Ballarat on track for Melbourne link

Ballarat will get a direct rail line to Melbourne as part of the Regional Rail Link being funded through the Victorian budget, which was announced yesterday.

A total of $4.3 billion has been allocated to the Regional Rail Link, which is the single biggest project in the state budget.

The project will create stand-alone tracks to Melbourne from Bendigo, Geelong and Ballarat.

Ballarat council’s chief executive, Anthony Schink, says the investment is needed to help Ballarat cope with population growth.

“The intention of linking the regional centres with Melbourne is clearly a recognition of the growth that we are experiencing,” he said.

Mr Schink says the line will help to make the fast-train service even quicker.

“What we’ve seen is investment in the fast train, investment in improving the infrastructure to get people to and from Melbourne quicker,” he said.

“But the blockage has always been the lack of dedicated lines when the trains hit the metro system.”

The budget also includes $2 million for intersection upgrades on the Ballarat to Buninyong Road at Mt Clear.

Health boost

Coleraine hospital in the state’s south-west has been secured in the budget and a new $25.2 million will be built in the town.

The Western District Health Service will contribute a further $600,000.

The health service’s chief executive, Jim Fletcher, says the hospital will include 10 new acute patient beds, 29 residential beds and a community health clinic.

“The tight-knit community will be over the moon with respect to this announcement,” he said.

“It is a great boost for Coleraine and what it does is ensure that they will have a health presence in their township for 50 years and beyond.”

Two western Victorian primary schools have also had their futures secured in the budget.

The Halls Gap and Woady Yaloak primary schools are two of six that will share in $10.5 million.

Woady Yaloak’s principal, Alan Campbell, says the money will help redevelop the ageing Smythesdale campus.

“In recent years the nature of teaching has changed – we’re much more flexible in the way we use space as part of our teaching methodology now,” he said.

“By adding these modern teaching spaces we’ll be able to provide a much more invigorating learning experience for our kids.”

A new police station at Daylesford has been allocated $2 million.

Highway loses out

But the Colac-Otway Council is shocked the budget contained no funding to upgrade the western section of the Princes Highway.

The G21 group of south-west Victorian councils had asked the Government to upgrade and duplicate the highway from Geelong to the South Australian border.

The budget included funding to upgrade the highway’s Gippsland section.

The Colac-Otway Mayor, Lyn Russell, says she expected the western part would be included.

“We were hoping it would be in this budget and we’ll be asking the question why it isn’t,” she said.

“It’s a very important transport link and we do need it.

“It’s not only for safety but the road has deteriorated over the years and so we’ll need to look at it and we’ll need to know why it wasn’t funded.”

Kazakh Foreign Minister condemns Moscow metro attacks

Astana (Kazakhstan), Mar.30 (ANI): Kazakhstan’s Foreign Minister and OSCE Chairperson Kanat Saudabayev has condemned Monday’s bomb attacks on the Moscow metro system that claimed the lives of 38 people and injured over 60.

In a statement issued here in the wake of the attacks, Saudabayev said: “I am deeply shocked by these inhumane attacks, and I condemn them harshly. In this hour of sorrow, I offer my deepest sympathies to the families of the victims, and to the Russian people and government.”

Kazakhstan holds the rotating chairmanship of the Vienna-based OSCE, whose 56 member countries include Russia and the United States.

Kazakhstan has attached great importance to combating the new threats and challenges of the modern age, especially international terrorism, religious extremism and the various forms of illicit trafficking and organized crime. (ANI)

Kazakh Foreign Minister condemns Moscow metro attacks

Astana (Kazakhstan), Mar.30 (ANI): Kazakhstan’s Foreign Minister and OSCE Chairperson Kanat Saudabayev has condemned Monday’s bomb attacks on the Moscow metro system that claimed the lives of 38 people and injured over 60.

In a statement issued here in the wake of the attacks, Saudabayev said: “I am deeply shocked by these inhumane attacks, and I condemn them harshly. In this hour of sorrow, I offer my deepest sympathies to the families of the victims, and to the Russian people and government.”

Kazakhstan holds the rotating chairmanship of the Vienna-based OSCE, whose 56 member countries include Russia and the United States.

Kazakhstan has attached great importance to combating the new threats and challenges of the modern age, especially international terrorism, religious extremism and the various forms of illicit trafficking and organized crime. (ANI)

Moscow mourns, Russian bombing toll rises to 39

Moscow observed an official day of mourning on Tuesday and nervous commuters returned to the metro, while the death toll from twin suicide bombings on the capital’s underground railway rose by one to 39 people.

Flags across Moscow flew at half-mast and sombre Muscovites laid flowers and lit candles at the stations hit by the blasts blamed on North Caucasus rebels.

The police presence was stepped up at Moscow metro stations, and security was tightened on the networks in cities from St. Petersburg to Novosibirsk in Siberia, local media reported.

Entertainment programmes on radio and television were dropped as Moscow observed the official day of mourning for the victims of the deadliest attack to strike the city in six years that was carried out by two female bombers.

Morning commuters warily entered the busy metro system a day after the rush-hour blasts on packed trains at two central stations — Lubyanka and Park Kultury.

“When I was riding the metro in today, somebody’s electronic watch started beeping and I thought, “That’s it,” said Katya Vankova, a business student. “It was very scary.”

Makeshift memorials were set up at both stations.

At Park Kultury, people left red carnations and tied white ribbons to a stand on the platform close to where the bomb went off. Some commuters crossed themselves as they passed by.

STARK SIGNAL

The attacks sent a stark message to President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

Some papers said the attack represented a failure of the government’s security policy. They wrote that years of official propaganda had lulled Russians into thinking there was little to fear from the Islamist insurgency in the turbulent and mainly Muslim North Caucasus.

A young injured woman died early on Tuesday, bringing the death toll to 39, Andrei Seltsovsky, the chief of Moscow’s health department, said on state-run Rossiya 24 television.

He said that 71 other people were still in hospital, five of them in critical condition, and eight of the victims had been identified. Officials said the bombs that caused the carnage were packed with bolts and iron rods.

At Moscow’s central Pushkinskaya station, where three lines intersect, tight-lipped commuters rushed to work past police who patrolled in pairs.

“It was frightening, of course, to go by metro, but I don’t really have any other way to travel. I live far away so there was no other alternative,” said Oxana Orshan, a student.

Mourning was official only in Moscow, but services for the dead were held at Russian Orthodox churches and other places of worship nationwide.

The bombings — one at Lubyanka station that serves the nearby headquarters of the Federal Security Service which is responsible for protecting Russia’s citizens — underscored the country’s vulnerability to militants.

They sparked fears of a broader campaign of attacks on Russia’s heartland by insurgents based in the heavily Muslim provinces along Russia’s southern border.

In recent years, rebel attacks have been largely limited to the North Caucasus, although a bombing blamed on the insurgents killed 26 people on a Moscow-St. Petersburg train in November.

Putin, who cemented his power in 1999 by launching a war to crush separatism in the North Caucasus province of Chechnya, broke off a trip to Siberia on Monday, declaring “terrorists will be destroyed”.

No group has claimed responsibility for the bombings, but Federal Security Service chief Alexander Bortnikov said those responsible had links to the North Caucasus, where militant leaders have threatened to attack cities and energy pipelines elsewhere in Russia.

(Additional reporting by Dmitry Solovyov)

(Writing by Dmitry Solovyov and Conor Sweeney; Editing by Peter Millership)

FACTBOX – Moscow metro a Stalinist prestige project

(Reuters) -Two female suicide bombers killed at least dozens pf people on two packed Moscow metro trains in the morning rush hour on Monday, officials said.

The current death toll makes it the worst attack on Moscow since Feb. 2004, when a suicide bombing killed at least 39 people on a metro train.

Here are some details about Moscow’s metro system, which ws one of the greatest prestige projects of dictator Josef Stalin. Many of the stations in the city centre are built in palatial style, with marble-clad walls, frescoes, mosaics, chandaliers and statues, many lauding the 1917 Bolshevik revolution:

* BEGINNINGS:

– Construction of the Moscow Metro began the 1930s. The first line opened in May 1935 between Sokolniki and Park Kultury with a branch to Smolenskaya which reached Kievskaya in April 1937.

– Construction continued throughout the 1930s and throughout World War Two. As Moscow was besieged in late 1941, the metro stations were used as air-raid shelters.

– The Council of Ministers moved its offices to the platforms of Mayakovskaya station, where Stalin made several public speeches.

follows this avenue, but the rest of the ring line was modified to connect to nine intercity train stations in Moscow.

* THE 1950s:

– The stations on the Arbatsky (or Arbat) line, constructed during the Cold War, were planned as shelters in the event of nuclear war with the United States.

– During the late 1950s, the architectural extravagance of new metro stations was significantly reduced, under the orders of Nikita Khrushchev.

– He championed a more simple or standard layout, which quickly became known as “Sorokonozhka” or “Centipede” due to the columns aligned in rows down either side of the platform.

– During this period, stations differed from one another only in the colour and design of tiles used. Most of these stations were poorly built.

* RECENT DEVELOPMENTS:

– In the mid-1970s, architectural extravagance was restored, and original designs once again became popular.

– Construction of new stations continues to this day, as does restoration of the original stations, such as Mayakovskaya.

* DESIGN:

– The marble used in the Moscow Metro was brought from all over the former Soviet Union from places including the Ural Mountains, Altay, Central Asia and the Caucasus.

– Black marble from the Urals, Armenia and Georgia decorates the walls of the Byelorusskaya, Ploshchad Revolutsii, Elektrozavodskaya and Aeroport stations. Deep-red marble from Georgia adorns the Krasnye Vorota metro station.

* SOME NUMBERS:

– The Moscow Metro has 298.8 km (185.7 mi) of route length, 12 lines and 180 stations; on a normal weekday it carries over 7 million passengers.

– In Aug. 2009 Moscow unveiled a refurbished metro station decorated with an inscription heaping praise on Stalin, sparking outrage from opposition and human rights groups.

– The chandeliered, mosaic-covered vestibule in central Moscow’s Kurskaya station bears a line from an old version of the Soviet national anthem: “Stalin brought us up to be loyal to the nation, inspired us to labour and great deeds.”

* ATTACK:

– The first known attack inside the Metro came during the time of Leonid Brezhnev, when a bomb planted in a carriage in Jan. 1977 by Armenian separatists killed seven people and injured another 37.

Sources: Reuters/http://russia-travel.suite101.com/BBC

Moscow Metro blast toll rises to 41, authorities suspect human bomb involvement

Moscow, Mar 29 (ANI): At least 41 people were reportedly killed in twin explosions on the Metro system in central Moscow on Monday morning.

Following the incident, the Russian administration expressed suspicion over the blast being suicidal in nature.

Moscow”s metro is one of the busiest subways in the world, carrying some 5.5 million passengers a day.

The first blast took place at the Central Lubyanka station, killing at least 26 people.

Another 15 people were killed in a second explosion, at the Park Kultury station.

According to a Moscow Metro release, 14 people were killed in the train and 12 on the platform at Lubyanka. Over 10 people sustained severe injuries.

“The blast hit the second carriage of a metro train that stopped at Lubyanka, said a spokesperson.

The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) headquarters is located just above the Lubyanka station.

Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov said both explosions were believed to have been set off by female suicide bombers as the trains entered the stations.

Moscow Chief Prosecutor Yuri Syomin said the blasts were suicide in nature.

“We can assume that belts with explosive devices were attached to their bodies,” he said.

Though no-group has yet claimed responsibility for the incident, the explosions do appear to have been co-ordinated, said a Russian official.

Suspicion is likely to fall on groups in the troubled North Caucasus region, where Russian security forces are fighting Islamist militants.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is currently visiting Siberia, is monitoring the situatuion with detailed information from security agencies.

The Moscow Emergencies Department said there was no fire and rescue teams have been pressed into service.

There was a major attack on the Moscow Metro in February 2004, when at least 39 people were killed by a bomb on a packed train as it approached the Paveletskaya Metro station.

Six months later, a suicide bomber blew herself up outside a station, killing 10 people. Both attacks were blamed on Chechen rebels, who had targeted the capital in the past.

Over the last decade Moscow has been hit by a string of deadly explosions claimed by militants from its turbulent southern region of Chechnya, but this has become less frequent in the last few years. (ANI)

Twin blasts in Moscow Metro kill 37

Moscow, Mar 29 (ANI): At least 37 people were reportedly killed in twin explosions on the Metro system in central Moscow on Monday morning.

The first blast took place at the Central Lubyanka station, killing at least 25 people.

Another 12 people were killed in a second explosion, at the Park Kultury station.

According to a Moscow Metro release, 14 people were killed in the train and 11 on the platform at Lubyanka.

The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) headquarters is located just above the Lubyanka station.

“The blast hit the second carriage of a metro train that stopped at Lubyanka, said a spokesperson.

The Moscow Emergencies Department said there was no fire and rescue teams have been pressed into service.

Over the last decade Moscow has been hit by a string of deadly explosions claimed by militants from its turbulent southern region of Chechnya,but this has become less frequent in the last few years.(ANI)

Russian rouble opens down after Moscow blasts

MOSCOW, March 29 (Reuters) – The Russian rouble weakened to 34.25 versus the euro-dollar basket RUS=MCX at the opening of trade on Monday, after two deadly explosions on the Moscow metro system.

The rouble had closed on Friday at 34.13 against the basket. [ID:nLDE62P0Q9]

Six killed in Washington subway crash

Washington, June 23 (ANI): Two subway trains crashed into each other at the height of the evening rush hour on Monday, killing at least six people and injuring several others.

A female driver of one of the trains is among the dead. A six-car train rear-ended the second train, which had stopped on the tracks near the northeast border of Maryland.

A D.C. fire department spokesman said both trains were ripped open and smashed together, forcing rescue workers to cut some people out of what he called a “mass casualty event.”

D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty said 70 people were treated at the scene while some went to local hospitals, two with life-threatening injuries.

“The scene is as horrific as you can imagine. One car of the train was completely squeezed on top of the other,” the Daily News quoted Fenty, as saying.

“There was no immediate explanation for the collision, which was the deadliest in the 33-year history of Washington’s Metro system, Fenty said. The section of track where the crash occurred was aboveground, and the weather was clear.

Alice Miller watched the horrific scene on the outskirts of her backyard and spoke by cell phone to her injured daughter, Karen Miller Long, 46, who was in the rear car.

Emergency crews were pulling people out of the cars while dazed and bleeding survivors sat on the ground nearby, and uninjured passengers walked along the tracks.

Hours after the 5:05 p.m. accident, firefighters were still “cutting through the train” to free passengers, said Metro General Manager John Catoe. (ANI)

Mexico City revives small pox rituals for modern flu

Mexico City – The bells of Mexico City’s cathedral rang in prayer, and the figure of Our Father Jesus of Health was taken out onto the streets of the city’s historic centre Sunday for the first time in 150 years to ask God for protection.

As in the times of smallpox, Roman Catholics joined in prayer against the ongoing flu epidemic, including cases of swine flu, that has left 149 people dead in the country in less than a month.

They had good reason. The streets and metro system of the nation’s capital turned ghostly as residents donned face masks, handed out by the Mexican army. Football games were played in empty stadiums. Schools were closed until May 6 and other public gatherings were shut down.

Additional worry came from a 5.7-scale earthquake that shook the city to its bones Monday and sent masked workers fleeing from buildings. Fortunately for the city, it was spared the added insult of physical damage from the temblor.

But times are different from the 16th century Aztecs of the ancient Tenochtitlan who had to face the smallpox brought ashore by the Spaniards. They are different from the later devastating epidemics of measles, cholera or mumps.

In fact, residents of Mexico City have many better weapons against disease – face masks, anti-viral drugs, modern communications and an efficient government that can quarantine if need be.

But time-honoured methods still carry their weight in modern Mexico. That was clear on Sunday with the procession of Our Father Jesus of Health, and with the novena – usually a nine-day-long series of prayers – to Our Lady of Guadalupe being organized by the Archdiocese of Mexico City for the coming days.

“You who have rescued us from other plagues, entrust us to the mercy of He who healed us with His wounds and freed us from death with His Resurrection,” the devout are praying, at the request of Mexico’s Primate Cardinal Norberto Rivera.

On Sunday, most churches in the Mexican capital had cancelled all community masses until further notice, following last minute orders from church authorities. In the coming days, there will be no communal, large-scale first communions or confirmations and no large wedding masses.

When it comes to faith, something has changed with respect to the plagues of old. Earlier, churches would fill up to pray at times of epidemics, said Archdiocese spokesman Hugo Valdemar, whereas now – in the face of scientific progress – people know that concentrating in closed spaces can be worse. Viruses pass from person to person even in God’s house.

Some onlookers were incredulous late Sunday as the procession carrying Our Father Jesus of Health – a figure of Christ on the cross that had not been carried through the streets since 1850 – advanced, carried by men with blue face masks.

“That won’t do any good,” one person muttered.

However, Valdemar disagreed.

“It is a centenary tradition to take out Our Father Jesus of Health on people’s shoulders when a pest or epidemic attacks the population,” he noted.

Mexico has one of the largest numbers of Roman Catholic faithful in the world, second only to Brazil. Religion has deep roots among the population, particularly with the adoration of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

The Guadalupe basilica, which usually hosts many thousands of faithful every Sunday, is now holding masses only behind closed doors.

Cardinal Rivera invited all Catholics to pray at home, follow mass on the radio and on television and take part in the novena of prayer.

The goal is to ask the Virgin Mary “to free the city and the country from this threat that is hanging on their residents, as she prodigiously did in the past, especially in the pests that the same city suffered in the years 1554, 1695, 1736 and 1850.” (dpa)