Malaysia’s Anwar wants sodomy accuser disqualified

The lawyer for Malaysia’s Anwar Ibrahim said on Tuesday he will seek to have Anwar’s accuser disqualified for perjury, a move aimed at casting doubts on a sodomy trial that could end the opposition leader’s career.

Anwar has been charged with consensual sodomy but his former aide, Saiful Bukhari Azlan, insisted under cross-examination by the defence on Tuesday that he was sodomised against his will.

The former deputy prime minister denies the charge, which he says is politically motivated to prevent him from wresting power following the government’s record losses in the last general election in 2008.

A conviction in the trial, set to end in late August, carries a maximum 20-year jail term, one which would end the career of the 63-year-old politician.

Sex between males is illegal in this conservative Southeast Asian country. Consensual and non-consensual sodomy are listed as separate offences.

The prosecution argued it was entitled to charge Anwar for either consensual or non-consensual sodomy but Anwar’s lawyer, Karpal Singh, later told reporters he would move to have Saiful disqualified for contradicting the charge.

“This is the first time in a criminal case in this country that you have a statement to the police saying that the act was non-consensual and yet the charge says consensual,” Anwar told reporters outside the packed courtroom.

HIGH STAKES

Malaysian media have lapped up lurid details of the politically charged trial and have published photos showing “in camera” trial proceedings that prompted complaints by the opposition of bias.

Analysts say the sensational media coverage signals a more important battle over the case that is being waged in the court of public opinion between the Anwar-led opposition and Prime Minister Najib Razak’s ruling coalition.

“Despite the proceedings, in the court of public opinion people already seem to have made up their minds,” said political analyst Ong Kian Ming.

“The more important question now is how far the continuing revelations in the trial will affect Anwar’s image among those who now feel that this charge was manufactured,” said Ong.

Anwar leads an opposition group that denied the ruling coalition control in five of Malaysia’s 13 states but was hit by a series of recent setbacks, including the resignation of four opposition MPs.

Victory by the ruling National Front of Prime Minister Najib Razak in its first parliamentary by-election since the 2008 general election has boosted the government’s confidence.

But analysts say the country’s non-Muslim minorities who abandoned the government due to alienation have yet to swing back to them. Tensions have also gone up due to a row over the use of the word “Allah” by Christians to describe God.

Najib took office in April 2009 pledging political and economic reforms to revive his ailing coalition and win back foreign investment.

But the uncertainties have helped dent foreign investment. Net portfolio and direct investment outflows reached $61 billion in 2008 and 2009, according to official data.

Flows have returned to the Malaysian bond market, with official data showing foreign ownership of Malaysian government bonds rose to 55.4 billion Malaysian ringgit ($17.32 billion) as of March 10 from 41 billion ringgit, largely after a central bank rate hike and speculation of a Chinese currency revaluation.

(Reporting by Razak Ahmad; Editing by Paul Tait)

Dollar hits fresh 7-month high vs yen after jobs data

NEW YORK, April 2 (Reuters) – The dollar climbed to a fresh 7-month high against the yen on Friday in the wake of a U.S. employment report that showed private sector jobs rose to their highest in nearly three years.

The dollar rose as high as 94.54, the loftiest since late August, according to Reuters data.

It was last at 94.44 yen JPY=, up 0.7 percent on the day. For more on the data, see [ID:nN01126422] (Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Editing by John Picinich)

Fien gone for five months

St George Illawarra hooker Nathan Fien is determined to return before the NRL finals after scans confirmed the Kiwi Test star broke his leg in the Dragons’ season-opening win over Parramatta.

Fien had an operation in Sydney on Saturday after it was revealed he had fractured his fibula when his leg became caught under the weight of several defenders as he made a charge towards the Eels line just before half-time in the Dragons’ 18-12 win at Parramatta Stadium.

Doctors set the recovery period at five months, meaning Fien should return in late August.

It was a disappointing end to what had started out as a day of great joy after he joined his wife in hospital in Wollongong to witness the birth of his fourth child, a little boy.

Fien himself finished the day in the care of medical staff, the 30-year-old saying he knew immediately that he was in some trouble.

“I knew something was wrong straight away, I heard a crack but was wondering how I was going to get up and play the ball quickly because we were so close to the line,” Fien said.

“When I was back in the sheds and they cut the tape off, it was bit numb and I thought I might be OK here, but when the doc had a look and moved it a bit, I realised it was pretty serious and they took me off to hospital.

“I was feeling really good out there, on top of the world.

“It was probably a combination of seeing my son being born and the back off we had in training last week.

“I was really enjoying the game, I was happy with my defence and we were getting some good shake in attack and then it was all over.”

The Dragons attack was noticeably more laboured after Fien left the field as Dean Young, who had been playing well at lock, moved into dummy half.

Young now looms as a likely long-term fill-in at number nine, though Dragons coach Wayne Bennett also has the luxury of calling on former premiership-winning hooker Luke Priddis.

Fien however said he was determined to return for the business end of the season.

“It’s just one of those things that happens in footy, not playing isn’t going to be fun, but I’m pleased that I can have the operation so soon to allow me to get back as quickly as possible,” Fien said.

“I will now just have to wait a little longer and enjoy some extra time with my wife and four kids.”

Fien is due to leave hospital on Sunday when he hopes to return to Wollongong to be with his family.

-AAP

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Pga Tournament | Pga Championship | Pga leaderboard | Pga Tournament Results | Pga National |  pga tour leaderboard | Pga European Tour | Pga Tour

The PGA Tour is an organization that operates the main professional golf tours in the United States. It is headquartered in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, a suburb of Jacksonville. Its name is officially rendered in all-capital letters as “PGA TOUR”.

The PGA Tour became a separate entity in 1968, branching off from the PGA of America, which is now primarily an association of club professionals. Tournament players formed their own organization, the Association of Professional Golfers (APG). Later in 1968, the tournament players abolished the APG and agreed to operate as the PGA “Tournament Players Division,” a fully autonomous division under the supervision of a new 10-member Tournament Policy Board. The name would officially change to the “PGA Tour” in 1975.

In 1981, the PGA Tour had a marketing dispute with the PGA of America and decided to officially change its name. Beginning in late August 1981, it became the TPA Tour, for the “Tournament Players Association.”The disputed issues were resolved within seven months and the tour’s name was changed back to the “PGA Tour” in March 1982.

Due to a multiplicity of similar names, it is worth emphasizing what the PGA Tour does and does not organize. The PGA Tour does not run any of the four major golf tournaments or the Ryder Cup. The PGA of America, not the PGA Tour, runs the PGA Championship, the Senior PGA Championship, and co-organizes the Ryder Cup with the PGA European Tour. The PGA Tour is not involved with the women’s tours in the U.S.; they are controlled by the LPGA. The PGA Tour is also not the governing body for the game of golf in the United States; this, instead, is the role of the USGA, which organizes the U.S. Open. What the PGA Tour does organize are the remaining 43 (in 2009) week-to-week events, including The Players Championship and the FedEx Cup events, as well as the biennial Presidents Cup.

-wiki.

Oz squad has talent to retain Ashes without Symonds: Ponting

Melbourne, May 20 (ANI): Australian captain Ricky Ponting has brushed aside concerns over the omission of troubled all rounder Andrew Symonds from this year’s Ashes squad.

A long-time backer of Symonds, Ponting said he believed that Australia had the talent in the squad to retain the Ashes on English soil without Symonds.

“I can’t personally be disappointed and we both know how good a player Andrew can be, but the facts are that he went out of the side for reasons last year,” Ponting said.

“Opportunities were given to others and the others that have come into those positions have played exceptionally well and played well enough to keep Andrew out of the squad. That is as simple and as difficult as it actually needs to be,” he said.

Symonds is currently plying his trade for the Deccan Chargers in the second edition of the Indian Premier League in South Africa, The Courier Mail reported.

“Look he will be disappointed but I have a squad of 16 players to take to England that I am very confident that we can play a level of cricket that is going to be good enough to win the series,” Ponting said.

“The selections have been made and I know the selectors have thought long and hard about this squad and the squad has come up without Andrew’s name in it. That is it, we move on and focus on the 16 players that we have got,” he said.

Chief selector Andrew Hilditch said Shane Watson had edged Symonds out at the selection table while allrounder Andrew McDonald maintained his place in the Test set-up.

Watson has been chosen subject to fitness after sustaining a minor groin injury in the recent limited-over series against Pakistan but Hilditch fully expected him to take his place.

The five-Test series starts at Sophia Gardens in Cardiff, from July 8, and finishes at The Oval in late August.

Australia hold the Ashes after Ponting’s side completed a 5-0 series whitewash at home in 2006-2007 to regain the urn after a 2-1 defeat in England in 2005. (ANI)