ABB buys Chloride Group for $1.25 billion

(Reuters) – ABB is buying Chloride Group for an agreed 860 million pounds ($1.25 billion), the Swiss engineering group said on Tuesday, announcing its second acquisition within a month.

Deals

ABB, which competes with French group Schneider, said Chloride had agreed on an offer of 325 pence per share.

In April, Chloride, whose products protect against power shortages, had rejected an offer for 723 million pounds from Emerson Electronic.

ABB, which sells power equipment to utilities as well as to oil and gas companies, had $7.1 billion in cash at the end of the first quarter, and had been expected to go on a buying spree.

Chloride will be part of ABB’s discreet automation division. Last November, ABB revamped its automation divisions and triggered talk it was about to go for a buy.

Chloride employs about 2,500 people and reported revenue of 336 million pounds in its fiscal year ended March 31.

In early May, ABB announced the buy of U.S. software group Ventyx, and then a fortnight later said it was raising its stake in its Indian subsidiary.

(Editing by Dan Lalor)

($1 = 0.6892 pound)

Another Hindu militant group on rise in Nepal?

Kathmandu, June 6 (IANS) A year after a militant Hindu group came into prominence by engineering a bomb attack on a church in Kathmandu valley that killed three women, another such group is on the rise, seeking to restore Hinduism as Nepal’s state religion, claims a prominent doctor who was a kidnap victim.

For more than a fortnight, Bhaktaman Shrestha, executive director at the B.P. Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital in Nepal’s southern Chitwan district, had grabbed headlines in Nepal after he disappeared last month while returning home from hospital.

The disappearance fuelled nationwide protests by the medical fraternity; and the government as well as the opposition Maoist party formed two separate probe panels to unravel the mystery.

Last week, the missing doctor’s car and briefcase were found in two different locations, giving rise to fears about his safety.

Then miraculously, the doctor, a Maoist sympathiser, reappeared Saturday, claiming he was abducted by a Hindu party that sought to make its presence felt through his abduction.

According to Shrestha, he was kidnapped by the Nepal Hindu Janata Party, a new outfit that has branches in 18 of Nepal’s 75 districts and an army of over 4,000.

It is seeking to re-establish Hinduism as Nepal’s state religion four years after parliament declared the world’s only Hindu kingdom secular.

A haggard and unkempt looking Shrestha, who wept publicly, also told the media he was kidnapped at gunpoint and kept blindfolded throughout his 18-day captivity though his captors treated him well and even provided him medicine for his migraine.

The claim about a Hindu militant group comes a year after an underground organisation, the Nepal Defence Army (NDA), caused a bomb to go off at the oldest Catholic church in Kathmandu valley, followed by threats to Christians and Muslims to leave Nepal or face dire consequences.

However, since the arrest of the NDA mastermind, Ram Prasad Mainali, as well as the woman who police say hid the bomb in the church, the attacks on religious minorities have stopped.

A parliamentary party, the Rastriya Prajatantra Party (Nepal) and Hindu groups like Shiv Sena Nepal and Vishwa Hindu Mahasangh have been seeking the restoration of Hinduism as the state religion but none have advocated violence so far.

RPP-Nepal is seeking a referendum and conducting campaigns to muster support for a Hindu monarchy.

The released doctor’s claim about a new militant Hindu party has been greeted with heavy scepticism by the media.

On Sunday, the mainstream dailies accused the doctor of being part of a cover-up exercise to steer away suspicion from the real culprits.

A national daily as well as Nepal’s Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal blame the Maoists for the abduction though the former guerrillas have been denying any involvement in the disappearance.

However, in the past, the Maoists abducted and thrashed to death a businessman who was said to be close to them, long after they had signed a peace agreement and pledged to renounce violence.

Kalmadi now wants road tax cut, Govt says it’s fed up

After getting freebies of all kinds, the Organising Committee (OC) is now asking for exemption for their sponsors as well. In a new memorandum sent to the Delhi government, Organising Committee chief Suresh Kalmadi has asked for VAT and road tax exemption for over 200 cars that they will get as sponsorship.

The OC has been holding dialogue with Maruti, Tata and Mahindra to get these cars. However, nothing has been finalised as yet. To make the deal more lucrative for them, the OC is asking for waiver on VAT while purchasing the cars and exemptions on road tax while registering it. This will cost the Delhi government nearly Rs 38 crore, said a senior finance official.

“Kalmadi has submitted a memorandum to us. Games organisers have pressed for such waivers quite regularly, claiming that it is our responsibility as the host state. Frankly, we are fed up of it now,” said a senior government official.

Kalmadi has also reminded the government of his pending request for waiving off 12.5 per cent VAT on all purchases made for the Games. They have also requested the government to provide food to volunteers during the fortnight of the Games.

The Delhi government is levying a flurry of taxes on Delhi residents to raise the Rs 1,300 crore more revenue required to fund the Games preparations. The government has also given close to Rs 250 crore as exemptions. Waiving luxury tax on hotels where participants will stay will alone cost the exchequer close to Rs 33 crore.

HC’s 5 directivesThe Delhi High Court on Wednesday drafted a five-point directive for the state for the benefit of Commonwealth Games workers. * Make “all possible” efforts to register maximum number of workers * Provide identity cards * Labour department to monitor issuance of passbooks * Provide education to as many children of the workers as possible * Assure medical facilities along with all other benefits

28 Taliban, 2 soldiers killed inPak Army’s latest offensive in FATA

Lahore , May 19 (ANI): More than 28 Taliban extremists and two Pakistani soldiers were killed in an ambush in the Orakzai region of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) on Wednesday, officials said.

The encounter took place after over 200 Taliban attacked a security check post in the region, The Nation reports.

The death toll was hard to be verified independently as the media is barred from visiting the war-zone.

The Pakistan military has intensified its operation in FATA killing scores of militants in the last fortnight.

Several army personnel have also been killed in the offensive, which is targeted at flushing out the militants from the region. (ANI)

Latest YouTube hit – water walking!

London, May 16 (ANI): Three athletic young adventurers have produced a video claiming to show ‘one of the most impossible-looking activities that anyone has ever seen’ – walking on water.

Ulf Gartner and his friends Sebastian Vanderwerf and Miguel Delfortrie call it ‘liquid mountaineering’, a new sport that is not only challenging the laws of gravity but is also encouraging thousands of fans to slip on watertight shoes and run as fast as possible into the nearest lake.

Over 2 million people have watched the YouTube video in the past fortnight.

The video shows the men racing in turns into a lake in Portugal. After several false starts they manage up to nine or 10 high-speed tiptoe-like strides before their legs buckle beneath them.

“All you have to do is start running towards the bank of the lake and keep running with top speed. As soon as you touch the water your legs should be going like a sewing machine. You should be just like a stone skimming the surface,” the Times quoted Gartner as saying.

Gartner says that rather than a miracle, you just need ‘good-quality rubber running shoes’.

Even those who think it is a trick agree it would be one of the cleverest hoaxes on the Internet.

“It might be fake but I have no idea how they made it look so real,” one Internet visitor concluded. (ANI)

The story behind failed Times Square bomber’s turn to extremism

New York, May 16 (ANI): It was not a sudden spurge of anger against the west, particularly the United States, or an abrupt shift towards radical thoughts that forced Faisal Shahzad, the confessed Times Square bomb plotter of Pakistani origin, to take such an extreme step, but the process of him seeking answers for the killing and sufferings of thousands of fellow Muslim men has started almost after the 9/11incident.

Though Shahzad understood the notion that Islam forbids the killing of innocents, an e-mail that he had sent to his friends in February 2006 clearly suggested that he was struggling with the ‘trial and pathetic conditions’ of Muslims the world over.

“Those who insist only on “peaceful protest, can you tell me a way to save the oppressed? And a way to fight back when rockets are fired at us and Muslim blood flows?” Shahzad wrote in his lengthy mail to his friends.

Even though he enjoyed a great life in the US, having a nice paying job and a happy family, his relatives, and friends said that his argument with American foreign policy grew after 9/11,and the mails, which are now in possession of investigators, written to his colleagues and some close pals, also suggest the same.

According to The New York Times, which interviewed many of Shahzad’s friends, relatives and colleagues, Shahzad became more religious around 2006. His friends recalled that by that year he was also turning away from the Pakistan of his youth, distancing himself from the liberal, elite world of his father, Bahar ul-Haq, a retired vice marshal in the Pakistani Air Force.

In the recent years, Shahzad’s financial condition weakened to an extent and he reportedly struggled to pay his bill, but it’s unclear whether that played any role in his radicalisation.

Shahzad’s father-in-law, M.A. Mian, is in complete shock over what he has seen in the past fortnight.

What drove Shahzad to such an extreme, was it political, religious or personal, even Mian is seeking answers.

“We all know these things, what the geopolitical problems are. Every day we sit in our living rooms with our friends and we discuss these issues,” the paper quoted Mian, as saying.

“But to go to this extreme, this is unbelievable. He has lovely children. Two really lovely children. As a father I would not be able to afford to lose my children,” he added.

One of graduates of Shahzad’s high school in Karachi, who spoke of conditions of anonymity, pointed out that Shahzad came of age during Pakistan’s state-sponsored jihad against India in Kashmir.

“We used to see the mujahedeens as heroes. When I look back, I think, ‘What was I thinking? What were we all doing?’ But in that era, it made sense. We all wanted to do something,” he said.

“He was always very upset about the fabrication of the W.M.D. stunt to attack Iraq and killing non-combatants such as the sons and grandson of Saddam Hussein,” the newspaper quoted one of Shahzad’s close relatives. (ANI)

Superstitious Collingwood feels good omens are favouring him

London, May 16 (ANI): Superstitious England captain Paul Collingwood believes that he has been blessed in the Caribbean over the past fortnight and is hoping that his good luck holds on during the World Cup Twenty20 final against Australia.

“There have been a couple of good omens for me out here, the other day in the semi-final I walked out on to the pitch for the anthems with the young girl mascot I had to hold hands with,” Collingwood said.

“I said: ‘Hi my darling, what’s your name then?’ and she turned and said: ‘My name’s Lucky.’ So as soon as she said it I had a big smile on my face and thought what a great sign that is.

“I love those sort of things that happen along the way and it put a really good feel factor into my mind as soon as I heard that,” The Telegraph quoted Collingwood, as saying.

“I’m a little bit superstitious about things so I was supposed to get my hair cut out here, and I know it looks atrocious, but once we got on a roll I thought I can’t get it cut until we’ve got home and hopefully that will be with the trophy.

“I don’t want to lose my strength!” Collingwood added. (ANI)

White supremacist, son jailed for Ricin poison plot

Durham (UK), May 15 (ANI): A white supremacist, who dismissed other extreme groups as weak, has been jailed for ten years.

He is the first Briton to be convicted for producing a chemical weapon.

Ian Davison, 42, manufactured enough ricin to kill nine people and kept it in a jar in his kitchen for two years.

According to The Scotsman, he was jailed along with his teenager son Nicky, who was a fellow member of a group known as “the Aryan Strike Force”.

Nicky was sentenced to two years in a young offenders” institution.

Ian Davison, a resident of Burnopfield in Durham County, previously admitted producing a chemical weapon, preparing acts of terrorism, three counts of possessing material useful to commit acts of terror and one count of possessing a prohibited weapon.

His 19-year-old son was convicted of three counts of possessing material useful for acts of terror following a trial a fortnight ago.

The charges related to downloading copies of the Anarchist”s Cookbook and The Poor Man”s James Bond on two computers. (ANI)

Oz mother prostitutes 12-year-old daughter to pay off debts

Melbourne, May 10 (ANI): A woman sold her 12-year-old daughter for sex to pay off her home loan, in Tasmania.

According to the Mercury, the mother, who belongs to Glenorchy in Tasmania, pleaded guilty in the Hobart Supreme Court, to charges of unlawfully procuring a child, being a commercial operator of sex business and receiving fees for sexual services of a child, News.com.au reported.

Daryl Coates, Crown Prosecutor, told the court that the 41 year-old woman and Gary John Devine had agreed on selling the little girl for sex because the woman had to pay off her home loan and she was short on cash.

Once they had agreed on the sale, an advertisement was placed in The Mercury the next day offering the girl as “Angela, 18, new in town”.

The mother then, booked a room at the Midcity Hotel and gave a key to Devine, who sold the girl to more than 100 men over a four-week period in August and September last year. She was sold for 100 dollars for half-an-hour and an extra 50 dollars for men who did not want to use a condom. The court heard the girl made 2000 dollars a day.

At the time the girl and another younger sister were under protective orders. The order was due to end in October but she was allowed to return to her mother”s care in June.

Coates said the mother was asked by her older 15-year daughter where the 12-year-old was, but the woman did not reveal anything initially.

The woman was paying 180-dollar per fortnight off her home loan that she had received from the Commonwealth Bank. She had re-drawn on the loan about five years ago, but spent the money on drugs instead.

The money made off the prostitution was also spent on drugs.

The sex racket continued at the woman”s house afterwards. The girl has now been diagnosed with sexually transmitted diseases including genital warts and chlamydia.

After initially denying everything, the mother accepted her crime when she was charged in February this year.

The woman”s defence lawyer Rochelle Mainwaring said the crimes were “horrendous” and her client was struggling to comprehend what she had done.

Justice Peter Evans adjourned the sentencing until Friday. (ANI)

Murray backs England for 2010 World Cup to boost his Wimbledon chances

London, May 5 (ANI): British tennis star Andy Murray is backing England for the 2010 football World Cup in South Africa, because it will help him to win Wimbledon.

Murray caused an uproar four years ago when he joked he would be supporting “anyone but England” at the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

But now he is ready to support Fabio Capello’s team in South Africa and is happy to let the Three Lions shoulder all the nation’s expectations.

Murray aims to become the first British player to win a Grand Slam in 74 years.

“Wimbledon is different in a World Cup year and it does make things a bit easier for me,” The Sun quoted Murray, as saying.

“The World Cup is huge in terms of viewing figures and media coverage and this year England have a very good chance of winning it. Last year there wasn’t a whole lot else going on during Wimbledon fortnight so all the focus was on me and the tennis.

“This year I probably won”t get so many demands on my time, particularly in the build-up. I might not get so many paparazzi following me about and not so many people knocking on my door asking about my personal life, which would make things nicer for me,’ Murray said.

Murray is still paying the price for his joke four years ago, The Sun reports.

“I need to be careful not to make any jokes that could be misinterpreted but as long as I’m honest there won’t be any problems. If you are asking me who is going to win the World Cup, I’d have to say Spain because they have an unbelievable team.

“But England have a very good chance and it”s absolute c**p to think I’ll be cheering for whoever they are playing,” he added. (ANI)

Coalition punishes Labor to take poll lead

The Coalition is in an election-winning poll position for the first time since 2006, with the latest Newspoll showing it leading Labor by 51 to 49 per cent on a two-party-preferred basis.

The Coalition’s support jumped five points while Labor’s dropped five. Opposition Leader Tony Abbott’s support as preferred prime minister rose three points to 32 per cent, the highest support of any Liberal leader since former prime minister John Howard.

In just a fortnight Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s satisfaction rating has slumped 11 points from 50 to 39 per cent, while his preferred prime minister ranking has also been slashed by 6 points to 50 per cent, its lowest level since he took office in 2007.

The Newspoll survey was conducted last weekend for The Australian and comes after a frenetic fortnight which saw the Government postpone its emissions trading scheme, axe its insulation program, ditch more than 200 new childcare centres, and jack up the tobacco tax.

However it was taken too early to be a reflection of the Government’s response to the Henry tax review. The next Newspoll will follow the announcement of the federal budget.

Newspoll chief executive Martin O’Shannassey says he has no doubt that the Government has had a very tough fortnight.

He says the result could be a rogue poll, but he thinks voters are sending Mr Rudd a message.

“It’s possible that we have a rogue poll, although, funnily enough, while there’s a chance of one in 20 that we get one over a certain percentage, the chance that we get one of such magnitude declines as well.

“In October 2009, the last time we talked down climate change or confidence in the Government was fading on climate change, we saw a sharp fall in the primary vote for the Government. Here it is again.

“What you look at is the first preferences, and it is very clear that Labor has taken quite a caning and the Coalition hasn’t gained everything it can from that. I think that probably is the story of this poll,” he said.

Well-beaten Murray sees progress

Andy Murray gave an indication of how far off his best he has fallen on Thursday, when he said he could see progress in his game despite being comprehensively beaten by Spain’s David Ferrer at the Rome Masters.

The Briton, who has slipped to fifth in the world rankings after reaching number two last year, struggled in several areas during the 6-3 6-4 third-round defeat, with his serve malfunctioning badly.

Nevertheless, he expressed satisfaction with his showing on the Italian capital’s clay, his least favourite surface, after beating Andreas Seppi on Tuesday to snap a run of three defeats.

“In terms of the way I was striking the ball it was a different level to the last two tournaments — way, way better,” Murray told a news conference.

“I just need to serve and return better, which are two basic things you tend to do better the more matches you play.

“I didn’t do the basics as well as I would have liked.”

Murray, who suffered an ignominious straight sets defeat on his claycourt season debut in Monte Carlo a fortnight ago, did manage to carve out three break points, two in the first set and one in the second, but was unable to convert any.

He admitted that, on the whole though, he had found it hard to pile any pressure on 13th-seeded claycourt specialist Ferrer.

“The only disappointing thing was I wasn’t able to create more break point opportunities, as normally that’s one of the best points of my game,” he said.

“This week I felt so much better than I did in Monte Carlo. This tournament is a step in the right direction compared with the last couple of weeks, which were going the wrong way.

“I’m disappointed to lose, but I was a lot happier with the way I hit the ball.”

(Editing by Alison Wildey

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

Ribery ‘flew underage prostitute to Germany as 26th birthday present’

Paris, Apr 29(ANI): French winger Franck Ribery had paid thousands of pounds to jet an underage prostitute, Zahia Dehar, from France to Germany as a ‘birthday present’ to himself.

Dehar, who had been in hiding since the scandal broke a fortnight ago, revealed that Ribery paid for her first class flights and a five-star hotel for his 26th birthday last year.

“I was Ribery”s birthday present. Franck approached me in a Paris club. He booked me and flew me to Munich to celebrate his 26th birthday,” The Telegraph quoted Dehar, as saying.

“He made reservations at a luxury hotel in Munich. We had sex and he paid me. I was a lovely little present, wasn’t I?” she added.

Ribery has been embroiled in a sex scandal after French police raided the Paris brothel Cafe Zaman, earlier this month.

Dehar had told officers how she had 1,500 pounds-a-night sex with three French international players, including Ribery.

While Ribery has admitted that he had sex with Dehar, he denies paying her or knowing she was only 17-years-old at the time, which would make it illegal. (ANI)

IPL scandal: India may end up being real loser

Mumbai, Apr.27 (ANI): The Indian Premier League (IPL) may be the biggest and brashest tournament cricket has ever seen, but the alleged behind the scenes financial irregularities may end up seeing India as the real loser, a report in The Times has claimed.

According to the report, India has 1.2 billion people, many of them crazy about cricket. Most are growing wealthier and the number who can afford to buy satellite TV subscriptions and replica shirts is growing.

More than that, for many Indians, the IPL is an emblem of their aspirations and proof of how the epicenter of the global economy is shifting East.

It is also a symbol of what they believe India is destined to become: a true global power.

In short, the IPL was an icon of a “New India” – one that was supposed to have shed the corruption, nepotism, cronyism and political patronage of the past.

As the confetti settles on this year’s competition, however, the question is whether it is too big to fail.

The suspension of Lalit Modi, the IPL’s fast talking creator and chief administrator, just minutes after the Chennai Super Kings vanquished the Mumbai Indians in an IPL final over allegations of money laundering, match-fixing, illegal betting, team auction manipulation, political corruption and multi-million dollar kickbacks, is likely to have a huge adverse impact.

Modi has been given 15 days to answer allegations of financial impropriety. His suspension may have set the stage for a messy dissection of the scandal in which the IPL has been mired for the past fortnight.

Modi has challenged the BCCI to justify its reasons for sacking him, suggesting that they are scared to face the truth.

There is no doubt that the scandal has rocked India to its core.

The resignation of Deputy Foreign Minister Shashi Tharoor a fortnight ago was a reminder of how cricket in the country is riddled with political patronage and worse.

Tharoor, a favourite of Sonia Gandhi, was forced to step down when it emerged that a business consortium he had advised had given a 10-million-pound stake in a new IPL side to a woman widely reported to be his girlfriend.

Having sacrificed Tharoor, the Government went out for revenge, unleashing its tax inspectors on anybody with an association with the IPL.

The real target, however, has appeared to be Modi, who triggered the Tharoor scandal through a leak on the Twitter website. (ANI)

In UK Facebook beats sex

A new survey has found that overworked Britons would rather check their email and update their Facebook page than have sex.

In the poll of British adults’ favourite bedroom activities, it was shown that making love came in sixth, with activities on the laptop being preferred to sex.

Among the 4,000 people questioned, most preferred to sleep, read, watch TV, listen to music and surf the Internet rather than have sex, and one in seven treated their bed as another place to get work done.

A quarter said they now only turn up the heat in the bedroom once a fortnight. They blamed overwork, exhaustion and stress.

Women were more likely to read in bed and men more likely to watch TV.

Men were keener than women for romance outside the bedroom with the living room bathroom, kitchen and garden favoured places.

“Given the long hours we work and the stresses and strains we are under, it’s no wonder we see their bedrooms as a sanctuary in which to relax,” the Daily Express quoted Amanda Jones, of the bed manufacturer Silentnight, which commissioned the survey, as saying.

Overworked Brits prefer Facebooking to sex

London, April 22 (ANI): A new survey has found that overworked Britons would rather check their email and update their Facebook than have sex.

In the poll of British adults’ favourite bedroom activities, it was shown that making love came in sixth, with activities on the laptop being preferred to sex.

Among the 4,000 people questioned, most preferred to sleep, read, watch TV, listen to music and surf the Internet rather than have sex, and one in seven treated their bed as another place to get work done.

A quarter said they now only turn up the heat in the bedroom once a fortnight. They blamed overwork, exhaustion and stress.

Women were more likely to read in bed and men more likely to watch TV.

Men were keener than women for romance outside the bedroom with the living room bathroom, kitchen and garden favoured places.

“Given the long hours we work and the stresses and strains we are under, it’s no wonder we see their bedrooms as a sanctuary in which to relax,” the Daily Express quoted Amanda Jones, of the bed manufacturer Silentnight, which commissioned the survey, as saying. (ANI)

Terrorised by Taliban tribals scoff Pak Army’s ‘war is over’ claims

London, Apr.21 (ANI): Local residents in Pakistan’s tribal regions, where the Army had initiated an all out offensive against the Taliban and other extremist groups last year, are still living in fear despite claims that the militants have been flushed out.

While the Pakistan Army has been claiming huge success against the Taliban and said that things were fast returning to normal in the rugged terrains, people here are still terrorised by the outlawed militant group, which clearly suggests that the ‘war in not over’.

“People are very intimidated. They have been terrorised by the Taliban. They are scared to go out at night. They are scared to speak. The war is not over,” The Times quoted a former army officer Khalid Munir, as saying.

The tribal region close to the Afghan border has witnessed a sudden increase in army’s action and terror strikes over the past fortnight.

A few days ago over 70 people, mostly civilians, were killed in an air raid by the air force. Nearly 45 people were killed in a suicide attack in Kohat last week.

Earlier this week, suicide bombers targeted a police station killing seven security officials. Another terror strike in a busy market place in Peshawar, the capital city of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) killed over 25 people.

The surge in violence certainly puts a question mark over the Pakistan Army’s repeated remark that normalcy in returning in the tribal region, and also suggests that they are nowhere near to being defeated. (ANI)

Karun Chandhok given five-place grid penalty for Chinese GP

Shanghai, Apr 17(ANI): Indian driver Karun Chandhok has been handed over a five-place grid penalty for Sunday’s Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai after the Hispania Racing Team broke a seal on his car’s gearbox following Friday practice sessions.

The 26-year-old must take a penalty, as the team opened the gearbox to work on it without an FIA official in attendance, which is a breach of regulations.

However, the penalty is unlikely to affect the rookie driver, who finished 24th and last after the qualifying session at the Shanghai International Circuit, Xinhua news agency reports.

Chandhok and his team-mate Bruno Senna were 15th and 16th respectively in the Malaysian Grand Prix, a fortnight ago, and have only once qualified off the back row of the grid in three attempts. (ANI)

Teething problems with new transport system

New South Wales Government says commuters could experience “teething problems” with the new transport fares system which starts in less than a fortnight.

The Transport Minister David Campbell wants bus, train and ferry passengers to buy their MyZone tickets early to avoid delays.

Mr Campbell says some tickets can be pre-purchased at re-sellers now but will not be available at railway stations until the day the new system starts.

“There will be some people who don’t have detail on the day that this starts,” he said.

We’ll have a lot of staff available to give customer assistance and customer service on the first day of MyZone.”

IRC backs union calls for payroll bungle help

The Australian Services Union (ASU) says it has been successful in getting help for Queensland Health payroll staff struggling to deal with the fallout from a faulty new system.

More than 3,000 Queensland Health staff across the state were underpaid or not paid at all in the last fortnight and hundreds more reported problems this week.

ASU spokeswoman Julie Bignell says the Queensland Industrial Relations Commission (IRC) has agreed that payroll staff need urgent assistance to correct the problems.

“It’ll make a bit of a difference to payroll staff who really need the time off the phones to be able to adjust people’s pays,” she said.

“I’d have to say they probably would think that that’s too little too late.

“I think the better course of action would have been to have foreseen this in the first place.”

Ms Bignell says payroll staff have been inundated with phone calls because of the bungle.

“The volume of calls has been so great that people literally pick up the phone and hang up the phone and cannot get off the phone – it is constant,” she said.

“There are many of our other members saying they can’t get through to payroll services to even tell them about what their problem is.

Health Minister Paul Lucas has promised help for any workers whose credit ratings are affected by not being paid properly.

“We would be more than happy to have Queensland Health provide them with the appropriate letter in support,” he said.

“Then if there is an ongoing issue where someone is not prepared to actually take that on board as a credit rating agency then I’m more than happy to take that up on a personal basis with a credit rating agency.”

QBuild pay problems

Meanwhile, the Electrical Trades Union (ETU) says some of its members who work at QBuild have been underpaid for up to eight weeks.

The ETU has spoken out after problems were revealed with a new payroll system within Queensland Health.

ETU spokesman Scott Reichman says there is frustration among QBuild staff.

“It’s mostly after hours call-out payments that haven’t gone through, plus some allowances and other bits and pieces that they’re entitled to for the different kinds of work that they do that haven’t been coming through,” he said.

He says QBuild workers have been told it could take some time to sort out the problem.

“They’ve been told that they are trying everything they can to get it sorted out and we’ve had some assurance we’ll be sorted out in the next week or so regarding absent allowances,” he said.

“Some of the other problems of the new system regarding leave and other entitlements are going to take somewhat longer to sort out.”