Australian PM may call election within days-media

SYDNEY, July 12 (Reuters) – Australia’s ruling Labor party is set for a narrow victory in upcoming elections, two new opinion polls showed on Monday, as speculation grew that Prime Minister Julia Gillard could call an election as soon as this week.

While the robust economy, in its 17th year of growth, should be a winning ticket for Gillard, voters believe the opposition is the better economic manager, according to the polls.

Gillard has also been seeking to reframe government policy in key areas such as climate and asylum seekers.

Opinion polls published in Fairfax and News Ltd newspapers put Labor ahead of the conservative opposition at 52 percent versus 48 percent. For Reuters Poll Trend [ID:nSYU010167]

“They’re in front and they’ve got a primary vote that can deliver victory,” John Stirton, research director with pollster Nielsen, told local radio. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

TAKE-A-LOOK-Australia’s Greens to sway policy [ID:nSGE667085]

Reuters Poll Trend [ID:nSYU010167] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Gillard, 48, is Australia’s first woman prime minister. She replaced Kevin Rudd on June 24, in a move that has resurrected Labor’s electoral standing and reshaped Australian politics.

Speculation Gillard may be set to call an election grew after Governor-General Quentin Bryce delayed leaving for a trip to Europe by a day until Saturday, sparking talk that Gillard could ask the representative of Australia’s head of state, Queen Elizabeth, to dissolve parliament as early as this week.

Gillard declined to comment on the timing when questioned by reporters on a trip to Adelaide, but said in a speech “in the days to come I will be putting forward more detailed arguments about some of the biggest challenges facing our nation.

“I will be explaining the steps I think we need to take and asking for people’s consideration of those steps. I will ask for the Australian people’s trust to move Australia forward,” she said.

Political commentators said Gillard’s words meant she may seek to call an election on Thursday or Friday this week.

But commentators warned that Labor still risked losing an election expected in late August. [ID:nSGE6600MU]

“The coming of Julia Gillard to the Labor Party leadership appears to have stopped the decay in her party’s fortunes,” said The Age newspaper’s national editor Tony Wright.

“She has stopped the Rudd rot, though she hasn’t been able to make any serious inroads into Labor’s loss of the disaffected to the Greens.”

Labor took power in 2007 promising to tackle climate change, but under Rudd failed to implement a carbon trading scheme, a disappointment that saw Green voters desert Rudd.

Labor needs to woo them back to ensure victory over the Liberal-National opposition.

Gillard has acted quickly on key policies, ending a three-month row with mining companies over a new tax that was hurting the government in the polls, and proposing a regional asylum processing centre, possibly in East Timor, to curb boatpeople arrivals. [ID:nAUTAX]

The tax deal has been generally accepted by voters, but her asylum policy has received criticism for being in its infancy.

The cabinet will meet on Tuesday and was expected to discuss a new climate policy, but it is not clear whether Gillard will go as far as announcing a carbon tax as an interim measure before a full blown carbon trading scheme can be created.

She has said a carbon price is inevitable, probably via a market-based scheme, but that any decision on such a scheme would not be until 2012 and not without community consensus.

But voters want quick action on climate change, according to opinion polls and public comments in local media.

Until now the political risk of announcing a carbon price ahead of an election has been the threat of rising power bills. But two new surveys suggest power bills will rise and energy investment will fall because of a lack of a carbon price.

The lack of an emissions trading scheme and price on carbon would cost the Australian economy and consumers an extra A$2 billion by 2020 due to investment in less energy efficient coal-fired power plants, The Climate Institute estimates. (Additional reporting by Ed Davies; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Q+A: PM Gillard changes Australian govt election hopes

(Reuters) – Australia’s ruling Labor party elected Julia Gillard as the nation’s first woman prime minister on Thursday after former prime minister Kevin Rudd quit on losing the support of his lawmakers.

World

Gillard, 48, has promised a more consensus-driven government to help her party reconnect with disgruntled voters after months of poor opinion polls and with an election expected around October.

Here are some questions and answers on how Gillard’s appointment changes the political outlook in Australia. IS

LABOR MORE LIKELY TO WIN THE NEXT ELECTION?

Gillard’s election should help Labor re-build voter support ahead of the election, and should give the party a stronger chance of victory. Opinion polls regularly find Gillard to be more popular than Rudd, and betting agencies have already reported Labor is now the firm favorite to win the election.

Gillard has long been one of the government’s best performers in parliament with her ability to sell policies and deflect political attacks. Her promise of a consensus style of government is also in stark contrast to Rudd’s sometimes autocratic style.

Gillard also has wide voter appeal to both men and women, compared to conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott, a former Catholic seminarian who regularly polls poorly with women voters.

She is also likely to now enjoy a political honeymoon period, and every action of the first woman to lead the country is likely to be closely reported by media early in her time in charge.

DOES THIS CHANGE THE ELECTION TIMING?

Gillard’s appointment is unlikely to change the timing of the next election, which is due by the end of the year. She is likely to spend the coming months traveling the country, and making sure Australian voters know who she is and where she comes from.

She has also called a truce in the government’s damaging fight with miners over a proposed 40 percent profits tax. She is likely to need time to broker a deal ahead of the election.

An early poll in August would be risky for a new leader, still getting used to the wider responsibilities of the job. Gillard’s home state of Victoria also has elections set for late November. Both point to an election in early to mid October.

WHAT POLICIES MAY CHANGE?

Gillard has already signaled a more consultative approach on the mining tax and has indicated a stronger focus on the postponed emissions trading scheme if she wins the next election

But Gillard could also make changes to controversial asylum seeker policies. More boatpeople arrivals in recent years has been a simmering issue on talkback radio, and Labor has been vulnerable to opposition attacks blaming Rudd’s policies for the arrivals. At her first media conference, Gillard signaled a firmer stance after stressing she understood why Australians were disturbed about refugee boats arriving in Australian waters.

HOW WILL THE ELECTION BATTLE SHAPE UP?

Gillard’s elevation changes the political battle with opposition leader Tony Abbott.

Abbott is a blunt speaking conservative who grabs headlines with his combative style. Gillard can be a sharp-witted debater, but also retains a calm and composed demeanor when under attack.

Abbott may need to take care in his attacks on Gillard, to ensure the election does not become about personalities, particularly as Gillard’s election adds a gender issue to the political debate.

Gillard, in her first news conference as prime minister, has already made it clear she will focus her political attacks on Abbott’s views on workplace laws, and on health and education. Abbott has stressed that while Gillard is a new face for Labor, she supports the same policies as Rudd.

(Editing by Ed Davies and Miral Fahmy)

Australia’s first woman PM an old-school Labor leader

(Reuters) – Australia’s new prime minister, Julia Gillard, has become the first woman to lead her country, but her leadership style evokes the past, not the future.

World

A quick-witted politician, with a broad Australian accent and a working-class pedigree, Gillard is in many ways an old-school Labor Party politician, more reminiscent of Labor prime ministers from the 80s and 90s than her bookish predecessor, Kevin Rudd.

Like previous Labor prime ministers Bob Hawke and Paul Keating, Gillard stands in stark contrast to Rudd, a Mandarin-speaking ex-diplomat who broke the mold as a Labor leader in 2006 when he took control of a then demoralized opposition.

Rudd won a landslide election victory in 2007, ousting veteran conservative leader John Howard, and then dominated the opinion polls until, suddenly, last April the fairy tale ended.

Thanks to a few big policy failures, Labor’s “Prince Charming” began losing the confidence of voters and, just as suddenly, Gillard was emerging as a new but much more familiar Labor hero, a working-class politician with a talent for plain-speaking.

Where Rudd once told lawmakers about “evidence-based policy” and explained in heavy detail the complexities of his tax or climate-change policies, Gillard stood in parliament on Thursday and launched straight into vintage Labor rhetoric.

“I grew up in a home of hard-working parents,” began the 48-year-old daughter of a former policeman and rail clerk.

“I believe in a government that rewards those who work the hardest, not those who complain the loudest,” she added.

“I believe in a government that rewards those who, day in and day out, work in our factories and on our farms, in our mines and in our mills, in our classrooms and in our hospitals, that rewards that hard work, decency and effort.”

Gillard arrived in Australia, aged four, in the 1960s from south Wales, a cradle of Britain’s own Labour movement. Her father had gone to work before finishing school, his family too poor to support him through higher education.

Gillard initially lived in a migrant hostel in the rural town of Adelaide before her father bought a house. She studied law at university, where she got involved in politics and then became a partner in a law firm specializing in class actions and personal injury cases before working as a political adviser.

CONSENSUS BUILDER

Gillard was first elected to parliament in 1998, and quickly rose to become a leading light of the Labor left, becoming shadow health minister in 2003 and then backing Rudd for the leadership in return for the deputy Labor leadership.

Gillard kept in Rudd’s shadow until this year’s opinion-poll meltdown when, without apparent hesitation or squeamishness, she made her move just months away from a general election, just as Hawke did on the eve of another election in the early 1980s.

Gillard seems to model her leadership style on the Hawke era, when cabinet forged policy by consensus — another departure from Rudd, whose corporate-style management rankled Labor MPs.

“Her consultation skills are fantastic,” said one senior industry figure who negotiated opposite Gillard on labor-market reforms. “She is bloody good,” he told Reuters.

That will be good news for global miners that are threatening to pull more than $20 billion in investment unless the government overhauls its proposed 40 percent mine-profits tax. Gillard has refused to drop the tax so must negotiate a solution quickly.

Even if Gillard shares Hawke’s famed negotiating skills, and Keating’s sharp wit, she also faces a challenge that no previous Australian leader has ever known: being a woman in power.

She has long attracted headlines for her hair, which she recently restyled and dyed an auburn shade instead of its natural ginger, her partner who is a hairdresser and her decision not to have children.

One conservative lawmaker even once remarked her unmarried status made her unfit to govern. He later apologized for the comment but, in the socially conservative heartland of middle-class Australia, it can be an issue.

“She’s not married is she? No children either,” remarked Elvie Santos, a legal secretary, when asked during her lunch break on Thursday whether she liked Gillard.

But she added: “Let’s give her a try. You never know.”

(Additional reporting by James Grubel; Editing by Ed Davies and Miral Fahmy)

Nita Kapoor is new secretary-defence finance

New Delhi, May 31 (IANS) Nita Kapoor, a 1973-batch Indian Defence Accounts Services (IDAS) officer, Monday took over as the new secretary, defence finance, replacing Indu Liberhan who retired Monday, an official statement said.

The first woman officer from the northeast to assume the post, Kapoor is an alumnus of the National Defence College, New Delhi, and brings with her a ‘rich bureaucratic experience’ of almost 37 years to the ministry of defence, the statement said.

Kapoor was controller general of defence accounts before taking over the new assignment.

She has worked in the department of personnel and administrative reforms, science and technology and National Commission for Women.

The Appointments Committee of the Cabinet approved her appointment last week.

Patrick looking to get back on fast track at Indy

Danica Patrick knew this season would be the toughest of her career but the Indy Car darling hopes to turn things around at Sunday’s Indy 500.

In addition to racing for Andretti Autosport she also signed a deal to race in NASCAR’s second-tier series part-time for stock car’s most popular driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.

She admitted that driving in two different types of cars had proven more difficult than she thought.

“It’s definitely the hardest year I’ve had here at Indy, it’s been challenging,” said Patrick, the only woman to win an Indy Car race. “Throughout this whole year I’ve really needed to work on keeping my confidence up, because it’s been tough.

“I guess I knew it was going to be (tough) when the decision was made to do both of them.

“I knew it was going to be the hardest year of my career. I didn’t know how hard.

“I thought my Indy car stuff would give me confidence for the NASCAR stuff and I would be able to stay happy all the time but, unfortunately, I think it’s been a little of the opposite.”

After qualifying a disappointing 23rd for Sunday’s Indy 500, a frustrated Patrick blasted her team in a trackside interview telling the crowd it was not her fault and for the first time in five years racing at the Brickyard the diminutive 28-year-old heard boos.

“I kind of thought: ‘Oh shoot, what did I do?’” she said.

Driving a sleek, open-wheel Indy car versus the heavy, full-bodied stock cars requires different talents and only ex-Formula One driver Juan Pablo Montoya has had any tangible success in both series.

When Patrick arrived at Indianapolis for the first time in 2005 it was a novelty. When she turned in competitive lap times people paid attention.

She qualified fourth and finished fourth in her rookie year while becoming the first woman to lead a lap in the Indy 500.

Covers of magazines and lucrative sponsorship deals followed making her Indy Car’s most marketable driver.

“As quickly as they can go ‘boo’ they can go ‘yeah’ and cheer for me just like they did any other year, like the first year,” said Patrick. “They’re here for an emotion and I’m giving them something to be emotional about.

“I hope that Sunday, it’s something positive.”

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

Tiger Woods’ mistress Rachel Uchitel to pose for Playboy

London, May 18 (ANI): Rachel Uchitel, the former mistress of Tiger Woods, has agreed to strip for Playboy magazine.

The 35-year-old refused to bare all at the photo shoot in three weeks” time but will go topless, reports The Sun.

Uchitel made headlines as she was the first woman linked to the 34-year-old golf superstar in November last year.

Her texts on Tiger”s phone sparked a fight with his Swedish model wife Elin.

Tiger and Elin now live apart in Florida and have hired divorce lawyers. (ANI)

Record-breaking climber denies she’s a cheat

The South Korean climber who claims to be the first woman to have scaled the world’s 14 highest mountains has returned from her final summit and dismissed allegations that she cheated.

Oh Eun-Sun’s 2009 ascent of Mount Kanchenjunga has been disputed by fellow mountaineers, including her chief rival for the record, Spain’s Edurne Pasaban, who questioned whether she made it to the top.

“I am really sad that it has come to this,” said a visibly tired Oh in the Nepalese capital Kathmandu after conquering her last peak, the 8,091-metre Annapurna, on April 27.

“I have video footage taken by the Korean Broadcasting Service where I can prove my ascent of Kanchenjunga.

“It is quite unfortunate the comments were made after such a success and a good moment.”

Ms Pasaban alleges she was told by Ms Oh’s sherpas that the South Korean had not reached the summit of Kanchenjunga, but Ms Oh rejects all the charges.

“I believe that according to Pasaban, some sherpas told her that I hadn’t climbed Kanchenjunga,” Oh said.

“But no names of the sherpas have been mentioned. Why?”

A picture provided by Ms Oh, 44, shows her standing on a bare rock apparently on the peak of Kanchenjunga on the Nepal-Tibet border, but those taken by Ms Pasaban’s team on the summit shows them standing on snow.

Ms Pasaban, 36, conquered Annapurna last month, leaving her with just one more mountain to climb.

She is currently in Tibet preparing to tackle Shisha Pangma – the lowest of the 14 peaks over 8,000 metres.

“When I reached the top of Annapurna I felt as if the world was at my feet,” Ms Oh said.

“I am tired of climbing. I just want to rest at home for a few years now.”

Record disputed

But her ascent of Kanchenjunga, and therefore her claim to the record, will be registered as disputed, experts say.

“Oh will be credited for her climb to Kanchenjunga but the ascent will be marked as disputed,” said climbing historian Elizabeth Hawley in Kathmandu.

Ms Hawley leads a team that compiles the Himalayan Database, an authoritative account of all major climbs in the Nepal Himalayas.

“I met Oh Eun-Sun today. She said she had video footage to prove her ascent on Kanchenjunga and that she would send me some still photos,” she said.

“Her account was completely different from Pasaban’s so I really don’t know who is right.”

Ms Oh faces further criticism because a Spanish climber died on Annapurna at the same time Ms Oh’s expedition was on the mountain and the dead man’s team leader alleges the South Korean and her team did nothing to help.

“We were hungry and exhausted on our way down. We wanted to help him, out of humanity, but we faced our own limitations,” Ms Oh said.

Fewer than 20 people have been to the top of the 14 mountains over 8,000 metres, all of which are in Asia’s Himalaya and Karakoram ranges.

Reinhold Messner from Italy became the first person to achieve the feat in 1986.

Granny enters record books after completing 27 marathons in 27 days

London, May 3 (ANI): A granny has entered the record books after she completed 27 consecutive fund raising marathons.

The 63-year-old grandma, Rosie Swale Pope MBE, ran for the final step in her toiling 707-mile journey.

Swale was “tired but very happy” when she crossed the finish line in Tudor Square, in her hometown of Tenby, in west Wales.

“Although I am actually 63 doing something like this makes me feel as though I am really 36. It was fantastic. I crossed the finish line in Tudor Square, in Tenby, and it was like a dream,” Swale said.

“I think the main thing is to show people that they should reach out to do what they want to do. Maybe you can”t always get there but you should always reach out,” she added.

The 27-day race schedule took Swale from Bristol to London and from Tunbridge Wells to Bury St Edmunds, reports Sky News.

The money raised from the races will be donated to Ty Hafan children”s hospice in Cardiff and Helen & Douglas House in Oxford.

Once Swale achievement is officially confirmed, she will become the first woman ever to run so many consecutive marathons. (ANI)

Parti Punjabi Malaysia elects first woman president

Kuala Lumpur, May 3 (ANI): Dr Susheel Kaur has become the first woman to be elected as president of the 24 year-old Parti Punjabui Malaysia (PPM).

She was elected unopposed by more than 50 delegates at the party”s biennial general meeting.

A highly qualified lady, Dr Kaur did her Ph D in population geography from Chandigarh University. She has also majored in social impact studies and hopes to use her academic expertise in her new role as Parti President.

She told the New Strait Times that she did not see herself as a politician but felt responsible for the PPM since her father was its founder.

She succeeds cousin Dr Gurdeep Perkash Singh, he has been the PPM President for ten years.

Dr Kaur admitted that the party did not stand on equal ground when compared to other Malay-Indian parties but hopes to change that.

According to Dr Kaur, the reason behind this disparity is because the PPM has failed to gain entry into the ruling coalition, Barison Nasional.

“We have been trying to do this for over 10 years now. Not fewer than six applications were submitted, but all went unanswered. In fact, our latest application was made on February 2. We are still waiting for an answer,” she said.

She added that it was an open secret that an Indian-based party within the BN coalition had opposed the PPM joining the ruling coalition. (ANI)

Lisa Hose becomes Australia”s first female Biggest Loser

Sydney, April 19 (ANI): A West Australian mother has become the first woman to win reality TV show The Biggest Loser.

Lisa Hose has lost almost half her body weight to triumph in the latest series.

Hose was declared the winner for shedding 56.2 kilos in 5 months.

She entered the competition weighing 121.9 pounds and toned down herself to 65.7 kilos, reports The Sydney Morning Herald.

Hose is a 40-year-old education assistant who works with disabled children.

She defeated 21-year-old Joe Medway from Queensland who lost 82.7 kilos and managed the second spot.

Hose said that the weight loss was far more than she had expected.

“All I ever wanted from The Biggest Loser was to get my weight off and be a better role model to my beautiful daughters and to make my husband proud,” she said.

“I could never have done it without the support of my trainer Shannan Ponton. Thanks to him, I am looking forward to a new beginning with my family,” Hose added. (ANI)

Lisa Hose becomes Australia”s first female Biggest Loser

Sydney, April 19 (ANI): A West Australian mother has become the first woman to win reality TV show The Biggest Loser.

Lisa Hose has lost almost half her body weight to triumph in the latest series.

Hose was declared the winner for shedding 56.2 kilos in 5 months.

She entered the competition weighing 121.9 pounds and toned down herself to 65.7 kilos, reports The Sydney Morning Herald.

Hose is a 40-year-old education assistant who works with disabled children.

She defeated 21-year-old Joe Medway from Queensland who lost 82.7 kilos and managed the second spot.

Hose said that the weight loss was far more than she had expected.

“All I ever wanted from The Biggest Loser was to get my weight off and be a better role model to my beautiful daughters and to make my husband proud,” she said.

“I could never have done it without the support of my trainer Shannan Ponton. Thanks to him, I am looking forward to a new beginning with my family,” Hose added. (ANI)

Musharraf’s govt ‘failed’ to protect Bhutto: UN

In a damning report, a UN investigation into Benazir Bhutto’s killing on Friday concluded that the then military ruler Pervez Musharraf’s government “failed” to protect the ex-premier despite being aware of the serious threats to her life.

The UN-appointed independent panel report also slammed the powerful ISI and the Pakistani police, saying they “deliberately failed” to properly probe 54-year-old Bhutto’s murder which could have been averted.

“Bhutto’s assassination could have been prevented,” said the much-awaited 65-page report by a three-member panel headed by Chile’s UN ambassador Heraldo Munoz.

The investigators stressed that besides passing on messages of the serious threats to Bhutto, no proactive measures were taken by the authorities to neutralise the danger. However, the report does not reveal who killed Bhutto.

“The responsibility for Bhutto’s security on the day of the assassination rested with the federal government, the government of Punjab and the Rawalpindi district police… none of these entities took the necessary measures to respond to the extraordinary fresh and urgent security risk that they knew she faced,” Munoz told reporters.

“A range of government officials failed profoundly in their efforts first to protect Bhutto and second to investigate with vigour all those responsible for her murder not only in the execution of the attack but also in its conception, planning and financing,” he said.

The panel pointed out that Bhutto faced a threat from several sources, including Al-Qaeda, Pakistani Taliban, other Jihadist groups and “so called establishment in Pakistan” that consisted of elements of military commanders, intelligence agency, allied political parties and business partners.

Bhutto, the first woman to become prime minister of a Muslim country, was killed on December 27, 2007 in a gun and suicide attack after addressing an election rally in Rawalpindi, a garrison city near the capital Islamabad.

The Munoz-led panel, which commenced its probe on July 1, 2009, was to have submitted its report on December 31, 2009 but its term was extended for another three months. It was tasked with establishing the facts and circumstances of the slaying and was not empowered to identify culprits.

However, the report, initially scheduled for March 30, was delayed after Pakistan made a request to the panel urging it to include input from former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Saudi Arabia.

The report severely rebuked Pakistan’s spy agency ISI for interfering in criminal investigations after her assassination, which subordinated law and order.

Breuer and Fox to keep MPs in line

MP Lyn Breuer says she will be firm but fair in her new role as South Australia’s parliamentary speaker.

The 59-year-old Whyalla MP has been nominated to become the first woman to fill the position full-time.

Molly Byrne was acting speaker in 1972.

Ms Breuer believes she will get some respect as a woman in the chair and says parliamentary standards need to improve.

“Probably most behaviour occurs in question time where we can always expect some antics but I think we can still have some fun,” she said.

“We can still be very serious about what’s happening and we can keep some of that bad behaviour out.”

She says it something of a reflection on society that she is the first woman to hold the role in more than 150 years.

MP Chloe Fox has been chosen as deputy speaker.

Rachel Uchitel insists she’s a nice normal girl

Washington, March 31(ANI): Rachel Uchitel, the first woman to emerge as Tiger Woods’ alleged mistresses, has said she is just a regular girl.

The hottie was present at Perez Hilton’s 32nd Birthday Party at Hollywood’s Paramount Studios.

“You can”t judge a book by its cover. I”m a nice normal girl that anybody would be friends with…” Fox News quoted her as saying.

Uchitel avoided all questions on her link up with the golfer.

However, she revealed that she has moved into a new house.

She said: “I just moved to Vegas with my dogs. I own an apartment there so I just moved there to have some time in an apartment that I own, and I visit friends and have family there… I am absolutely (enjoying more anonymity now). Put yourself in my shoes.”

Rumours are abuzz that Uchitel accepted a 1-million-dollar payout to keep quiet over Woods’ sex-scandal. (ANI)

Bligh ‘not a quitter’ on assets sell-off

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says she is determined to press ahead with major asset sales despite growing anger in the union movement.

It is the first anniversary today of Ms Bligh’s historical win, where she became the first woman in Australia to be elected as Premier.

Since then, she says her administration has overhauled the rules for government integrity and updated freedom of information laws.

Ms Bligh also says the State Government has made tough decisions for the economic downturn and seen improved literacy and numeracy results in schools.

She says she is also delivering on health, education and the environment.

Ms Bligh told Channel Nine that she has no intentions of standing aside.

“I’m not a quitter and in these sorts of positions I don’t think you can falter because there is a hurdle,” she said.

“You don’t enjoy those kind of opinion polls, but what they actually do is spur me on.

“I feel a renewed sense that people are telling me they want to see me do better.”

Ms Bligh says she has a theory about her recent poor showing in the opinion polls.

“Perhaps people aren’t used to seeing women having to make some tough decisions, so they are seeing me a bit at the moment as being a bit hard and tough and perhaps they don’t like it very much – that is something I have grappled with,” she said.

She says the Government is keeping its promise to protect and create jobs, but acknowledges she has suffered in the polls on issues like privatisation.

“It hasn’t been an easy 12 months and I certainly hope that it’s a better 12 months going forward,” she said.

“I certainly as Premier commit myself to doing better in my second year.”

But Queensland Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek says the State Government has let voters down in the past 12 months.

“We have Queenslanders who feel like they’ve been betrayed by a Premier who said anything to get elected and has clearly let Queenslanders down – whether it’s to do with jobs, whether it’s to do with a fuel tax, privatisation of state assets, and our registration, electricity and water costs that are going through the roof,” he said.

“We’ll be continuing to focus on those things, standing up for those people of Queensland and then providing an alternative at the next election.”

Gallagher clinches slalom bronze

Downhill skier Jessica Gallagher has made Australian Paralympics history, becoming the country’s first woman to win a medal at the Winter Games.

Gallagher took out bronze in the visually impaired women’s skiing at Whistler on Monday morning (AEDT), Australia’s first medal of the Games.

She posted a time of 0:57.77 to finish third behind Austrian Sabine Gasteiger and Canada’s Viviane Forest after the first run.

Their positions did not change after the second run, and the 53-year-old Austrian claimed the second gold and fifth medal of her Paralympic career.

“It is very satisfying because we have not been skiing long compared to a lot of the other competitors, and we have made a lot of sacrifices to be here,” said Gallagher, who is guided on the course by Queenslander Eric Bickerton.

“We have been dreaming about this for a long time.”

She said she was wound up before her second run.

“I am always nervous and all the excitement and adrenaline was building up inside of me,” she said.

“And I was bursting to go to the bathroom like always.”

Gallagher said her next target is track and field events at the summer Games in two years’ time, before a return to the slopes.

“I am going to start focusing on London in 2012 to compete in the shot put and the discus, and I definitely want to come back to Sochi in 2014,” she said.

“I think it [Sochi] will be a great [Paralympic Winter Games]. There is no limit to where Eric and I can get to.”

Birthday present

It was a sweet achievement for the 24-year-old on her birthday although the result came over a week earlier than expected.

The event was brought forward after heavy fog over the weekend postponing several events on the hill.

Gallagher said her celebrations will be low-key.

“After the medal ceremony I will catch up with my family and friends,” she said.

“Only my mum could make it from Australia but we have a good contingent of Aussies here and our team is really tight-knit.”

Gallagher has remarkably never competed at a Paralympic Games.

She intended to participate in long jump and shot put in Beijing in 2008 but was disqualified when tests showed she was not sufficiently vision impaired.

Instead, Gallagher attended as a medical administrator for the Australian team.

Australian Paralympic team head coach Steve Graham said Gallagher’s training regime held her in good stead for the dramatic rescheduling.

“When we train, I’m a huge believer in that you need to train every day as if the next day you might have to compete in any discipline,” he said.

“And it came to the fore today without a doubt.”

Graham said he was keen to have Gallagher, who is yet to decide between summer and winter sports, in the team for the 2014 winter Paralympics in Sochi, Russia.

“Without a doubt. She can be a superstar of the technical events in our sport within another 12 months,” he said.

- ABC/AAP

Indian-origin woman is Leader of Opposition in Trinidad and Tobago

PORT-OF-SPAIN: Indian-origin Kamla Persad-Bissessar has became the first woman Leader of the Opposition in the Trinidad and Tobago parliament, ousting former premier Basdeo Panday from the post.

Kamla was administered the oath of office here Thursday by President George Maxwell Richards at the president’s house amidst loud cheers from the seven MPs, who supported her to oust incumbent Basdeo Panday.

Panday had been Leader of the Opposition for almost 34 years, minus the six years he was prime minister.

Kamla’s ascent to the position follows elections within the opposition United National Congress (UNC) party Jan 24 when she beat her political mentor Panday ten to one in the UNC’s national elections to choose a new leader and executive.

She emerged leader much to the dismay of Panday who had set the machinery for the vote himself, but did not accept the result.

Kamla entered politics in the early 1980s when she became an alderman in the then St. Patrick County Council. She has served as a senator and then as member of parliament for Siparia.

In 1995, she became the country’s first woman attorney general when Panday formed the government and later became minister of education. She was also the first woman to act as prime minister.

Kamla became Leader of the Opposition in parliament by getting eight votes — including herself — out of the 15 MPs of the party.

Kamla has visited India on several occasions, attending the Pravasi Bharatiya conference in Hyderabad in 2006 and Commonwealth Parliamentary Association meetings.

Her forefathers were among 148,000 people who came from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar between 1845 to 1917 to work on sugar plantations here.

Fans give away Best Picture Oscar to ”Avatar”

New York, March 5 (ANI): Fans have already given an Oscar to James Cameron”s Avatar – the 3-D sci-fi saga bagged 33.7 percent votes in the Moviefone.com survey to emerge as Best Picture.

But readers named Cameron”s ex-wife as the Best Director.

Kathryn Bigelow, who helmed “The Hurt Locker,” received 39 percent votes as she outscored her former hubby.

“Audiences are pulling for her to become the first woman to win for best director,” the New York Daily News quoted Kevin Polowy, editor of Moviefone.com, as saying.’

Jeff Bridges’ role of a country singer in “Crazy Heart” won him the favour of 46.4 percent readers who named him as Best Actor while 60 percent fans named Sandra Bullock as Best Actress for her performance in “The Blind Side.”

The poll, which was conducted from Feb. 9 to March 4, saw the participation of over 45,000 people.

According to Polowy, the survey was a look at what the Oscars would look like “if the power was put in the hands of moviegoers rather than the Academy [of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences].” (ANI)

Delhi Half Marathon 2009 | Delhi Half Marathon | Delhi Marathon 2009 | Deriba Merga | Delhi Half Marathon Winner Deriba Merga | Delhi Marathon With Shah Rukh Khan | Airtel Delhi Half Marathon | Airtel Delhi Half Marathon 2009 | 2009 Delhi Marathon | Delhi Marathon

Delhi Half Marathon 2009 | Delhi Half Marathon | Delhi Marathon 2009 | Deriba Merga | Delhi Half Marathon Winner Deriba Merga | Delhi Marathon With Shah Rukh Khan | Airtel Delhi Half Marathon | Airtel Delhi Half Marathon 2009 | 2009 Delhi Marathon | Delhi Marathon

The Delhi Half Marathon is an annual half marathon foot-race held in New Delhi, India. It was established in 2006. The 2006 marathon drew about 20,000 participants.

2006 featured the marathon, there is a half marathon, a Fun Run and a 5km run. The event supports a number of charities including the Multiple Sclerosis Society of India and CRY (Child Relief and You). From November 2007 onwards, the marathon only features the half marathon (21.097 km), a senior citizen run (4 km), a wheel chair marathon (2.7 km) and the Great Delhi run (7 km).

The 2006 winner of the marathon was Simon Maiyo (Kenya) in a time of 2:17:00, whilst the first female over the line was Enatesh Tadesse (Ethiopia) in a time of 2:44:29. The marathons first prize is $30,000 for men and $20,000 for women.

The 2007 half marathon was held on November 11, 2007. World number six Diudone Disi (Rwanda)completed the 21-kilometer race in 1:00:43, while the fastest female over the line was Deriba Alemu (Ethiopia) who took little over one hour 10 minutes to win the race, ending the Kenyan dominance established during the last two editions of the half marathon.

The 2009 marathon, held on 1st November 2009, was again won by Deriba Merga (Ethiopia) in 59:54 minutes and the first woman to cross the line was Mary Keitany (Kenya).

For More Information Airtel Delhi Half Marathon 2009 Website : http://www.adhm.indiatimes.com/

Prince Charles accused of ‘abusing his position’ to influence planning process

London, Sep 2 (ANI): A senior architect in Britain has accused Prince Charles of “abusing his position” to influence planning decisions.

Ruth Reed, the first woman president of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), claims that the Prince of Wales used his royal status to interfere in the “democratic process”.

She also accused him of writing letters “behind the scenes” to display his opinions on certain architects and building projects.

“It is unfortunate if anybody uses their position in public life to exert undue influence on a democratic process such as planning,” the Telegraph quoted her as telling BBC Radio Four’s Front Row.

She added: “There appears to be evidence that he has written behind the scenes both about planning applications and also about the appointment of particular architects, which would be an abuse of his position, definitely.”

However, the Clarence House has declined to comment on the allegations. (ANI)