those attacks were racial. (ANI)

Monkeys and humans share ‘diet control’ habits

Washington, May 20 (ANI): In a new research, behavioural ecologists working in Bolivia have found that wild spider monkeys control their diets in a similar way to humans, contrary to what has been thought up to now.

Rather than trying to maximize their daily energy intake, the monkeys tightly regulate their daily protein intake, so that it stays at the same level regardless of seasonal variation in the availability of different foods.

Tight regulation of daily protein intake is known to play a role in the development of obesity in humans, and the findings from this research suggest that the evolutionary origins of these eating patterns in humans may be far older than suspected.

The research also provides valuable information about which trees are important for the monkeys’ diet, which is relevant to conservation.

In addition, it may help to improve the care of captive primates, which can be prone to obesity and related health problems due to their diet.

Dr Annika Felton, a Departmental Visitor at the Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, spent a year in the Bolivian rainforest, familiarizing the Peruvian spider monkeys to her presence and then observing their feeding habits.

She followed 15 individual monkeys (7 adult males, 8 adult females), conducting continuous observations of the same animal from dawn to dusk, and following each of the monkeys for at least one whole day a month.

During observations, she recorded everything they did and ate and for how long.

Where possible, she counted every fruit and leaf they ate, and collected samples of what they had eaten from the actual trees the monkeys had chosen.

The samples were then dried and sent to the laboratory in Australia where they were analysed for their nutritional content.

It is unusual for a study of feeding habits in wild primates to be conducted in this detailed way.

It enabled Dr Felton and her colleagues to calculate how much an individual monkey had consumed and the nutrients involved.

According to Dr Felton, “We found that the pattern of nutrient intake by wild spider monkeys, which are primarily fruit eaters, was almost identical to humans, which are omnivores.”

“What spider monkeys and humans have in common is that they tightly regulate their daily protein intake, that is, they appear to aim for a target amount of protein each day, regardless of whether they only ate ripe fruit or mixed in other vegetable matter as well,” she said. (ANI)

China, India ‘may stir up regional war’: Oz Army report

Canberra (Australia), May 9 (ANI): An Australian Army internal report has claimed that both China and India may stir up a war in the Indian Ocean Rim region in the not too distant future.

According to the White Paper, a copy of which has been accessed by The Australian, makes hawkish comments about India and China’s military ambitions.
A draft copy of an army report, Army’s Future Land Operating Concept, due to be finalised in September, warns about China and India’s military ambitions.

China and India’s growing military ambitions, matched by growing military spending, have the potential to destabilise the region with their military expansion,” the report states.

“China, and potentially India have the potential to challenge US (strategic) dominance within their regions,” the report states.

“Of particular concern is an increased likelihood for dispute escalation as a result of changes to the perceived balance of power with the real potential for a return to major combat operations involving states.”
The different wording in the documents suggests the white paper was toned down for public release to avoid causing offence in Beijing and New Delhi. (ANI)

Oz PM to send 450 troopers to beef up Afghan security

Canberra (Australia), Apr.29 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has announced that his government will send 450 extra troops to beef up security in troubled Afghanistan.

However, there will be no combat troops among the latest contingent. The extra troops will assist in military training, governance and reconstruction, Rudd said, adding “Australia concurs with the United States that the current civilian and military strategy is not working.”

“If anything, security in Afghanistan is deteriorating. We must not allow Afghanistan to once again become the unimpeded training ground and operating base for global terrorist activity,” Rudd said, adding that more than 100 Australians had been killed in terrorist attacks in recent years.

“To reduce the threat of terrorist attacks on Australian citizens in the future the Australian Government has decided to increase our Defence Force commitment in Afghanistan,” he said.

“A measured increase in Australian forces in Afghanistan will enhance the security of Australian citizens given that so many terrorists attacking Australians in the past have been trained in Afghanistan,” he added.

Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said earlier today the Government was continuing to look at what it could do to contribute to Afghanistan. (ANI)

Australia’s spy chiefs cross swords over China, but Rudd favours hawks

Canberra (Australia), Apr.11 (ANI): Defence strategists have ignored the advice of Australia’s most senior intelligence chiefs and rejected the view that China’s military expansion poses little threat to the nation’s long-term security.

The standoff between the intelligence doves and defence hawks has gone all the way to Kevin Rudd personally, reports The Australian.ut the hawks have won, and Australia will spend over 100 billion dollars over the next two decades to boost its naval and air war-fighting capacity.

The rise of China will shape Australia’s defence planning for a generation.

The Rudd Government’s defence white paper, due out later this month, will call for a more potent and costly maritime defence for Australia. The expansion of Australia’s sea and air defences will include a doubling of the submarine fleet, 100 joint strike fighters, new spy planes, as well as powerful new surface warships.

The divisions between the defence chiefs and Australia’s top intelligence assessment agencies, the Office of National Assessments and the Defence Intelligence Organisation, were so strong that ONA chief Peter Varghese felt compelled to write to the Prime Minister late last year expressing his concern about the China debate and how it could distort Australia’s national security priorities.

Varghese’s concern was that the white paper drafting team led by Defence Department deputy secretary Mike Pezzullo appeared to ignore comprehensive assessments prepared by the intelligence agencies on China.

The deep rift inside the defence and intelligence community – kept secret until now – reflects strong differences over how to assess China’s long-term capabilities and intentions, including plans to acquire long-range submarines and aircraft carriers.

The bruising debate over whether China’s military build-up could eventually threaten the regional security order resulted in a clear win for Defence hardliners led by Pezzullo.ipped as a future Defence Department chief, the hard-driving Pezzullo shares Rudd’s view that Australia should adopt a “hedging” strategy on China’s future strategic trajectory.

The ONA and DIO assessments agree that the least likely, but the most dangerous, long-term threat to Australia’s security was the prospect of war between the US and China. (ANI)

Oz PM Rudd loves to roll a cricket ball over with staff in his office

Canberra (Australia), Apr.11 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd knows that hallway cricket is banned in the outer corridors of Parliament House, but this does not stop him from rolling a cricket ball over inside his office.

According to the Daily Telegraph, Rudd uses sport as a means of communicating with staff. After travelling and working most of the day, at 6.40 p.m., he starts walking around with a battered Sherrin football and a makeshift cricket ball.

He visits the cramped network of their small offices chatting about events and issues of the day. Then he will recruit teams – men and women – for 15 to 20 minutes of sport in the corridors or in the PM’s courtyard.

Occasionally he will apply his shiny RM Williams to a football, but he prefers cricket. And he prefers to bowl because, he has told staff, “batting is more embarrassing”.

The sports gear is eventually put away, and the Prime Minister continues with his official schedule and work.

By 7.15 p.m.; Rudd is back in his private study in The Lodge. (ANI)

Rudd’s short temper triggers exodus of personal staff

Canberra (Australia), Apr.4 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s short temper and unreasonable demands have triggered an exodus of personal staff and a backlash from public servants.

The latest casualty is Rudd’s 78,000-dollar-a-year ex-butler John Fisher, dubbed “Jeeves” by the Opposition, The Daily Telegraph reports.

Rudd’s bullying style has come under close scrutiny after it was revealed he had reduced a young RAAF cabin attendant to tears during a VIP flight when she was unable to produce the right meal.

Labor staffers, even those who have left the PM’s office, are reluctant to speak out about their boss. But some are privately critical of Rudd’s management style.

“He never gives positive feedback and gets angry very easily,” said one.

A former senior Rudd staffer described his old boss as intolerant and socially dysfunctional.

He said Rudd was unable to deal with situations such as catering and usually left those matters for others to handle.

Senior public servants have also become frustrated at the unrelenting demands of the workaholic PM, who thinks nothing of calling them at night.

Fisher, whose role as butler caused embarrassment to Rudd, is expected to leave after Easter. He has moved on from his role as travelling assistant, where his job was to lay out Rudd’s suits.

Other staff to recently depart include Virginia Dale, a long-term Labor adviser, and Gary Quinlan, who will soon become our new ambassador to the UN. (ANI)

Maths algorithm may address problem of population relocation

Washington, April 2 (ANI): An international team of scientists has devised a mathematical algorithm to address the problem of population relocation.

The team comprised of decision scientist Sajjad Zahir at the University of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, and colleagues Ruhul Sarker of the University of New South Wales, Canberra, Australia and Ziaul Al-Mahmud of Lethbridge Community Network.

The team’s multi-objective optimization approach will help governments decide what fraction of a population would need to be relocated and how many people could stay behind for effective adaptation to climate change.

The “multi-objective” nature of the calculation takes into account people’s preferences, various costs, and planning priorities with the ultimate aim of ensuring that the issue of relocation is addressed fairly and is economically viable.

Although mitigation measures are vitally important for controlling greenhouse gas emissions, there are limitations to such efforts novel approaches to allow us to adapt successfully to the effects of climate change are now needed, according to the researchers.

They point out that large-scale cross-border migrations may not be a feasible solution to land loss because of the societal costs and the effects on labor.

An influx of environmental refugees from the worst affected parts of the developing world is also likely to face opposition from the developed world, they added.

The team’s decision analysis factors in the “value” of new opportunities, lost opportunities, transportation costs, adaptation costs and other variables.

This allows them to balance the books in terms of how migration would affect a population.

“To make adaptation a success, part of the population must be prepared to adapt to new or different work opportunities and living conditions and others may have to be relocated in a planned way to new locations that require accepting different working and environmental conditions,” the researchers said.

“Our methodology lets us find the fraction of people who would be relocated and who would stay in an optimal manner,” they added. (ANI)

Pak should ensure it doesn’t sponsor terrorism against India: Oz FM

Canberra (Australia), Feb.28 (ANI): Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith has called on Pakistan to make sure it doesn’t sponsor terrorism against India, to shut down Lashkar-e-Toiba terrorist networks that operate in the country and make a better effort against the Taliban, besides improving security across the Pakistani-Afghan border.

Smith’s statement has been widely welcomed.

According to an editorial in the Australian: ” These are absolutely the right things for Smith to say and the right policies for Australia to pursue.”t further goes on to say that Kevin Rudd Government is now reprising the failed policies of the Howard Government towards Pakistan.

It says that Smith, who is just back from Pakistan, has made an important ministerial statement about Australian policy towards Islamabad.

“We are increasing virtually all forms of civil and even military aid. We are bringing more Pakistani officers to train, not least in counter-insurgency, in Australia,” the editorial said.

When discussing the very vexed issue of nuclear proliferation, Smith makes this key judgment: “As on other difficult issues, close engagement with Pakistan on counter-proliferation is, in Australia’s view, the best way of making progress.”

There Smith is expressing the Howard conundrum: if we don’t work with the Government of Pakistan, then who do we work with?

The Australian Government policy towards Pakistan is probably the only policy Canberra could pursue: engagement, assistance and blind hope. Almost certainly, however, it won’t work, concludes the editorial. (ANI)